K2 Manual Rev F
K2 Manual Rev F
K2 Manual Rev F
O W N E R’S M A N U A L
ELECRAFT
K2
160-10 Meter
S S B/CW
Transceiver
Owner’s Manual
Revision F, January 29, 2004
Elecraft • www.elecraft.com P.O. Box 69 • Aptos, CA 95001-0069 (831) 662-8345 • Fax: (831) 662-0830
2 ELECRAFT
Table of Contents
1. INTRODUCTION.................................................................................................................................................................................... 3
2. SPECIFICATIONS ................................................................................................................................................................................ 5
4. CONTROL BOARD............................................................................................................................................................................ 13
6. RF BOARD.......................................................................................................................................................................................... 33
7. FINAL ASSEMBLY............................................................................................................................................................................. 78
8. OPERATION........................................................................................................................................................................................ 81
PARTS LIST.............................................................................................................................................................................APPENDIX A
SCHEMATIC.............................................................................................................................................................................APPENDIX B
BLOCK DIAGRAM..................................................................................................................................................................APPENDIX C
PHOTOGRAPHS.....................................................................................................................................................................APPENDIX D
TROUBLESHOOTING............................................................................................................................................................APPENDIX E
100-WATT STAGE AND RS232 I/O (K2/100) .......................................................APPENDIX G (SUPPLIED WITH KPA100 OPTION)
ELECRAFT 3
1. Introduction
The Elecraft K2 is a high-performance, synthesized, CW/SSB The K2 is an intermediate-level kit, yet you’ll be pleasantly surprised
transceiver that covers all HF bands. It is a true dual-purpose at how uncomplicated it is to build. All of the RF (radio-frequency)
transceiver, combining the operating features you’d expect in a circuitry is contained on a single board, while two plug-in modules
home-station rig with the small size and weight of a rugged, provide front panel and control functions. Wiring is minimal, unlike
go-anywhere portable. traditional kits which depend on complex wiring harnesses.
The basic K2 operates on 80-10 meter CW, and provides over 10 A unique feature of the K2 is that it provides its own built-in test
watts of RF output. If you prefer a full-power station, you can equipment, including a digital voltmeter, ammeter, wattmeter,
complete your K2 as a K2/100 at any time by adding the internal complete RF probe, and frequency counter. These circuits are
100-watt final stage (KPA100 option). Assembly of the KPA100 completed early in assembly, so they're ready to be used when you
is covered in Appendix G, a separate manual supplied with the begin construction and alignment of the RF board. We also provide
KPA100 kit. complete troubleshooting and signal-tracing information.
You can customize your K2 by choosing from a wide range of In addition to this owner’s manual, you’ll find extensive support for
additional options: the K2 on our website, www.elecraft.com. Among the available
materials are manual updates, application notes, photographs, and
SSB adapter with optimized 7-pole crystal filter information on new products. There’s also an e-mail forum; sign-up
Automatic antenna tuner (20 W internal or 150 W external) is available from the web page. It’s a great way to seek advice from
160-m adapter with receive antenna switch the K2’s designers and your fellow builders, or to tell us about your
60-m adapter with low-level transverter interface first QSO using the K2.
Computer control interface (RS232)
Noise blanker We’d like to thank you for choosing the K2 transceiver, and hope it
Digital or analog audio filter, each with real-time clock meets your expectations for operation both at home and in the field.
Internal 2.9-Ah rechargeable battery
Programmable band decoder Wayne Burdick, N6KR
High-Performance VHF and UHF transverters Eric Swartz, WA6HHQ
For a complete description of available options, see page 113. In Pre-Wound Toroids Available
addition to the options, a companion enclosure the same size and
style as the K2 is available for those who wish to build their own You can obtain a set of pre-wound toroids for the K2 if you prefer
matching station accessories (model EC2). not to wind them yourself. Refer to our web site for details.
4 ELECRAFT
2. Specifications
All measurements were made using a 14.0 V supply and 50-ohm
load unless otherwise indicated. Values are typical; your results will Frequency ranges,2 MHz
be somewhat different. Specifications are subject to change without Basic kit 3.5-4.0, 7.0-7.3,
notice. (See option manuals for additional specifications.) 10.0-10.2, 14.0-14.5, 18.0-18.2,
21.0-21.6, 24.8-25.0, 28.0-28.8
160 m (opt.) 1.8-2.0
General 60 m (opt.) 5.0-5.5
Size VFO
Cabinet 3.0" H x 7.9" W x 8.3" D Stability < 100 Hz total drift typ. from
(7.5 x 20 x 21 cm) cold start at 25° C
Overall 3.4" H x 7.9" W x 9.9" D
(8.5 x 20 x 25 cm) Accuracy3 +/- 30 Hz over a 500 kHz range
(typ) when calibrated
Weight 3.3 lbs. (1.5 kg), excluding options
Resolution 10 Hz
Supply voltage 9 to 15 VDC;
reverse-polarity protection; Tuning steps 10 Hz, 50 Hz, and 1000 Hz nominal
internal self-resetting fuse (other step sizes available via menu)
Current drain, Memories 20 (10 assigned to 160-10 m
Receive 120-150 mA in minimum-current Bands; 10 general-purpose)
configuration; 180-250 mA typical
RIT/XIT range +/- 0.6 to +/- 4.8 kHz (selectable);
Transmit1 2.0 A typical at 10 watts; 10-40 Hz steps depending on range.
programmable current limiting Fine RIT mode steps 2-3 Hz typ.
Frequency control PLL synthesizer w/single VCO
covering 6.7-24 MHz in 10 bands;
2
fine steps via DAC-tuned reference The K2 can receive well outside the indicated bands, but this extended
range is not specified or guaranteed Transmit ranges may be limited for
export to some countries. The K2/100 (KPA100 option) limits transmit from
1
Current varies with band, supply voltage, configuration, and load 25-27.999 MHz to 10 watts or less.
3
impedance. We recommend a minimum 3.5-amp power supply. See Frequency Calibration Techniques (page ).
6 ELECRAFT
Transmitter Receiver
Preamp On Preamp Off
Power output range <0.5 W to >10 W (typ.); Sensitivity (MDS) -135 dBm -130 dBm
power setting resolution 0.1 W, 3 rd-order intercept 0 to +7.55 +10
accuracy 10% @ 5 W 2 nd-order intercept +70 +70
Min. supply voltage 9.0 V min for 2 watts out Dynamic range,
recommended4 9.5 V min for 5 watts out Blocking 125 dB 133 dB
10.0 V min for 7 watts out Two-tone 96 97
10.5 V min for 10 watts out
I.F. 4.915 MHz (single conversion)
Duty cycle 5 W, 100%; 10 W, 50%
Selectivity,
Spurious products -40 dB or better @ 10 W (-50 typ) CW 7-pole variable-bandwidth crystal
filter, approx. 200-2000 Hz
Harmonic content -45 dB or better @ 10 W (-55 typ) SSB6 7-pole fixed-bandwidth crystal
filter, 2.2 kHz typ.
Load tolerance 2:1 or better SWR recommended;
will survive operation Audio output 1 watt max. into 4-ohm load
into high SWR
Speaker internal: 4 ohm, 3 W;
T-R delay approx. 10 ms-2.5 sec, adjustable Rear-panel jack for external speaker
Keyer
Keying modes Iambic A and B; adjustable weight
5
Varies with band.
4 6
For reference only; not guaranteed. If higher power than shown here is to be With optional SSB adapter. Other CW and SSB fixed crystal filter options
used for a given supply voltage, monitor transmitter output signal. may be available
ELECRAFT 7
Side RF
Panel
Front
Bottom
Panel
Cover
Figure 3-1
8 ELECRAFT
Board-to-board Connectors
The circuit boards in the K2 are interconnected using board-to-board connectors, which eliminates nearly all hand wiring. Gold-plated contacts
are used on these connectors for reliability and corrosion resistance.
Figure 3-3 shows a side view of the PC boards and board-to-board connectors. As can be seen in the drawing, the Front Panel board has a
connector J1 which mates with right-angle connector P1 on the RF board. Similarly, right-angle connector P1 on the Control Board mates
with J6 on the RF board. (Not shown in this drawing are two additional right-angle connectors on the Control board, P2 and P3, which mate
with J7 and J8 on the RF board.)
These multi-pin connectors are very difficult to remove once soldered in place. Refer to Figure 3-3 during assembly to make
sure you have each connector placed correctly before soldering.
Front Panel
Control Board
P1
RF Board
J6
J1
P1
Figure 3-3
ELECRAFT 9
150 pF: These are correctly marked "151" on one side, but the
other side may be marked #21 ASD, where "#21" looks like "821."
10 ELECRAFT
All resistor and RF choke color bands are provided in the text along
with their values. However, it is helpful to familiarize yourself with
the color code to allow you to identify these components without
having to refer to the text or parts list each time. Tolerance
(gold = 5%,
The color-code chart, Figure 3-4, shows how to read the four color silver = 10%)
bands on 5% resistors. 1% resistors are similar, except that they use Multiplier
five bands (three significant digits, multiplier, and tolerance). For
example, a 1,500 ohm (1.5 k) 5% resistor has color bands Second Digit
BROWN, GREEN, and RED. A 1.5 k, 1% resistor has color bands First Digit
BROWN, GREEN, BLACK, BROWN. The multiplier value is 1
rather than 2 in the 1% case because of the third significant digit. Color Digit Multiplier
Because 1% resistors have color bands that are sometimes hard to Black 0 x1
distinguish clearly, you should always check their resistance using Brown 1 x 10
an ohmmeter. Red 2 x 100
Orange 3 x 1K
The markings on RF chokes reflect their value in microhenries
(µH). Like 5% resistors, chokes use two significant digits and a Yellow 4 x 10K
multiplier. Example: an RF choke with color bands RED, VIOLET, Green 5 x 100K
BLACK would have a value of 27 µH. Blue 6 x 1M
Violet 7
Tools Gray 8
White 9
The following specialized tools are supplied with the K2:
Silver -- x .01
.050" (1.3 mm) Allen Wrench, short handle Gold -- x 0.1
5/64" (2 mm) Allen Wrench, long handle
Double-ended plastic inductor alignment tool Figure 3-4
ELECRAFT 11
In addition to the tools supplied, you will need these standard tools: In some steps you will actually be installing multiple components of
a particular type. In this case the instructions will be followed by a
Fine-tip soldering iron, 20-40 watt (temperature-controlled table listing all of the components to be installed, so you won’t
preferred, with 700 or 800°F tip [370-430°C] need to refer to the parts list during assembly. The order that the
IC-grade, small-diameter (.031") solder (DO NOT use acid- components are installed corresponds to their PCB locations.
core solder, water-soluble flux solder, additional flux, or
solvents of any kind, which will void your warranty) Do not skip any assembly steps; you may find that you’ve
Desoldering tools (wick, solder-sucker, etc.) installed one component that hinders the installation of
Needle-nose pliers another.
Small-point diagonal cutters, preferably flush-cutting
Small Phillips screwdriver Forming component leads: In a few cases you’ll find that the
Jeweler’s flat-blade screwdriver space provided for a component on the PC board is larger than the
distance between the leads on the part itself. In such cases, you’ll
While not required, the following items are recommended: need to carefully bend the leads out and then down to fit the given
space. Always use needle-nose pliers to accomplish this task, and
DMM (digital multimeter) for doing resistance and voltage bend the leads–don’t tug on them. This is especially important
checks. A DMM with capacitance measurement capability is with capacitor leads, which are fragile.
strongly recommended (see Identifying Capacitors).
Magnifying glass Bottom-Mounted Components
Conductive wrist strap
A number of components in the K2 are mounted on the bottom of
Assembly Notes the PC boards to improve component spacing or for electrical
reasons. Component outline symbols are provided on both sides of
each board, so it will always be clear which side a particular
i This symbol is used to alert you to important information
component goes on. You’ll be able to tell the top of the board from
the bottom easily: the top side has far more parts. Bottom-
about assembly, alignment, or operation of the K2. mounted parts are identified on the schematic by this symbol:
Photographs
You should review the photographs in Appendix D to get an idea of
what the completed PC board assemblies look like. Top/bottom interference: In a few cases, top-mounted parts may
interfere with the trimming and soldering of a bottom-mounted
Step-by-Step Assembly part. In this case, pre-trim the leads of the bottom-mounted part
before final placement, and solder it on the bottom rather than on
Each step in the assembly process is accompanied by a check-box: the top. (Since all holes are plated-through, you can solder on
either side.)
12 ELECRAFT
Integrated Circuits and ESD When you solder components on these boards, the solder fills the
plated holes, making excellent contact. This means that you do not
The K2 transceiver uses integrated circuits and transistors that can need to leave a large "fillet" or build-up of solder on top of the pads
be damaged by electrostatic discharge (ESD). Problems caused by themselves. A small amount of solder will do for all connections.
ESD can often be difficult to troubleshoot because components may
only be degraded, at first, rather than fail completely. Unfortunately, removing components from double-sided PC boards
can be difficult, since you must get all of the solder back out of the
To avoid such problems, simply touch an unpainted, grounded hole before a lead can be removed. To do this, you'll need solder
metal surface before handling any components, and occasionally as wick and a vacuum desoldering tool (see techniques below).
you build. We also recommend that you take the following anti-
static precautions (in order of importance): The best strategy for avoiding de-soldering is to place all
components properly the first time. Double-check values and
Leave ESD-sensitive parts in their anti-static packaging until orientations, and avoid damaging parts via ESD.
you install them
Ground yourself using a wrist strap with a series 1 megohm When removing components:
resistor (do NOT ground yourself directly, as this poses a shock
hazard) Don't pull a lead or pin out of a hole unless the solder has been
Make sure your soldering iron has a grounded tip removed, or you are applying heat. Otherwise, you can literally
Use an anti-static mat on your work bench pull out the plating on the plated-through hole.
Limit soldering iron contact to a few seconds at a time.
Use small-size solder-wick, about 0.1" or 2.5 mm wide. Use the
IC Sockets wick on both the top and bottom pads when possible. This
helps get all of the solder out of the hole.
Sockets are used for only the largest ICs. You should not use Buy and learn how to use a large hand-operated vacuum
sockets for the other ICs because they tend to be unreliable and can desoldering tool, such as the "Soldapullt," model DS017LS.
cause problems due to added lead length. Since sockets are not used Small solder suckers are not effective.
in most cases, you must double-check the part number and With ICs and connectors, clip all of the pins at the body first,
orientation of each IC before soldering. then remove all of the pins slowly, one at a time. You may
damage pads and traces by trying to remove a component
Soldering, Desoldering, and Plated-Through Holes intact, possibly leaving a PC board very difficult to repair.
Invest in a PC board vice with a heavy base if possible. This
CAUTION: Solder contains lead, and its residue can be makes parts removal easier because it frees up both hands.
toxic. Always wash your hands after handling solder. If in doubt about a particular repair, ask for advice from
Elecraft or from a someone else with PCB repair experience.
The printed circuit boards used in the K2 have circuitry on both Our e-mail reflector is also an excellent source for help.
sides ("double-sided"). Boards of this type require plated-through
holes to complete electrical connections between the two sides.
ELECRAFT 13
4. Control Board
The Control board is the "brain" of the K2. It monitors all signals
during receive and transmit, and handles display and control
functions via the Front Panel board. The microcontroller, analog i There are five sizes of 4-40 machine screws provided with
and digital control circuits, automatic gain control (AGC), and audio the kit. The relative sizes of the screws are shown below for
amplifier are located on this board. identification purposes (not to scale). All of the screws are black
anodized except for the 7/16" (11 mm) screws. The 3/16" (4.8
Components mm) pan-head screws are the most numerous, and will be referred to
as chassis screws throughout the manual. There is only one flat-
head, 3/16" screw.
i Review the precautions described in the previous section
before handling any IC’s or transistors. These components can be Flat-head, 3/16” (4.8 mm)
damaged by static discharge, and the resulting problems are often
difficult to troubleshoot.
Open the bag of components labeled CONTROL and sort the Pan-head, 3/16” (4.8 mm)
parts into groups (resistors, diodes, capacitors, etc.). If any of the (chassis screws)
components are unfamiliar, identify them using the illustrations in
the parts list, Appendix A. Pan-head, 3/8” (9.5 mm)
Locate the Control board. It is the smallest of the three K2
PC boards, labeled "K2 CONTROL" on the front side, in the lower
right-hand corner. The lower left-hand corner is notched. Pan-head, 7/16” (11 mm)
Open the bag labeled MISCELLANEOUS and empty the
contents into a shallow box or pan. This will prevent loss of any of
the small hardware while allowing you to locate items as needed. Pan-head, 1/2” (12.7 mm)
i The Allen wrenches are located in a small bag with the Identify all of the 4-40 screws and sort them into groups.
MISCELLANEOUS items. These wrenches may have been oiled
during manufacturing. Remove the wrenches and wipe off the oil, if
any, then discard the bag.
14 ELECRAFT
Assembly Solder all of the resistors, then trim the leads as close as
possible to the solder joints. Some builders prefer to trim the
leads before soldering. Either method can be used.
The side of the Control board with most of the components is
the top side. With the top side of the Control board facing you and Locate RP6, a 5.1 k, 10-pin resistor network. ("RP" means
the notch at the lower left, locate the position of resistor R5, near "resistor pack," another name for resistor networks.) RP6 is usually
the left edge. The label "R5" appears just below the resistor’s labeled "770103512." Check the parts list for alternative resistor
outline. network labels if necessary. Pin 1 of RP6 is indicated by a dot.
Install a 33-k resistor (orange-orange-orange) at R5, with the Locate the component outline for RP6 at the left end of the
orange bands at the top and the gold band (indicating 5% tolerance) PC board. Install the resistor network so that the end with the dot
at the bottom. Make sure it is seated flush with the board, then bend is lined up with the "1" label.
the leads on the bottom to hold it in place. Do not solder this
resistor until the remaining fixed resistors have been installed in the Make sure the resistor network is seated firmly on the board,
next step. then bend the leads at the far ends in opposite directions to hold it
in place. (Do not trim the leads.) Do not solder RP6 yet.
Install the remaining fixed resistors, which are listed below in
left-to-right PC board order. The resistors should all be oriented
with their first significant-digit band toward the left or top. This
i Components with many leads are difficult to remove once
will make the color codes easier to read if you need to re-check the soldered. Double-check the part numbers and orientation.
values after installation. Check 1% resistors with an ohmmeter.
Install the remaining resistor networks in the order listed
below. Do not solder them until the next step.
Note: When multiple items appear on one line in a component list
such as the one below, complete all items on one line before
moving on to the next, as indicated by the small arrow. (In other __ RP1, 3.9 k, 10 pins (770103392) __ RP7, 33 k, 8 pins (8A3.333G)
words, install R5 first, then R2, then go to the second line.) __ RP2, 82 k, 8 pins (77083823) __ RP3, 47 k, 10 pins (10A3.473G)
__ RP5, 470, 10 pins (10A3.471G) __ RP4, 82 k, 8 pins (77083823)
__ R5, 33 k (ORG-ORG-ORG) ⇒ __ R2, 3.3 M (ORG-ORG-GRN)
__ R3, 10 k (BRN-BLK-ORG) __ R4, 5.6 k (GRN-BLU-RED) Solder the resistor networks. (No need to trim the leads.)
__ R6, 100 (BRN-BLK-BRN)
Install potentiometer R1 (50 k), located at the left side of the
__ R7, 1.78 k, 1% (BRN-VIO-GRY-BRN) board. R1 will sit above the board due to the shoulders on its pins.
__ R8, 100, 1% (BRN-BLK-BLK-BLK) Hold it in place (flat, not tilted) while soldering.
__ R9, 806 k, 1% (GRY-BLK-BLU-ORG)
__ R10, 196 k, 1% (BRN-WHT-BLU-ORG) Install the 82 mH shielded inductor (L1) as shown by its
component outline. Make sure the L1 is pressed down onto the PC
__ R16, 10 (BRN-BLK-BLK) ⇒ __ R17, 3.3 M (ORG-ORG-GRN) board as far as it can go, then bend the leads slightly to hold it in
__ R21, 270 k (RED-VIO-YEL) __ R20, 2.7 ohms (RED-VIO-GLD) place while soldering.
ELECRAFT 15
Install the 1N4148 diodes listed below. D1 is in the upper left- Install and solder the electrolytic capacitors listed below,
hand corner of the PC board. If a diode has only one band, the end which are polarized. Be sure that the (+) lead is installed in the hole
with the band (the cathode) should be oriented toward the banded marked with a "+" symbol. The (+) lead is usually longer than the
end of the corresponding PC board outline. If a diode has multiple (–) lead, and the (–) lead is identified by a black stripe (Figure 4-1).
bands, the widest band indicates the cathode end.
+
__ D1, 1N4148 __ D2, 1N4148 -
X1 X2
Install Q12 near the upper left-hand corner of the PC board.
Align the large flat side of Q12 with its PC board outline as in
Figure 4-2. The body of the transistor should be about 1/8" (3 mm)
above the board; don’t force it down too far or you may break the
leads. Bend the leads of the transistor outward slightly on the
bottom to hold it in place. Solder Q12.
Solder and trim the leads of these transistors. Install U4 (LM2930T-8) and U5 (78M05, 7805T, L7805,
etc.), forming the leads as indicated (Figure 4-4). Fold the pins over
Install crystals X1 and X2 so that they are flat against the the shaft of a small screwdriver to create smooth bends. After
board. X1 is 5.068 MHz and is located near the notch in the lower inserting the leads into the proper holes, secure each IC with a 4-40
left-hand corner. X2 is 4.000 MHz, and is located near the center x 3/8" (9.5 mm) machine screw, #4 lock washer, and 4-40 nut.
of the board. (These regulators may have either plastic or metal mounting tabs.)
Solder the crystals. Use smooth
Prepare two 3/4" (19 mm) jumpers wires from discarded bend, not sharp
component leads. These short jumpers will be used to ground the
crystal cans in the next step.
Install a 40-pin IC socket at U6. (The microcontroller will be Install the 10-pin, dual-row connector, P4 (to the left of P5).
inserted into the socket in a later step.) Orient the notched end of The short ends of the 10 pins are inserted into the board. P5 must
the socket to the left as shown on the PC board outline. Bend two be seated flat on the board before soldering.
of the socket’s diagonal corner leads slightly to hold the socket in
place, then solder only these two pins. If the socket does not Install P7, a 3-pin male connector (to the right of P5). The
appear to be seated flat on the PC board, reheat the solder joints short ends of the 3 pins are inserted into the board.
one at a time while pressing on the socket.
Install a shorting jumper onto the two right-hand pins of P7.
Solder the remaining pins of the 40-pin socket.
At the upper left and right corners of the board are short
jumpers, labeled with ground symbols ( ). Use discarded
i The connectors used in the following steps have plastic component leads to make 3/4" (19 mm) long U-shaped wires for
each jumper (Figure 4-6). Solder the jumpers on the bottom of the
bodies that can may melt if too much heat is applied during
board, with the top of the U-shape approx. 1/4" (6 mm) above the
soldering, causing the pins to be mis-positioned. Limit soldering
board.
time for each pin to 3 seconds maximum (1 to 2 seconds should be
adequate).
Locking
i The pads used for R18 and R19 are shared with connectors
Tab J1 and J2, which are labeled on the top side of the board. These
connectors are provided with the KAF2 and KDSP2 audio filter
options. You should not install J1 and J2, or an audio filter option,
until after K2 assembly and checkout have been completed.
Top side of
PC Board Install short wire jumpers at R18 and R19. Make the jumpers
from discarded component leads as you did above, but keep them
flat against the board. Solder the jumpers on the top side.
Top side of
PC Board
i The connectors along the bottom edge of the board (P1,
P2 and P3) will be installed next. It is very difficult to remove them
once they are soldered. Follow all instructions carefully. P3
Hold the Control board vertically as shown in the side view
below (Figure 4-7). The top side of the board--the side with most of
the components--should be to the right.
Turn to page 8 and review Figure 3-3, which shows how the Figure 4-8
Control board plugs into the RF board. P1, P2, and P3 will all be
installed on the top side of the Control board as shown. Install P3, the 20-pin, dual-row right-angle connector (Figure
4-8). Use the same method you used for P1. Do not solder P3 until
Position 6-pin right-angle connector P1 as shown in the side
you are sure that it is seated properly.
view below (Figure 4-7). Do not solder P1 until the next step.
The plastic part of the connector must be seated flat against the PC Install P2, the 36-pin, dual-row, right-angle connector. Use the
board, and the pins must be parallel to the board. Do not bend or same method you used for P1 and P3.
trim the pins on the bottom of the board.
Figure 4-7
Flared
Solder just the two end pins of P1, then examine the placement
of the connector. If P1 is not flat against the board, re-heat the
solder on the end pins one at a time while pressing firmly on the Straight
connector. Once it is in the right position, solder all pins. Do not
trim the leads. Figure 4-9
ELECRAFT 19
Note: For U1, the IC type supplied may be either NE602 or SA602.
Install U2 in the orientation shown by its PC board outline, i When the microcontroller is pressed in its socket, you must
near the upper left-hand corner of the PC board, but do not solder
be careful to avoid jamming its pins. Make sure that all pins are
it yet. Make sure the notched or dimpled end is lined up with the
lined up with the associated holes in the socket before pressing
notched end of the PC board outline. Even though the outline is
down on the IC. Watch the pins on both rows as you press down,
covered when the IC is installed, you can still verify that the IC is
re-aligning them with the socket holes individually if necessary.
installed correctly by looking at pin 1. The PC board pad
corresponding to pin 1 will be either oval or round.
Insert the microcontroller, U6, into its socket. Make sure that
pin 1 on the IC itself is lined up with the pin 1 label near the lower
i left-hand corner of the PCB outline. Note: The revision label on
You may overheat the IC pins or PC pads if you take an the IC (usually white) may not be oriented the same direction as the
excessive length of time to solder. After a few tries, you should be text printed on the IC. Do not use the label as a guide--use the
able to solder an IC pin in about 1 or 2 seconds. notch or dimple to identify pin 1.
20 ELECRAFT
Slip the two lengths of insulation over the leads of a .01 µf capacitor ("103"). This is a new component (C46), not present on the board.
i Figure 4-11, below, shows the bottom side of the Control board. Components shown with dotted outlines are located on the top side.
