Review: QDX Kit

The QDX v3 kit arrived yesterday and today I’ve finished the build.

QDX

This transceiver is tiny, about the size of a playing card deck. It does FSK modes on four bands: 80, 40, 30 & 20m. Five watt output and a great receiver from what I can see so far.

The QDX connects to a computer with a single USB cable that comes up as a sound card and does TS-440 compatible CAT control – so very convenient for possible field use.

It can be built for 9 or 12V operation – I went with 12V as I have it more available.

The assembly manual is the best I’ve ever followed. Clarity and detail with lots of handy tips from Hans. The board comes with all the surface mount components already soldered in place so the main job for the constructor is a few diodes, capacitors, transistors and winding the toroids. 

Page 34-76 of the assembly manual describes the design and could be a book on its own rivalling the recent Software Defined Radio Transceiver Book by Peter & Purdum.

I took my time and had a break after a few toroids. One of the joints didn’t connect but following Hans’ advice to check continuity found this problem at the time. On initial power up I blew a 25A fuse – which was a bit alarming – but I think it was my DC connector shorting. All was fine with another connector.

Running with wsjt-x on Ubuntu Linux 22.04 got immediate spots on each of the bands (shown here in WSPR Watch).

I can’t recommend this kit too highly.

By Peter Marks. (First published on blog.marxy.org)