ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED                        MARCH 1968
Bare-Essentials Transmitter


By JIM WHITE, W5LET

EVERYBODY talks about inflation these days. According to the experts, we're 
spending too much and driving the price of everything sky high. Washington now 
threatens us with higher taxes to stop our spree.
But for hams on a budget there's a way to have your cake and fight inflation, 
too. You do spend a little of the green stuff but it won't make much of a dent in 
your wallet or the national economy. The way out: our Bare-Essentials Transmitter. 
This little 40- and 80-meter rig takes the prize as the anti-inflationary CW 
transmitter of the year. You spend only $7 to get it on the air.
There's no chassis. The rig is built on a piece of wood--any kind, like the end 
of an orange crate, will do. And for tie points you use finishing nails. The 5OC5 
(or a 5OL6) tube can be salvaged from an old AC/ DC radio. You'll have to spend 
II for a tube socket but you won't have to buy a socket for the crystal. 
Its not fancy but it packs a wallop for its price.
Used with a mediocre antenna, it has worked stations all over the U.S.  
When conditions are right and with a good antenna there is no reason why it 
can't work some real DX.
  
The Circuit: The transmitter consist of a 5OC5 crystal oscillator, which 
operates on either 40 or 80 meters, Since the 5OC5 has a 50-V filament it uses 
a 400-ohm 20-watt dropping resistor instead of a filament transformer.
The power supply for the plate and screen voltages is a doubler which provides 
about 350 VDC. Two capacitors, two silicon rectifiers and a 1-watt resistor 
complete the power supply.

Building The Transmitter: First thing is the chassis, which is simply a 
1O x 6 x  -in.-thick piece of wood. Take a close look at the pictorial to see 
where each part goes. The tube socket is mounted on short spacers so that its 
lugs clear the wood.

Image 301.jpg and 302.jpg

The rest of the parts are soldered to finishing nails in the board. The 
power-supply components are located in the upper right comer of the board. 
There is no power switch so the AC leads go directly to the nails.
Nails again are used for connecting points for the antenna and for the key. 
Another nail, located at the lower right of the board is for a ground connection 
for neon lamp NL1. If the AC plug is in the wrong way, the hot side of the line 
will be connected to the key. This will mean that 117 V exists from the key to 
ground, enough to cause a severe shock.  However, if the plug is reversed, the 
ground side of the AC line will be connected to the key circuit and a shock hazard 
will not exist.

By connecting a water-pipe ground to the nail, the neon lamp will light if 
the AC plug is in the wrong way. Observe carefully the polarity of the silicon 
rectifiers and the electrolytics.
The coils are wound on plastic pill bottles.  The 80 meter coil is wound on 
a 1   in. dia. x 3  in. long bottle. The 40-meter coil is wound on a 1 3/16 
or 1 in. dia. x 2 in. long bottle. First drill a small hole in the bottom of 
each of the bottles for the mounting screw.
The plate winding (primary) for the 8O-meter coil is 45 turns of No. 24 enameled 
wire, closewound. The 40-meter primary is 23 turns of No. 24 enameled wire also 
closewound. Both secondaries are No. 20 solid hookup wire: the 80 meter is four 
turns, the 40 meter three turns.
Before winding the primaries drill four small holes (two at the top and two at the 
bottom of the primary winding) in each form.  Then thread the ends of the primary 
wire through these holes.
The secondaries are wound over the primary coils and are held in place by twisting 
the ends together as shown in the coil pictorial(Image 311.jpg)

Image 312.jpg

On The Air: After mounting a coil mount and connect its four leads, then check your 
work once more. If you're going to work 40, plug a 40-meter crystal into its pin 
connectors. Plug in the tube, connect an antenna(using 50-ohm coax) to the antenna 
nails and a key to the key nails. Be sure that you have a water-pipe ground connected 
to NL1.
Now plug in the transmitter. If NL1 glows, reverse the AC plug. Wait about 30 seconds 
for VI's filament to reach operating temperature and press the key. Quickly adjust C4 
until oscillation starts. Oscillation can be determined by listening to a receiver 
tuned to the crystal frequency. Or hold a neon lamp against the plate transformer. 
If the transmitter is working the lamp will glow. Adjust C4. When the lamp glows at 
maximum brilliance, tuning is correct.
In loading the transmitter into an antenna some adjustment of T1's secondary may 
be necessary. Closer coupling can be achieved by moving the coil higher up over the 
primary winding. An input of about 50 ma at about 350 V (17.5 watts) is about right.
Do not operate the transmitter without an antenna because this may cause C4 to break 
down if the key is held down for an extended period of time.-*-
=====================================================
From: Gary Johanson <wd4nka@juno.com>
To: glowbugs@piobaire.mines.uidaho.edu
Date: Tue, 26 Dec 2000 13:47:07 -0500
Subject: GB> 50C5 Transmitter

Hi, Gang:
Trusting the Holidays are fareing well for you.