On the bottom side of the Control board, solder C46 between R21 and the base lead of Q8 as shown below. Keep lead length short.
Figure 4-11
A 22-µF electrolytic capacitor has also been added (C45). Solder C45 as indicated above, between U8 pin 2 (+ lead) and U8 pin 14 (- lead).
Carefully compare your installation of C46 and C45 to Figure 4-11. Make sure the leads of these capacitors are soldered to the indicated
pads. Verify the orientation of the (+) and (-) leads on C45.
ELECRAFT 21
Components
Figure 5-1
Open the bag labeled FRONT PANEL and sort the parts into
groups (resistors, diodes, capacitors, etc.). Observe anti-static
precautions when handling ICs and transistors. Position pushbutton switches S1 and S2 as shown in Figure 5-2,
using the switch spacing tool to set the switch height. Make sure all
Locate the front panel PC board, which is just a bit larger than four legs of each switch are centered in their holes, then gently
the Control board. It is labeled "K2 FP" on the top side, in the push each switch until it is resting flush against the switch-spacing
lower right-hand corner. tool. (Caution: switch pins are fragile.) Do not solder yet.
Assembly S1 S2
Figure 5-3 __ RP2, 120, 10 pins (770101121) (dotted end should be near "RP2" label)
__ RP1, 100 k, 10 pins (10A1.104G) (dotted end near "RP1" label)
Figure 5-3 shows a side view of a switch that is properly mounted
(spacing tool not shown). The leads of the switches will just be
visible on the bottom of the board. Proper switch height is Install and solder the diodes listed below, observing proper
important for maintaining an even appearance. orientation as described in the previous section.
Once you’re satisfied that S1 and S2 are seated correctly, __ D4, 1N5817 __ D5, 1N5817 __ D6, 1N5817
solder the leads (on the bottom side of the board). Leave the
spacing tool in place until you’ve finished soldering both switches.
Install and solder the following capacitors. C9 is located on the
Install the remaining switches, S3-S16, using the same bottom of the board and must be soldered on the top side.
technique. When you get to S8 through S16, you may install three
switches at a time using the spacing tool. __ C1, .047 (473) __ C2, .01 (103) __ C3, .047 (473)
Install another 3/16" (4.8 mm) diameter x 1/4" (6.4 mm) long Install the audio-taper potentiometer, R3, in the lower left-
round standoff on the top of the PC board, on the left side of the hand corner. (The PCB is labeled "AUDIO" at R3.) Push only
large square hole in the middle of the board. The standoff mounting on the frame, not the shaft. Make sure that the potentiometer body
hole is below C2. Use the same hardware as indicated in Figure 5-5, is parallel to the PC board and is pressed against the board as far as
including two #4 lock washers and one chassis screw. it will go before soldering.
Install two 1/4" (6.4 mm) diameter x 1/2" (12.7 mm) long hex Install the four 5-k linear-taper potentiometers at R1, R2, R4,
standoffs on the bottom of the board (Figure 5-6). The holes for and R5. (The PC board is labeled "LINEAR" at each pot.) Verify
these standoffs are indicated by large pads on the top and bottom of correct positioning as you did in the previous step.
the board. Use one lock washer and a chassis screw for each
standoff. Insert the lock washer between the standoff and PC board.
i Before installing J1 in the following step, review
Figure 3-3 (page 8) to be sure you have J1 on the correct
side of the board.
Bottom of
PCB The front panel attaches to the RF board via J1, a 20-pin
single-row female connector. Install J1 on the bottom side of
the board (Figure 5-7). Solder just two pins, one at either end.
Bottom side of
PC Board
Figure 5-6
J1
Identify the two different types of panel-mount
potentiometers. Four of them are 5-kohm linear-taper types,
labeled "B5K". The fifth is an audio-taper type, labeled "A5K".
They may be physically identical or have slightly different shafts,
body colors, etc. Figure 5-7
Re-heat the two end pins and press the connector down until J1
i When you install the panel-mount potentiometers is seated flat against the board, then solder the remaining pins.
in the next two steps, do not push on the shafts, which may
damage the part. Push only on the metal frame.
26 ELECRAFT
LED
diffuser
Square Keycap
Insert U1 into its socket on the bottom of the board. (This spacers (2)
must be done before continuing with LCD installation, since the
LCD’s presence will make pressing U1 into its socket much more
difficult.) Be sure that U1 is completely seated with no bent pins.
diffuser
Locate the LCD backlight assembly, which is about 3" (7.5 cm)
long. It includes the diffuser and two small LEDs, one at each end. D2 D3
Do not remove the backing from either side of the diffuser.
Make sure the LEDs in the LCD backlight assembly are pressed
into the diffuser and are not mis-aligned or loose. Figure 5-10
Place two 3/4" (19 mm) long spacers over the leads of each
backlight LED as shown in Figure 5-9.
ELECRAFT 27
Figure 5-12
28 ELECRAFT
Front Panel Final Assembly Locate the green plastic bargraph filter and two pieces of
Locate the front panel chassis piece. Place it on a soft cloth double-backed tape. These items will be found in a small bag with
to protect the finish and labeling. the serial number label.
Figure 5-13
30 ELECRAFT
Remove the brown paper backing from the other side of each Turn the front panel face up.
piece of tape, then turn the filter/tape assembly adhesive-side down.
Carefully center the green plastic filter over the inside of the Position the clear plastic LCD bezel over the LCD and
bargraph LED hole (Figure 5-14). bargraph holes as shown in Figure 5-15. The bezel goes on the
outside of the panel.
Green Film
E L E CR A F T K2 T R AN SC E I VE R
Tape
Figure 5-15
ELECRAFT 31
Remove the insulation from four 1.5" (38 mm) lengths of Insert the front panel PC board assembly into the front panel.
green hookup wire. The pushbutton switch caps on both sides of the LCD should
protrude slightly as shown in the side view, Figure 5-17a.
Install the bare wires on the bottom of the front panel PC
board, using the four pads below the large rectangular hole (Figure Note: the board/panel assembly will not be rigidly held in place
5-16). until it is mated with the RF and Control boards in a later section.
Solder and trim the wires on the top side of the board. The
wires will be connected to the optical encoder, Z1, in a later step.
(a) (b)
Figure 5-17
Figure 5-16
Remove the protective plastic film from the face of the LCD.
A 1/4" (6.4 mm) standoff on the PC board should now be
Be careful not to scratch the glass. Caution: Do not peel off the
visible through the hole just to the left of the encoder mounting
LCD glass, just the thin protective film. The LCD will not be
hole. Secure the panel to this standoff using the 4-40 x 3/16"
usable if you lift the glass itself.
(4.8 mm) flat-head screw as shown in Figure 5-17b.
Remove the hardware from the shaft of the encoder, Z1, and
discard the lock washer, which will not be used. Insert the encoder
through the hole in the Front Panel board (Figure 5-18a).
Cut 1/8" (3 mm) off the end of each of the encoder's four
connector pins.
32 ELECRAFT
Attach the encoder to the inside of the front panel using the Attach small knobs to the potentiometer shafts, starting with
nut and flat washer only. Figure 5-18 shows the side view (a) and the KEYER and POWER controls. Each knob's two set screws can
front view (b) with encoder properly installed. The encoder has a be tightened using the small Allen wrench (.050", 1.3 mm). The
small metal tab near the shaft that will only allow it to be installed knobs should be mounted as close as possible to the panel without
one way. Do not over-tighten the nut. (Note: the green encoder touching it. Align the pointers per panel labeling.
bushing is metal, not plastic.)
Locate the 1" (25 mm) dia. by 1/16" (1.6 mm) thick felt
washer, and place it over the encoder nut (Figure 5-19). The washer
should be seated on the front panel, with the nut inside it.
(a) (b)
Figure 5-18
Figure 5-19
Attach the four encoder wires you installed earlier to the
matching pins on the back of the encoder. Each wire should be Place the large knob on the encoder shaft. Push the knob on
wrapped securely around the base of its matching pin, with no slack until it just touches the felt washer. If the knob does not spin
in the wire. Trim and solder the wires, making sure they aren't freely, move it out slightly. If the knob is not contacting the felt
shorting to each other or to the encoder body, which is conductive. washer at all, it may "drift" slightly once it stops spinning.
Set all potentiometers to midway in their rotation. Using the larger Allen wrench (5/64", 2 mm), tighten the two
set screws alternately, in small increments.
i In the next step, a small knob may fit too tightly onto its
potentiometer shaft. If so, rotate the shaft until it bumps up against i At this point, the pushbutton switches may not all protrude
one of its stops, place the knob at the top of the shaft, and rotate an equal distance. The switch height will become equalized once the
it slowly in the same direction while gently pressing it down. front panel assembly is mated to the RF board in a later step.
ELECRAFT 33
6. RF Board
Most of the K2’s receiver and transmitter circuits are located on
the RF board, including filters, oscillators, and RF amplifiers. The Components
front panel and Control boards plug into the RF board, and the
chassis pieces are designed to form a tight enclosure around it (see
photos in Appendix D). In addition, many option boards plug i Review anti-static precautions before handling transistors
directly into the RF board to minimize wiring. or ICs.
Assembly and testing of the RF board is broken into three parts: Open the bags labeled RF and sort the components into related
groups. In later steps you’ll sort some of the components according
Part I: The DC and control circuits are installed so that the front to value to reduce the likelihood of assembly errors.
panel and Control boards can be plugged in and tested. The I/O
controller (U1 on the RF board) is also installed and tested at this Locate the RF board and place it in front of you with the
time. Once this phase of assembly is completed, you’ll have the component side up (the side with most of the parts), and the front
K2’s built-in test equipment available for testing and aligning the edge facing you (the edge with the irregular cutouts). Throughout
remaining circuits. this section we’ll refer to the different areas of the board in terms
of their proximity to you. For example, "front-left" means the
Part II: Synthesizer and receiver components are installed and corner closest to you on the left.
tested. By the end of Part II you’ll have the K2 receiving on 40
meters.
Take a moment to familiarize yourself with the RF board using Install 2-D fasteners at 5 locations on the bottom of the board
Figure 6-1 to identify the major sections. If you flip the board over as shown in Figure 6-3. Secure each fastener from the top side of
you’ll see that there are a few components on the bottom of the the board using two chassis screws (black, 3/16" [4.7 mm]) and two
board, primarily in the transmitter section. #4 lock washers. The washers go on the top side of the board.
T-R Switch
Holes offset
Band-Pass XMTR Low-pass from center
Filters Filters
U1 (I/O Controller)
Figure 6-2
Synthesizer RCVR
(Bottom of board)
2-D Fasteners
(5)
Figure 6-1
Assembly, Part I
Locate a 2-D fastener and hold it vertically as shown in Figure 1/4"
6-2. Looking at a side with two holes, note that the holes are offset Standoffs
from the center. When you install the fasteners in the following
step, be sure to position them so that the holes in the fastener are
shifted in the same direction as the holes in the PC board outlines
on the bottom of the board.
Figure 6-3
ELECRAFT 35
Make sure that the 2-D fasteners on the edges line up with the Install R1 and R2 (220 ohms, RED-RED-BRN), near the back
edge of the PC board and do not hang over. If they hang over or do left corner of the board.
not match their component outlines, they are installed backwards.
Install two 3/16" (4.8 mm) diameter by 1/4" (6.4 mm) long i To avoid stray signal coupling, all capacitors on the RF
round standoffs on the bottom of the board at the locations board must be mounted as close to the PC board as possible (without
identified in Figure 6-3. Secure these standoffs from the top side damaging the leads or their epoxy coating).
with chassis screws and #4 lock washers. Do not put lock washers
between the bottom of the board and the standoffs. Install C1 and C2 (.001 µF, "102"), which are on the left edge.
Turn the board back over to the top side. Install the 28-pin IC Install electrolytic capacitors C105 and C106 (2.2 µF), located
socket at U1, near the middle of the board (Figure 6-1). The near the front-left corner.
notched end of the socket should be at the left. Make sure the
socket is flat against the PC board before soldering. (U1 itself will Install R35 and R36 (82, GRY-RED-BLK) just to the right of
be installed in a later step.) C105.
Turn the board back over and verify that all of the relays are __ C77, .001 (102) __ C196, .047 (473)
in the correct orientation and are seated flat on the board. __ R69, 100 k (BRN-BLK-YEL) __ R66, 2.7 k (RED-VIO-RED)
Install the self-resetting fuse, F1, near D10. F1 is yellow and Install D8 and D18 (1N4148), on the bottom of the board,
looks like a square-bodied capacitor. One side is labeled "G300". toward the right edge. Make sure the banded end of each diode is
aligned with the band on its component outline.
Install the key jack, J1, at the back-left corner of the board.
Before soldering, make sure that the jack is aligned with its PC
board outline. i In the steps that follow you’ll install the connectors that
mate with the control and Front Panel boards. These connectors
Install the headphone jack, J2, on the small board extension must be installed properly to ensure reliable mechanical connection.
near the front left corner. The pins on J2 are not very long, so They are very difficult to remove once installed, so follow all
they will be nearly flush with the bottom of the board. Solder the instructions carefully. Review Figure 3-3 (page 8) for correct
pin closest to the front edge first (ground), then verify that the placement.
jack is seated flat on its plastic nubs before soldering the remaining
pins. Install the 6-pin, single-row female connector, J6, which is just
left of the power switch. It must be seated vertically on the board
Install the power switch, S1, at the right front corner. (S1's and must not be tilted (Figure 6-4). Solder just one pin near the
key cap will be installed later.) center of J6.
Install the DC input jack, J3, at the back right corner. The 3
leads on the jack must be lined up with the slot-shaped holes in the J6
component outline. If the holes are a tight fit, press firmly until
the connector snaps into position.
Install the following components near U1 (at the middle of Figure 6-4
the board). You may need to confirm the part number of U2
(78L06), since it is easy to confuse it with U8 (78L05). Use a
If J6 does not appear to be completely flush with the board,
magnifying glass if necessary.
re-heat the soldered pin and press down. Once it is installed
__ U2 (78L06) __ C139, 0.1 (104) correctly, solder the remaining pins.
__ C140, .001 (102) __ R64, 100 (BRN-BLK-BRN)
Install the 20-pin, dual-row female connector, J8, near the
front left corner of the board. Use the same technique you used for
Install the ceramic resonator, Z5, near U1. (Z5 looks like a J6. This connector must be seated flush with the board before
capacitor with 3 pins.) It can be installed in either orientation. soldering.
Install R65 (10 k, BRN-BLK-ORG) on the bottom of the Install 36-pin dual-row female connector J7 in the same
board, near U1. manner as J6 and J8.
ELECRAFT 37
Visual Inspection
Figure 6-5 Set switch S1 on the RF board to the "OFF" position. (Plunger
OUT is OFF, plunger IN is ON.)
Solder just the two end pins of P1.
Resistance Checks
Look closely at P1 to make sure that its plastic support is
pressed down as far as it will go, and that the pins are parallel to the Perform the following resistance checks.
board. If not, re-heat the soldered ends while pressing it into place.
Once it is seated properly, solder the remaining pins. Test Point Signal Name Res. (to GND)
R115, right end (near S1) 12V IN > 500 ohms
To the left and right of the I/O controller, U1, you’ll find two
U1 pin 1 6V > 500 ohms
short jumpers labeled " " or "GND" (on the top side of the
U1 pin 4 K13 control > 20 k
board). Form 3/4" (19 mm) long U-shaped ground jumpers and
install them at these locations as you did on the control and Front U1 pin 9 OSC1 > 20 k
Panel boards. Use discarded component leads. U1 pin 10 OSC2 > 20 k
U1 pin 28 AUXBUS > 20 k
On the bottom of the board you’ll find two additional ground R1 (end near R2) DOT/PTT >1M
jumpers, one near the middle and the other near the back edge. R2 (end near R1) DASH >1M
Install U-shaped ground jumpers in these two locations.
38 ELECRAFT
Locate the two side panels. Remove any masking tape from
the panels using the same technique described in the Front Panel
Holes offset
section, taking care not to scratch the outer surfaces. away from
panel
Arrange the two panels as shown in Figure 6-6, and verify that
they are mirror images of each other. The 2-D fasteners to be
attached in the next step go on the inside surface, which has bare
aluminum areas that were masked during painting. (Note: the actual
size and shape of masked areas may vary.)
Figure 6-7
Left Side Panel
(inside surface)
Install two 2-D fasteners on each side panel at the locations
indicated by small rectangles in Figure 6-6. Use one chassis screw to
hold each fastener to the side panel (see Figure 6-7). The two
unused holes on each fastener must be offset away from the side
panel.
Figure 6-6
ELECRAFT 39
Each oval foot has a notch into which the bail will be inserted.
Install one of the oval feet on the bottom cover using two 7/16"
(11 mm) 4-40 screws, #4 lock washers, and 4-40 nuts. The notch in
the foot should be facing inwards (toward the other foot). The nuts
and lock washers go on the inside of the bottom cover.
Install the tilt bail, then the second oval foot. The bail should
be compressed firmly between the two feet. You may need to adjust
the positions of the feet slightly before tightening the hardware.
Make sure the two feet are at exactly the same distance from
the front edge of the bottom cover. If they are not equally spaced,
the tilt stand may "rock" when in use.
Figure 6-8
Figure 6-9
40 ELECRAFT
Secure the front panel to the side panels and RF board using 4
chassis screws. (Refer to the photos in Appendix D.) You may need
to make slight adjustments to the 2-D fasteners at the top edge.
Figure 6-10
ELECRAFT 41
Plug the Control board assembly into the RF board, with the Once you have tried the Control board extraction technique
component side of the Control board facing backwards. (Refer to described above, plug the Control board back in for the tests that
the photos in Appendix D.) All three connectors on the Control follow.
board must be lined up with the three connectors on the RF board at
all pins. Secure the front panel and Control boards together using two
chassis screws (Figure 6-12). The upper left and right corners of the
Make sure the Control board is pushed as far down as it will go; Control board may be touching the 2-D fasteners, or there may be a
it should be flat against the RF board along its entire edge, with all small gap.
three connectors properly mated.
i If the Control board does not plug in easily, you may have
one or more connectors installed incorrectly.
Figure 6-12
Long-handled
Push the black keycap onto S1’s plunger until it snaps into
allen wrench place. Test S1’s action (push on, push-off). Leave the switch in the
OFF position (out).
Figure 6-11
42 ELECRAFT
Alignment and Test, Part 1 Locate P7 on the Control board. A shorting jumper should be
installed onto the two pins of P7 nearest the "P7" label.
In this section you’ll test most of the circuits on the Control board
and front panel. Along the way you’ll become familiar with basic For the remaining test and alignment steps, you’ll need a well-
operation of the K2, including use of the front panel switches, regulated 12-14 V power supply or a battery. A power supply rated
display, and menu. at 300 mA or more of output current will suffice for the tests in
Parts I and II, but higher currents (3-3.5 A) will be needed for
Before proceeding with initial test, turn to the first page of the transmitter tests in Part III.
Operation section of the manual to familiarize yourself with the
K2’s front panel layout. Do not turn on power to the K2 at this If your power supply or battery does not already have a plug
time. that mates with the power jack (J3), use the supplied mating plug
and prepare a suitable power cable. The center lead of the plug is
The Tap/Hold Rule positive (+).
Turn the K2 off and wait for a few seconds, then turn it back Tap the P R E / A T T N switch three times. You should hear relays
on. The display should now show EL EC RA FT for about two switch each time.
seconds, followed by the frequency display. Now that the EEPROM
is initialized, this is the display you should always see on power-up. RF Probe Assembly
The "R" and "T" in "ELECRAFT" appear in lower-case letters due
to the limitations of the seven-segment LCD characters. The Switch Spacing Tool used during Front Panel can now be used
Tap the D I S P L A Y switch once to select voltage/current as the PC board for the RF probe. All parts for the probe, including
a ground alligator clip, 2 feet of RG174 coax, and banana plugs for
display. The display should now show something similar to this:
a DMM, are supplied with the kit. You can assemble the probe at
any time, using the instructions on page 9 of Appendix E.
E1 2 . 0 i 0 . 0 8
This would indicate that the power supply voltage (E) is about 12.0 Voltmeter Probe Assembly
V, and the supply current (I) is about 80-100 mA.7
If you do not have a DMM (digital multimeter), you can use the
Optical Encoder Test simple DC voltage probe shown below in conjunction with the built-
in voltmeter. The crimp pin and 2-pin housing can be found in the
Tap the D I S P L A Y switch to return to the frequency display. MISCELLANEOUS components bag.
Turn the VFO knob in both directions and verify that the Assemble the voltage probe as shown in Figure 6-13 using
displayed frequency changes accordingly. green-insulated hookup wire. No ground connection is needed since
you will be measuring voltages inside the K2.
Tap the R A T E switch to the right of the knob to change the
tuning rate, and repeat the VFO test at each rate.
Hookup wire,
12” (0.3m)
Relay Test Housing
Tap B A N D + . After a short delay the K2 will switch to the
next band. At the same time, you’ll hear one or more relays.
Tap the B A N D + switch 7 more times to verify that you hear Tinned lead, Crimp pin
relays being switched with each band change. Note: The 1.8 MHz 0.5” (13mm)
(160 m) and 5 MHz (60 m) bands will not appear in the band list
unless the associated options are installed. This can be done only
after assembly and alignment have been completed. Figure 6-13
Move the voltage select jumper (Control board, P7) toward Tap M E N U again to bring up the menu. Turn the VFO knob now,
P5. Select voltage/current display mode using the D I S P L A Y switch. and you’ll see the other menu entries and their parameters scroll
The voltage reading on the LCD should go to 0 0 . 0 . by. (You can also tap the B A N D + or B A N D - switches to scroll
through menu entries.) Scroll the menu until you see
To test the voltage probe, touch the tinned end of the hookup
wire to pin 1 of the I/O controller, U1 (RF board). The voltage I NP HA ND
displayed on the LCD should be approximately 6 V.
This menu entry is used to select the keying device. HA ND means
Return the voltage select jumper to the "12 V" position. that the key jack is configured for a hand key or external keyer.
Note: Always disconnect the voltage probe when it is not in use. Press and hold the E D I T switch for 1/2 second to activate the EDIT
It may cause shorts or noise pickup if left inside the K2 during function. (Remember the TAP/HOLD rule: when you HOLD a
normal operation switch in, you activate the function indicated by the lower label on
the switch.) The display should now show:
Menu Tutorial
I NP HA ND
We’ll present a brief tutorial on using the menu here. A complete
list of menu functions can be found in the Operation section. Notice that the underline has moved to the parameter (HA ND).
This tells you that you’re in EDIT mode, and that turning the VFO
Tap the M E N U switch on the K2. The first entry will be displayed: knob will now change the parameter for the current menu entry.
You can also change the parameter using B A N D + and B A N D - .
ST L 0 4 0
Turn the VFO knob now to see the various keying input selections.
This is the sidetone level menu entry. 0 4 0 is the associated P DL n and P DL r configure the key jack for a keyer paddle, wired
parameter, in this case the sidetone volume setting. The row of for either normal (tip = dot) or reverse (tip = dash) operation.
annunciators under S T L serves as an underline, indicating that
turning the VFO knob will change the menu entries. Tap the M E N U switch again to exit EDIT mode. The underline
should return to the menu entry.
Tap the M E N U switch again and you’ll return to the frequency or
voltage/current display, depending on what display mode was
selected when you entered the menu.
ELECRAFT 45
Using the Calibration Functions Separate the braid from the center conductor at both ends.
Remove 1/4" (6 mm) of insulation from each center conductor. At
Scroll the menu until you see C A L O FF. This is the entry point
one end, cut the braid off completely right at the coax jacket (a
into the calibration sub-menu, which you’ll be using during
ground connection will not be needed for frequency measurements).
alignment.
The braid should be twisted into a fine bundle at the other end.
Enter EDIT mode by holding E D I T as before, moving the underline Solder crimp pins onto the center conductor and shield at the
to the O FF parameter. Then turn the VFO knob to see the various housing end of the cable. Solder quickly, so that the heat from
C A L functions, including FC T R (frequency counter), C UR soldering does not melt the center insulator of the coax and cause a
(transmit current limiting), t P A (KPA100 temperature shield-to-center short.
calibration), S L O / S HI (S-meter calibration), FI L (crystal
filter configuration), and P L L (VFO calibration). Insert the pins into the crimp housing as shown in Figure 6-14.
They should snap into place. Each crimp pin has a small tab on the
Once you select a C A L function, holding E D I T again activates the back that latches into a hole in the housing.
function. The selected C A L function remains active until you tap
M E N U again, which returns you to the menu. Another tap of M E N U Trim the leads of the 10 pF axial-lead capacitor down to 1/4"
returns you to the normal K2 display. (6 mm). Solder one end to the center conductor of the coax cable.
Plug the frequency counter probe assembly into P6, which is at Tap M E N U to turn off the sidetone, then scroll up to the
the far left end of the Control board (as viewed from the front of sidetone pitch menu entry (ST P) using the VFO knob or by
the transceiver). The connector can only be plugged in one way. tapping the B A N D + switch. The display will show
Turn on the K2 and tap M E N U to bring up the menu, then ST P 0 . 6 0
scroll to the C A L menu entry. Hold E D I T , then scroll the C A L
parameter until the display shows C A L FC T R. Hold E D I T again This indicates that the sidetone pitch is set for 0 . 6 0 kHz (600 Hz).
to activate the frequency counter function of the C A L sub-menu. Hold E D I T to turn on the sidetone, then vary the VFO knob. The
The LCD should show 0 0 0 0 0 . 0 0 . (The frequency counter pitch of the sidetone should change to match the display.
circuitry is sensitive, so it may pick up a stray signal and show it on
the display.) Keyer
To test the counter, you can read the frequency of the 4 MHz
oscillator on the Control board. Touch the counter probe tip to the In the following steps you’ll test the keyer (audio tone generation
left side of trimmer capacitor C22, which is just below U1, the only). This tests the keyer jack, speed control, and potentiometer
microcontroller. The LCD should now read within +/- .02 kHz of read circuits, including the A-to-D converter on the
0 4 0 0 0 . 0 0 .8 microcontroller.
Remove the frequency counter probe. Tap M O D E until C is displayed at the right end of the LCD,
indicating CW mode.
