Search results
Query: shirt
Links: 12 | Categories: 1
Categories
-
Ham Radio T-Shirts, Caps, Mousepads, also vintage designs! Designs include logos from Amperex, Collins, Eico, Eimac, Gonset, Hallicrafters, Hammarlund, Heathkit, Johnson, Knight, Mars, National, Swan, Skywarn and others.
-
Produce QSL & post cards, stickers, ID cards, calendars, certificates, awards, membership applications, log and call-books, rubber stamps,T-shirts, brochures, advertising materials.
-
Custom Design T-Shirt with No Minimum order (you can buy just 1) and NO Setup Fee. Will transfer your Favorite Images from JPEG's and E-mail attachments and from photo prints to Custom T-shirts with unbelievable Crispiness and Clarity of true Color Reproduction. Our image transfer paper is 11.5" x 8" heavy duty industrial grade.
-
Manufacturer of custom belt buckles,coffee mugs,t-shirts,sweat shirts,maine gifts,name tags,call tags and awards for police, fire, sheriff, ham radio and amateur radio clubs
-
A family of small size QRP SSB transceivers for the 15 MHz. Includes a cigarette pocket size QRP transceiver and a larger shirt-pocket transceiver.
-
UV-3R Review at G4ILO Blog with long textual review, pictures and some sound files
-
Printing QSL cards, postcards, advertising materials, bussines cards, calendars, stickers, t-shirts, gold printed advertisements, rubberstamps, and QSL lables from Bulgaria. See also LZ QSL Printing Service web site
-
High quality ham radio t-shirts. Made by Hams for Hams. Made in the USA.
-
Printer in Poland, now provide T-shirts, CAP with Call sign, dust cover for yaesu, icom, kenwood, elecraft transceivers, acom amplifiers and more. QSL printing has been dismissed
-
Blog related to ham radio t-shirt and accessory designs
-
Custom embroidered hats, shirts and jackets to Ham Radio Operators small businesses, ARES, ARRL and RACES clubs across America.
-
This article details the design and construction of a compact 20-meter QRP SSB transceiver by Pete Juliano, N6QW, measuring just 2 x 4 x 2 inches—small enough for a shirt pocket. Inspired by a 1963 QST design and refined from a prior version, it employs bilateral circuits, a 4.9152 MHz homebrew crystal filter, switched-crystal VXO for 60 kHz coverage (14.160-14.220 MHz), and standard components like ADE-1L mixers and IRF510 PA for 1W output. Key innovations include a double-sided PCB skeletal frame for shielding and isolation, Vectorboard sub-assemblies, and ultra-miniature relays. The bilateral receiver/transmitter shares stages, omitting AGC for simplicity, while a W3NQN LPF and optional 10W external amp enable DX contacts. Tune-up focuses on crystal matching and bias for linearity. Videos on YouTube demonstrate performance, confirming excellent stability and audio. Total cost nears $100, prioritizing portability over features like CW.