I came across an old article mentioned some years
ago in a nostalgia review of it in the "World of Ideas"
column of CQ mag.  The author was waxing nostalgic
over classic transmitter projects of the 1960's, and
mentioned W5LETs article, the "Bare-Essentials"
transmitter.  I had cut this piece from a March edition
of Electronics Illustrated back in 1968 and kept it
folded up in my old Ameco book for years.  I pulled it
out and re-drew the schematics and cadded up a
quick illustration of the layout.  It was originally built
on a pine board.  It is transformerless with a neon
current-warning light added for protection.  It used a
50C5 tube, which was pretty "garden-variety" in the
all-american 5-tuber.

If anyone is interested in it, (and happens to have
a pile of 50C5s or 50L6s on hand from old table-tops,)
let me know.  I'll e-mail it direct.

This article is largely word-for-word transcription with
some wise-cracks from yours truly, and a re-edited
tuning explanation.  But one look at the schematic and
you will recognise it as the old, ubiquitous one-tube crystal-
cracker, and the text is non-revelational.

It is e-mailable in a zip file, ( or however Juno bundles
these multi-files) and plays on any .bmp viewer
like Paint (TubePad). Text is in window's on-board Wordpad.

vy 73
gary // wd4nka
" . . . who forgets the past forfeits the future . . ."
=====================================================
From: EZela57383@aol.com
To: wd4nka@juno.com, glowbugs@piobaire.mines.uidaho.edu
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2000 20:44:52 EST
Subject: Re: GB> 50C5 Transmitter

I built that rig when the article first was published, and a second time when 
I had to present a demonstation in one of my electronics classes. Just be 
careful, obviously, as 350VDC+ is present on those nail tie points! The rig 
does work and I was able to make some contacts....but don't expect the note 
to be a '9'.

Good Luck

KA8GEF
Emil 
=====================================================
From: Gary G Johanson <wd4nka@juno.com>
To: EZela57383@aol.com
Cc: glowbugs@piobaire.mines.uidaho.edu
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2000 23:53:11 -0500
Subject: Re: GB> 50C5 Transmitter

Hi, Emil and gruppe:

I am not surprised that there would be some ripple on the note.
I do remember, on that wireless phono oscillator upon which
i began my short pirate carreer, which was also transformerless,
using a 35W4 rectifier and, i think, a 50C5 oscillator, had no
trace of any line  noise or ripple.  Of course, it didn't have to buck
so much voltage down for the filament, either.  Only had to drop
30 volts.  Not a whole lot of current, either, for 100 mW.  I never
knew what IT'S plate voltage was, but i would guess it was 100v.
I don't remember 2 caps for a doubler.  I think the plates were
wired together as a single diode and served as a half-wave
rectifier.

The thing i thought might be of some unique value is the power
supply's neon hot-line warning light.  I know if i ever go
transformerless,
that is ONE feature i will be sure to incorporate. I'd still float the
chassis and make provision to avoid the metal, but it is nice to
know the thing isn't gonna bite.  Maybe.

I have another transmitter project tucked away that is similar to
this one, only using the not-so-garden variety 117L6 .  Not an expensive
tube yet, but not one found in the good ol' all American 5'er.  But, a
lot easier on the heat i bet.  No huge hi-watt dropping resistor for
the filament.  Run the filaments in parallel with the B+ with lots of
de-coupling caps and RF chokes and have DC on the filament.  Bet
there's a lot of interesting arrangements you can make with one
of those tubes.

vy 73
gary // wd4nka
======================================================
From: "Mike Silva" <mjsilva@jps.net>
To: <glowbugs@piobaire.mines.uidaho.edu>
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2000 23:47:55 -0800
Subject: Re: GB> 50C5 Transmitter

FWIW, the 85V dropped by a 50C5 / 35W4 combination is exactly the effective
voltage you get by half-wave rectifying the 120V line.  The benefit is the
lack of heat dropped in a resistor, not to mention that 1N400Xs are a lot
cheaper and more available than the proper dropping resistor.

Given the ample cathodes of the 50C5s and 50L6s, two of them would probably
do fine splitting 85V between them in either a MOPA or Jones rig.  (Easier,
though, to just use a 35C5 or 35L6 osc. in the MOPA)

BTW, you didn't really mean 117L6, did you?  Never saw that one, but it
would be kinda nice if it existed!

73,
Mike, KK6GM
===================================================
From: Gary Johanson <wd4nka@juno.com>
To: mjsilva@jps.net
Cc: glowbugs@piobaire.mines.uidaho.edu
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2000 08:05:54 -0500
Subject: Re: GB> 50C5 Transmitter

Mike:
I downloaded the mail at the clinic, but if it isnt a 117L6, it is
something like that.  It is a pentode or tetrode with a 117v filament,
and the designation is such ( 117)
I need to look it up when i get home tonight.
vy 73
gary // wd4nka
====================================================
From: N2EY@aol.com
To: wd4nka@juno.com, mjsilva@jps.net
Cc: glowbugs@piobaire.mines.uidaho.edu
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2000 10:27:34 EST
Subject: Re: GB> 50C5 Transmitter

Probably the 117L7GT, one of a small family of octal tubes with 117 volt 
heaters. They are all rectifier/power pentode dual tubes. I think they were 
meant for AC-DC phonographs and phono oscillators. 
73 de Jim, N2EY 
======================================================
From: w8au@sssnet.com
To: "Mike Silva" <mjsilva@jps.net>
Cc: glowbugs@piobaire.mines.uidaho.edu
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2000 11:19:21 -0500
Subject: Re: GB> 50C5 Transmitter

At 11:47 PM 12/28/2000 -0800, Mike Silva wrote:

>BTW, you didn't really mean 117L6, did you?  Never saw that one, but it
>would be kinda nice if it existed!