Audio Amplifier and Tone Generator Test Plug a keyer paddle into the key jack. The plug must be stereo
(2 circuit). A mono plug will key the transmitter continuously. (A
Plug in a pair of low-impedance (4 to 32 ohm) headphones, mating stereo plug for the keyer jack is supplied with the kit.)
stereo or mono.
Using the menu’s I NP entry, set up the keyer input for either
Tap M E N U and scroll to the sidetone level menu entry P DL n or P DL r as described previously.
(S T L ). Hold E D I T to activate the sidetone. You should now hear a
clean 600-Hz audio tone. Turning the VFO knob should vary the Adjust the KEYER control. As soon as you turn it, the display
volume. should show the keying speed (approx. 9-50 WPM).
Notice that turning the AF GAIN control does not affect the While listening with headphones, test the keyer paddle to
sidetone volume. The sidetone is injected into the AF amplifier verify that both dot and dash are working.
after the volume control, so AF GAIN affects only the receiver
volume. Note: No sidetone will be generated when LSB or USB mode is
selected (L or U).
8
This is not a valid indication of how well the 4 MHz oscillator is
calibrated, since this oscillator is used as the reference for the frequency
counter itself. The 4 MHz counter will be calibrated in a later step.
ELECRAFT 47
Make sure the RF GAIN control is rotated fully clockwise. If you have an Elecraft XG1 receiver test oscillator or other
calibrated signal source, set it for 50 microvolts (-73 dBm) and
Locate potentiometer R1 on the Control board (right side, as verify that the S-meter indicates S-9. If not, adjust C A L S HI .
viewed from the front of the K2).
Set your DMM for DC volts. Connect the (-) lead of the
Bargraph Current Test
DMM to one of the ground jumpers or to the K2 chassis ground.
In the following steps, you’ll test the current measurement circuit
Touch the (+) lead to pin 5 of U2 on the Control board. (U2 is by using the bargraph LEDs to establish a known current drain.
located just above trimmer R1. Pin 5 is the pin nearest diode D1.)
Enter the menu and verify that G RP H (LED bargraph mode)
Adjust R1 for a reading of 3.80 volts on the DMM. This is the is set to DO T , not to BA R or O FF.
suggested setting, but it can be adjusted later to suite the operator.
Set the RF GAIN control for minimum gain. Segment 10 of
the LED bargraph should now be on if you have done the S-meter
i The S-meter must be realigned anytime the AGC
adjustment as described above.
threshold setting is changed. S-meter alignment is covered Using the menu, select the L C D menu entry. Change the
in the following steps. parameter from NI T E to DA Y . At this point you’ll see the LCD
backlight turn off, and segment 10 of the LED bargraph will
S-Meter Alignment become much brighter.
Using the menu, select the C A L S L O function (S-meter Exit the menu and tap D I S P L A Y to switch to voltage/current
zero). Hold E D I T a second time to activate it. mode. Write down the voltage and current readings.
Turn the VFO knob until you see only the left-most segment Use the menu to change the G RP H mode to BA R. All 10
of the LED bargraph lit. Then turn the knob a bit more clockwise segments of the LED should now be on.
until this LED just turns off.
Exit the menu and check the current. It should now be about
Exit the C A L S L O function by tapping M E N U . Enter the 0.16 to 0.18 amps higher.
menu again and select C A L S HI (S-meter full-scale sensitivity).
Use the menu to change G RP H to DO T , and L C D to NI T E.
Turn RF GAIN fully counter-clockwise. Adjust the VFO knob
until bargraph segment 9 lights, then turn it a bit more counter-
clockwise until segment 10 just turns on (right-most segment).
i The combination of L C D DA Y and G RP H BA R can
result in high peak current drain on receive. DO T or O FF are
Turn the RF GAIN control back to its full clockwise position. preferred for battery operation. See Advanced Operating Features.
48 ELECRAFT
__ R9, 100 k (BRN-BLK-YEL) ⇒ __ R16, 100 k (BRN-BLK-YEL)
Assembly, Part II __ R10, 470 (YEL-VIO-BRN) __ R31, 10 k (BRN-BLK-ORG)
__ R32, 10 k (BRN-BLK-ORG) __ R33, 15 k (BRN-GRN-ORG)
In this section you’ll install the components for the synthesizer __ R30, 120 (BRN-RED-BRN) __ R28, 27 k (RED-VIO-ORG)
and receiver circuits. Most of the components to be installed are on __ R20, 270 (RED-VIO-BRN) __ R21, 100 k (BRN-BLK-YEL)
the front half of the board (see Figure 6-1). After all of the parts __ R22, 3.3 M (ORG-ORG-GRN)
are installed, individual stages will be aligned and tested. Detailed
troubleshooting procedures are provided in the Troubleshooting __ R25, 2.7 k (RED-VIO-RED) __ R24, 2.7 k (RED-VIO-RED)
__ R15, 33 (ORG-ORG-BLK) __ R14, 10 k (BRN-BLK-ORG)
section should you need them (Appendix E). The supplied RF probe __ R13, 10 k (BRN-BLK-ORG) __ R12, 560 (GRN-BLU-BRN)
will be very useful if you need to do signal tracing. RF probe __ R17, 100 k (BRN-BLK-YEL) __ R11, 560 (GRN-BLU-BRN)
assembly instructions start on page 9 of Appendix E. __ R5, 2.7 k (RED-VIO-RED) __ R78, 22 (RED-RED-BLK)
__ R6, 100 (BRN-BLK-BRN) __ R7, 68 (BLU-GRY-BLK)
In some steps a large number of components will be installed, then __ R8, 100 (BRN-BLK-BRN)
soldered as a group. Check for unsoldered leads after completing
each group. A final complete check will be done later. __ R92, 33 (ORG-ORG-BLK) __ R91, 820 (GRY-RED-BRN)
__ R93, 820 (GRY-RED-BRN)
Remove the screws holding the Control board to the Front __ R72, 470 (YEL-VIO-BRN) __ R95, 2.7 k (RED-VIO-RED)
Panel board, then unplug the Control board. To avoid damaging any __ R96, 2.7 k (RED-VIO-RED) __ R74, 47 (YEL-VIO-BLK)
Control board components, use the long-handled Allen wrench as __ R73, 2.7 k (RED-VIO-RED) __ R97, 33 (ORG-ORG-BLK)
described in Part I.
__ R80, 680 (BLU-GRY-BRN) __ R81, 1.8 k (BRN-GRY-RED)
Remove the bottom cover (six screws). __ R79, 1.8 k (BRN-GRY-RED)
__ R82, 18 (BRN-GRY-BLK) __ R101, 10 k (BRN-BLK-ORG)
Remove the screws from the front panel assembly and unplug it __ R107,100 k (BRN-BLK-YEL) __ R111 5.6 k (GRN-BLU-RED)
from the RF board. Pull it straight out from the bottom edge, near __ R112, 22 (RED-RED-BLK) __ R90, 470 (YEL-VIO-BRN)
__ R89, 100 (BRN-BLK-BRN) __ R88, 470 (YEL-VIO-BRN)
the middle of the panel. This may be easier to do with the __ R84, 18 (BRN-GRY-BLK) __ R85, 150 (BRN-GRN-BRN)
transceiver sitting on its right side so that you can steady it with __ R83, 4.7 ohms (YEL-VIO-GLD)
one hand and pull with the other.
Remove the side panels by taking out the two screws along the Install the resistor networks. Start with RP2, which is in the
bottom edge of each panel. front left-hand corner. Align the pin 1 mark on each resistor
network with the pin 1 end of its component outline.
Install the following 1/4-watt resistors, orienting them so that
the first band is at the left or toward the back of the board. The __ RP2, 10 k, 8 pins (8A3.103G)
resistors are listed in the order they appear on the RF board, __ RP6, 100 k, 8 pins (8A3.104G)
starting with R9 (near the left edge, about halfway back). __ RP4, 100 k, 6 pins (6A3.104G)
__ RP5, 100 k, 6 pins (6A3.104G)
Note: Remember to complete each line of resistors before
proceeding to the next line (i.e., install R9, then R16, then R10). NOTE: RP3 is not used. The Thermistor PC board will be installed at
this location as described on the next page.
ELECRAFT 49
Locate the PLL Upgrade kit, which should include the The remaining 8 holes on one edge of the board are used as
Thermistor PC board and all other parts listed below. leads to insert into the pads provided for the original resistor
network, RP3. Solder one wire into each of the holes, with most of
Ref Description Qty the lead protruding from the component side.
RA 33K 1/4W Resistor (org-org-org) 1
On the component side, bend each lead at a 90-degree angle so
RB 12K 1/8W Resistor (brn-red-org) 1
that it points away from the board (but parallel to it).
RC 2.2K 1/8W Resistor (red-red-red) 1
RD 1.8K 1/8W Resistor (brn-gray-red) 1 Locate the position for resistor network RP3 (near the front-
RE, RF 10K 1/8W Resistor (brn-blk-org) 2 left corner, adjacent to U6). Slide each of the 8 leads of the
THM Thermistor, 10K, 3% (small orange body 1 thermistor board through the corresponding holes at RP3. The
with black and brown stripes near leads) components on the thermistor board should be facing U6, and the
MISC Thermistor PC Board 1 thermistor should be oriented toward the location of crystal X1.
MISC #24 Green Wire, Insulated, solid conductor 1 ft. (See Figure 6-14a.)
(30 cm)
Locate all of the small glass-bodied diodes. You should have a Install the remaining 1SV149 diodes listed below, keeping them
number of 1N4148 diodes, and one 1N5711, which will be similar in flat against the PC board, with no excess lead length. D17, D21 and
size but should have different markings. Use a piece of masking D22 are in the front-left corner. D29 through D34 are on the right
tape to identify the 1N5711 as "D9, 1N5711." side near the crystal filter.
Install the following diodes, located near the outline for __ D17 __ D21 __ D22
toroidal transformer T5, in the synthesizer area. Be sure to orient __ D29 __ D30 __ D31
the diodes according to their outlines. __ D32 __ D33 __ D34
Varactor diodes have a small plastic package, like a TO-92 __ Q17, 2N7000 __ Q16, PN2222A __ Q18, J310
transistor, but with only two leads. Sort the varactor diodes into __ Q19, J310 __ Q20, 2N7000 __ Q24, J310
groups: type MV209 and type 1SV149. (1SV149 diodes are labeled __ Q25, PN2222A
"V149" and may have a center lead that has been cut flush with the
body of the device.) The K2 will not function correctly if the
varactor diode types are interchanged. Install Q21 (2N5109), which is located near U1 in the middle
of the board. Align the small tab on the transistor’s case with the
Install the MV209 diodes listed below. The flat side of each tab on its component outline. Bend the leads on the bottom to hold
diode must match the flat side of its PC board outline. These diodes Q21 in place, then solder.
must be pushed all the way down on the board to prevent stray
signal coupling. Bend the leads slightly to hold them in place. D16 Install Q22 (2N5109), which is to the right of the
and D23-D26 are in the front-left corner. D39 is to the right of J7 "ELECRAFT" label. Make sure Q22 is flat against the board before
(Control board). soldering.
__ D16 __ D23 __ D24 Carefully press a 3/4" (19 mm) dia. by 0.25" (6.4 mm) high
__ D25 __ D26 __ D39 star heat sink onto Q22. The heat sink should be pressed down as
far as it will go, and should not touch the components around the
Note: Do not install D19 and D20. These are supplied with the transistor. The heat sink is fragile. If you need to spread it
K60XV option, which should not be installed until the K2 has been slightly, use a blunted wooden pencil or a plastic wire nut.
aligned and tested.
Install Q12 (2N7000), which is to the right of Q22.
Install type 1SV149 diodes at D37 and D38, near the SSB
option connector. Keep them flat against the PC board, with no Install Q23 (2N7000), near the right-front edge of the board.
excess lead length. Install C167 (.001 µF, "102"), which is near J11, the connector
for the SSB adapter. The leads on this capacitor should be formed
to match its PC board outline.
ELECRAFT 51
Sort all of the remaining capacitors by value to reduce the Install the following ICs, aligning the notched end of each IC
possibility of assembly errors in the next step. If you are unsure of with the notch on its component outline. U6 is at the front-left.
any capacitor’s value and do not have a capacitance meter, the
pictures in the parts list (Appendix A) may help. __ U6, LMC662 ⇒ __ U5, LTC1451 ⇒ __ U4, MC145170
__ U3, LT1252 __ U10, NE602 __ U9, LT1252
__ U11, NE602 __ U12, MC1350
Install the following capacitors, starting with C86 in the front-
left corner. Integer values are in pF and fractional values are in µF.
Install U8 (78L05), which has a plastic TO-92 package like a
__ C86, 0.1 (104) ⇒ __ C84, 120 (121) ⇒ __ C85, 120 (121) transistor. U8 is located near the front left corner of the board.
__ C100, .001 (102) __ C95, .01 (103) __ C96, 1 µF (105)
__ C71, 82 (82) __ C72, 270 (271) __ C73, 47 (47) Option-bypass jumpers W5, W2 and W3 are located on the
__ C74, 20 (20) right side of the board, near the crystal filter. Use component leads
to make these jumpers, or remove the insulation from appropriate
__ C82, .001 (102) __ C80, .001 (102) __ C81, .001 (102) lengths of green hookup wire. These jumpers should be formed so
__ C79, .001 (102) __ C59, 0.1 (104) __ C38, .001 (102) that they lie flat on the board, and should not touch any adjacent
__ C55, .01 (103) __ C61, .01 (103) __ C58, .01 (103) components.
__ C65, 0.1 (104) __ C54, .01 (103)
Test points TP1, TP2, and TP3 are round, yellow, single-pin
__ C68, 10 pF (10) __ C64, .001 (102) __ C67, 0.1 (104) female connectors. TP1 and TP3 can be found in the synthesizer
__ C63, .01 (103) __ C92, .022 (223) __ C94, 0.047 (473) area of the board. TP2 is near the SSB option connector, J11.
__ C89, .001 (102) __ C87, .01 (103) __ C175, .01 (103)
__ C62, .01 (103) __ C154, 100 (101) __ C144, 100 (101)
Install and solder all three test points.
Pin 13
C91
.001
Pin 16 X
C90
The bag of 7 filter crystals should have a number written on it. Sort the black and dark gray toroidal cores into three groups to
Record the number here: ___________. (This identifies the tested avoid mis-identifying them in later steps. You should have eight
frequency of the crystals, and can be used in aligning filters.) FT37-43 ferrite cores (3/8", 9.5 mm); four T44-10 iron powder
cores (0.44", 11 mm); and one FT50-43 ferrite core (0.5", 12.7
Install the 12.096 MHz crystal, X1, at the lower left. The mm). Ferrite cores are dark gray; T44-10 cores are black.
crystal should be seated flat on the board before soldering (it is OK
to bend the pins to hold it to the board). X2 is not used. Locate a 3/8" (9.5 mm) diameter ferrite toroidal core (type
FT37-43) as described above.
To the left of X1 (along the edge of the board) you’ll find a
pad for grounding the crystal case. Use short lengths of bare wire to Find RFC14’s component outline on the RF board, near the
ground the crystal on at the top of the can. front left-hand corner. Compare this component outline to Figure
6-15, which shows two views of a typical toroidal inductor. RFC14
Install the BFO crystals at X3 and X4 (near J7). Important: will be mounted vertically as shown at the right side of the drawing,
trim X3's leads, and fold them down flat against their pads, before with one wire exiting at the core’s upper left, and the other at the
soldering. Then use a minimal amount of solder. This is necessary to lower right. There are pads on the PC board in these two locations.
avoid interference between X3 and L33 in a later step.
Ground the cases of X3 and X4. The ground pads are to the left
of the crystals.
Ground the cases of X5 and X6. The ground pads are near
where the two crystals meet.
To wind RFC14, cut a 9" (23 cm) length of #26 red enamel- i Do not use adhesives or fixatives of any kind to
coated wire, then "sew" the long end of the wire through the core secure toroids to the PC board. Toroids will be adequately held
exactly 10 times. Each pass through the core counts as one turn. to the board by their leads alone. (T5 is the only exception.)
The finished winding should look very similar to Figure 6-15, but
with 10 turns rather than 14. RFC16 is wound on an FT37-43 core (dark gray) using 16
turns of red enamel wire (12", 30 cm). Wind this inductor in the
Verify that the turns of RFC14 are not bunched together. same manner as RFC14. Install RFC16 vertically, to the right of
They should be evenly-spaced and occupy about 85% of the core’s RFC14.
circumference. If the turns are all bunched together, RFC14’s
inductance value will not be correct. (Unless otherwise specified, RFC11 is wound on an FT37-43 core using 20 turns of red
about 80 to 90% of the core should always be used.) enamel wire (16", 40 cm). Wind this inductor and prepare its leads
in the same manner as RFC14.
Stripping Toroid Leads
Install RFC11 horizontally, on the bottom side of the board, as
The enamel wire supplied with the kit can be heat-stripped. One shown by its component outline (near the center of the board). The
way to do this is to place a small amount of solder (a "blob") on the pads for RFC11 are the two that just touch the outline. Pull the
end of your soldering iron, then insert the wire into the hot solder leads taut on the top to keep the toroid secured to the board, then
for a few seconds. Another possibility is to burn the insulation off solder.
by heating it with a match or small butane lighter for a few seconds,
then use fine-grain sandpaper to remove the enamel residue. Avoid
scraping insulation off with a razor blade, as this may nick the wire. i T5 is a toroidal transformer, with two numbered windings.
These numbers are printed next to each pad on the PC board. T5’s
Strip and tin the leads of the toroid before you mount it on the windings are 1–2 and 3–4.
board. As shown in Figure 6-15, you should remove the enamel
from the leads up to about 1/8" (3 mm) from the core. You should Locate the large yellow core (T50-6) for use at T5. The core
see only bare wire (no insulation) on the side to be soldered. is 1/2" (12.7 mm) in diameter.
Install RFC14 vertically as shown by its component outline, Wind the first winding, 1-2, using 16 turns of red enamel wire
near the front left-hand corner of the board, then pull the leads taut (15", 38 cm). This winding must occupy 85% of the core, and will
on the bottom of the board. look very similar to Figure 6-15. Remember that each pass through
the core counts as one turn.
Solder the leads of RFC14. When soldering, make sure that the
solder binds well to the leads. If the lead appears to be an "island" in Carefully strip and tin the leads of T5’s 1-2 winding.
a small pool of solder, chances are it is not making good contact.
Measure from pad to pad (not wire to wire) using an ohmmeter to
be sure the leads are making contact.
ELECRAFT 55
Figure 6-16 2 1
Transformer T6 is mounted vertically, near the middle of the Clip and untwist the ends of the red/green pairs so that the
board. It uses a different winding technique where the wires for the leads of the transformer look like those in Figure 6-19 (b). The pin
two windings are twisted together before winding ("bi-filar"). Cut numbers shown match the component outline, with the red wires
two 12" (30 cm) lengths of enamel wire, one red and one green. numbered 1-3 and the green wires numbered 2-4.
Twist them together over their entire length. The wires should
cross over each other about once every 1/2" or 12 mm. Strip and tin all four wires. Be careful not to strip the leads so
close to the core that the red/green wire pairs might short together.
Wind the twisted wires onto a 3/8" (9.5 mm) ferrite core
(FT37-43), using exactly 10 turns. Use the same method you used Install T6 vertically, with the wires inserted as indicated in
when winding non-twisted wires, covering about 85% of the core. Figure 6-19 (b). Pull the leads taut on the bottom, then solder.
Figure 6-19 shows how the winding should look from two views
(your turns count will be 10 rather than 8 as in the drawing). Sort the slug-tuned shielded inductors into two groups: 1 µH
("T1050", quantity 4) and 4.7 µH ("T1005", quantity 8).
(a) Install 4.7 µH inductors at L30 and L34 ("T1005"). Press
these inductors down as far as they’ll go before soldering.
RFC3 is wound on an FT37-43 core (dark gray) using 16 turns Find the "C6" label, along the back edge. The three pads near
of red enamel wire (12", 30 cm). Wind this inductor in the same C6 are labeled "J15" on the top side (for use with the K60XV
manner as RFC14. Install RFC3 vertically, just to the left of W1. option). Install C6 (4.7 pF) into the outer two of the three pads.
Install 4.7 µH slug-tuned shielded inductors (marked "T1005") Locate L31, a 12 µH shielded solenoidal inductor (black case;
at L1 and L2, near the back-left edge of the board. may not be color coded). L31 is mounted on the bottom of the
board, near the right edge.
Install the 40-meter low-pass filter components, which are
listed below. These components are located near Q22 (2N5109 Install the group of components listed below on the bottom of
transistor with heat sink). the board. C183 is near the front left corner.
__ C225, 390 (391) __ C228, 56 (56) __ C227, 330 (331) __ C183, .01 (103) __ C186, .01 (103)
__ C226, 680 (681) __ C229, 220 (221) __ C161, .01 (103) __ C150, 330 (331)
__ L25, T44-2 (red), 14 turns #26 red enamel wire, 14" (35 cm) __ C90, .047 (473) (bend body down before soldering)
__ L26, T44-2 (red), 12 turns #26 red enamel wire, 13" (33 cm) __ C157, .047 (473) (bend body down before soldering)
Locate the rubber stem bumper. Clip off about one-half of the
tip of the stem using diagonal cutters.
Stem Bumper
L33 is located on the bottom of the board, near the front
center. Place the rubber stem bumper directly on top of L33's Leads
component outline. Flush-trim the leads of all parts under or
near L33 so the stem bumper can sit flat on the PC board.
Figure 6-20
Locate the pre-wound BFO inductor, L33 (41 µH, 5%). It may
be supplied in a small envelope or bag labeled "L33".
Press L33 down onto the stem bumper as far as it will go.
Position L33 and the stem bumper as shown in Figure 6-20.
Use the leads of R116 to hold L33 firmly to the board (Figure
6-21), bending them outward on the top side. Solder R116.
Solder L33's leads to the leads of the resistor points as shown Figure 6-22
in Figure 6-22. Keep L33's leads as short as possible, and away from
any nearby component pads.
Trim off the excess portion of L33's leads. Note: Trimming To ensure that R116 cannot short to the bottom cover, attach
fine wire may be difficult with worn or poor-quality diagonal a thin self-adhesive insulator to the bottom cover in the area
cutters. Be careful not to stress L33's leads in the process. Use a directly beneath L33. Electrical or other types of tape may be used.
magnifying glass if necessary.
ELECRAFT 59
Resistance Checks
i D40 and D41 were added to the receiver I.F. circuit to
prevent saturation when a station a few feet away transmits on Perform the following resistance checks:
your frequency. These diodes will be installed in the steps below.
Test Point Signal Name Res. (to GND)
On the bottom of the RF board, locate resistor R114, which is R115, right end (near S1) 12V IN > 500 ohms
near the power switch. Near R114 you'll find the 8 pads for I.F U6 pin 8 8B > 100 ohms
amp U12, which is on the top side of the board (Figure 6-23). U4 pin 16 5B >1k
Solder D40 and D41 to the two round pads just to the right of U11 pin 8 8A > 250 ohms
R114 (pads #3 and #4 of T7, which is on the top side). The U10 pin 8 8T > 500 ohms
banded ends of the diodes go in opposite directions. U12 pin 1 8R > 500 ohms
Install the side panels and secure with two chassis screws each.
U12 Figure 6-23
Plug in the front panel assembly. Secure with two chassis
screws.
Visual Inspection Secure the front panel and Control boards together using two
chassis screws.
Examine the bottom side of the RF board carefully for
unsoldered pins, solder bridges, or cold solder joints. Since this is a
large board, you should break the examination up into three parts: i Before installing the bottom cove in the next step, verify
that all components on the bottom of the RF board have an
__ perimeter of the board __ front half __ back half installed height of 1/4" (6 mm) or less. Capacitors or other parts
that stand above this height must be bent downward at an angle to
Examine the top side in the same manner. prevent them from hitting the bottom cover.
Set S1 on the RF board to OFF position. (Plunger OUT). Install the bottom cover and secure it temporarily using six
chassis screws.
60 ELECRAFT
Use one of the following methods to adjust C22 on the VCO (Voltage-Controlled Oscillator) Test
Control board (listed in order of preference):
Use B A N D + or B A N D - to select the 80-meter band, and set the
Connect a calibrated external frequency counter probe to TP3, VFO for a frequency of about 4000.10 kHz.
without removing the K2's internal counter probe. Adjust C22
until the K2's reading matches the external counter's reading. Connect the frequency counter probe to the VCO test point,
Alternatively, you can use a calibrated short-wave or ham-band TP1. Activate the frequency counter using C A L FC T R as before.
receiver. Set the receiver for LSB or USB mode. Connect a
short length of wire to the receiver's antenna jack, and lay the You should now see a frequency counter reading in the 8 to 10
end near the 4 MHz crystal on the K2 Control board. Find the MHz range. It may or may not be stable at this time (i.e., the
oscillator signal on the receiver. Tune the receiver to 4.000 frequency may be changing). If the reading is 0000 kHz or is
MHz, and adjust C22 until you hear a zero-beat (pitch = 0 Hz). changing rapidly, you probably don’t have the counter cable
If you don't have a counter or receiver, leave C22 set at its connected to the VCO test point. If the reading is fairly stable but
mid-point for now. You can improve the calibration later using not between 8 and 10 MHz, refer to Troubleshooting.
a calibrated signal generator or an on-air signal, such as WWV
(at 10.000 MHz). Tap M E N U to exit C A L FC T R.
ELECRAFT 61
VCO Alignment
Table 6-1. VCO Voltage Readings
In the following steps you’ll adjust the VCO inductor (L30) so that
the VCO control voltage is in the proper range. Band Low Freq. Voltage High Freq. Voltage
80 m 3500 ______ 4000 ______
Disconnect the internal frequency counter probe and remove 40 m 7000 ______ 7300 ______
it completely from the K2. 30 m 10000 ______ 10150 ______
20 m 14000 ______ 15000 ______
Select 80 meters, and set the VFO for about 4000 kHz. 17 m 18000 ______ 18200 ______
15 m 21000 ______ 21450 ______
Connect a DMM (digital multimeter) to the left end of resistor 12 m 24800 ______ 25000 ______
R30 (near the center of the synthesizer area of the RF board) and 10 m 28000 ______ 28800 ______
ground. Use a small alligator clip to ensure a good connection. (You
can also use the built-in voltmeter to measure the VCO control If some VCO control voltage readings above are < 1.5 V, or
voltage. Refer to Voltmeter Probe Assembly in Part I.) some of them are > 7.5 V, you may be able to shift the entire set of
readings so that they are all within the 1.5 to 7.5 V range. Switch to
the band (and frequency) that had the highest or lowest voltage,
i It is possible to damage the slugs in slug-tuned inductors if then adjust L30 to bring that reading into range. Then re-measure
you use a metal tool or if you tune the slug too far in or out. The all of the voltages to make sure they're in range.
tuning tool provided will not damage the slugs.
