#vfo — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #vfo, aggregated by home.social.
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@sergio_101 I started out on the novice band on 40m bcs my #heathkit #DX60B had crystals and I didn’t upgrade to the #vfo until later.
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@sergio_101 I started out on the novice band on 40m bcs my #heathkit #DX60B had crystals and I didn’t upgrade to the #vfo until later.
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@sergio_101 I started out on the novice band on 40m bcs my #heathkit #DX60B had crystals and I didn’t upgrade to the #vfo until later.
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@sergio_101 I started out on the novice band on 40m bcs my #heathkit #DX60B had crystals and I didn’t upgrade to the #vfo until later.
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@sergio_101 I started out on the novice band on 40m bcs my #heathkit #DX60B had crystals and I didn’t upgrade to the #vfo until later.
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Retro Style VFO Has Single-Digit Parts Count https://hackaday.com/2025/12/02/retro-style-vfo-has-single-digit-parts-count/ #rotaryencoder #rounddisplay #RadioHacks #SI5351 #ESP32 #VFO
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Also called a “DDS VFO.” This may be a bit of a brain dump. Although I have local notes (in Joplin), if I had to look hard for this stuff, maybe someone else can benefit from it. I’ll try to skip the details of the dead-ends I went down.
I put the Pixie kit I put together as a distraction from the thing that’s been bugging me, which is putting together some different modules in a receiver to 1) learn more about hardware and b) eventually design a radio orienteering receiver. (Why design when I can put together someone else’s design? Not sure yet.)
Building
In short, I took these building blocks and put them together:
- Adafruit Si5351 breakout board to act as a local oscillator
- Adafruit Metro microcontroller development board
- Pretty generic OLED display (pulled from a TTGO T-Beam I originally got on AliExpress)
- Arduino code from CesarSound
- Pixie kit from AliExpress
- Rotary encoder with push button from eBay
- Generic momentary contact button (originally from SparkFun kit)
- High-pass filter that I designed and need to blog about
Although I don’t understand it all yet, the modification to the Pixie is explained at the very end of this “S-Pixie QRP Kit Student Manual.” Although I have the Pixie and not the S[uper]-Pixie, the component names matched the schematic I was provided with.
Schematic of the modified Pixie board, showing seven components that were removed (two were half-removed), one new resistor, and the wires for LO in and ground from the LO.Photo of the modified Pixie board, showing seven components that were removed (two were half-removed), one new resistor, and the wires for LO in and ground from the LO.The S-Pixie can be modified to cover the whole 40 Meter band by replacing the oscillator with a VFO. A popular approach has been to use a Direct Digital Synthesizer (DDS) controlled by an Arduino. The human interface includes an LCD display and rotary encoder.
Popular DDS choices include the AD9850 and the SI5351.
Remove/Omit C3, C7, Y1, W1, D2, R6, and C8.
Place a 47K resistor between Q1 base and GND.
Connect the DDS across that resistor.I don’t think I changed any of the code yet, but my version is here. I used the same pins CesarSound defined in the schematic below. I only used the connections from the Si5351 module, the OLED display, and the rotary encoder to the Arduino and ignored the rest. I skipped the capacitors across the rotary encoder connections.
Schematic from CesarSound of the connections from Arduino to Si5351 module and OLED.Testing
I’m a bit overwhelmed, so you don’t get anything here right now.
here is where I talk about testing, maybe with audio/video
does it transmit
HPF to block broadcast AM – separate blog post
not great selectivity – hard to use for QSO
Next Steps
I have to keep reminding myself that this is not a product, it is a learning exercise. I do plan on making a standalone digital VFO module (with a board and case and all that) that can be plugged into other modules as needed. The digital VFO might use something smaller and cheaper than the Metro, like an ESP32 dev board, if I can get it to work. Pete N6QW has a bunch of information on this type of project.
The Pixie part may be modified/stripped down more so I can better understand it or re-use into another application.
Photos
Photo of a solderless breadboard, an Adafruit Metro, a Pixie transceiver kit, and a copper board. The breadboard has an encoder, a button, an OLED, and an Si5351 board. The copper board has a homebrew high-pass filter on it. Coax runs from the filter off the top of the image. A 9V battery powers the Pixie. A black cable runs off the bottom to power the Metro/OLED/Si5351. It looks like a big old mess. -
Boat Anchor Twins Get a Little Digital Help Staying on Frequency - In the ham radio trade, gear such as the old Drake units [Dr. Scott M. Baker] has ... - https://hackaday.com/2022/03/11/boat-anchor-twins-get-a-little-digital-help-staying-on-frequency/ #variablefrequencyoscillator #directdigitalsynthesis #amateurradio #radiohacks #ad9850 #drake #dds #ham #vfo
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Radio Shack Shortwave Goes Digital - If you spent the 1970s obsessively browsing through the Radio Shack catalog, you probably remember... more: https://hackaday.com/2020/05/20/radio-shack-shortwave-goes-digital/ #frequencycounter #frequencydisplay #digitaldisplay #radiohacks #radioshack #shortwave #dx-160 #vfo #if
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EBay Modules And Custom PCBs Make A Plug And Play Ham Transceiver - Many of us have fond memories of our introduction to electronics through the “200-in-1” sets that ... more: https://hackaday.com/2019/03/17/ebay-modules-and-custom-pcbs-make-a-plug-and-play-ham-transceiver/ #wirelesshacks #amateurradio #transceiver #fldigi #si5351 #morse #quisk #ham #sdr #vfo #cw