> > I have another transmitter project tucked away that is similar to
> > this one, only using the not-so-garden variety 117L6 .  Not an expensive
> > tube yet, but not one found in the good ol' all American 5'er.

Mike:

The tube is probably the 117L7 or 117N7.   This is a pentode/diode combo 
that was a self-contained oscillator (or whatever) and a diode to supply 
half-wave rectified DC.   A number of articles on simple transmitters using 
this tube appeared post-WW2 in CQ magazine, among others.

The OT who mentored my Amateur Radio beginnings built many of these and I 
also built some using his guidelines.  I used mine on the 1950's era Novice 
bands.   Some variations included two tubes in a Push-Pull xtal oscillator 
arrangement.

Today it would be more efficient to just use the pentode sections of these 
tubes and forget about the diode parts.  Silicon diodes would be more 
efficient and plate voltage could be increased even more by voltage 
doubling.  I recall these tubes running well at 350 volts.

These 117 volt tubes are not real difficult to find, and surprisingly are 
not too expensive.  I suppose that is because there is not much demand for 
them.  I stocked up on a half dozen some years ago anticipating the high 
cost/unavailability scenario, but it never happened.
Have fun.....
Perry   w8au
======================================================
From: Gary G Johanson <wd4nka@juno.com>
To: w8au@sssnet.com
Cc: glowbugs@piobaire.mines.uidaho.edu
Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2000 01:01:23 -0500
Subject: Re: GB> 117 v tubes

On Fri, 29 Dec 2000 11:19:21 -0500 w8au@sssnet.com writes:
> At 11:47 PM 12/28/2000 -0800, Mike Silva wrote:
> 
> Mike:
> 
> The tube is probably the 117L7 or 117N7.   This is a pentode/diode  combo 
> that was a self-contained oscillator (or whatever) and a diode to  supply 
> half-wave rectified DC.   A number of articles on simple  transmitters using 
> this tube appeared post-WW2 in CQ magazine, among others.

************* Aye, that's the one.  I think it's a tetrode section, actually, 
rather than a pentode section.  I thought i had a copy of the article 
from an early '90s CQ which had this along with some other quickie 
tubester QRP rigs.  I did not photocopy it for the note-folder, but i kept 
the mag . . . deep in that forbidden trunk in the chamber of horrors.  
I recall, now, that it did use it's diode section for the power supply.  
I never built it because of my natural suspicion of transformerless 
power supplies.  Once bit, twice shy.
> 
>snip<

> Today it would be more efficient to just use the pentode sections of  these 
> tubes and forget about the diode parts.  Silicon diodes would be  more 
> efficient and plate voltage could be increased even more by voltage 
> doubling.  I recall these tubes running well at 350 volts.

************ agreed.  It would also lessen the jumble of connections
to that poor ol' octal socket.  Since the 117L7 is a diode / tetrode, every
pin would be utilised.    Yow !!  That's rough in a small underchassis.
> 
> These 117 volt tubes are not real difficult to find, and  surprisingly are 
> not too expensive.  I suppose that is because there is not much  demand for 
> them.  I stocked up on a half dozen some years ago anticipating the  high 
> cost/unavailability scenario, but it never happened.

****************I recall them being available in quantity from Antique Electronics Supply.
> 
> Have fun.....
> 
> Perry   w8au
> 
> 
vy 73
gary // wd4nka
===================================================
From: "Mike McKean Sr" <mikemckeansr@earthlink.net>
To: <w8au@sssnet.com>, "Gary G Johanson" <wd4nka@juno.com>
Cc: <glowbugs@piobaire.mines.uidaho.edu>
Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2000 12:13:01 -0500
Subject: Re: GB> 117 v tubes

I built a transmitter a while back using the 117 volt tube with the pentode
and diode...made a 40 meter CW osc out of the pentode and the diode became
the power supply rectifier...main thing is to ensure that the chassis ground
is connected to the neutral side of the AC line...it ran great..lit up a
number 47 light bulb very nicely  :-)

Mike N3HJQ
---------------------------------------------------
From: "Brian Carling" <bcarling@cfl.rr.com>
To: glowbugs@piobaire.mines.uidaho.edu
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2000 08:21:32 -0500
Subject: Re: GB> 50C5 Transmitter

The 50C5 TX design is available on-line at:
http://www.thebizlink.com/am/tech/htm/50c5.htm
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