Using the wide end of the plastic tuning tool, adjust the slug in i If you have some voltages that are < 1.5 V and others that
inductor L30 until the voltage at R30 reads 6.0 V. If the voltmeter are > 7.5 V, you have probably installed the wrong value at one or
reading does not change at all as you tune L30 through its full more of the VCO capacitors (C71-C74) or varactor diodes (D21-
range, refer to Troubleshooting. If the voltage changes but you D26). Another possibility is that T5 has the wrong number of turns
cannot get to 6.0 V, you have probably wound the VCO inductor or that you installed the wrong type of slug-tuned inductor at L30.
(T5) incorrectly or have installed the wrong value at L30 or C72. If you change any of these components, repeat the VCO alignment
procedure.
Set the VFO for approximately 3500 kHz.
Disconnect the DMM from R30.
Measure and write down the VCO control voltage at this
frequency in Table 6-1 (using pencil). Connect the internal frequency counter probe to the BFO test
point, TP2 (right side of the RF board, near the crystal filter).
For each remaining band, set the VFO to the low and high
frequencies listed in Table 6-1 and write down the VCO control
voltages.9 (You can tune quickly to the approximate frequencies in
the table by selecting the 1-kHz tuning rate.)
9
Usable VFO coverage extends well beyond the ranges given in the table. 15
MHz is used as the upper boundary on 20 meters to allow reception of WWV
at this frequency.
62 ELECRAFT
BFO Test
The BFO (beat-frequency oscillator) will be tested in the following If your BFO range is less than 3.6 kHz, you may have the wrong
steps. varactor diodes installed at D37 or D38, or the wrong crystals
installed at X3 or X4.
Switch to the 40-m band.
If the BFO frequencies are shifted too high or too low, it may be
Connect the frequency counter to the BFO test point (TP2), due to one of the following:
which is on the right side of the RF board near the crystal filter.
If you didn't calibrate the K2's internal frequency counter using
Using the menu, select C A L FC T R. The counter should show an external counter, it may not be reading accurately. If
a frequency between 4908 and 4918 kHz. possible, borrow an accurate counter and re-do the 4 MHz
Oscillator Calibration.
The BFO range shift could be due to the inductance of L33
i If you see a reading of 0 0 0 0 . 0 0 kHz, or one that is being too high or too low. However, since L33 is supplied pre-
changing rapidly, you may not have the frequency counter probe wound and tested, this is unlikely.
connected properly, or the BFO may not be working (see The leads of R116 may have been heated excessively during
Troubleshooting). If you see a stable frequency reading that is soldering, shorting out a portion of L33's turns.
nowhere near 4908-4918 kHz, you may have installed the wrong One of L33's leads could be broken. Look closely at the leads
crystals in the BFO (X3/X4). using a magnifying glass.
One or more of the capacitors or varactor diodes in the BFO
When you’re in frequency counter mode, the B A N D + and circuit could be of the wrong value.
B A N D - switches can be used to check the range of the BFO. First,
tap B A N D + and write down the frequency reading below (typically
about 4916-4917 kHz). Then tap B A N D - and write down this
frequency reading (usually about 4909-4912 kHz). Finally, calculate
the BFO range (high - low) in kHz. Typical range is 4 to 6 kHz.
Make sure the bottom cover is securely attached. Use the procedure listed below to linearize the VFO. If you see
any I NFO messages, refer to Troubleshooting.
Tap P R E / A T T until the PRE annunciator is turned on.
(Turning the preamp on will provide some background noise so you 1. Use B A N D + or B A N D - to select 40 meters. Select CW normal
can hear the effect of changing filter bandwidths.) mode and filter FL1.
2. Set the VFO to anywhere in the range 7000-7100 kHz.
Follow all instructions on page 88 to become familiar with the 3. Enter the menu and select C A L P L L , then hold E D I T a
C A L FI L function. second time to start the VFO linearization sequence.
4. The frequency counter will show the VCO frequency as it
Perform the steps in the example on page 89 to set up all decreases through a range of about 10-13 kHz. (The letter "d "
filters. You'll use the filter and BFO data from Table 8-1 (for a will flash each time a calibration data point is stored.)
CW-only K2), since the SSB adapter is not installed. If you later 5. When calibration is completed (4-8 minutes), you'll see the
install the SSB adapter, you can easily change the settings to take message En d on the LCD. You can then tap any switch to
advantage of the optimized, fixed-bandwidth SSB filter. return to normal operation. If you see an INFO message rather
than En d , refer to Troubleshooting (Appendix E).
64 ELECRAFT
I.F. Amplifier Alignment Using the plastic tuning tool, adjust both L1 and L2 (back left
corner) for peak signal strength. You may be able to use the
L34, located near the right front corner of the RF board, is used to
bargraph if the signal is strong enough. If you do not hear any
peak the output of the I.F. amplifier.
signals or noise, see Troubleshooting.
Using the wide end of the plastic tuning tool, adjust the slug in
L34 until it is near the top of the can. Stop turning the slug
when it appears to be at the top or when you feel resistance.
i In CW mode, the frequency shown on the display takes into
account an offset equal to your sidetone pitch. This allows you to
Turn L34’s slug one full turn clockwise (down into the can). determine a station's actual carrier frequency by matching their
pitch to your sidetone, rather than by zero-beating the signal. The
Set the band to 40 meters using B A N D + or B A N D - . Select CW S P O T switch can be used for this purpose.
Normal and FL2 (700 Hz nominal bandwidth).
This completes 40-meter receiver alignment. You may wish to
Make sure the RF GAIN control is fully clockwise (max. gain). become familiar with the K2’s receiver features before proceeding
Disconnect the antenna from J4, if one was connected. (see Operation). In Part III you’ll install the remaining band-pass
filters and align the transmitter and receiver on all bands.
Tap P R E / A T T N until the PRE annunciator turns on.
Connect a pair of headphones (stereo or mono) to the front Assembly, Part III
panel jack, and turn the AF GAIN control to about midway.
In this final RF board assembly section you’ll install the transmitter
Slowly tune the VFO to locate the weak internally-generated components, as well as the remaining band-pass and low-pass filters.
signal near 7000 kHz. If you can't hear the signal at all, you may This will allow you to align and test the K2 on all bands.
have a receiver problem. Try the 40-meter Band Pass Filter
Alignment, below, then refer to Troubleshooting if necessary. Turn off the K2 and disconnect the power supply.
While listening to the signal at 7000 kHz, adjust L34 for best Remove the two screws holding the Front Panel board to the
signal strength and lowest noise. This setting occurs at about 1 to Control board, then unplug the Control board. Use the long-handled
1.5 turns below the top of the can. (You can use your DMM on AC Allen wrench as described in Part I.
volts, at the speaker jack, to obtain a more sensitive indication.)
Remove the bottom cover.
40-Meter Band Pass Filter Alignment
Remove the screws from the front panel assembly and unplug
Connect an antenna or a signal generator to the antenna jack it from the RF board.
on the rear panel. If you use a signal generator, set it for approx.
7150 kHz at an output level of about -100 dBm, or strong enough Remove the side panels by taking out the two screws along the
to activate the S-meter. If you're using an antenna, tune in a signal bottom edge of each panel.
in the range of 7100-7200 kHz. If you cannot find a signal, you
can use atmospheric noise from the antenna to peak the filter.
ELECRAFT 65
Install the following 1/4-watt resistors, starting with R46 __ C219, 12 (12) __ C138, .047 (473) __ C222, 100 (101)
which is just to the left of I/O controller U1. __ C221, 39 (39) __ C220, 220 (221) __ C214, 68 (68)
__ C213, 33 (33) __ C212, 150 (151) __ C203, 47 (47)
__ R46, 270 (RED-VIO-BRN) ⇒ __ R45, 47 (YEL-VIO-BLK) __ C199, 220 (221) __ C200, 150 (151) __ C202, 120 (121)
__ R59, 4.7 k (YEL-VIO-RED) __ R61, 120 (BRN-RED-BRN) __ C201, 220 (221) __ C192, 1200 (122)
__ R49, 120 (BRN-RED-BRN) __ R40, 470 (YEL-VIO-BRN)
__ R41, 560 (GRN-BLU-BRN) __ R55, 33 (ORG-ORG-BLK)
i There are two types of ceramic trimmer capacitors used in
__ R53, 4.7 ohms (YEL-VIO-GLD) the band-pass filters: 30 pF and 50 pF. These may look identical.
__ R56, 33 (ORG-ORG-BLK) They will either be bagged separately, or the 50-pF trimmers will
__ R54, 4.7 ohms (YEL-VIO-GLD)
__ R60, 100 ohms (BRN-BLK-BRN)
have a red marking.
__ R62, 2.7 k (RED-VIO-RED)
__ R67, 1.5 k, 1% (BRN-GRN-BLK-BRN) Install the trimmers listed below, starting with C21 near the
__ R68, 226 ohms, 1% (RED-RED-BLU-BLK) back-left corner. Orient the flat side of each trimmer capacitor
with the flat side of its component outline. This orientation is
required to prevent RF pickup during alignment.
i The 150 pF and 3.3 pF capacitors to be installed below __ C21, 50 pF __ C23, 50 pF
may be hard to identify. See capacitor information on page 9.
__ C32, 30 pF __ C34, 30 pF
Install the capacitors listed below. C12 is near the back left __ C44, 30 pF __ C46, 30 pF
corner. Note: C13 and C14 will not be installed; they are included
with the 160 m/RX Antenna option (K160RX). Set all of the trimmer capacitors just installed to their mid-way
points (see Figure 6-23). Use a small flat-blade screwdriver.
__ C12, 560 (561) ⇒ __ C11, 1800 (182) ⇒ __ C26, .001 (102)
__ C16, 1800 (182) __ C15, 560 (561) __ C22, 3.3 pF (3.3)
__ C20, 47 (47) __ C19, 330 (331) __ C30, 470 (471)
__ C24, 47 (47) __ C25, 330 (331) __ C35, 56 (56)
__ C37, .001 (102) __ C36, 470 (471) __ C33, 2.2 pF (2.2)
Ferrite-bead assemblies Z1 and Z2 will be installed vertically Install the following components on the bottom of the board,
near transformer T3 as indicated by their component outlines. To working from left to right.
make these assemblies, string two ferrite beads onto a 1" (25 mm)
length of bare hookup wire (or discarded component leads) as __ R63, 220 (RED-RED-BRN)
shown in Figure 6-24.
Note: bend the leads of R58 exactly as shown by its component outline.
i TO-220 package transistors Q6, 7, and 8 look identical, but i It is very important to wind and install toroidal
Q6 is different. Locate the two 2SC1969’s (labeled "C1969"), Q7 transformers T1 through T4 exactly as described in the following
and Q8, and set them to one side. The 2SC2166 transistor, Q6 steps. Remember that transformer windings are identified by
("C2166"), will be installed first. numbered pairs of leads, which correspond to the PC board and
schematic.
Attach a self-adhesive thermal pad to the PC board on top of
the component outline for Q6. The hole in the thermal pad must T1 is wound on an FT37-43 ferrite core (dark gray) and has
be aligned precisely with Q6's mounting hole on the board. windings similar to those shown in Figure 6-25. The 1–2 winding is
9 turns of red enamel wire (10", 25 cm). The 3–4 winding is 3 turns
Prepare the leads of Q6 as you did with the voltage regulators of green enamel wire (5", 13 cm). (The drawing shows more than 9
on the Control board (Figure 4-4, page 16), using gradual bends to turns on the larger winding.)
avoid lead breakage. Insert Q6 as shown by its component outline.
Prepare T1’s leads as in Part II. Completely remove the
Secure Q6 to the board using a 4-40 x 3/8" (9.5 mm) screw, #4 insulation to within about 1/8" (3 mm) of the core, then tin the
lock washer and 4-40 nut. The screw should be inserted from the leads.
bottom side of the RF board; the washer and nut go on the top.
T2 is wound on the same core type as T1 (FT37-43). Its Wind the twisted wires onto a 1/2" (12.7 mm) dia. ferrite core
windings must be spaced as shown in Figure 6-26(a), with the 3-4 (FT50-43), using exactly 5 turns and covering about 85% of the
winding occupying about half the diameter of the core. T2’s 1–2 core. Figure 6-27 shows how the winding should look. The leads of
winding is 12 turns of red enamel wire (13", 33 cm), and its 3–4 T3 are labeled with letters A through D on the PC board to avoid
winding is 8 turns of green (9", 23 cm). confusing them with the numbered leads of T2 and T4.
Prepare T2’s leads, but leave an extra 1/2" of insulation on Separate T3’s leads as shown in Figure 6-27. Strip and tin the
leads 3 and 4 (green) as shown in Figure 6-26(a). leads, being careful not to let the red/green wire pairs short
together.
Fold the leads of T2's green winding (3-4) down and under the
core as shown in Figure 6-26(b). Install T3 vertically as shown by its component outline. T3
must be seated flat against the PC board, with its leads pulled tight
Install T2 horizontally, just to the right of Q6. To ensure that on the bottom side.
the leads do not contact any adjacent pads or components, T2
should be mounted so that it is elevated slightly above the board A
(about 1/16" [1.5 mm]).
(GRN)
1
3 3 C
(RED)
B
(GRN)
4
4
2 D
(a) (b) (RED)
Figure 6-26
Locate the "binocular" (2-hole) ferrite core for T4. Wind 2 Before installing T4, verify that the screws holding the 2-D
turns of green-insulated hookup wire (5", 13 cm) through the fastener beneath it are tightened, and that #4 internal-tooth lock
core as shown in Figure 6-28. This forms the 1–2 winding. (Do not washers were used. It is important that these screws not come loose
use enamel-coated wire.) sometime after T4 has been installed.
Cut and strip the two leads using the lengths shown. Be careful Install T4 to the right of T3, inserting leads for the 1–2 and
not to nick the wire. 3–4 windings into their matching numbered holes. T4 should rest
directly on top of the screws that secure the 2-D fastener beneath
it. T4 should also be parallel to the board, not tilted to one side.
1 Pull the leads taut on the bottom and bend them to hold the
transformer in place. Do not solder T4 yet.
Use two 2" (5 cm) lengths of bare hookup wire to form the
2 5–6 and 7–8 windings on T4 (Figure 6-30). (These are more
accurately described as links, each being just a single turn.) Route
1/2” (13mm) the bare wires through the core first, then bend them down and
insert them into their numbered holes. Do not solder yet.
7/8” (22mm)
5 6
Figure 6-28
8 7
3
Figure 6-30
Uninstalled Components
Check off the components in the list below, verifying that
they are not yet installed. All of these components are on the top
side of the board. Note: Most of these components are provided
with option kits, as indicated in the list. Some of the connectors
can be pre-installed, as will be explained on the next page.
Figure 6-31
__ J14 (near antenna jack); supplied with K160RX
Insert a 4-40 x 1/2" (12.7 mm) screw through the PC board __ C13 and __ C14 (in 160 m band-pass filter); supplied with K160RX
hole for Q7’s tab (see Figure 6-31). Then slip the hardware listed __ C75 (synthesizer area); supplied with K160RX
below onto this mounting screw from the bottom side. (The
__ J15 (3-pin connector in 40 m band-pass filter); supplied with K60XV
shoulder washer can be found with the MISCELLANEOUS __ J13 (transverter conn., near 40 m band-pass filter); supplied with K60XV
components.) __ D19 and D20 (synthesizer area); supplied with K60XV
__ #4 fibre washer (black) __ P6 (near DC input jack); supplied with KAT2 or KPA100
__ 1/4" (6.4 mm) dia., 1/8" (3 mm) long phenolic standoff (brown) __ P3 (near crystal filter); supplied with KBT2 or KPA100
__ #4 nylon shoulder washer (black)
__ J9, __ J10, and J11 (near crystal filter); supplied with KSB2
__ J12 (near crystal filter); supplied with KNB2
i Do not use any hardware other than that supplied. The
height of the PA transistor assembly is critical for maintaining __ J5 (near BFO crystals); reserved for future use
good heat dissipation. __ X2 (front left corner); not used
ELECRAFT 71
i If you have already purchased option kits, you may install If you have the KNB2 (Noise Blanker) option, locate the
selected option components now, as explained in the following Installation section of the KNB2 manual. Complete only the
steps. This will simplify installation of the options after K2 installation of J12 and the standoff. Do not remove W5, R88,
alignment and test have been completed. R89 or R90 at this time.
Install the two side panels and secure with two chassis screws Remove the 4-40 nuts and #4 lock washers from the mounting
each as you did in Part I and Part II. screws for Q7 and Q8, but do not pull the screws out. (If you pull
these screws out, the associated hardware will fall off and will have
Plug in the front panel assembly and make sure the connectors to be re-installed.)
are completely mated. Secure the front panel with four chassis
screws.
i In the next step you'll install thermal insulation pads on
Verify that all components on the bottom of the RF board the power amplifier transistors, Q7 and Q8. These pads must be
have an installed height of 1/4" (6 mm) or less. Capacitors that positioned correctly to keep the collectors of the transistors from
stand above this height must be bent downward so that they won’t shorting to ground. Proper positioning is also required to guarantee
hit the bottom cover or heat sink. good heat conduction.
Install the bottom cover and secure it using six chassis screws. Place self-adhesive thermal pads on top of Q7 and Q8 as
shown in Figure 6-32, with the hole in the pad centered over the
Plug in the Control board. Make sure that all three connectors hole in the transistor tab. The adhesive side must be in contact with
are completely mated. the transistor.
Secure the front panel and Control boards together using two
chassis screws.
4-40 screw
Locate the heat sink panel. You'll need to remove all of the
masking tape from this panel except that covering the "RCV ANT" Thermal
and "XVTR IN/OUT" holes. Use a sharp tool to cut though the Pad
tape, leaving a 1/2" (12 mm) border around these holes. Then peel
the tape off, leaving these holes covered.
Attach two round rubber feet to the heat sink using 4-40 x Figure 6-32
7/16" (11 mm) screws, #4 lock washers, and 4-40 nuts. The screws
are standard steel/zinc-plated, not black anodized. The nuts go on
the inside surface of the heat sink. (The rubber feet can be found Back out the mounting screws for Q7 and Q8 until the ends of
with the MISCELLANEOUS items.) the screws protrude only slightly from the transistor tabs. Keep the
K2 on its left side so the screws don’t slip out further.
Remove the finishing nuts and washers from the shafts of the
antenna and key jacks. They will be re-installed later. Make sure that the thermal pads on Q7 and Q8 are centered,
and that you can see the shoulder washers inside the tab holes. If
Turn the K2 up on its left side. This will keep the PA the shoulder washers have come out of the tab holes, re-align the
transistor screws from slipping out during the following steps. PA transistor hardware as needed.
ELECRAFT 73
Keeping the K2 on its left side, slip the heat sink over the Secure Q7 and Q8 on the bottom of the heat sink using 4-40
rear-panel connectors and into position (Figure 6-33). Figure 6-34 nuts and #4 lock washers. Do not over-tighten the nuts, as this may
shows how the heat sink and associated hardware appear in cross- cause the thermal pads to scrape against the heat sink, possibly
section. causing a short to ground.
Heat
Sink
Figure 6-34
Make sure that the four small holes in the heat sink line up There are four more #4 holes in the heat sink: two on the
with Q7/Q8 and the 2-D block between them. bottom and two on the back panel. Use four chassis screws to secure
the heat sink to the side panels and RF board at these locations.
Press the Q7/Q8 mounting screws all the way back in so that You may need to adjust the positions of the 2-D fasteners on the
they protrude from the heat sink. side panels slightly.
Use two chassis screws and two #4 lock washers to secure the Install the washers and finishing nuts that you removed earlier
heat sink firmly to the 2-D fastener. from the antenna and key jacks. (The antenna jack hardware is
shown installed in Figure 6-34.)
74 ELECRAFT
Alignment and Test, Part III Select voltage/current display mode by tapping D I S P L A Y to
make sure the receiver is not drawing excess current. (Typical
In this section you’ll complete alignment and test of the K2 on all current drain will be 180-250 mA depending on menu settings.)
bands.
Return to frequency display mode.
Make sure the power switch, S1, is in the OFF position (out).
Switch to CW and select FL1 using X F I L .
Connect your power supply or battery. For transmitter tests, a
battery or well-regulated power supply that can handle at least 2 Use the menu to set up the desired CW sidetone volume and
amps is recommended. Avoid using a switching power supply unless pitch if you have not already done so, using S T L and S T P . The
it is well shielded and includes EMI filtering. A linear-mode supply pitch can be set from 400 to 800 Hz, although 500-600 Hz is
will typically generate much less noise in the HF bands. (See any recommended. The sidetone volume and tone will vary a small
recent ARRL Handbook for examples of both types.) amount as the pitch is changed, but it should have a pleasant
sinewave sound at any setting.
Connect a 50-ohm dummy load such as the Elecraft DL1 to
the antenna jack. The dummy load should be rated at 10 watts or Set up the desired keying device using I NP . If you’re using a
higher. (The DL1 is rated at 20 watts.) hand key or external keyer, use I NP HA ND. To use the internal
keyer, select P DL n or P DL r (normal or reverse paddle). You can
Connect a pair of headphones and a key or keyer paddle. also connect a computer or external keyer along with the keyer
paddle. Refer to the Operation section for details on this "auto-
Set the POWER control fully counter-clockwise (minimum detect" feature (Page 95).
power output).
To verify that the sidetone is functioning, hold the
Turn on the K2. You should see EL EC RA FT on the LCD, SPOT switch. Tap any switch to turn the SPOT tone off.
followed by the frequency display.
ELECRAFT 75
40-Meter Transmitter Alignment If necessary, repeat the adjustment of L1 and L2 two or three
times to be sure that you have the inductors peaked correctly. If
i To align the transmitter you’ll need some means for you cannot get power output to 2.0 watts or higher, see
Troubleshooting.
monitoring power output as you adjust the band-pass filters. An
analog wattmeter or oscilloscope is ideal. However, in the Make sure the bar graph is set for DO T mode using the
instructions that follow we’ll assume that you’re using the K2’s G RP H menu entry.
built-in digital wattmeter, which will also provide satisfactory
results. Set power output to 5.0 W using the POWER control.
Set the POWER control for 2.0 watts. Tap D I S P L A Y to enter voltage/current display mode. When
this display is selected, you can use T U N E to check your voltage and
Switch to the 40 meter band and set the VFO for about 7100 current in transmit mode.
kHz.
Enter tune mode and note the change in voltage and current.
Locate the 40-meter band-pass filter inductors, L1 and L2, and Current drain at 5 watts is typically 1.3 to 1.6 amps.10 If the
be prepared to adjust them using the wide end of the tuning tool. current reading is much higher than this, or if the voltage drops
more than 1 V, you may have a problem in the transmitter, load, or
power supply (see Troubleshooting).
i In the following steps you’ll place the K2 into "TUNE"
mode by holding T U N E . You should limit key-down periods to about Return to frequency display using the D I S P L A Y switch.
5 or 10 seconds during tune-up for safety reasons. If you see or
smell smoke turn the K2 off and refer to Troubleshooting. Set the POWER control for 10.0 watts.
Note: While in tune mode, it is normal to see power drift upward Enter tune mode just long enough to verify that the wattmeter
several tenths of a watt. You may also see a sudden jump in power reads approximately 10 watts. If you then switch to voltage/current
during alignment. The output will quickly be reduced to about 2.0 W display and hold T U N E again, you should see a current drain of
by the firmware if this happens. typically 1.8 to 2 amps. If you see a "HI CUR" warning message
(high current), use CAL CUR to set your transmit current limit
Put the K2 into tune mode and activate the built-in wattmeter higher. If current is much higher than 2 A, see Troubleshooting.
by holding T U N E . Using the alignment tool, adjust L1 for maximum
output. Tap any switch to exit TUNE mode. This completes transmitter alignment and test on 40 meters.
10
The K2 transmitter is most efficient at 10 watts and higher; current drain at
5 watts CW may be higher than expected. This is unavoidable because the K2
is capable of up to 15 W output. Also, for a given power level, SSB
transmission requires more transmitter "overhead" to prevent distortion.
76 ELECRAFT
Receiver Pre-Alignment Switch to 20 meters (14100 kHz) and turn on the preamp. Set
C21 and C23 to their mid-points. Adjust L8 and L9 for maximum
Since the same filters are used on both receive and transmit, it is signal strength. (This step pre-sets C21, C23, L8, and L9 before
possible to align all the remaining bands on transmit only. final adjustment in the next two steps.)
However, you can pre-align the filters on receive by using a signal Switch to 30 meters (10100 kHz) and turn on the preamp.
or noise generator (such as the Elecraft N-Gen), separate ham Adjust L8 and L9 for maximum signal strength.
transceiver, or on-air signals and atmospheric noise. This pre-
alignment on receive will make transmitter alignment easier, since Switch back to 20 meters (14100 kHz). Adjust C21 and C23
the filter adjustments will already be at or close to their final values. for maximum signal strength.
Switch to 80 meters and set the VFO for about 3750 kHz Switch to 15 meters (21100 kHz) and turn on the preamp.
(mid-band). Turn on the RF preamp by tapping P R E / A T T N until Adjust L10 and L11 for maximum signal strength.
you see the PRE annunciator turn on.
Switch to 17 meters (18100 kHz) and turn on the preamp.
Use a signal generator or an antenna to inject a signal or noise Adjust C32 and C34 for maximum signal strength.
at this frequency.
Switch to 10 meters (28200 kHz) and turn on the preamp.
Adjust L3 and L4 for maximum signal strength. Adjust L12 and L13 for maximum signal strength.
Transmitter Alignment
If you did the receiver alignment, above, you may find that little or
i Since some inductors are shared between two bands, you
no transmit adjustment is required on most bands. must always align the remaining bands in the order indicated.
Always use this procedure if you re-align the filters later.
