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Miss Mosquita was the first QRP transceiver which I didn't design myself.
But this little cutie by
DL-QRP-AG caught
my eye at a hamfest, so I bought the kit (for a very fair price) and
assembled it in some hours on one weekend. The construction is very simple,
and if you follow the detailed step-by-step instructions there should be
no problem to get it running - my Miss Mosquita worked properly right from
the start. Only for personal taste, I made two minor modifications which
are described below.
But first of all, this is how the transceiver looked (with the LED frequency
counter attached) during the first QSOs - no enclosure yet, because I wanted
to get "on air" with it as fast as possible :

The seven-segment frequency display is my first prototype (details about
the counter are here; the
counter which can be ordered from QRP-project soon is basically the same
with a slightly modified layout).
Mosquita modifications
Again, Miss Mosquita worked right from the start. I made the following
modification just for personal taste:
The CW pitch was a bit low (audio center frequency about 400 Hz). Since I
prefer 650 Hz for CW, I modified the BFO, TX-mixer a bit, and reduced the
audio bandwidth to something about 400 Hz:
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reduced C11 (series capacitor for crystal in the BFO) from 100 pF by 56 pF,
which increased the audio note and removed the "grumbling" low-frequency
tones;
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changed L9 in the TX-mixer from 15 uH to 4.7 uH, because after the BFO-mod
described in the previous step, the TX frequency was a bit off frequency
(this made RX and TX "transceive" again)
-
increased C7 and C8 in the 4 MHz IF filter from 220 pF to 330 pF to reduce
the CW filter bandwidth a tiny bit
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replaced C45 (100 nF) in the TX-driver stage by 2.2 nF, because the gain
of T4 and T5 (TX preamp and driver) was a bit too high for an easy adjust
the output power. With 2.2 nF (= -j*10 Ohm) in the emitter, there is
less gain, but still enough driving power to reach 5 watts, and the power
is a bit easier to adjust with P3 now.
The VFO can be easily tapped for the (LED-) frequency counter between R15
(820 Ohm) and P3 ( 250 Ohm to ground).
Digital frequency readout for Miss Mosquita (DL4YHF counter)
I found the oscillator in the TX mixer running at 3.9990 MHz, so I added
this frequency in the table of "preconfigured" offset frequencies in the
PIC16F628 firmware (use "counter2.hex", also for the counter kit from QRP
project). If your counter is preprogrammed with an IF offset of ZERO, here
are the steps how to get it running properly with Miss Mosquita's 3999 kHz
TX-mixer:
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Connect the pushbutton to (DL4YHF-) frequency counter. You only need that
button temporarily, so there's no need to install it in the front panel !
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Turn Miss Mosquita (and the counter) on. If there is no IF offset programmed
yet, the counter may show something like "3.0310" (MHz) now.
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Hold the counter's button pressed until the display shows "Prog", then release
it
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Shortly press the button a few times until the display shows "tAbLE"
-
Now press the button a bit longer, until the selected menu (here: "TABLE")
starts flashing. This takes you into a sub-menu where different preconfigured
frequency offsets can be recalled.
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Shortly press the button a few times until the display shows "3.9990". If
you miss that entry, you have an older firmware (which doesn't have this
"Mosquita-specific" IF offset - see note below on how to use that firmware
for Miss Mosquita)
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Now press the button for a second (until the display flashes "3.9990"). Release
the button when the display flashes. After this, the counter asks you if
that frequency shall be added ("Add") or subtracted ("Sub"). For Miss Mosquita,
the IF offset must be added, so hold the button pressed for a second while
the display shows "Add". When "Add" begins to flash, the counter has permanently
saved the new offset. Release the button, and you are back in normal operation
mode.
If everything went right, the counter shows something like "7.0300" (MHz)
now. Bingo.. connect an antenna and listen for QRP stations, or start calling
CQ on that frequency ;-)
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Note:
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If your counter is equipped with an old firmware, there may be no entry for
"3.9990 MHz" in the preconfigured table of frequency offsets.
In this case, you can enter the offset as described in the firmware documentation
for DL4YHF's PIC-based frequency
counter (temporarily connect the counter to the oscillator in the TX-mixer,
which delivers the 3.9990 (+/-) reference). If the relative link doesn't
work, try this
absolute
link.
Yet to come (for the frequency counter firmware) :
automatic (optional) "power-off" feature for the LED display: If the frequency
isn't changed by more than 100 Hz within one minute, the counter can turn
the display off to save 20 mA battery current. As soon as the VFO changes
by more than 100 Hz, the display is turned on again.
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