NRG founder

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LeeCavanagh
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Re: NRG founder

Post by LeeCavanagh » Tue Dec 10, 2024 9:51 am

rigmo wrote: Tue Dec 10, 2024 8:55 am
LeeCavanagh wrote: Sat Dec 07, 2024 12:20 am The NRG name came from me,
Can you tell us more abut that?
Not too much to say.
I went over to see Stephen like we did every now and then, and remember we were in his kitchen discussing the fact he was being forced to give up the trading name he started. I suggested the name NRG (infact I had been running a station on and off called NRG which used the alfasound feel the energy package) it was fresh in my mine, and i explained that it felt like a good fit…. NRG was short and indicated power. I was thrilled the group of us all like the name suggestion, we went off to the pub to talk about a website refresh, I rebranded the website and the rest is history.

The company was later split by Christine after Stephen’s death, Gareth bought into it in New Zealand. And Andrew carried on selling on eBay in the uk
Sony ST 920 QS

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rigmo
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Re: NRG founder

Post by rigmo » Tue Dec 10, 2024 10:19 am

Albert H wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 11:12 pm Just found the Practical Wireless circuit:

First Rig.png
hard to find today. 6L6 807 hard if it's old, 6J5 can go ECC82, 6J5 is from 1936. 807 from 1960. 6L6 is still used today for audio.

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Re: NRG founder

Post by teckniqs » Tue Dec 10, 2024 11:03 pm

LeeCavanagh wrote: Tue Dec 10, 2024 9:51 am And Andrew carried on selling on eBay in the uk
Not heard of Andrew, who is he?

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rigmo
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Re: NRG founder

Post by rigmo » Fri Dec 13, 2024 12:15 am

challeng.. pelas if any of you have in archive can you share with me ?
this was link https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgr ... 26ZH3TMsJM
taken from hire..
http://www.gareth.net.nz/hollings/Radio ... page2).htm

The link below is a statement written by stephen in 1999 regarding Paul hollings steeling his designs and company name veronica, veronica was establish by stephen the transmitters were designed also by stephen.https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgr ... 26ZH3TMsJM




As 3 mtr jim stated the pll transmitters stephen sold evolved from a vfo exciter that operated at quarter of the frequency with a pll that was programmed with wire jumpers, this then evolved into the 50meg version with virtually the same pll circuit with a few improvements such as dip switch frequency selection way before paul hollings got involved.

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Re: NRG founder

Post by rigmo » Fri Dec 13, 2024 8:49 am

https://groups.google.com/g/alt.radio.p ... 26ZH3TMsJM
Stephen J Moss made an improvement version of the Kallitron oscillator.
The oscillator is based on the Kallitron oscillator developed by Mesny in France in the 1930s.
It was an early way of developing powerful VHF signals from valves with limited upper frequency response.

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Re: NRG founder

Post by Albert H » Wed Feb 05, 2025 11:37 pm

I was pleased to be able to help Stephen out when Hollings tried to shut him down. He asked me if I had any way to make his products significanly different to the ones from "down the road", I improved his Pro II stereo coder into the Pro III. For the first time, the coder audio input sockets could be labelled "left" and "right", because the 4013 bistable would always start in the correct phase (I used the other half of the 4013 as a monostable to guarantee the starting phase of the bistable that was driving the multiplexing switches). I also added the facility to switch it to mono - with a single pole switch! It also gained mono / stereo indication with a couple of LEDs which looked good. I also modified the pre-emphasis circuit so that 50µs, 75µs or none could be selected with little push-fit jumpers.

Stephen upgraded the Pro II exciter from 1 Watt to 4 Watts and eliminated the output stage trimmers by designing a properly broadband two-stage amplifier. One evening, we discovered that it was possible to develop a "conjugate" match situation in the final stage by adding resistors to reduce the voltage available to the final transistor, and develop exactly 1 Watt out (and some warm resistors!) instead of the full 4 Watts.

I suggested the use of the 74HC4059, to allow BCD programming of the output frequency. There were plans to move to BCD-coded rotary switches for frequency selection, but Stephen had stock of tens of thousands of those little DIP switches, so we stayed with those, with the BCD option for a future upgrade. The use of the '4059 made frequency setting much easier than the old "Look-up" table - if you knew about binary representations of denary numbers, you could easily work out the settings.

Stephen had developed the Out-Of-Lock Powerdown circuit several years before and it was always fitted as a little board beneath the exciter in the rigs that were used for RSLs. I took the EasyPC files for the PCB and added the OLPD circuit as a permanent feature (without increasing the PCB size), so that - unlike the competitor product - it wouldn't ever transmit on the wrong frequency.

There were a number of things that made the product stand out from the crowd: much more power, effective harmonic suppression, no in-band spurs whatsoever, and even little details like the inclusion of plastic pillars and nylon screws that allowed the use of the "naked" PCD by standing it off the surface, and a small, screw-in dummy load containing a pair of 1 Watt carbon 100Ω resistors and a note to warn against using this with the board set to 4 Watt output!

"Down the Road", the clown H****ngs had tried to make his board "no tune", by saturating the driver and output stages in an effort to get his paltry 1 Watt right across the band. It didn't work, of course, and generated a huge amount of wideband noise. He also tried to "simplify" the VCO by removing the "unneccessary" balance transistor - ensuring lots of ½f and 1½f breakthrough. The clown also removed many of the "excessive" decoupling capacitors. Just for amusement, we bought one of these worthless kits anonymously, and assembled it according to the instruction sheet. The "performance" of the thing was a sick joke - it was a wideband noise generator with a bit of carrier on the chosen frequency!
"Why is my rig humming?"
"Because it doesn't know the words!"
;)

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Re: NRG founder

Post by rigmo » Thu Feb 06, 2025 9:33 pm

The CLOWN! ..

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Re: NRG founder

Post by Persona Non Grata » Sun Feb 23, 2025 6:40 pm

The Anoraks UK ads were c 1987/8

I seem to remember him doing kits for Band 1 and 3 links as well but all trace of these seems to have disappeared online.

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