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This interface board was designed for experimenting with RTTY, SSTV and other digital modes with my Yaesu FT-817ND transceiver using DroidRTTY and DroidSSTV applications on an Android phone.
The idea of this circuit is not new. Many of its variants were published in the internet and the difference between them is relatively small. Usually different versions use different transistors and diodes and some resistors and capacitors values vary but the circuit remains the same.
One of my sources was the article An AFSK Interface for Android Smartphones by Wolfgang Philips, W8DA, and Martin Huyett, K0BXB, which was published in the May 2012 issue of QST.
More circuits are available in links section of this document.
J1 connects the interface to a phone or tablet. It is a generic 4-pole 3.5mm jack. Its pinout is the same as that of Android phones. Using this jack makes connecting the phone or tablet easy requiring only a simple 3.5mm-to-3.5mm TRRS jack cable. No custom cables are required.
R1 and R2 prevent short-circuit of phone outputs. Their values are not critical and can be in the range of 10 to 51 Ohm. R1 connects the output of the right channel and R2 connects the left. One channel or both can be used. If only one channel is used, only the corresponding resistor should be assembled. In this configuration a wire jumper can be used instead of a resistor.
Transistor Q1 is a common emitter voltage amplifier stage. It is powered from the phone by the DC voltage which usually powers external microphone.
The bias resistors of this stage are R3, R4 and R5. These three resistors allow building two different amplifier types. All the three should not be assembled at the same time. Assembling R5 only creates a shunt feedback stage. In this case R3 and R4 are not required. If R3 and R4 are assembled the amplifier becomes voltage divider biased stage without AC feedback. In this case R5 is not required. These three resistor footprints leave some field for experimenting which is an essential part of the amateur radio.
Diodes D1 and D2 rectify the amplified signal and create DC bias for Q2 which pulls down the PTT line of the transceiver. Different versions of this circuit use different types of diodes. Some use silicon diodes, others use Shottkys. My assembled version worked well with 1N4148 silicon diodes. Replacing them with BAT46 Shottkys increased the rectifier output voltage. Germanium diodes like 1N34 or 1N60 should work as well in this circuit.
Transistor Q2 pulls the PTT line of the transceiver down. The PTT line of FT-817ND has pull-up resistors network with total resistance of 11 kOhm. It means that the current needed to pull the PTT voltage down to zero is 0.45 mA. It requires bias current of Q2 to be about 20 microamperes. In actual circuit the voltage on C6 will be about 0.8V which will be enough to bias Q2 into saturation.
The design features two connectors for connecting a transceiver. P1 is a 6-pin mini-DIN connector which is pin-compatible with DATA connector of Yaesu FT-817. The second connector, J2 is 4-pole 3.5mm jack. It is a generic connector which can also be used to connect transceivers. The 3.5mm TRRS jack does not have PTT line. Two connectors are put for redundancy. In actual circuit only one or both can be assembled depending on requirements.
Both connectors have 1200 bps and 9600 bps lines and switch SW1 is used to choose between the two data rates. If only one data rate is required, the corresponding switch pins can be shorted with a wire jumper without assembling the switch itself.
C7 and C8 are RF-blocking capacitors thus ceramic ones are preferred. Other components are not critical. Most of them can be pulled of old electronic equipment.
If you like exploring oscilloscope output, doing some math and want more details about this circuit, please refer to circuit_description.md.
If you like simulating circuits, refer to circuit_simulations.md for LTspice simulations.
- Enclosure box.
- Small size.
- Easy-to-get parts.
- Adjusting potentiometers from front or rear panel.
- No proprietary connectors.
- Easy assembly.
- Good repeatability by other hams.
- Options for experiments.
When I started the development, I decided to assemble the device in an enclosure box. The box had to be inexpensive and easily available from different electronic parts suppliers.
After some search I found a blue aluminium box 58x50x24mm. The box is relatively cheap and can be purchased from many sellers on eBay or AliExpress. The box fits a PCB of 50x50mm which is enough for this project and has front and rear panels which can be easily modified by drilling or cutting.
The PCB was designed using KiCAD software as a simple two-layer board with through-hole mounted parts.
The PCB was produced by PCBWay who did a great job. Solder mask was made blue in order to match the color of the enclosure box.
The design uses through hole parts which make PCB assembly quite simple. Connectors, trimmer potentiometers and switch are new. All the other components were recovered from old electronic equipment.
I haven't yet completed drilling the front and the rear panel of the box, so the device isn't yet fully assembled. The following photos show that the PCB perfectly fits in the chosen box.
Cuba to Israel. Nice DX!
The developers of Wolphi-Link interface report the following issue:
WolphiLink might not work properly if you transmit on VHF or UHF while having your antenna to close to your phone/tablet and WolphiLink. The PTT might get triggered by RF and would not release.
I experienced the same behavior on VHF and UHF bands especially when trying to transmit in AM, FM or PKT modes. When the transmitting antenna is close to the board the transceiver remains in TX mode and the only way to release it is to turn it off. The issue usually disappears when the phone is disconnected even if its cable is still connected to the jack.
I suppose that the cables between the transceiver and the phone become a counterpoise of the transmitting antenna and the generated RF causes transceiver keying. I don't know if this issue exists wiht other transceivers.
Till now, I couln't find any solution. On HF bands and when the transmitting antenna is far from the transceiver the device functions properly.
Update: After connecting a shielded cable between the transceiver and the interface, the problem is almost completely.
A properly assembled device should require only RX and TX level adjustments using R10 and R11 trimmer potentiometers.
If I ever do another revision of this board, I'd like to make the following improvements:
- Adding an RF-blocking capacitor to the PTT line.
- Adding PTT line to J2 3.5mm jack.
- Adding a capacitor in parallel to R5 for limiting the bandwidth of the amplifier.
- Removing ground conductor from the component layer.
- Improving the thermal relief on the grounded pads. Today they are sometimes hard to solder.
- Increasing the space between R10 and R11 to fit larger trimmer resistors.
- Adding a TX inhibit switch which will disable triggering the PTT line. It may be useful to prevent notifications or other non radio-related sounds to key the transceiver.
- Designing a Phone/Radio interface: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3
- http://www.darc-husum.de/android-interface.html
- https://www.dk9jc.de/blog/equipment/109-ft-817-smartphone-interface-for-pskdroid-and-aprsdroid
- DroidSSTV manual
- Wolphi-Link interface
- http://161wt001.blogspot.com/2013/11/construction-interface-sstv-psk-rtty.html
- https://oe6fte.com/wolphilink-android-interface/
- https://g4fre.blogspot.com/2014/02/rtty-and-psk31-transceive-with-nexus-7.html
- http://wa8lmf.net/ham/tonekeyer.htm
- https://9m2pju.blogspot.com/2012/05/droidpsk-psk-on-your-android-phone.html
- Enclosure box: http://www.ebay.com/itm/171186884639
You are more than welcome to contact me with any questions, suggestions or propositions regarding this project. You can:
- Visit my QRZ.COM page
- Visit my Facebook profile
- Write me an email to iosaaris =at= gmail dot com