Set the POWER control for 2.0 watts.
Switch to 20 meters (14100 kHz). Set C21 and C23 to their
Switch to 80 meters and set the VFO for about 3750 kHz mid-points. Adjust L8 and L9 for maximum power output. (This
(mid-band). step pre-sets C21, C23, L8, and L9 before final adjustment in the
next two steps.)
Enter tune mode and adjust L3 and L4 for maximum power as
indicated on the internal wattmeter. (Use a more sensitive analog Switch to 30 meters (10100 kHz) and adjust L8 and L9 for
instrument if available.) Limit tune-up time to 5 or 10 seconds. maximum power output.
Switch to 20 meters (14100 kHz) and adjust C21 and C23 for
maximum power output.
Switch to 15 meters (21100 kHz) and adjust L10 and L11 for
maximum power output.
Switch to 17 meters (18100 kHz) and adjust C32 and C34 for
maximum power output.
Switch to 10 meters (28200 kHz) and adjust L12 and L13 for
maximum power output.
Switch to 12 meters (24900 kHz) and adjust C44 and C46 for
maximum power output.
7. Final Assembly
Place the top cover upside down as shown in Figure 7-1, with Trim the supplied grille cloth to the size of the speaker frame.
its rear panel facing away from you. The illustration shows how the
speaker, 2-conductor cable, external speaker jack and other Place #4 fibre washers (black) at each of the top cover's four
hardware will be attached to the top cover. speaker mounting holes (Figure 7-1). Trim the corners of the grille
cloth so it just fits between the fibre washers, not touching them.
D D Place the speaker on top of the fibre washers and grille cloth.
Secure it with four 3/8" (9.5 mm) screws, #4 lock washers, and 4-40
nuts (Figure 7-2). Do not over-tighten the nuts.
Figure 7-2
15"
(38 cm) Locate the two holes marked A in Figure 7-1. Use two 4-40 x
3/8" (9.5 mm) screws to fill these holes, securing them with #4 lock
washers and 4-40 nuts. (The holes are for the battery option.)
C C
Install 2-D fasteners at the two locations marked B in Figure
Figure 7-1 7-1. The 2-D fasteners should line up exactly with the edges. Use
two chassis screws per 2-D fastener.
ELECRAFT 79
Using a sharp tool, cut through and peel off about 1/2" x 1/2"
(12 x 12 mm) of the masking material covering the EXT SPKR
hole. Note: Leave the other holes covered with masking material SP Ground
until the associated options are installed.
Install the external speaker jack in the EXT SPKR hole. AF
Orient the jack as shown in Figure 7-1 and Figure 7-4, with the
"AF" tab nearest the inside of the top cover. (Caution: Mis-
identification of the three tabs could result in a ground short.)
Copper wire
24" (61 cm) of 2-conductor speaker cable is supplied. Cut it
into two pieces, 15" (38 cm) and 9" (23 cm) long.
Solder crimp pins to the two wires at one end of the 15" (38 Figure 7-4
cm) length of speaker cable (Figure 7-3).
Connect one end of the 9" (23 cm) speaker cable to the
Copper wire speaker terminals. The copper wire should be connected to the lug
Pin 1 side marked (+) on the speaker. Solder both wires.
Housing
Crimp pin
SP Ground
Figure 7-3
i When you insert crimp pins into the housing in the next
step, they should snap into place. Each pin has a small tab on the
back that latches into a hole in the housing when inserted. Copper wire
Connect the other end of this cable to the external speaker Use three cable ties at the points shown in Figure 7-1 to hold
jack as shown in Figure 7-4. The copper wire must be connected to the speaker cables in place. (Save the fourth cable tie for use with
the "AF" lug of the speaker jack. Solder only the copper wire. the supplied RF probe.) The ties should be pulled tight. Trim any
excess cable tie length.
80 ELECRAFT
Finishing Touches
Examine the Control board one last time to be sure that it is Attach the self-adhesive serial number label to the rear panel
correctly plugged into the RF board. All three connectors must be of the heat sink in the space provided.
mated completely.
Write the serial number on the inside cover of your manual.
Leave the frequency counter test cable connected to the BFO
test point (TP2). This will allow you to modify your filter and BFO
settings if necessary during normal operation. 1 2
If there are any missing chassis screws in the bottom cover,
heat sink, side panels, or front panel, install them now.
Cut through and peel off about 1/2" x 1/2" (12 x 12 mm) of Figure 7-6
masking material from around the top-cover mounting holes
marked D in Figure 7-1. These holes are in the far corners of the
top cover's rear panel, corresponding to screws 1 and 2 in Figure This completes assembly of your K2. Please read the Operation
7-6. section, which follows, and try each of the K2's features.
Place the top cover onto the chassis and secure it using six
chassis screws as shown in Figure 7-6. i If you did not have access to a frequency counter or
calibrated receiver when aligning the 4-MHz oscillator, you may
i When removing the top cover in the future, take out only wish to use the one of the alternative VFO calibration techniques
described in the Operation section (page 101). You can use an on-
the six screws shown in Figure 7-6.
air signal, such as WWV at 10 MHz, to obtain better than +/- 50 Hz
VFO dial calibration on all bands.
ELECRAFT 81
8. Operation
BAND AND MODE NUMERIC
MEMORY BARGRAPH ANNUNCIATORS INDICATOR KEYPAD (1-9)
SELECTION
0 -1 +1
ON
LOCK OFF
K2 FRONT PANEL
82 ELECRAFT
ANTENNA
SER. NO.
12VDC KEY
RCV.
ANT. IN OUT
+ - 50Ω XVTR ELECRAFT K2
K2 REAR PANEL
ELECRAFT 83
This section of the manual explains how to set up and operate the Antenna
K2. Refer to the illustrations on the previous pages for control
locations. A comprehensive "mini-manual" is also A well-matched antenna (50 Ω) or an antenna tuner should be used
available for the K2; see our web site for details. with the K2. Some high SWR conditions may result in excessive
current drain unless power is reduced. If you have the KAT2 antenna
Connections tuner option installed, the K2's power control and power output
display will be much more accurate under all SWR conditions.
Power Supply Keying Devices
You can power the basic K2 (without the KPA100 amplifier)
from any 9-15 V DC power supply. A mating connector for the Any type of hand key, bug, or external keyer can be plugged into the
DC input jack is provided with the kit. Current drain is typically KEY jack, or you can use the K2's built-in memory keyer. In all
1.5-2 A on transmit, but can be over 3 A at the highest power cases, you must use a stereo plug with the keying device (a suitable
settings or with high SWR. (See Current Limiting, below.) plug is provided with the kit). Also see CW Operation (page 95).
Low Battery Warning: If the supply voltage drops below about Headphones
11 V, you’ll see a brief L O BA T T message flashed on the LCD
once every 8 minutes (approx.). If this happens, reduce power and Any type of mono or stereo headphones at nearly any impedance
recharge your battery. For tips on battery operation, see page will work with the K2. However, for best results we recommend high-
100. quality stereo headphones with full ear covers and 1/8" (3 mm) plug.
Self-Resetting Fuse: If the K2's internal 12 V line is shorted to
ground, fuse F1 will temporarily open, limiting current drain to
External Speaker
about 100 mA. The display will remain blank. If this happens,
turn power off until the problem is located and corrected. The K2 has a built-in, high-sensitivity 4-ohm speaker. You can also
plug in an external 4 or 8-ohm speaker at the "EXT. SPKR" jack.
Current Limiting: You can specify the maximum transmit
current (see C A L C UR, page 87). You'll see HI C UR on the Option Connectors
LCD if the programmed limit is reached.
A number of mounting holes are provided on the back panel of the
50/60-Hz Interference: Do not place the K2 beside, or on top K2 for specific option connectors. See Options (page 113). Two new
of, any equipment that uses a large AC power transformer. This holes were recently added to the lower rear panel to provide more
could result in modulation of the K2's low-level signal sources. convenient low-level transverter I/O. Refer to the K60XV manual.
84 ELECRAFT
LCD and Bargraph Meter You can install an LED on the front panel that will turn on
whenever SPLIT, RIT, or XIT is in effect. See the associated
The LCD shows the operating frequency and other information application note, Adding a SPLIT/RIT/XIT LED to the K2.
depending on selected display mode. The LED bargraph functions
as an S-meter on receive, and RF out or ALC meter on transmit. Potentiometers
Power-Up Messages: The LCD will display EL EC RA FT for AF GAIN receiver audio level
two seconds on power-up. If a problem is detected, the display will
show I NFO 1 0 0 or a similar message. The number shown RF GAIN receiver RF level11
corresponds to a paragraph in the Troubleshooting section.
Turning this control CCW (counter-clockwise) decreases receiver RF
Mode Indicator: A letter at the right end of the display tells you sensitivity. At the same time it increases the bargraph S-meter
the operating mode: C (CW), L (LSB), or U (USB). A fourth indication to remind you that you’re not at full receive sensitivity.
mode, RTTY/data, can also be enabled, and uses the letter r (page The farther CCW the control is set, the stronger a signal must be
104). If a small bar appears above the C or r , it means that the before it results in a meter deflection.
CW sideband is inverted (CW reverse or DATA reverse). The mode
indicator will also flash slowly in two cases: CW T ES T mode (see KEYER keyer speed control
page 96) and S P EEC H (VOX) mode (see page 98).
When you turn this control, keyer speed in words per minute (WPM)
Annunciators: The LCD provides eight Chevron-shaped will be displayed, e.g. S P D 1 8 . The speed can be set from about 9 to
annunciators, or status indicators: 50 WPM.
NB noise blanker on (flashes if Low Threshold setting POWER power output control
is selected using L E V E L )
ANT2 ant. 2 selected (requires ATU) When you turn this control, power output will be displayed in watts,
PRE pre-amp on (approx. +14 dB) e.g. P 5 . 0 . The range is 0.1 to 15 W for the basic K2, and 1 to
ATTN attenuator in (-10 dB) 100 W if you have the KPA100 amplifier installed. See Basic K2
A VFO A selected (flashes in SPLIT mode) Operation for details on controlling power output (page 93).
B VFO B selected (flashes in SPLIT mode)
RIT RIT turned on (flashes if wide range selected) OFFSET RIT/XIT offset
XIT XIT turned on (flashes if wide range selected)
This control provides a default range of +/- 0.6 kHz in 10 Hz steps
Decimal Points: The decimal point to the right of the 1 kHz when R I T and/or X I T are enabled. You can also select a wider
digit will flash slowly if the VFO is locked by holding L O C K . See RIT/XIT range (see RI T menu entry, page 104).
Advanced Operating Features for other cases where decimal points
flash (scanning, page 99; AGC OFF, page 100).
11
As in many transceivers, this control actually varies the I.F. gain.
ELECRAFT 85
Tap and Hold Functions X IT turn on XIT (see RI T menu entry, page 104)
P F2 activate programmable function 2
B AND+ select next higher band
RCL recall memory #0 - 9 (to start scan, use #0 - 9 ) A =B set both VFO’s to current VFO frequency
S P LI T toggle between SPLIT and NORMAL transceive
B AND- select next lower band X FI L select next crystal filter (FL1-4)
S TO RE store memory #0 - 9 (to start scan, use #0 - 9 ) AFI L audio filter mode (OFF, AF1-2, CF1-4, SF1-4)*
M E NU enter the menu M SG play or chain CW msg #0 - 8 (to repeat, use #0 - 8 )
E DI T edit current menu parameter RE C record CW message #0 - 8 (M S G cancels record)
D I S P LAY show voltage/current, time*, DSP parameters* Two-Switch Combinations (hold both switches)
RF/ ALC select SSB transmit bargraph mode (RF or ALC)
B AND+ + B AND- direct frequency entry (e.g., #7 0 4 0 )
A NT1 / 2 toggle between ATU antenna jacks 1 and 2*
TUNE key transmitter; activates ATU if installed P RE / ATT + A GC AGC on/off (mode letter dec. pt. flashes)
NB select noise blanker mode (OFF/NB1/NB2)* X FI L + A GC display crystal filter # and bandwidth
LE V E L toggle noise blanker threshold (low or high)* (plus audio filter setting, if applicable*)
A FI L + S P LI T DSP notch filtering on/off*
R ATE select VFO tuning rate (see RA T ES menu entry)
LO CK lock/unlock VFO (DP flashes) A FI L + R EC DSP noise reduction on/off*
M O DE select operating mode (CW/LSB/USB) D I S P LAY + TUNE override ATU T U N E power limit*
VOX CW: oper/test; SSB*: PTT/SPEECH (0.2-1.0)
RIT + X FI L turn FINE RIT on/off (see page 102)
*These functions require option modules; see page 113.
86 ELECRAFT
To access the menu: Tap M E N U . The display will show the ST L sidetone level (volume): 0-255 (Tone Source*)
menu entry last used, with an underline. For example, you might ST P sidetone pitch: 0.40 to 0.80 kHz in 10 Hz steps
see: L C D DA Y , indicating that the LCD is in "day" mode (i.e.,
T-R QSK delay: 0.00 to 2.55 sec. (8R Mode*)
backlight off). You can scroll to a desired menu entry by turning
the VFO knob or by tapping the B A N D + and B A N D - switches. RP T CW message repeat interval: 0 to 255 seconds
I NP CW input selection (Auto-detect on/off*):
To modify a menu entry's parameter: Hold E D I T to move the P DL n (internal keyer/norm. w/auto-detect12 )
underline to the parameter, rather than the menu entry name. In P DL r (internal keyer/reversed w/auto-detect)
the case of L C D, the parameter can be DA Y or NI T E. Change HA ND (hand key or external keying device)
the parameter using the VFO knob or B A N D + / B A N D - . When IAB iambic mode: A or B
you’re finished, tap M E N U to return to scrolling. Another tap of S S BA SSB audio level (mic gain): 1 , 2 , 3 , or BA L
M E N U will return you to normal operation.
S S BC SSB speech compression level: 1 - 1 through 4 - 1 ;
in RTTY/data mode, a separate compression
D I S P LAY Switch Usage in E D I T Mode: The D I S P L A Y switch
level is provided, and the menu entry is S S BC r
is used to access supplemental parameters when editing certain
menu entries (marked "*" at right). You will normally not need to LCD DA Y (backlight off, bargraph bright) or
change these settings. Entries which use D I S P L A Y include: NI T E (backlight on, bargraph normal)
G RP H LED bargraph selection: O FF, DO T , BA R
Entry D I S P LAY Switch Usage in E D I T mode (O P T BA T T overrides G RP H BA R, forcing
DO T mode)
ST L Selects the sidetone source, U6 - 2 5 or U8 - 4 . Use
OP T receiver optimization: P ERFo r ma n c e or
U8 - 4 (default).
BA T T e r y (see page 100)
T-R Specifies "8R" behavior, 8 r h o l d or 8 r n o r .
ATU ATU operating mode
"Hold" mode (default) holds the 8R line low during
the user-programmed QSK delay. RA NT RX antenna: O FF or O N, per-band (page 100)
I NP Selects auto-detect mode, A DET O n (default) or CAL calibration submenu (page 87)
A DET O f f . P F1 / P F2 programmable functions (page 100); can be
assigned to any menu function, S C A N, or
E DI TShortcut: If the menu entry you want to change is the last FP o n (Fast-Play)
one used, you don't need to tap M E N U ; just hold E D I T . Change the
parameter as usual, then exit by holding E D I T once more.
12
If auto-detect is turned on, a computer, hand key, or external keyer can be
connected along with the paddle. See page 95.
ELECRAFT 87
This section explains how to use C A L FI L to select the Tap B A N D - to display the BFO setting for filter FL1, which will be
bandwidth and BFO settings. An example appears on the next similar to BF1 t 1 1 0 c . The 3-digit number is the BFO control
page. The Elecraft web site provides information on other filter parameter. This number can be changed using the VFO knob, but
setup methods, including a method that uses a personal computer you'll use a different BFO-setting method described below. The letter
sound card. For a discussion of how the crystal filter and BFO t after BF1 is a reminder that the BF1 BFO frequency is always used
settings are related, see page 107. on transmit, which is important for SSB operation.
Basic CAL FIL Setup Whenever the BFO control parameter is displayed, you can tap
D I S P LAY to show the actual BFO frequency in kHz. The VFO knob
1. Connect the frequency counter test cable to TP2 (BFO). can then be used to set the BFO directly. This method is used in the
2. Set AF GAIN high enough to hear some background noise. filter-setup example.
3. Switch to a band between 160 m and 17 m. (The sideband is
inverted on 15 m and above, which may be confusing during Note: After changing the BFO setting, you can tap A G C to re-
filter setup.) measure and save the BFO information without switching filters. This
4. Select CW mode using M O D E . If a bar appears above the C, is useful if you want to try various BFO settings for a particular filter
the K2 is in CW Reverse mode; hold C W R V to select CW to find the one with the best audio peak.
Normal mode.
5. Tap X F I L until FL 1 is selected. Other CAL FIL Operations
6. Tap M E N U and scroll to C A L . Hold E D I T to move the
underline to O FF, then scroll until you see C A L FI L . When you're in C A L FI L you can always tap X F I L to change to the
Finally, hold E D I T again to activate the filter display. next filter, tap M O D E to change modes, and hold C W R V to switch
from CW normal to CW reverse. Whenever you switch modes or
Filter Bandwidth Display filters, the K2 will first record your new settings, if they have been
changed.
The initial C A L FI L display shows the present filter bandwidth
and the operating mode, e.g. FL 1 1 . 5 0 c . The number 1 . 5 0 B AND+ switches to the filter bandwidth display, and B A N D - switches
indicates a bandwidth of roughly 1.50 kHz.14 This parameter has to the BFO display. Tapping M E N U exits C A L FI L and returns to
a range of 0 . 0 0 - 2 . 4 9 . Above 2 . 4 9 , the parameter changes to the normal display. (On exit from C A L FI L , changes are saved.)
O P 1 - O P 5 , which can be used to select optional filters. For
example, the filter on the SSB adapter (KSB2) is O P 1 . Turning Selected Filters Off
Note the present bandwidth setting, then try using the VFO knob FL2, 3, or 4 can be individually disabled. To turn off a filter, display
to change it. You'll hear the "shape" (or pitch) of the noise the filter bandwidth using C A L FI L , then set the bandwidth number
change. (Return to the original bandwidth after experimenting.) to O FF. (To get to O FF, go to 0 . 0 0 first, then turn the VFO knob
a bit farther counter-clockwise.)
14
The number shown should be used only as a relative indication of filter
bandwidth. Actual bandwidth will probably be narrower.
ELECRAFT 89
CAL FIL Example (setting up all filters): 5. Use X F I L to return to FL 1 . Tap B A N D - to show BF1 .
6. Tap D I S P L A Y to show the actual BFO frequency. Use the VFO
Table 8-1 shows the recommended filer settings for a CW-only knob to select the value shown in the table. Typically you'll be
K2. If you already have the SSB adapter installed, use the SSB able to get to within +/- 20 Hz of the target frequency.
settings from the KSB2 manual. 7. Tap X F I L to save the new value and move to BF2 . Repeat steps
6 and 7 to set up BF2 , BF3 , and BF4 .
1. Read the CAL FIL instructions on the previous page if you 8. Switch to CW Reverse by holding C W R V . Then repeat steps 6
haven't already. You'll need to be familiar with CAL FIL and 7 for each CW Reverse BFO setting (BF1 -BF4 ).
displays and controls before proceeding. 9. Tap B A N D + to return to the filter bandwidth display. Use the
2. Do the Basic CAL FIL Setup from the previous page M O D E switch to select LSB, and return to F L 1 using X F I L .
exactly as described. You should then see a display similar to 10. Set up each LSB filter bandwidth according to the table. (This
FL 1 1 . 5 0 c . also updates the USB filter bandwidths.)
3. Using the VFO knob, set FL 1 to the value shown for CW 11. Tap B A N D - and set up each LSB BFO as you did for CW.
Normal (1.50). Tap X F I L to save the new value and move to
12. Tap M O D E to select USB, and set up each USB BFO.
FL 2 . (The CW Reverse bandwidth will also be updated.)
13. If you use settings that differ from the defaults, record them in
4. Set up FL 2 , FL 3 , and FL 4 in the same manner.
Table 8-2. Use pencil, since you may change them later.
CW Norm.
CW Rev.
LSB
USB
90 ELECRAFT
Audio Filter Control: If you have a KAF2 or KDSP2 option
Basic K2 Operation (audio filter and real-time clock) installed, A F I L will control audio
filter selection. Tap D I S P L A Y to activate other features.
Mode Selection
Preamp: The preamp provides about 14 dB gain. If you experience
Tap M O D E to cycle through the operating modes, noting the strong in-band interference, you may want to turn the preamp off.
change in the mode indicator letter (C = CW, L = lower sideband,
U = upper sideband). If RTTY/data mode is enabled, r = RTTY/data Attenuator: If necessary, 10 dB of attenuation can be switched in
will also appear in the mode list (see page 104). by turning on the attenuator. This is more effective than using the
RF GAIN control in the case of strong-signal overload.
Sideband Inversion: The K2 inverts the sideband on 15 meters
and above due to the frequency mixing scheme (the upper and lower Scanning: See Advanced Operating Features, page 99.
sidebands of the signal become reversed). In CW Normal mode, the
pitch of CW signals goes up with frequency on the lower bands; on Antenna Selection: If you're using a KAT2 or KAT100
15 m and up, the pitch goes down with frequency. automatic antenna tuner, the A N T 1 / 2 switch will toggle between
the two ATU antenna jacks. This also instantly recalls the ATU's
stored L-C parameters for each antenna. Refer to the relevant
Receiver Configuration ATU manual.
Gain Controls: The RF GAIN control should normally be set Noise Blanker Controls: The KNB2 option is required to use
fully clockwise. Adjust the AF GAIN control for comfortable these controls. The noise blanker is always turned OFF on power-
volume. Sidetone volume is set using S T L (page 96). up, and you should leave it off unless needed. When it is turned on,
the receiver will be more susceptible to interference from strong
Crystal Filter Selection: Each operating mode provides up to signals. To turn on the noise blanker, tap the N B switch. You’ll see
four filter settings, FL1-FL4. Bandwidth and BFO settings can be NB1 , NB2 , and O FF in that order. The NB1 and NB2 modes
customized using C A L FI L (page 88)15 . Tapping X F I L cycles provide short or wide pulse blanking intervals, respectively. One
through the filters. FL2, 3, or 4 can also be turned OFF. may be more effective than the other, depending on the type of
noise. In either mode, the NB annunciator will turn on.
Filters and Operating Modes: The CW Normal and CW Reverse
crystal filter selections are tied together. For example, if you switch The noise blanker provides two thresholds of noise detection: high
to FL2 when in CW Normal mode, CW Reverse also switches to and low. If you hold L E V E L the noise blanker will toggle between
FL2. The same applies to the LSB and USB modes. these two modes, with the display showing HI T HR or L O T HR.
High threshold is the default and should be used in most cases. If
Checking Filter Status: You can check the current filter number you select low threshold, the noise blanker may be more effective
and its bandwidth without changing filters by holding on certain types of noise, but it will also leave the receiver more
X F I L + A G C . For example, you might see F L 2 0 . 8 0 c . If a KAF2 vulnerable to strong in-band signals. When L O T HR is selected,
or KDSP2 audio filter is installed and enabled, you'll see audio filter the NB annunciator flashes as a reminder.
info after the crystal filter display (e.g. A F1 , C F1 , S F1 ).
15
Bandwidth settings below 0 . 2 0 may cause excessive signal attenuation.
ELECRAFT 91
Bargraph Modes: You have a choice of O FF, DO T , or BA R for Transverter Bands: The K2 provides up to six programmable
the LED bargraph. If you select DO T , just one bargraph segment transverter band displays for use with external transverters. Refer
representing the current meter level will be illuminated. If you to the T RNx menu entry (page 105).
select BA R, all LED segments to the left of the current level will
also be illuminated, resulting in a more visible display. O FF mode Transmit Limits: Some countries require transmit to be disabled
turns off the bargraph completely during receive but uses DOT outside of specified amateur bands. If you key the transmitter with
mode on transmit (see Advanced Operating Features). the VFO set outside fixed limits, you’ll see En d on the LCD.
Display Modes: Tapping D I S P L A Y alternates between frequency You can change bands in one of three ways:
display mode and voltage/current display mode. If you have the
KAF2 or KDSP2 option installed (audio filter and real-time-clock), • tap B A N D + or B A N D -
a time/date display will also be accessible (plus DSP settings in the • hold R C L (memory recall); see below
case of the KDSP2). • use Direct Frequency Entry (described later)
In frequency display mode, the LCD will show the operating Whenever you change bands or recall a frequency memory, a
frequency, mode indicator, and any annunciators that are enabled, number of parameters are saved in nonvolatile memory
e.g. 2 4 9 4 5 . 0 4 c . This is the display you’ll use most often. (EEPROM). This update also occurs periodically if you’ve moved
the VFO (see Backup Timer). The parameters that are saved on a
In voltage/current display mode, the LCD will show supply voltage per-band basis include:
(E) in 0.1 V increments and supply current (I) in 0.02 A
increments, e.g. E1 3 . 8 i 1 . 4 0 . This is useful for monitoring battery • A and B VFO frequencies and VFO tuning rate
condition. It can also be used with a simple voltage probe to check • Current VFO (A or B)
DC voltages inside the K2. Jumper P7, on the Control board, • Operating mode (CW, USB, LSB) and CW Normal/reverse
selects either 12 V monitoring or the voltage probe (P5). If the • AGC slow/fast
display shows 0 . 0 volts, P7 may be in the probe position. • Preamp and attenuator on/off
• Noise blanker on/off (requires noise blanker option)
In time/date/DSP display mode, the LCD will show either time (e.g. • ANT1/2 selection (ATU option)
0 8 . 0 5 . 0 0 ) or date (e.g. 1 1 - 2 8 - 0 2 ) or DSP settings. You can • Receive antenna on/off (160 m/RX ant. option)
toggle between time and date by holding B A N D + and B A N D -
together. Refer to the KAF2 or KDSP2 manual for details on 16
setting the time and date as well as other features. The receiver is not intended to be general coverage; narrow band-pass filters
are used at the front end to reject out-of-band signals. If you attempt to tune
too far outside an available band, receiver sensitivity and transmit power will
greatly decrease, and at some point the synthesizer will lose lock.
