This beacon was originally a WIA (VK6 Division) owned unit, run by
the Northern Corridor Radio Group. In 2004, it was decided to upgrade the unit
to something more modern and more reliable as the old technology was developing
faults quicker than it could be repaired. Shown below is the old 10m beacon,
which was originally built by John VK6ZN and then repaired by VK6FJA many years
later with an old 11m radio donated by Greg (now VK5JGW). It used a diode matrix
CW identifier, which has corroded somewhat over the last 15 years. It does still
work though - with a repair to the Transmitter, it could be put back in service
if required.
The front of the old
beacon.
Inside the old beacon showing the
radio (click on the image to see it full size!)
A better option was decided by the NCRG in 2004. A "Realistic" HTX 100
(Tandy-RadioShack) radio was bought from VK-HAM for the purpose of replacing the ageing
beacon transmitter (an old CB radio). James VK6FJA set about the modification of
the unit to perform the beacon task. On this page, you can find details of how
the new beacon was constructed.
The radio to convert. These were
being sold off by Tandy a while ago. It is based on the Uniden HR2510
design. In fact, inside - the radio IS a Uniden.
Inside the radio - the new CW ID
board has been mounted on the top panel and a plastic insulator keeps
the radio circuitry apart from the CW board.
A picture of the new CW ID board
based on a 16F84A PIC IC.
Here is the circuit diagram of the
new CW ID board.
The front of the new beacon radio
(HTX100). The yellow glow behind the CW indicator is a LED indicating
that the radio is being
keyed.
The beacon source code was
re-written based on concepts in other freeware morse identification units. The
program was written in Pascal and compiled using mikroPascal
demo software for the 16F84A PIC
micro. Parts available at Dick Smith
Electronics stores.
Disclaimer: Software for beacon written with resources
from the Internet. Code is original but code design concept is based on
freeware programs. Manuals and datasheets are freely available from other
websites on the Internet and a copy is provided as a cached version only and
will be removed upon any request to do so. Photos (c) VK6FJA 2005.
Details current as as July 2005.