# | Project | Cntry | Main Page | Description | Parts | Tubes | Type | Subtype |
1 | A Single-Tube 75-Watt Novice Transmitter | US |
N6EV
| From 1957 ARRL Handbook (page 173) | 24 | 6146 | CW Ham Transmitter | 75 Watts |
2 | A 75-Watt 6DQ5 Transmitter (6AG7 / 6DQ5) | US |
N6EV
| From 1961 ARRL Handbook (page 179) | 35 | 6AG7, 6DQ5 | CW Ham Transmitter | 75 Watts |
3 | A 7-Band 90-Watt Transmitter | US |
N6EV
| From 1957 ARRL Handbook (page 179) | 45 | 6AK6, 6C4(3), 6146 | CW Ham Transmitter | 90-Watts |
4 | The Mighty Midget - A 10-Watter for 80 and 40 | US |
N6EV
| From 1966 QST | 25 | 6GW8 | CW Ham Transmitter | HF, 10+ Watts |
5 | AI2Q's 6L6 Transmitter | US |
N6EV
| 9th on the Schematics and Projects List | 26 | 6L6 | CW Ham Transmitter | HF, 10+ Watts |
6 | A One-Tube Two-Band Transmitter for the Novice | US |
N6EV
| From 1957 ARRL Handbook (page 170) | 17 | 6AG7 | CW Ham Transmitter | X |
7 | 75 Watts on Four Bands | US |
N6EV
| From 1957 ARRL Handbook (page 176) | 36 | 6AG7, 6L6GB(2) | CW Ham Transmitter | X |
8 | Three Band Oscillator Transmitter for Novice (6DQ6A) | US |
N6EV
| From 1961 ARRL Handbook (page 172) | 30 | 6DQ6A | CW Ham Transmitter | X |
9 | All-Band Inexpensive 40-Watt Transmitter (6AG7 / 1625) | US |
N6EV
| From 1961 ARRL Handbook (page 175) | 30 | 6AG7, 1625 | CW Ham Transmitter | X |
10 | A 90-Watt All-Purpose Amplifier (6146) | US |
N6EV
| From 1961 ARRL Handbook (page 183) | 40 | 6146 | CW Ham Transmitter | X |
11 | 6AQ5A QRP 80M/40M Transmitter | US |
N6EV
| By Scott Brigham; AA0HU | 19 | 6AQ5A | CW Ham Transmitter | X |
12 | 6BM8 Xmtr by Lee Richey; WA3FIY | US |
N6EV
| From N6EV's Glowbugs site. | 35 | 6BM8 | CW Ham Transmitter | X |
13 | 10-Watt Transmitter | US |
N6EV
| In Dutch | 25 | 6BM8 | CW Ham Transmitter | X |
14 | 6L6 Scrounger | US |
N6EV
| By Steve Smith; WB6TNL | 13 | 6L6 | CW Ham Transmitter | X |
15 | Vackar VFO | US |
N6EV
| Simpler than the parts count would suggest | 28 | ECL80 | CW Ham Transmitter | X |
16 | G4VAM Valve Job | US |
N6EV
| Simpler than the parts count would suggest | 28 | ECL80 | CW Ham Transmitter | X |
17 | 100W Linear Amp using Four 807's | US |
N6EV
| Schematic is a little; um; schematic | 25 | 807 (4) | Ham Amplifier | 100-300 Watts |
18 | A Single 6146 Amplifier | US |
N6EV
| From 1957 ARRL Handbook (page 201). Coil data at http://www.qsl.net/n6ev/57-202L.jpg | 31 | 6146 | Ham Amplifier | X |
19 | A Parallel 807 Amplifier | US |
N6EV
| From 1957 ARRL Handbook (page 204) | 25 | 807 (2) | Ham Amplifier | X |
20 | One-tube regenerative receiver | US |
N6EV
| From 1957 ARRL Handbook (page 113) | 24 | 6U8 (2) | Ham Receiver | Regenerative |
21 | A Two-Band Three Tube Superheterodyne | US |
N6EV
| From 1957 ARRL Handbook (page 116) | 39 | 6U8, 6BD6, 12AX7 | Ham Receiver | Superheterodyne |
22 | A Two-Band Five-Tube Superheterodyne | US |
N6EV
| From 1957 ARRL Handbook (page 119) | 50 | 6AC7, 6K8, 6C4, 6SN7, 6SN7 | Ham Receiver | Superheterodyne |
23 | Regenerative Receivers | US |
N6EV
| Discussion of various approaches to regenerative receivers from ARRL Handbook | 15 | 30 | Ham Receiver | X |
24 | 80 Meter Pebble Pulverizer QRP Transceiver | US |
N6EV
| From QST 1967; change the last number of the file to see the different pages | 70 | 6GH6, 12AT7(2), 6U6A, 6EA6, 12BV7A, 6GK6 | Ham Transceiver | X |