92 ELECRAFT
Default Frequency Memories: When you first turn on the K2, There are three possible results from using direct frequency entry:
each band memory is preset as follows:
• If you enter a frequency within the current band, only the
• VFO A is set to the first multiple of 100 kHz above the band current VFO will be updated.
edge (e.g. 7100, 24900). • If you enter a frequency that is in a different band, a band
• VFO B is set to the U.S. CW QRP frequency for that band change results, and the entire configuration for the target band
• Other defaults include: CW mode; VFO A; fast AGC; preamp will be loaded, except that the current VFO will now be at the
ON above 40 meters and OFF on 40 m and below; noise blanker frequency you just entered.
OFF and high threshold; antenna 2 OFF (antenna 1 selected); • If you enter a frequency that is too far outside any available
receive antenna OFF (normal receive operation) band, you’ll be switched to the closest available band, and the
frequency will be set to the one last used on that band. For
Memories #1-8 are preset to the same values as the 160-10 meter example, if you try to switch to 8400 kHz--which is typically
band memories, respectively. outside the range of the synthesizer--the K2 will switch to 40
meters and setup the VFOs as they last were on this band.
Store and Recall: Ten memories are provided, numbered 0
through 9. Each memory stores the same information that is stored Tuning Rates: The VFO tuning rate is selected by tapping R A T E .
per-band. Default tuning rates include 10 Hz, 50 Hz, and 1 kHz per step,
resulting in 1 kHz, 5 kHz, and 100 kHz per VFO knob turn. Other
To store the current setup in a frequency memory, hold S T O R E tuning rates can be selected; see the RA T ES menu entry (page
until you see ENT 0 - 9 , then tap one of the numeric keypad 103).
switches. To recall a stored setup, hold R C L until you see ENT 0 -
9 , then tap the number of the memory you wish to recall. In both The frequency display changes to remind you of the current tuning
cases you can cancel the operation by tapping any non-numeric rate. At 10 Hz/step, two decimal places are shown (100 Hz and 10
switch. Hz). When you select 50 Hz/step, the 10 Hz digit is blank. When
you select 1 kHz/step, both decimal places are blank.
Note: If you hold rather than tap a numeric keypad digit when
doing either a store or recall, you will initiate scanning. See page VFO Lock: The current VFO frequency can be locked by holding
99. the L O C K switch until L O C is displayed. The decimal point will
then flash slowly as a reminder. Split Operation: Lock applies
Direct Frequency Entry: To do direct frequency entry, hold both only to the current (receive) VFO. So, while you are holding the
B AND+ and B A N D - simultaneously. When you see "-----" on the R E V switch (temporary VFO reverse), you can change the
LCD, release the two switches, then enter the target frequency frequency of the other VFO (transmit), overriding lock. This is
using the numeric keypad. To enter a frequency in the 160 meter very useful when operating SPLIT, since it allows you to check and
band, you must enter 5 digits, starting with a leading 0, e.g. 0 1 8 3 modify your transmit frequency without unlocking the receive
5 . For other bands below 10 MHz, you need only enter 4 digits VFO.
(e.g., 7 0 4 0 ). On transverter bands, direct frequency entry can
only be used to go to a new frequency within the present band. (see Holding the switch again cancels lock and displays NO R (normal).
T RNx menu entry, page 105).
ELECRAFT 93
GROUND
Several advanced CW features are covered in later sections:
DO T DASH
You must use a stereo (2-circuit) plug, even if you use only a hand Figure 8-1
key or external keyer. This should not affect the use of the keying
When you connect the keying devices in this way, you can
device with other equipment, since the middle contact on the plug
continue to use the paddle as usual. But if the external keying
(often called the "ring" contact) is only used with keyer paddles.
device is keyed, both the DOT and DASH lines will be pulled low
simultaneously via the diodes. The K2 firmware interprets this as
Hand key or External Keying Device: To use a hand key or
direct external keying rather than as DOT or DASH triggers.
external keying device, select I NP HA ND using the menu. Use the
"tip" contact (DOT) of the key jack with a hand key or external
Auto Detect can be turned off if desired. Find the I NP menu entry,
keying device. You can key the K2 externally at up to 70 WPM.
E D I T the parameter, then tap D I S P L A Y to select A DET O F F.
96 ELECRAFT
Advanced Operating Features To use continuous scanning (from VFO A to VFO B):
A number of specialized operating techniques are described in this Setup VFOs A and B for the two ends of the band of interest.
section: VFO A must be set for a frequency lower than VFO B.
Select the operating mode, preamp/attenuator setting, and
Scanning and channel hopping (see below) tuning rate (R A T E ). Select a narrow filter if the band is noisy.
Reducing current drain for portable operation Store this setting in any memory (using the S T O R E switch), but
Using a separate receive antenna instead of tapping the switch for the desired memory, hold the
Programming the PF1/PF2 functions numbered switch (0 - 9 ) until you see S C A N on the display. You
AGC on/off control can also initiate scanning when you recall a stored memory.
VFO frequency calibration techniques Just hold R C L , then hold the numbered switch, as with S T O R E .
Checking firmware revision numbers The memories can store up to 10 scan ranges for instant recall.
Resetting to factory defaults To scan with the receiver live (unsquelched), continue to hold
Using computer control of the K2 the numbered button until you see A F O N. If the tuning rate is
FINE RIT mode set for 10 Hz steps, live scanning proceeds at 50 kHz/minute.
During squelched scanning, when a station is found, the receiver
Also see Secondary Menu Functions (page 103). will un-squelch and will stay on that frequency for about 25
seconds or until the signal fades.
Scanning and Channel Hopping You can stop scanning by tapping any switch, key, or PTT.
Use SCAN RESUME (P F 1 or P F 2 , see at left) to restart scan.
To resume "live" scanning, hold until you see A F O N.
The K2's scanning features let the K2 tune any band segment
continuously, or channel-hop among two or more memories, with
To use channel hopping (manually or with scanning):
or without the receiver squelched. Scanning when squelched allows
the K2 to ignore stable carriers (key-down signals with no
Set up and S T O R E two or more memories for the target band
modulation), stopping only when "interesting" signals are found.
(using VFO A only). Then choose one memory as the
Scanning with the receiver "live" (unsquelched) is especially useful
"initializer" to be used when starting channel scan, and R C L it.
when listening for weak signals on very quiet bands.
Edit the RA T ES secondary menu parameter (page 103); tap
D I S P L A Y to select C H S C (channel scan) or C H S C - T N
60-Meter Channels: Channel-hopping (manually or using scan) is
intended primarily for use on 60 meters. The present U.S. 60-meter (channel scan plus manual hopping); exit the menu; S T O R E
channel designations are 5330.5, 5346.5, 5366.5, 5371.5, and this memory. If manual hopping is enabled, you can now use
5403.5 kHz (USB only). Typically these would be programmed the VFO to hop among memories assigned to this band.
into memories 1-5. See channel hopping details at right. Scanning can be initiated via R C L or S T O R E . The scan rate is
0.2 seconds per channel (0.5 seconds per channel for "live"
Scan Resume: Scan-mode users may wish to use the menu to scanning). Note: VFO B can be set up differently on a per-
program P F 2 (or P F 1 ) as SCAN RESUME. Holding that switch will channel basis for split operation, if desired, or you can fine-tune
then re-start scan without having to use the R C L / S T O R E method. channels when necessary by turning on both R I T and X I T .
100 ELECRAFT
Reducing Current Drain for Portable Operation Programmable Function Switches (PF1/PF2)
You can use any of the methods listed below to reduce receive- The P F 1 and P F 2 switches (below R I T and X I T , respectively) can
mode current drain and thus extend battery life. These techniques be programmed as direct edit shortcuts to any two menu entries of
will have only a small effect on transmit current drain, however. your choice, including secondary menu entries (see page 103). Two
Reduce power output to the lowest effective level if you're special functions can also be assigned to P F 1 or P F 2 : Fast Play
transmitting frequently on a weak battery. (FP o n , page 103) and SCAN RESUME (S C A N, page 99).
Use headphones or reduce speaker volume. To program P F 1 or P F 2 : Enter the menu and scroll to P F1 or
Turn off the RF preamp. P F2 , then change the parameter to the desired entry. Exit the
Set G RP H to DO T mode. There's also an O FF mode, which menu.
completely disables the S-meter and forces DO T mode for
transmit power display. To use P F 1 or P F 2 : HOLD one of these switches to activate the
Set O P T (Optimization) to BA T T (battery); this reduces the selected menu shortcut, then change the menu parameter (which
I.F. post-mixer amplifier current by about 40 mA and will be underlined) using the VFO knob or B A N D + / B A N D - . To
automatically forces the bargraph to use DO T mode if set for return to normal operation, tap any switch or the keyer paddle.
BA R. Receive performance is minimally affected by this Exceptions: the FP o n , S C A N and RA NT functions take effect
setting unless you have very strong in-band stations nearby. immediately.
Set L C D to DA Y to turn off the L C D backlight. This is most
effective if you also set G RP H to O FF, since each bargraph Using P F 1 or P F 2 as secondary menu shortcuts: Enter the
LED segment that is turned on in DA Y mode uses about 18 menu and scroll to P F1 or P F2 . To switch to the secondary menu
mA. (Each segment uses only 6 mA in NI T E mode.) entries, tap D I S P L A Y . (Tapping D I S P L A Y again will return to the
primary menu entries.) Select the desired parameter, then exit the
Note: Voltage/current display mode can be used to verify the effect menu.
of each setting.
AGC On/Off Control
Using a Separate Receive Antenna
Some operators prefer to turn AGC off and use manual RF GAIN
The 160 m/RXANT option (K160RX) provides a separate receive control under certain weak-signal conditions.
antenna which can be enabled on a pre-band basis.
To turn off AGC: Hold both the P R E / A T T and A G C switches
To enable the receive antenna: Switch to the desired band. Use simultaneously. Release the switches when you see O FF flashed on
the menu to change the RA NT option to O N. The preamp and the LCD. To remind you that AGC is off, the decimal point to the
attenuator settings with RA NT O N can be set independently from left of the mode indicator will flash slowly. Received signals will no
of their normal settings. If you switch between the normal and longer affect the S-meter level. Turning the RF GAIN control
receive antennas often, you can program P F 1 or P F 2 as RA NT , counter-clockwise will increase the S-meter reading.
and it will switch immediately (one switch press).
ELECRAFT 101
Frequency Calibration Techniques being used by at least one count, then return it to the original
setting. Tap M E N U to exit without switching filters. This will
The VFO is only as accurate as the 4.000 MHz oscillator on the force the K2 to re-measure the BFO frequency.
Control board, which is calibrated using C22. C22 can be fine-tuned 10. Repeat step 2. If the VFO dial is still off, repeat steps 3 - 9.
using one of the following methods: 11. Modify all BFO settings using C A L FI L (as in step 9).
If you find it necessary to reset to defaults, record the following data Limitations: Entering FINE RIT mode turns off SPLIT, RIT, and
first: XIT, which cannot be used in combination with FINE RIT. If you
move the VFO while using FINE RIT, you may need to readjust the
• filter and BFO settings for all modes/filters (using CAL FIL) OFFSET control due to small differences in linearity over the
• other CAL parameters, e.g. S-meter HI/LO, current limiting VFO's tuning range.
• primary menu parameters
• secondary menu parameters, if applicable To use FINE RIT: Select a narrow data-mode filter (FL 2 - FL 4 )
using X F I L . Next, hold R I T and X F I L together; the display will
To reset to defaults: Turn the K2 off, then hold down the 4 , 5 , show FI NE O N, and the RIT and XIT annunciators will alternate
and 6 switches, and turn power back on. The EEPROM will be on/off slowly. Only FL 1 and the selected narrow filter will now be
rewritten with factory defaults. You can then re-enter the data available; the other two will be temporarily disabled. You can then
saved above using the menu functions. Re-doing CAL PLL is also use the OFFSET knob to fine-adjust the signal pitch of the narrow
recommended. filter without affecting the pitch of FL1. Turning the OFFSET
knob will display the filter selection and the FINE RIT offset, from
Computer Control of the K2 -15 to +15 units (e.g., FL 3 - 1 2 ). One unit is about 1 to 3 Hz
(finer on lower bands). When you transmit (always through O P 1 ),
If you have the RS232 interface adapter installed (model KIO2), or you will be closer to the received station's carrier frequency, and on
the 100-watt stage (KPA100), you’ll be able to use a computer to receive, switching filters will result in few if any lost characters.
control the K2. Both the KIO2 and KPA100 provide true RS232
levels (at 4800 baud), with no need for a level converter. To cancel FINE RIT: Hold R I T + X F I L , or change modes or bands.
FI NE O FF will be displayed.
The K2's computer-control capabilities are compatible with nearly
all contesting, logging, and remote-control software, including
Elecraft's k2remote and k2voice programs. Control over the 18
In data modes, the TX and RX frequency will always be exactly the same
internet is also possible. You can write your own programs as well
if you use only FL1 (if set to O P 1 ), and avoid using splits. However, you
(see the KIO2 Programmer's Reference, on our web site). may wish to switch to a narrow filter when QRM is present. The shift in
frequency between O P 1 (which is used on transmit) and the narrow filter can
Refer to the KIO2 or KPA100 manuals for additional details. cause the signal to "walk" up or down the band if "net" is turned on in the
demodulation software. Most software provides a means of turning off "net"
(i.e. locking the TX frequency). FINE RIT provides a supplemental tool.
ELECRAFT 103
Transverter Bands (TRN1-TRN6) Using transverter bands: When you switch to a transverter band
(using B A N D + / B A N D - ), the message T RN1 , 2 o r 3 is flashed.
Six user-definable bands are provided for use with transverters. Once The LCD shows up to 999 MHz by shifting one place to the right.
enabled individually using the T RN1 - 3 / 4 - 6 menu entries, these Note: If you select 10 Hz tuning steps with R A T E , the hundreds of
bands will appear in the band rotation following 10 meters. You can MHz digit will briefly disappear so you can see the 10-Hz digit.
use Elecraft XV-Series transverters and most other transverter
types with the K2. Direct Frequency Entry on transverter bands is in-band only. For
bands over 99 MHz, the first digit is made part of the prompt. For
Transverter switching: Up to six Elecraft XV-Series transverters example, on a transverter band in the 430 MHz range, you'd see
can be controlled automatically using the K60XV option (60 meter - - - - 4 when you hold B A N D + and B A N D - together to initiate
adapter and low-level transverter I/O). Refer to the K60XV manual Direct Frequency Entry. To get to 432.100 MHz, you'd then enter
for further details. 32100.
Transverter configuration: These bands are set up using the Controlling transverter relays: The 8R HOLD feature can
T RN1 - 3 / 4 - 6 menu entries. First, tap M E N U , select the secondary prevent excessive transverter relay switching in CW mode. To
menu (S EC ) using D I S P L A Y , and scroll to T RN1 , 2 , or 3 . change the 8R HOLD setting, locate the T - R menu entry (primary
(Tapping A N T 1 / 2 switches to T RN4 - 6 .) Next, hold E D I T to menu), edit the parameter, and tap D I S P L A Y to select 8 r h o l d .
highlight the first parameter. You can then tap D I S P L A Y to rotate (This is the default setting and is recommended for use in all
through the parameters. Finally, change parameters as needed using operating modes, whether or not transverters are used.)
the VFO knob or B A N D + / B A N D - . Changes take effect when you
exit EDIT mode. Using the K60XV option with transverters: In addition to 60
meter coverage, the K60XV option provides a low-level, split
O N / O FF Set to O N to enable this transverter band RX/TX path transverter interface. This interface can be selected on
RF Transverter operating frequency (0-999 a per-transverter-band basis by adjusting the O UT field for an
MHz; GHz digits not used) output value in milliwatts (L 0 . 0 1 -L 1 . 2 7 ). In T U N E mode, power
IF K2 band to use as the I.F. (7, 14, 21, or 28 in mW is displayed, plus LP for "low power" (e.g. P 1 . 0 0 L P ).
MHz)19
O FS Display offset (+/- 9.99 kHz); calibrate The K60XV also provides a buffered relay keying output, and logic
based on transverter oscillator offset, if any outputs for transverter switching. Additional control capabilities are
O UT Power output limit, L 0 . 0 1 -L 1 . 2 7 mW available with the Elecraft KRC2 programmable band decoder.
(requires K60XV) or H0 0 . 0 -H1 2 . 7 watts; (Refer to the K60XV and KRC2 manuals.)
can reduce setting using POWER control
A DR Elecraft XV-Series transverter selection ATU considerations: Use caution when connecting both a
address (see K60XV manual) transverter and an HF antenna to the KAT2: you could
accidentally transmit at high power into the transverter. For
example, suppose that you have T RN1 set up for an I.F. of 14
MHz and a 1.0-watt power limit. If you switch the K2 to 14 MHz--
19
When you first select a different I.F., the displayed A and B VFOs may where there is no power limit--you must remember not to transmit
end up outside the intended RF band. To correct this, tune the VFO up or into the KAT2 antenna jack that is connected to the transverter.
down to the desired frequency, or use direct frequency entry.
106 ELECRAFT
9. Circuit Details
Before reading this section you should become familiar with the schematics Signal Flow
(Appendix C) and Block Diagram (Appendix B).
The block diagram (Appendix C) shows overall signal flow in the K2.
System Overview Transmit and receive paths are shown for sideband operation. For CW
transmit, the BFO signal is routed directly to the transmit mixer.
The K2’s modular design allows flexibility in configuration and provides for
The K2 receiver is a single-conversion superhet, utilizing double-tuned band-
future expansion. At the core of this modular architecture are the three main
pass filters on each band and down-conversion to a low I.F (4.915 MHz).
circuit boards:
This approach results in excellent CW and SSB performance. The low I.F. is
compatible with narrow, variable-bandwidth CW crystal filtering and allows
Front Panel User interface, including display and controls
the use of fast I.F.-derived AGC. An I.F. of 4.915 MHz also results in nearly
Control Board MCU, DC control, AGC, and AF amplifier
no birdies across all nine bands. The BFO is microcontroller controlled to
RF Board All RF circuitry, relays, and I/O controller (IOC)
allow upper and lower sideband reception on any band, as well as CW on
either sideband. AM signals can be received in SSB modes thanks to the
This functional division allows related circuits to be grouped together, but
stable VFO, although AM transmit is not currently supported.
also provides a high degree of isolation between the analog and digital
sections of the transceiver. The RF board serves as a "mother board," while
Individual (per-band) band-pass filters offer improved intermodulation
the front panel and Control boards plug into the RF board at its front edge.
performance when compared to up-conversion designs that use only a single
The front panel and Control boards are mounted back-to-back, with their
low-pass filter to remove image products ahead of the receiver. Up-conversion
ground-plane layers forming a partial enclosure that helps minimize radiated
also requires the use of a second I.F. to obtain good CW performance,
digital noise.
increasing cost and producing additional spurious signals. (An alternative is
The K2’s custom enclosure is also modular. It is fabricated in six pieces, up-conversion followed directly by a product detector and audio filter. While
with a unique 2-D fastener used at each joint and also for PCB support. This this results in minimal parts count, it was not considered since the resulting
design provides a rugged but light-weight enclosure that is ideal for field or CW and AGC performance would have been poor.)
home use.
On transmit signal flow is reversed, so the BFO is combined with the VCO
The top cover, which includes the upper portion of the rear panel, can support to generate an output at the operating frequency, which is filtered by the
a variety of built-in options such as an internal battery, automatic antenna band-pass and low-pass filters. A highly stable power amplifier chain up to
tuner, and RS-232 interface. The top cover can be replaced with a 100 W 10-15 watts on all bands, and the output level can be set in 0.2-W increments
power amplifier module, converting the K2 into a medium-power station. (0.1–W increments below 10 W). The transmit strip is conservatively rated to
provide excellent reliability and immunity to high SWR. High-isolation PIN-
diode T-R switching is used to provide silent, no-relays QSK. (Please refer to
the RF Board section for further details.)
ELECRAFT 107
Coverage of 160-10 meters is provided by a single wide-range VCO (voltage- Figure 9-2 shows the BFO positioned above the same two filters, which will
controlled oscillator). High-side and low-side injection are both used, allow the K2 to receive USB and CW Reverse (opposite-sideband CW).
depending on the band, so the overall VCO range is limited to about 6 to 24 Since the upper boundary of the filter moves as the filter is widened, the
MHz. Only one VCO is needed, with a single high-Q inductor and three BFO frequency must move the same amount. BFO2 is used with FL2, and
small DPDT relays configured to select one or more fixed capacitors. The BFO1 is used with FL1.
VCO is driven by a PLL synthesizer. 5 kHz frequency steps are used at the
PLL, while 10 Hz increments are provided by a 12-bit DAC driving an 11
MHz VCXO (PLL reference oscillator).
FL2 FL1
Crystal Filters and BFO Settings
4913.5 4914.0 4914.5 4915.0 4915.5
The signals you tune in on the K2's receiver are "shaped" by the crystal filter,
which passes only a narrow range of frequencies. The pitch of these signals is
determined by the BFO (beat-frequency oscillator). Figure 9-1 shows an
example of how these signals are related. The BFO frequency is below the
filter passband; this is the case for the CW "normal" and LSB modes on the BFO2 BFO1
K2. Two different filters are shown: FL2 (narrow, for CW), and FL1 (wide,
for LSB voice). Frequencies in the 4915 kHz range are shown because this is Figure 9-2. CW Reverse or USB.
the K2’s intermediate frequency, or I.F.
The C A L FI L menu function provides the means to control how wide the
filters are, and where the BFOs are located in relation to them. (The numeric
FL1 parameters you select using C A L FI L are translated into voltages that
FL2 control the filter and BFO by means of voltage-variable-capacitance diodes, or
varactors.)
4913.0 4913.5 4914.0 4914.5 4915.0
Microcontroller (MCU)
The K2’s microcontroller is an integral part of all transceiver operations.
BFO Signal 1 Signal 2 Firmware is used to advantage to provide many functions traditionally
provided by discrete control logic. For example, the VCXO (PLL reference
Figure 9-1 CW Normal or LSB. oscillator) is linearized on each band by a firmware auto-calibration routine,
with resulting tables stored in EEPROM. Another example is firmware ALC,
which is used on CW to maintain the user-specified power level across all
In this example, filter FL2’s bandwidth is set for about 1 kHz, and it is bands. The SSB adapter, when installed, provides its own optimized
centered at 4914.0 kHz. The BFO is set for 4913.0 kHz. hardware ALC.
Signal 1 (4914.0 kHz) will be passed by FL2, and you’ll hear it at an audio
pitch of 1 kHz (4914-4913). Signal 2 (4915.0 kHz) will be rejected by FL2, Extensive use of firmware also results in many useful operating features not
but passed by FL1, and heard at 2 kHz. The same BFO setting can be used usually found on transceivers in this price class. These features include built-
for both filters, because the lower boundary of the K2’s variable-bandwidth in test equipment (frequency counter and digital voltmeter), auto-calibration,
crystal filter stays fixed as it is made wider. Only the upper edge moves dual VFOs, memories, split operation, RIT/XIT, and a versatile keyer.
significantly. Provisions have also been made in firmware to support a wide range of
option modules. (See full feature list elsewhere on the web site.)
108 ELECRAFT
20
I2C stands for Inter-IC Communication, an industry standard serial
interface protocol used by Philips and other IC manufacturers.
ELECRAFT 109
Potentiometers R1, R2 and R5 (Keyer Speed, Power Out, and RIT/XIT To get the most out of the available I/O on the MCU, much of the
Offset) are multiplexed onto a single A-to-D input of the MCU, the communication from MCU to the rest of the K2 is done via serial interfaces:
"VPOTS" line, so their position can be read. Firmware hysteresis is used for
these controls to prevent noise from interfering with the readings, with more RS232: Used for communicating with a computer via P4
hysteresis on transmit. The AF GAIN control is not read by the MCU; its (Aux I/O)
leads go directly to the input of the AF amp on the Control Board. (The I2C: Display driver data
entire path from product detector to AF amp is balanced to prevent common- SPI: The serial peripheral interface is used to access various
mode noise pickup—see Control Board for details.) As is true of most peripherals, including the PLL and DACs.
modern transceivers, the RF GAIN control actually controls the receiver’s IF AuxBus: 1-wire data network for co-processor control
gain; it varies the DC control voltage on pin 5 of U12 (RF Board). Shift registers: serial-to-parallel shift registers are used to access
MOSFET LED drivers on the front panel; a parallel-to-
The circuitry associated with J2, the mic jack, is only present if the SSB serial shift register on the front panel is used for reading
option is installed. P1 is a configuration header that the user can wire as pushbuttons.
needed to support any of several industry-standard microphones with an 8-pin
circular connector. Q3 and its associated resistors are used to multiplex the In addition to the microcontroller the Control board provides a number of
UP, DOWN, and FUNCTION lines from P1 onto the VPOTS line to allow specialized hardware interfaces. Circuitry is described moving from left to
the mic to send commands to the MCU. The PTT line from the MIC right, top to bottom on the schematic.
activates the DOT-PTT line to initiate transmit. The MICAF line, mic audio
output, is amplified and processed by circuitry on the SSB adapter (see U10A and associated circuitry are used to accurately control power output as
Option Modules). well as provide CW waveform shaping. The keying waveform is sigmoidal
(S-shaped) on both rising and falling edges in order to provide totally click-
Control Board free keying.
