I was lucky enough to secure another MTR (Mountain Top'er) kit from Steven Weber, this from his second batch released at the end of March 2013. I had been keeping an eagle eye on the AT Sprint Yahoo group for news of the release of another 149 MTR kits. I was amazed when an email came through just as I was getting up for work early one morning announcing that orders were being taken for the new run of MTRs. I ordered straight away but I was worried that I might have missed my chance to own another MTR as I worked out that it had taken 40 minutes for the original email to come through to my phone. I need not have worried though as I later learned that only twelve kits had been spoken for by the time I ordered.
My order confirmation came through pretty quickly from Steve, I was over the moon to have secured another MTR, this time with a neat custom case. The package arrived around 2 weeks after ordering, Steve stated that he had bought the entire stock of shipping boxes from his local Post Office and did not have enough to send out all the orders! My kit had been held back a while whilst Steve sourced some more boxes.Once the reference oscillator is set, the BFO needs to adjusted, this is simply a case of measuring the audio output with an oscillscope and peaking the internally generated audio tone for maximum amplitude using a single trimmer capacitor (CT1).
All that is needed to be done after calibration and setting of the BFO is the align the RX band trimmers. I used my FT817 (my only commercial HF rig) to provide a signal to tune my SOTA dipole using a manual ATU. I tuned for 1:1 VSWR at the radio and then swapped the FT817 for the MTR and peaked the two trimmers for the first band for maximum response. I then repeated the whole operation again for the second band.
The rig is very pleasing to use, I built my second MTR for 20m and 30m, and I find 30m is great for weekend SOTA when there is also a big contest on the bands. I like the new case, but I probably prefer my original Altoids tin MTR, it's so much more compact and lighter too! My Altoids tin MTR weighs in at 80g, whilst my new MTR with it's pretty case weighs in at 170g! There are some minor circuit board changes to the second run kits and it might be all in the mind but i find I prefer the audio of my first run MTR.
KD1JV has produced a great little kit that works very well. I'm sure these MTR's will be sought after for years to come. There are apparently 299 MTRs out in the wild and it's unclear whether there will be any more produced, Steven was making noises about making a more complex rig next time including DSP.
| 1% of the world's population of MTRs! |
Colin