U4 provides coarse tuning (5 kHz steps). Fine steps are achieved using a 12- Sheet 2: Receiver and Low-Level Transmitter Circuits
bit DAC (U5) to tune a voltage-controlled crystal oscillator (Q19), which is
the PLL reference oscillator. The reference oscillator range needed on each The receiver is a single-conversion superhet with an I.F. (intermediate
band varies in proportion to the VCO output frequency. To cover exactly 5 frequency) of 4.915 MHz. The preamp and attenuator are switched in using
kHz in 10 Hz steps on each band, an automatic calibration routine is provided latching relays so that no current is required except when switching them on
in firmware. The DAC is swept from its highest output voltage down, and or off. The mixer is a diode ring type, providing good dynamic range (Z6),
the DAC word needed to select each 100 Hz step is recorded in EEPROM on and is followed by a strong post-mixer amplifier, Q22. The current drain in
a per-band basis. 10 Hz steps are then interpolated based on the 100 Hz table Q22 can be reduced by the operator using a menu option that turns off Q12.
data. Crystal X1 in the PLL reference oscillator can be tuned by varactor
diodes D16 and D17 over a range of about 10 kHz, which is required in order A 5-pole variable-bandwidth crystal filter is used on CW (X7-X11). This
to tune the full 5 kHz on the lowest band (160 m), but still provides better filter is optimized for use at low bandwidths (~200 to 500 Hz), but can be set
than 10 Hz resolution on the highest bands. both narrower and wider as needed with only a small additional loss. The
shape factor and passband ripple content are optimized at around 300 Hz. (On
The synthesizer design is unique in that three inexpensive DPDT latching SSB, a separate fixed filter is switched in; this filter is located on the SSB
relays are used to select one of eight VCO ranges, thus requiring only a adapter.)
single high-Q VCO inductor (T5). The relays are optimally interconnected to
allow for maximum coverage of the nine HF bands, plus a large out-of-band AGC is derived from the output of the I.F. amp by using an auxiliary, low-
tuning range. Computer simulation was used to find a relay topology that frequency I.F. of about 150 kHz (see Control Board). The AGC signal is then
allowed for the use of standard 5% fixed capacitors along with the smallest applied to pin 5 of the I.F. amp (U12).
practical varactor diode capacitance. As a result, the VCO exhibits low noise
on all bands and has a low max/min tuning ratio on each band. A second crystal filter (X6/X5) follows the I.F. amp to reduce wideband
noise. This filter is also tunable. Varactor diode D39’s capacitance is
In order to provide some allowance for unit-to-unit variance in T5, a much increased during CW use, but on SSB is reduced, making the response quite
higher value slug-tuned inductor (L30) is placed across T5’s high-impedance broad. Q25 turns on only if the optional SSB adapter is installed and its
winding. L30 has only a small effect on the Q of T5, but provides about a fixed-bandwidth "OP1" filter is selected. This pulls capacitor C179 to
20% tuning range. The combined parallel inductance is very small (only 1
ground, which interacts with L34 to shift the second crystal filter's center
µH), resulting in a very large C/L ratio on the lowest bands. frequency so that it matches that of the OP1 filter.
U3 buffers the VCO signal. Q16/Q17 provide stable ALC to keep the VCO
The product detector is a Gilbert-cell mixer/oscillator (U11). Due to the loss
voltage fairly constant over the entire frequency range despite variations in the in the second crystal filter, the input voltage to U11 never exceeds the range
VCO transistor, Q18.
that the device can handle.
Also shown on sheet 1 is the DC input circuitry (bottom right-hand corner), U11 also provides the BFO signal, which is tunable over about a 4 to 5 kHz
which is designed to protect the K2 and its power supply from almost any
range by varactor diodes D37 and D38. X3 and X4 have carefully-controlled
conceivable mis-connection or short. D10 protects the K2 from reverse
characteristics and are well matched. As in the PLL VCXO (Q19, sheet 1),
polarity at the DC input, while dropping only 0.1-0.2 volt. F1 is a thermal
the two crystals de-Q each other to increase the tuning range of the BFO.
self-resetting fuse that goes into a high-resistance state if a short or other
high-current situation exists anywhere inside the K2. F1 resets quickly once
On transmit, the BFO buffer/attenuator (Q24) is turned on. Q24’s drain
the source of the short is removed. D12 provides reverse-polarity protection
voltage is controlled by the microcontroller, providing BFO amplitude
for the internal battery, if applicable. control. Precision PIN diode D36 provides additional reduction in low-level
signal leakage when Q24 is turned off. U10 mixes the VCO with the BFO on
transmit, and video amplifier U9 increases the signal level while providing a
low-impedance output to drive the bandpass filters (sheet 3).
112 ELECRAFT
Sheet 3: Filters and I/O Controller The latching relays are wired with a single common drive line so that when
The band-pass and low-pass filters are switched with latching relays to one relay needs to be turned on or off, the others are pulled in the opposite
minimize loss and current drain. Only five band-pass filters and seven DPDT direction. This arrangement requires no drivers of any kind. U1’s I/O lines are
relays are required to cover nine bands (160-10 m). This is accomplished by protected from relay transients by its own internal shottky clamping diodes to
switching fixed capacitors in or out using two additional relays. For example, 6 V and ground. Measured transients are well within the current rating of the
on 160 meters, relay K3 places C13 and C14 across the 80 m band-pass clamping diodes. Transients are reduced in amplitude by the series resistance
filter. But relay K3 also used to switch the 20 meter band-pass filter to 30 of the other non-switched relays and U1’s own MOSFET driver impedance.
meters by shorting C21 and C23 to ground. K6 places C32/C34 across the The relays are rated at 5 V nominal (250-ohm coils). The actual impressed
15 m inductors to select 17 meters, or C44/C46 across the 10 m inductors to voltage is in the 5 V to 6 V range, depending on ambient temperature,
select 12 meters. The band-pass response is a compromise on 80 and 160 reflecting the best and worst-case sink/source current limits of the 16F872.
meters but on all other bands is similar to what would be obtained with
separate filters. The IOC communicates with the main microcontroller over the 1-wire
AuxBus. U1’s 4 MHz clock is turned off and the device is in sleep mode at
The low-pass filters also serve double-duty in most cases; five filters cover 8 all times, except when it is processing an AuxBus message, so there is no
bands (80-10 m). The 30/20 m filter uses three pi-sections to provide good digital noise on receive. The main microcontroller runs from a 5 V supply,
roll-off of the 20 MHz second harmonic when operating on 30 meters. Most while the IOC runs from 6 V. The AuxBus is designed to accommodate
of the filters are elliptic, aiding attenuation of specific harmonics. But elliptic devices running at both voltage levels.
filters are not needed on 40 and 80 meters since these each cover only one
band. The 2nd harmonic attenuation provided by the push-pull power Sheet 4: Transmitter Amplifier
amplifier is quite good even pre-filter (sheet 4).
Q5 and Q6 are class-A pre-driver and driver stages, respectively. Q5’s bias is
DPDT relays are used for the low-pass and band-pass filters rather than the provided directly by the 8 V transmit line (8T), while Q6’s bias is switched
traditional SPDT approach which requires twice as many relays. This is on by the 8T line but is gated by Q10. This is necessary because the DAC
possible by virtue of careful guard-banding techniques on both top and output that supplies the bias voltage for the driver is used as the crystal filter
bottom of the PC board in the filter areas. Isolation between input and output bandwidth control voltage on receive. The bias to Q6 can be varied under
of each filter is excellent across the entire frequency range. firmware control to optimize efficiency for CW vs. SSB and at different
output levels. This is useful in maintaining high overall efficiency during
The T-R switch (D1-D5) provides very high isolation using low-cost silicon battery operation.
diodes with a PIN characteristic (1N4007). Q2 is a very high-voltage
MOSFET that provides a ground path on receive for D3 and D4, but on Q7 and Q8 form a conservatively-rated push-pull power amplifier that can
transmit this transistor can easily handle the high voltages present on the easily supply 10 watts or higher output on all bands. Q11 and Q13 are used
power amplifier collectors. as a bias voltage regulator. The bias regulator is effectively out of the circuit
on CW because of the large size of resistor R62, resulting in approximately a
U1, a 28-pin PIC microcontroller (16F872 or 16F872A), drives all of the class-B bias level. On SSB, resistor R63 is grounded by the I/O controller,
latching relays and a few other I/O lines. U1 is referred to it as the I/O causing much more current flow through Q13 and stabilizing the bias for
controller (IOC) because it handles nearly all I/O functions for the main class AB operation.
microcontroller. It also has the job of determining whether the 160
m/RXANT option board is installed by sensing the presence or absence of the
two relays on the module. Finally, the IOC contains all of the per-band and
per-memory initialization data in ROM, which is sent to the main
microcontroller as needed to initialize EEPROM data tables. A number of
different regional band plans and other customized parameters can be
accommodated in U1’s data tables.
ELECRAFT 113
10. Options
The K2 can be customized using a variety of internal and external options, K60XV 60-m Adapter and Transverter Interface: The K60XV adds 60
which are briefly described here. Note: If you press a switch associated with a meter coverage and a low-level, split RX/TX transverter interface (~0 dBm).
missing option module, you'll see NO T I NS T (not installed) on the LCD.
Menu parameters for missing options will be displayed as "- - ". K160RX 160 m Adapter and RX ANT Switch: The K160RX option adds
160 meters a separate receive antenna switch. The receive antenna can have a
KSB2 SSB Adapter: The KSB2 allows the K2 to transmit and receive LSB separate preamp/attenuator setting from the normal antenna (per-band).
and USB, which enables use of voice as well as PSK31, RTTY (AFSK),
SSTV, and other data modes. VOX and PTT are supported, and power output KBT2 Internal 12-V Battery: The rechargeable battery fits snugly into the
can be set from about 0.5 to 15 watts (PEP). The adapter's crystal filter is top cover along with the KAT2 ATU and/or KIO2. Recharging requires an
optimized for SSB transmit and receive, but can also be used for CW or AM external 14-V regulated power supply, which can also power the transceiver.
receive. Mic gain and speech compression level can be set using the menu.
Our MH2 Heil/Elecraft hand mic is ideally suited to use with the KSB2. KIO2 RS232 Interface: This option allows full computer control of the K2,
and uses true RS232 signal levels. It works with most transceiver control and
KNB2 Noise Blanker: The KNB2 is effective on a wide range of noise logging software, as well as our own k2remote and k2voice programs.
sources, and includes two gain settings as well as two different blanking
pulse widths. The noise blanker is controlled using two dedicated front-panel KDSP2 or KAF2 Audio Filter and Real-Time Clock: The KDSP2
functions, N B and L E V E L . provides advanced DSP filtering, auto-notch, and noise reduction. The KAF2
provides analog low-pass and narrow CW band-pass functions. Both include
KAT2 Automatic Antenna Tuner (ATU): Our internal QRP ATU handles time/date display and an on-board, long-life backup battery.
a wide range of impedances, tunes nearly any antenna–on any band–in
seconds, and stores all data for instant band recall. Best of all, it includes an KPA100 Internal 100-Watt Stage with RS232 I/O: The KPA100
integral dual antenna switch (controlled by A N T 1 / 2 ), providing the completes the K2 as a 100 W PEP/CW transceiver. The kit comes with its
functionality of two antenna tuners in one. The KAT2 uses latching relays, so own top cover/heat sink that replaces the K2's original top cover. The original
current drain is nearly zero except when an antenna is being tuned. top cover can be re-installed in about one minute for lightweight field
operation.
KAT100 High-Power Automatic Antenna Tuner (ATU): The KAT100 is
a rugged, external ATU that's the ideal companion for the K2/100. It can KRC2 Programmable Band Decoder: The KRC2 can be used to control
handle up to 150 watts, and like the KAT2, provides two antenna jacks antennas, amplifiers, transverters, filters, or other station equipment directly
accessible with the A N T 1 / 2 switch. The KAT100 offers the same matching from the K2. Custom configuration is possible using a PC.
range, menu control features, and display capabilities of the KAT2, and in
XV-Series Transverters: Elecraft's transverters are an ideal match for the K2,
addition offers 10 LEDs for real-time monitoring of SWR. Note: The
providing high-performance receive and 20-25 watts output on VHF/UHF
KAT100 can be used with the basic K2 as well as the K2/100. The basic K2
bands. The K2 can directly control up to six transverters.
must have the KIO2 option installed to control the tuner.
Appendix A K2 Packing Box Parts List
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
PCB3 RF Printed Circuit Board, RF E100086 1
B1 left side Chassis piece, painted E100076L 1
B2 right side Chassis piece, painted E100076R 1
B3 front panel Chassis piece, painted/silk-screened E100072SS 1
B4 rear panel / heatsink Chassis piece, painted/silk-screened E100075SS 1
B5 top cover Chassis piece, painted/silk-screened E100073SS 1
B6 bottom cover Chassis piece, painted E100074 1
Bag, Wire Pack Wire, coax, heatshrink tubing E850005 1
Bag, Front Panel Parts Front Panel board parts E850003 1
Bag, RF Parts RF board parts E850001A & B 1
Bag, Control Parts Control board parts E850002 1
Bag, Misc. Parts Hardware and Misc. parts E850004 1
KN1 Knob, 1.6" diam Main Tuning Knob, weighted, 6mm shaft E980013 1
KN2, KN3, KN4, KN5, KN6 Knob, 0.5" diam Small Control Knobs, 6mm shaft E980016 5
Docs Toroid Order Form E740038 1
Page 1 Control
Appendix A
Appendix A K2 Control Board Parts List (p/n E850002)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
Page 2 Control
Appendix A
Appendix A K2 Control Board Parts List (p/n E850002)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
78M05
U5 Alt: 7805, 7805T, L7805 5 Volt regulator, TO-220 Pkg. E600024 1
Page 3 Control
Appendix A
Appendix A K2 Control Board Parts List (p/n E850002)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
MISC 2-pin shorting jumper For use with P7 (voltage source select) E620055 1
PCB1 Control Printed Circuit Board, Control E100084 1
Page 4 Control
Appendix A K2 Front Panel Board Parts List (p/n E850003)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
C1, C3 .047 Monolithic, "473" E530025 2
Spacer Set (made from (4) 0.75" spacers for Backlight LEDs; (1)
HW PCB stock) spacing tool for push button switches E100079 1
J1 socket FP to RF Board E620025 1
Misc Keycap, square, black Rate / Lock Keycap; S7, (BLACK, Square) E980009 1
RP2 120Ω SIP, "770101121" SIP 10pin resistor pack; ALT: "10A1121G" E510012 1
RP1 100K SIP, "10A1-104G" SIP 10pin resistor pack; ALT: "770101104" E510010 1
Page 1 RF
Appendix A K2 RF Board Parts List (p/n E850001A and E850001B)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
C221 39 NPO, "39" or "390" E530036 1
C20, C24, C73, C203 47 NPO, "47" or "470" E530014 4
C31, C35, C122, C228 56 NPO, "56" or "560" E530015 4
C88, C153, C104, C214 68 NPO, "68" or "680" E530007 4
C71, C174, C210 82 NPO, "82" or "820" E530038 3
C5, C7, C144, C154, C179, C197,
C222 100 NPO, "101" E530016 7
C84, C85, C202 120 NPO, "121" E530041 3
NPO, "151"; markings on rear side may
C200, C212, C218 150 include: "041 RKF" E530049 3
Page 2 RF
Appendix A K2 RF Board Parts List (p/n E850001A and E850001B)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
Page 3 RF
Appendix A K2 RF Board Parts List (p/n E850001A and E850001B)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
Variable Ind, 4.7µH TOKO, VCO, IF, 40m BPF, 80/160m BPF,
L30, L1, L2, L3, L4, L8, L9, L34 "T1005Z" 20/30m BPF. Large adjustment slot E690001 8
Page 4 RF
Appendix A K2 RF Board Parts List (p/n E850001A and E850001B)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
RFC1, RFC2, RFC12, RFC13, 100µH solenoidal green body; brown-black-brown E690004 4
RFC4, RFC5, RFC8, RFC9 10µH solenoidal green body; brown-black-black E690009 4
100µH solenoidal,
RFC15 subminiature very small tan body; brown-black-brown E690013 1
RFC7 15µH solenoidal green body; brown-green-black E690006 1
RFC10 1mH solenoidal green body; brown-black-red E690010 1
0.37" dia. ferrite core (GRAY)
RFC3, 47µH, 16T; RFC11, 100µH, 20T
RFC3, RFC11, RFC14, RFC16 RFC14, 18µH, 10T; RFC16, 47µH, 16T
0.37" dia. ferrite core (GRAY)
T1, 9:3T; T2, 12:8T;
T1, T2, T6, T7 FT37-43 T6, 10T bifilar; T7, 5:20T E680003 8
Toroidal transformer on 0.50" dia. ferrite
T3 FT50-43 core (GRAY). 5T bifilar. E680008 1
Toroidal transformer on 0.50" dia. iron-
T5 T50-6 powder core (YELLOW), 1.3µH, 16:4T E680010 1
Page 5 RF
Appendix A K2 RF Board Parts List (p/n E850001A and E850001B)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
Page 6 RF
Appendix A K2 RF Board Parts List (p/n E850001A and E850001B)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
Q10, Q12, Q17, Q20, Q23 2N7000 TO-92 E580002 5
Q18, Q19, Q24 J310 TO-92 E580012 3
Q11, Q13, Q16, Q25 PN2222A TO-92 E580001 4
Q2 ZVN4424A Slightly Thinner TO-92 Style E580005 1
Page 7 RF
Appendix A K2 RF Board Parts List (p/n E850001A and E850001B)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
R75, R80 680 (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500040T 2
R91, R93, R100 820 (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500001T 3
R38, R39 1K (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500013T 2
R79, R81 1.8K (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500004T 2
R5, R19, R24, R25, R34, R44,
R62, R66, R73, R95, R96 2.7K (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500005T 11
R114 3.9K (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500009T 1
R59 4.7K (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500047T 1
R110, R111 5.6K (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500007T 2
R13, R14, R29, R31, R32, R65,
R101 10K (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500015T 7
R33 15K (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500060T 1
R28 27K (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500056T 1
R9, R16, R17, R21, R37, R69,
R107 100K (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500006T 7
R18 1M (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500024T 1
R22 3.3M (TAN) 5%, 1/4 watt E500021T 1
100K,3R ISO; "6A3-
RP4,RP5 104G" SIP; resistor pack, 6 pins; ALT: "77063104" E510017 2
100K,4R ISO; "8A3- SIP; resistor pack, 8 pins; ALT: "77083104"
RP6 104G" or "B104G" E510018 1
RP3 n/a Thermistor board installed here (see text) n/a 0
10K,4R ISO; "8A3-
RP2 103G" SIP; resistor pack, 8 pins; ALT: "77083103" E510005 1
TP1, TP2, TP3 test point, female VFO, BFO, PLL REF test points E620036 3
Page 8 RF
Appendix A K2 RF Board Parts List (p/n E850001A and E850001B)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
U3, U9 LT1252 8 pin DIP, VFO Buffer; TX Buffer E600020 2
8 pin DIP, 12-Bit DAC for Reference Freq.
U5 LTC1451 Of PLL E600016 1
U6 LMC662 8 pin DIP, (rail-to-rail out); PLL Loop filter E600026 1
U10, U11 NE/SA602 8 pin DIP, mixer; alt: NE/SA612 E600006 2
U12 MC1350P 8 pin DIP, IF Amp / AGC E600000 1
X1 (X2 not used) 12096 kHz PLL reference oscillator crystal; HC-49 E850007 1
Page 9 RF
Appendix A K2 RF Board Parts List (p/n E850001A and E850001B)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
HW 4-32,screw, nylon x 1/2" screw, pan head, nylon (For T5) E700022 1
Page 10 RF
Appendix A K2 Misc. Bag Parts List (p/n E850004)
PICTURE Designators Value Description Part Number QTY
HW 4-40 screw 7/16", steel-ZN Phillips, for mounting feet and tilt stand E700032 6
4-40 standoff 1/4" long x
HW 3/16" Threaded E700026 5
4-40 standoff, 1/2" x 1/4"
HW Dia. Threaded hex 0.5" x 0.25" dia. E700007 2
ACC-P2 stereo 1/8” phone plug Plug for hand key/keyer/paddle/computer input E620033 1
Misc female crimp pins For 2-pin speaker housing (SPK-J1) E620022 2
plastic tuning tool, p/n
Misc MARS-12 For aligning slug-tuned inductors (GREEN) E980012 1
Long-handled, for large knobs and for Control
Misc Allen wrench board removal E980004 1
Misc Allen wrench Short-handled, for small knobs E980008 1
FCP-J1, VMP-J1 2 pin female housing For counter and voltmeter probes E620021 2
Misc female crimp pins For counter and voltmeter probes E620022 3
Misc Aligator clip, insulated For RF probe (ground) E700074 1
Misc Banana plug, red For RF probe (DMM positive lead) E700076 1
Misc Banana plug, black For RF probe (DMM negative lead) E700075 1
RFP-R1 4.7M Resistor 5%, 1/4W; For RF probe E500048 1
160m K2 160m-K1 -
80m K2, K3 K8 K13
+60m K1, 60m-K1 K12 K13, K14
*40m ALT K1 K12 K13, K14
40m K1 K12 K14
30m K3, K4 K9 K14, K15
20m K4 K9 K13, K14, K15 Transistors
2SC2166
17m K5 K11 K13, K15
2N3906 2SC1969
15m K5, K6 K11 K15 2N7000 PN2222A 2N5109
12m K6, K7 K10 K13, K14, K15 C
ZVN4424 MPS5179 J310
10m K7 K10 K13, K15
Integrated Circuits
PLASTIC DIP VOLTAGE REGULATORS
VCO Table VCO Freq.
(DUAL-INLINE PACKAGE)
2930T-8, 78XX
78L05, -06
Band Fixed Cap., pF Total Cap., pF* at band edge** 1 8 GND
2 7
160m C75 (470) 525-629 6715 (subtract) 3 6
80m C72 (270) 325-429 8415 (subtract) 4 5
OUT GND IN
60m C71+C73 (129) 215-259 10165 (subtract)
***40m ALT C71+C73 (129) 163-209 11915 (subtract) COUNT PINS STARTING AT
40m C71 (120) 154-203 11915 (subtract) PIN 1 AND GOING COUNTER- IN OUT
30m C73+C74 (67) 102-131 14915 (subtract) CLOCKWISE (8-PIN DIP SHOWN)
GND
20m C74 (20) 55-84 18915 (subtract)
17m none (0) 35-64 22915 (subtract)
15m C73 (47)
12m C74 (20)
82-111
55-84
16085 (add)
19975 (add)
Special Symbols
10m none (0) 35-64 23085 (add)
= On bottom of PC board. Jumper
* This includes capacitance of varactor diodes D23-D26 on all bands, D21-D22
on 80 -160 m, and D19-D20 on 40 and 60 meters (if applicable). Only a
portion of the indicated capacitance range is actually used to cover
each Amateur band segment. VCO frequency can be calculated based on
a total inductance of 0.95 µH (T5 in parallel with L30). Elecraft K2 Schematic Key
** Based on an I.F. of 4915 kHz (e.g., 6715 - 4915 = 1800). By W. Burdick Rev. Date Sht.
5250 kHz used as 60-meter lower band edge (pending U.S. FCC ruling). E.Swartz D 10/23/02 1 of 1
S1
S0
S2
S3
S4
S5
S6
S7
S8
S9
5A
8F,E,AN
8A,G,D
8B,C,DP
7F,E,AN
7A,G,D
7B,C,DP
6F,E,AN
6A,G,D
6B,C,DP
5F,E,AN
5A,G,D
5B,C,DP
4F,E,AN
4A,G,D
4B,C,DP
3F,E,AN
3A,G,D
3B,C,DP
2F,E,AN
2A,G,D
2B,C,DP
1F,E,AN
1A,G,D
1B,C,DP
LEDs
/BANK1
DS1
D2 D5 D4 D4 D3
5A Bargraph D2 D3
COM1
COM2
COM3
COM3
COM2
COM1
Brightness
VIM-838-DP 8-DIGIT LCD /BANK2
Control 1 2 3 4 5 6 PRE/ATTN AGC XFIL
BAND- ANT1/2
S3 S4 S11 SPOT S12 CW REV S13 AFIL
R10 STORE TUNE #5 #6
#4
R9 R11 33
220 470 U1
LCD Driver PCF8566 D6 D1 D5 D2 D6
/NIGHT S23
(S0 through S23 connected to DS1; only S0 and S23 shown)
40 35 30 25 21
RATE RIT XIT MSG
MENU NB
S23
S22
S21
S20
S19
S18
S17
S16
S15
S14
S13
S12
S11
S10
S9
S8
S7
S6
S5
S4
S5 S6 S7 LOCK S14 PF1 S15 PF2 S16 REC
Q1 Q2 EDIT LEVEL
#0 #7 #8 #9
PN2222A
/SYNC
VLCD
SDA
SA0
VDD
OSC
VSS
BP0
BP2
BP1
BP3
SCL
CLK
C1
A0
A1
A2
S0
S1
S2
S3
4.0V DAY (18mA/LED) D7 D0 D3 D1 D7 D0
.047
2.7V NIGHT (6mA/LED) 1 5 10 15 20
(based on LED Vf=1.9V)
RP2 120
1 D0 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 RP1 Pushbutton Switches
IDAT ICLK 100K
2V
2
First switch label corresponds to switch TAP,
R12
S0 Second label corresponds to switch HOLD.
3
120
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 S7 - S16 can also be used as a numeric keypad.
4
3 2 1 C9
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 R16 R15
5
.01
15K 10K
6
LED Array DS2 5A
/SPD RD
/MIC RD
/BANK1
/BANK2
7
8
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 (spare)
9 10
/ENC RD
11
12
13
14
1
Z1
4
5
6
5A
14
15
16
17
18
14
15
16
17
18
4
5
6
7
4
5
6
7
C
D
H
B
G
A
/Q1
/Q4
SOUT
/Q1
/Q4
SOUT
Shaft Encoder
/Q0
/Q2
/SRCLR /Q3
/Q5
/Q6
/Q7
/Q0
/Q2
/SRCLR /Q3
/Q5
/Q6
/Q7
U2 R1 5K
CLK INH
V+
V-
SH/LD
A
B
74HC165 Keyer Speed
VCC
/QH
GND
CLK
SER
SRCK
SRCK
4 3 2 1
QH
VCC
RCK
VCC
RCK
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
SIN
SIN
/G
/G
/SPD RD
15
10
1
2
cw
7
16
ccw
8
5A
12
13
19
12
13
19
11
11
10
10
9
3
2
ENC B
ENC A
C3
.047 D4
/SR RD SR CK SR DIN 5A R2 5K
U3 Power Out
U4 C2
SR DOUT
6B595
SR CK
SR WRT
5A
D5
J1
J2 R5 5K
5A R4
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
Mic RP3 5K RIT/XIT Offset
8 7 10K R.F. Gain /BANK2
1 AF MIC AF cw
1
ccw
AUXBUS (NC)
SR DOUT
SR WRT
SR CK
ENC A
/SR RD
SR DIN
5A
2 PTT ENC B
2
cw ccw
3 DN /DOT-PTT
3
D6
4 UP
4
6 1N5817
FUNC V POTS
5
5
Q3
6 5V RP3 V POTS
2N3906
6
2
C8 5 10K R7 4.7K
7 GND
7
R13 10K R3
4 5A
C4 C5 C6 C7 1 AF Gain
68.1K, 1% R6
.01 .01 .01 .01 4.7K
RP3
P1 cw ccw
IDAT
ICLK
Mic Config. 3
/MIC RD
Appendix B
RP7 R11 RP3 RP3 LMC660
8A C18 .01
33K 47K C24 47K 47K
Aux I/O
V PWR ("D3" on PCB) * C46 .01
3
Q8
R6
AUXBUS
5 6 3 4 5 6
5
+ 7 +
C33
+ 100 6
1 .0027 -
TXD
P4 AUXBUS R22 82K R21 270K C31 2
- 1 PN2222A
5A MCLR RB7
40 8 C36 2.2µF
.01 C35 .0027 U10B
Q5 RP7
+
1
C12
2
C45 RA0 RB6 ICLK .01
TONEVOL
U10A LMC660
* .0027 2N7000 33K
4
RXD 3 22µF RA1
C43 8T V SMTR RB5 IDAT
7
ALC
5
6
.001 I SENSE RA2 RB4 /SR RD 5A
V ALC
Quad, 8-bit DAC
C34 .001 5 C40 .01
7
8
12V V SENSE RA3 RB3 SR DOUT 1 16
10
4 3 2 1 35 V PWR OUTB OUTC 8A
9
8R RA4 5A
/SLOW AGC RB2 SR CK 2 15
OUTA OUTD 4
V BFO
C5 .01 * Part of CW key shaping
mod; solder on back (see text)
RP2 82K RP3 47K V POTS
ENC A
RA5
RE0
RB1
RB0
SR WRT
SR DIN 3
3
REF AGND
14 12
13
+ 14
R12 820 4 13 -
UPO VDD 5A
/AGC OFF RE1 VDD 5A RP7 5 12 11
U10D
10 33K PDE DGND
RE2 VSS 6 11 RP2
EXT ALC /LDAC DIN 5 6 8 7
4 C39 5 5V FCTR 30 4
V RFDET 4.000MHz 5A VDD RD7 /DOT-PTT 7 10
C20
.01 /CLR SCLK 82K RP3 47K
RP5 RP5 VSS RD6 /DASH
X2 8 9
470 470 DOUT /CS
C21 OSC1 RD5 RX V BIAS-XFIL
RP4 RP4 .001 10
3 6 33 +
OSC2 RD4 TX U8
82K 82K 9
15 MAX534 - 8
RC0 RC7 RP2 U10C
C37 1 2 3 4 25 8 7 9 10
C38 ENC B RC1 RC6 TXD RXD
.01 C22
Freq. Ctr 680 82K RP3 47K
SIDETONE
8-50 /MUTE RC2 RC5
1
COUNT 1
100kHz-40MHz Q10 8
Q9 /DAC2CS RD0 RD3 /CS VCC
20 /EECS 2
P6 MPS5179 MPS5179 /PLLCS RD1 RD2
21
SDO /HOLD
7
5A
1 /DAC1CS 3 6
Audio
/WP SCK SCK PD2 PD1
RP7 4 5
Filter
U6 VSS SDI SDO
Voltmeter Source 18C452 33K AUXBUS 12V
EXT INT 2
Voltmeter Input U7
Current Sense MCU 1 2 3 4 5
25LC320
- + 12V IN 5A
Note: Current sense resistor EEPROM
12V R18
P5 P7 is R115 on the RF board. R19
8V Low-Dropout Reg. 0Ω J1
0Ω
2 1 1 2 3
LM2930T-8 8V Switching
8A J2
C42
U4 (NOTE 1) 1 2 3
0.1 R8 IN OUT 8T
8 Q1
+
100 GND
Voltage Sense 2 C13 C16
R9 1% - 1 2N3906
3 22µF C15 .047 R17 3.3M
C17 0-25.5V 4 3 2 1
806K, 1% +
4 U3A 100µF Mute /MUTE
.01 (0.1V res.)
5 LMC6482AIN RP1
+ 7 S
V SENSE 3.9K S
6 TX Q6 Q7
- Q11
R10 5V Reg. 9 J310 G G
J310
0.00-5.10A PN2222A Q3 D C23 D
196K, 1% U3B 78M05 RP1
(.02 A resolution) R7 1.78k, 1% U5 3.9K .01
C25 C26
I SENSE IN OUT 5A 8R 10 0.1 0.1
GND Q2
C44 C14 C19 2N3906 2N7000 VOL2
Not Used .047 .047 5 6 7 8 C27 .022 VOL1
Q4
C1 RP6 C4 RP1 VOL3
/AGC OFF
AGC 2.2µF
5.1K 0.47µF 3.9K RX
+
3
2
1
D2 C6 /SLOW AGC V SMTR
7
AF Amp
GND
IN2
IN1
NC BYPASS
1N4148 .047 2 1
C11 V RFDET RP5
8A Q12 470
R5 33K 10
V BIAS-XFIL
U1 8
GND
OUT
C9 PN2222A RP6
v+
8A
/DOT-PTT
NE602 .001
SR DOUT
/DAC2CS
R3 D1 C32
AUXBUS
U9
EXT ALC
8 .01 5.1K 5A 9
AF OUT
V POTS
12V IN
6
7
8
1
ENC A
V ALC
6 10K 1N4148 L1
IDAT
9 LM380N-8 RP5
PD2
V+
SCK
- 7 3 8
8R
+ 82 mH
8T
+
V- nc R16 12V
8R 3.3M C30
+
3
8A
ccw 4 3 U2A .047 C29 10
6 7
C8 LM833 RP4 220µF
39 82K
C10 5 6 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 8 7 C28
.01 R1 RP6 5.1K 220µF
AF OUT
cw 50K C3
.01 R.F. GAIN C41
AGC THR. R4
VOL3
SR WRT
8R
/SR RD
SR CK
PD1
AF OUT
12V 5A 8A 8T VOL1
ICLK
ENC B
V BFO
/PLLCS
/DASH
SDO
.01
SR DIN
7
C7 5.6K
X1 RP6 V AGC
330
5.068MHz 5.1K
8 8R
1 2 3 4 5 6 P2 To RF Board, J7 P3 To RF Board, J8
I.F. OUT P1
Elecraft K2 Control Board
To RF Board, J6
By W. Burdick Rev. Date Sht.
E. Swartz F 1/27/04 1 of 1
NOTE 1: Jumpers are used at R18 and R19. They must be removed if the Audio Filter option is installed. = on bottom of PC board
Appendix B
PLL Reference PLL Synthesizer L30
Oscillator C96
RFC15 (NOTE 3) 4.7µH C67 R15
12.090-12.100 MHz C65
C95 .01 1µF VFO 0.1 33
0.1
12.096MHz X1
Q19 5B 8B
8B TP3 C94
100 µH C91
J310 .047 R28
D18 .001 (NOTE 3) C68
D 1 16 RFC10 D
1N4148 10pF
G OSCIN VDD
1mH D23 MV209 G Q18
2 15 27K R13
OSCOUT PH V D24 J310
L31 X2 C86 10K
12µH (NOTE 1) C84
S 0.1 R22 3
REFOUT PH R
14
R24 R25
U6B R17
S Buffer
3.3M 4 13 6 R30 R31
120 FIN PDOUT - 7 100K
R21 D13 U3
5 12 2.7K 2.7K 5 TX VFO
SDO DIN VSS + 1N4148 C64 LT1252
100K 120 10K
6 11
+
RP2 C85 C87 /PLLCS /ENB LD C88 LMC662 2 .001
D25 D26 7
10K 120 .01 7 10 68 C93 4 3
SCK CLK FV + 6
8 9 C92 10µF R32 2 RX VFO
1 2 4 3 DOUT FR 4V T5 -
RP2 RFC14 (NOTE 3) .022 10K 1 3
D8
D16 D17 R14 4
10K 18µH 1.2µH 1N4148
U4 10K
MV209 1SV149 R29
MC145170 K15
3 TP1
R20 10K
4 2 C61
270 R33 R11
15K .01 560
C100 R19 nc R12
7 9
.001 2.7K 560
8
8B
(NOTE 2) K14 8B C63
U5 3
8B 4 2 .01
LTC1451
1 8 Q17 ~2Vpp
SCK CLK VCC 5B D20 D19 nc D21 D22
8 7 9
2 7 3 MV209 2N7000 R9
SDO DIN VOUT + 1 8 1SV149
3 6 2 U8 100K
LD /CS REF - RFC16 D
/DAC2CS
+
8B
4 5 4
8A
47µH 78L05 5B C74
20 C60 G VFO ALC
DOUT GND
100µF D11 C58
IN OUT R10
S
12-Bit DAC U6A
+
3 1N4148 470 .01
C89 K13
(Vout = 0 to 4.096V) LMC662 4 2
.001
2, 3 1 VFO Range Selection
8 7 9 Relays are shown in RESET R16
C175 C103 C90 C59
8B 8 position. See relay table (key).
.01 .047 0.1 100K C62
RA 33K RB 12K RD 1.8K 220µF C73 Q16 .01
RF 47 C75
PN2222A
10K Rt 10K RC 470 R18
C71 C72
RE 10K Thermistor 2.2K 1M
6, 7 (NOTE 2) 82 270
4V
4, 5
Thermistor Board
(replaces RP3 on PC board)
J3
12V DC
AF OUT
V BIAS-XFIL C196
SR DOUT
/DOT-PTT
V RFDET
AUXBUS
Control
EXT ALC
J1
/DAC2CS
V POTS
12V IN
ENC A
V ALC
IDAT
PD2
Board
SCK
Key/Keyer/Paddle
8R
8T
12V 5A 8A VOL2 .047
P3
R2 R1
J6 D10
2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 Aux. 12V
220 220 95SQ015
1
J7 +
1 2 3 4 5 6 J8 2
-
C2 C1 F1
1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19
.001 .001 RGE300
/DOT-PTT
/DASH
12V 12V IN
I.F. OUT
8R
V AGC
R.F. GAIN
/PLLCS
/DASH
SDO
8R
VOL3
SR WRT
/SR RD
SR CK
8T
PD1
AF OUT
12V 5A 8A VOL1
ICLK
ENC B
V BFO R115
SR DIN
0.05Ω, 1%, 3W ON
AF OUT
Current Sense
R35 R36 8R
D12
82 82 Front Panel Board OFF
SB530
C105
2.2µF + C106 2.2µF R113 S1
+ P1 82
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
Power
Q23
8T
SR DOUT
IDAT
VOL1
SR WRT
/DOT-PTT
AUXBUS
SR CK
ENC A
/SR RD
V POTS
SR DIN
VOL2
VOL3
ICLK
5A
2N7000
ENC B
R.F. GAIN
MIC AF
Elecraft K2 RF Board
+
1 2
9
100µH .01 .01 C142 .01 .01 C158
.01
J12
8
RFC11
K17 +7dBm 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
R74 C159 R81 C163 100µH C170
7
4
47 4
.01 1.8K .01
12V
AUXBUS
.047
2 1 12V
1 2
D6 R7 T6 C145 Z6 C161 8R
1N4007 .01 TUF-1 3 .01
R6 68 R8
4 3
100 100 Q22
Rcv. Mixer R80 2N5109 R89
Q21
680
BPF 2N5109 R79 R83 W5 100
(Sh. 3) Attenuator R75 1.8K 4.7Ω R84 NB Bypass R88 R90
R5
-10dB 680 R76 RF Preamp 18 470 470
2.7K 10 +14dB
C164 C162
R85
D7 C146 .01 .047 150 HI IP -5dB, Z= 150Ω
R77 8R
.01
1N4007
220 Q12 NOTE: If Noise Blanker is installed,
2N7000
R88 and R90 must be removed,
Buffer R97 Post-Mixer Amp.
33 and R89 replaced with a jumper.
12V
C151
U9
0.1 R96
LT1252
2.7K
7
+
3 4.9136 MHz Variable-Bandwidth Crystal Filter
6
2
C54 R92 4
- V BIAS-XFIL IF Amp
.01 33 R93 R95 R101 V XFIL2 C185 R112
820 2.7K 10K
RFC13 C166
8R Product Det.
RP4, RP5: 100K 0.1 22
100µH (NOTE 2)
Q20 U12 J5
2 4 6 1 3 5 .047 1N4148 V XFIL2
2N7000 4 3 2 1 MC1350 Aux. AF
R100 C178
5.6K
RP4 RP4 RP4 RP5 RP5 RP5
R94 8A
T7 D40
C55 82 D29 1 3 5 6 D34 L34 R107 820 0.1
2 4
.01 1 3 4.7uH 100K
C157 3 2 1
8T AGC U11
R111
.047 2 X6 X5 NE602
C150 W2 X7 X8 X9 X10 X11
W3 8
5 6 7 8 1
330 4 D41 V+
D30 D31 D32 D33 4
C182 PD2
R114 R110
180 C181
D29-D34: 1SV149 C184 5.6K 2 5
.01
.01
3.9K D39 V- C177
C179 I.F. OUT PD1
V AGC MV209 C176 .022
J11 SSB Control 100
3
6 7
1 2 3 0.1
3 2 1 C183 2nd Xtal Filter C174 82 V BFO
J9 .01
J10 1
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
X3 RP6
XFIL In XFIL Out C173
Q25 100K
4.917MHz 220
Xmit Mixer
/DOT-PTT
V RFDET
8R
AUXBUS
8T
MIC AF
C186 PN2222A 8 2
8A .01 X4
C156 7
R91
.047
EXT ALC
R98 BFO RP6
820 Q24 100K
V ALC D38
L33
8T J310
SSB Adapter 270 C168 D
41µH 1SV149
.01 G 4 3
8 C167 .001 (NOTE 1)
4 5 D37 RP6
V+ S C172
1 C169 1SV149 100K .01
C153 U10
NOTE 1: Remove C167 when SSB Adapter is installed. 390
68 NE602 TP2 6
R99 D36 RP6
5 2
NOTE 2: D40 and D41 were added to improve handling of extremely 270 5082-3081 100K
V- strong signals (from nearby transmitters). These diodes
C155
3
6 7 .01 must be soldered on the back of the PC board (see text). Elecraft
BFO Buffer/Attenuator K2 RF Board
TX VFO
C144 By W. Burdick Rev. Date Sht.
C154 100pF F 1/27/04 2 of 4
E.Swartz
100
Appendix B
J15
(NOTE 1) 60m J4
1 2 3
Xverter J14 6V
Ant.
4 C5 C7
7 Interface 160m/
C6 4.7pF
100 100
L1 L2 J13 R X A n t. R65
3 C4 C8 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
4.7µH 10K
820 4.7µH 820 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
2
40/60m 9 8R
C108 P6
K1A K1B
L5 33µH 8R 6V .01 Aux. RF
AUXBUS
RXRY RY COM 160RY
2
4 7 G X 1
C12 C15
C13 C14 8T C224
560 1200 560
.047
3 8 8T
C11 80/160m C16 RFC2
1800 1800 100µH 1N4007 C114
2 9
D3 .01 4 80m 7
2
C110 R39
30m/80m 1N4007 .01 R37 RFC3
Bypass 2 1200 1800 1200 9
1K
7
4
W6 D5 100K 47µH
8R
4 7
R38 1N4007 R34 L18 L19 L20
XVTR D
C20 C22 1K
L9 2.7K
L8 3.3 pF Bypass 20/30m 3 8
47 C24
4.7µH 4.7µH 8R
4 20/30m 7 RFC1 G
47 2
C198 C200 C202 9
S C113
27 150 120
3 C19 C28 C29 8 .01
C25 100µH K9A
330 C21 12 12 C23 D1 C109 C201 K9B
330 C199
2 9 1N4007 Q2 C197 C203
50pF 50pF .01 220 220
C33 8T ZVN4424A 100 47
K4A K4B
2.2 4 7
C32 C34 C107 L21 L22
LPF
.01
4
C31 C35
7 T-R (Sh. 4)
3 8
5-30pF 5-30pF RFC7
56 56
PRE-DRIVER Switch 10/12m 2 9
3 15/17m 15µH C211 C213
L10 8
C30 L11 C36 (Sh. 4) 10 33
2 1µH 470 C210 C214
470 1µH 9
2
82 68 K10B
K5A
10m/17m K5B Low-Pass Filters K10A C212
C104 150
K6
68
3
4 7
L23 L24
12m/15m
7
4
15/17m 3 8
I/O Controller
C44 5-30pF C46 5-30pF U2 2
K7A K7B C219 C221 9
6V
78L06 R64 12 39
4 7 100 C218 C222
C43 C45 1 C47
6V U1
33 12V IN OUT AUXBUS 150 100
33 K11A C220 K11B
L12 C139 PIC16C72 220
3 L13 8 C140
C42 1µH 10/12m C48 0.1 or 16F872
2 1µH .001
330 330 9
BPF Relays 40/60m 7
C81
C79
C80
28 4 L25 L26
1
MCLR RB7
K12B
K12A
10 1
160RY RA0 RB6 K2 3 8
VCO Relays
BPF Band-Pass Filters RXRY RA1 RB5 K3
2 9
(Sh. 2) 1 10 25 C228 C229
K13 RA2 RB4 K1
56 220
5 K4
K14 RA3 RB3 C225 C227
K15 RA4 K5 390 330
/CLASS AB RB2
C226 680
RA5 RB1
K7
Z5 VSS K6
RB0
20
RF Output Detector R67
4.0MHz OSC1 VDD
ALL RELAY BYPASS CAPACITORS ARE .001µF C39 R66 D9 1.5K
C82 10
OSC2 VSS .001 V RFDET
.001
C38
C49
C37
C27
C26
C17
C9
C17, C27, C195, C204, C207, C216, C223 RC0 RC7 HI IP 2.7K 1N5711 1%
1 RF
RC1 RC6 K10
R69 C77 R68
Pre/Attn. 10
K11 G
RC2 RC5 100K .001 226Ω
Relays 14 15 K12 1%
RC3 RC4
NOTE1: When the K60XV (transverter and 60 m) option is installed, K16 1 10 K8
C6 must be removed and J15 installed in its place, on K17 K9
the top side of the PC board. Elecraft K2 RF Board
C204 C207 LPF
Relays By W. Burdick Rev. Date Sht.
C208
NOTE2: Pins 5 and 6 of relays are not connected internally. E. Swartz F 1/27/04 3 of 4
C195
C223
C216
C57 RY COM
However, these pins may be connected to other relay pins
.001 .001
or to other components on either side of the PC board.
Appendix B
RFC4 12V
10µH
+
C119 C126
.01
47µF
C127
RFC5 T2
680
12:8, FT37-43 Q7
10µH
2 2SC1969
3
LPF
C115 C122
R53 RFC8 (Sh. 3)
.01 56 C129
4 4.7Ω 10µH 5
1 .01 6
R55
33 C A 1 3 R58
T3 180
C121 C120 R56 2 4 1/2W
RFC6 C130 D B
2 .01 .01 R54 33 7
R49 RFC9
3 0.1 8
C116 4.7Ω 10µH
33 T4
8T 120 0.68µH
4
2:3:1:1
Q8
1
T1 2SC1969
9:3, FT37-43 C128
R44 Q6 680
2.7K 2SC2166
R40 C118
R48 R47 Z2
470 .01 120 47 R50
1.5Ω C131 NOTE: WIND T4 2:2:1:1 FOR
1/2 W 0.1 Power Amplifier (PA)
Q5 BETTER EFFICIENCY AT 5W
PRE-DRIVER
2N5109 (SEE "MODIFICATIONS" SECTION)
(Sh. 3)
+
C124
C125
0.1
R42
22µF Driver
R41 4.7Ω
560 S
C117 Q10
R43 8T
0.047 2N7000
22Ω G PA Bias
D
8T
C137
100µF
C138
.047 R60
100
/CLASS AB
R63 Elecraft K2 RF Board
220
R62 By W. Burdick Rev. Date Sht.
2.7K E.Swartz F 1/27/04 4 of 4
Appendix B
T-R
AGC
4.915MHz
ATTEN. POST-
RCV NOISE CRYSTAL
AND MIXER T-R T-R I.F. AMP
MIXER BLANKER FILTERS
PREAMP AMP
XMIT BAL.
BUFFER MIXER MOD. PROD.
DETECTOR
Shaft Encoder
KEY DISPLAY
AND CONTROLS
Common Transmit Receive
If you have any difficulty with your K2: Problem Troubleshooting Steps
000 Unit appears to be Make sure your power supply or battery is
Closely examine all PC boards for poor solder joints and incorrect, completely dead when connected, turned on, and isn’t plugged in
broken or missing components. power switch is turned backwards
Look for your problem in the Troubleshooting Tables (below). on (no display, no Check power supply and battery fuses if
Follow the step-by-step receiver and transmitter Signal-Tracing audio) applicable
procedures at the end of this section. Also included are complete DC The K2’s internal self-resetting fuse, F1, may
Voltage Tables for all ICs and transistors. have gone into a high-resistance state due to
a short from the 12-V line to ground; unplug
the power supply and check for such shorts
Troubleshooting Tables Examine power cable for shorts or opens
Verify control board is plugged in and that its
There are five troubleshooting tables (listed below). Within each table, connectors are fully seated
problems are identified by 3-digit numbers in the ranges shown. In most cases Check for 12 VDC at the power jack
you’ll know which table to look in based on the symptoms you observe. If in Make sure speaker, battery, and other internal
doubt, start with the General Troubleshooting table. option connectors are not swapped or
plugged in backwards
General Troubleshooting 000-049 Measure the +5V and +8V regulated power
Control Circuits 050-099 supplies. If either is incorrect, check the
Receiver 100-149 regulators (050).
Transmitter 150-199 Check the MCU (075)
Operation and Alignment 200-249 003 LCD is dim Check values of R16 and R15 on the front
panel
When referring to components on the various K2 boards in the table, we will Check continuity from LCD driver (U1) to
sometimes use a shorthand form such as “RF-U11,” which means U11 on the LCD. Also look for bent pins on driver.
RF board. 004 Display turns on Check the MCU, Control-U6 (075)
but unit still appears Verify that the control and front panel boards
INFO Messages functionally dead or is are plugged in correctly
“running slowly” The MCU oscillator may be shorted out due
If you see a message such as I N F O 1 0 0 on the LCD, look up the to solder flux residue, especially if you used
corresponding entry in the troubleshooting tables. Note: I N F O messages water-soluble flux solder (030)
can be cleared by pressing any switch. However, the cause of these messages 005 No display, but Remove the bottom cover and verify that the
should be investigated before continuing to operate the transceiver. audio is OK front panel connector is properly mated with
the RF board
If the front panel is plugged in correctly but
the problem still persists, check all LCD
voltages and control lines (060)
1
009 L O B A T T P7 on the control board may be jumpered for increase significantly; try reducing the power
displayed ext. 12V. Move the jumper to the "12V" pos. setting or use C A L C U R to set up a
Battery voltage may be below 10.5V. current limit
Recharge the battery as soon as possible. Use voltage/current monitor mode to see if
010 Battery voltage If you saw I N F O 0 1 0 on the LCD, your the power supply voltage drops below 11V
too low for proper battery voltage is too low (< 8.5V). This on transmit; if so, you may be exceeding the
voltage regulation usually happens on transmit when your capability of your power supply or battery
battery is weak. Disconnect the battery from (025)
the K2 and measure its voltage; if the battery If the supply voltage and antenna impedance
voltage quickly rises back to 11 or 12V, the are correct, the driver or PA transistors may
K2 may be loading the battery down. But if not be operating efficiently (150)
the battery stays stabilizes at under about 10 018 Supply voltage Use voltage/current monitor mode to see if
V when measured outside of the K2, it has drops when K2 is the receive-mode current drain is too high
become fully discharged or may be defective. turned on (015)
If you suspect the K2 is pulling the voltage If voltage drops but current drain is normal,
down, tap any button to clear the I N F O you probably have a power supply problem
message then use D I S P L A Y to show the or a battery that is not fully charged (025);
voltage and current drain. If the current drain review power supply requirements
is > 200 mA with no signal and the bargraph (Specifications)
OFF, something is shorting either the 12V 019 Supply voltage Use voltage/current monitor mode to see if
line or one of the regulators (050). drops too low when transmit-mode current drain is too high (016)
011 No audio, but Make sure that a working antenna is transmitter is keyed If voltage drops but current drain on transmit
display is OK connected; check audio filter option, antenna is normal, you probably have a weak battery
switch, tuner, SWR bridge, etc. or inadequate power supply (025)
See Receiver Troubleshooting (100) 025 Battery won’t Batteries must be charged using the right
012 Display, VFO Front panel or control board may not be charge up to the voltage or their usable life will be greatly
knob, switches, or plugged in correctly correct voltage, or reduced; if you have the K2 internal battery
potentiometers do not Check the MCU (075) discharges too quickly option, refer to the charging instructions in
function correctly or Check all regulated supply voltages (050) the option manual
are intermittent RP1 or RP2 on the front panel board may be Battery life can be extended by reducing
installed backwards. power output and by turning off selected
015 Current drain Check receive-mode current drain (140) features using the menu; see Operation
excessive on receive Always disable the K2’s internal battery
016 Current drain Connect the K2 to a known 50 ohm load using the rear-panel battery on-off switch if
excessive on transmit (preferably a dummy load); if current drain you plan to use an external battery or a
returns to normal, you probably have a reduced-voltage power supply that is
mismatched antenna and will have to inadequate for charging purposes
improve the match or reduce output power 029 Small error in Make sure your 4.000-MHz oscillator
If you have set the power level control actual vs. displayed (control board, X2) is calibrated. Two
significantly above the level that the frequency methods are provided in the Operation
transmitter is capable of, current may section (Advanced Operating Features).
2
Make sure the bottom cover is installed when are in a range that the VCO should be
doing C A L F I L and C A L P L L . Also, if capable of tuning, re-check VCO alignment
you calibrate at room temperature but operate (see RF board Alignment and Test, Part II)
the radio at much lower or higher If the displayed frequency is “garbage,” see
temperatures, calibration will be worse. Resetting the Configuration to Defaults in
Re-do C A L F I L after calibrating the Advanced Operating Features.
4.000–MHz oscillator
Re-do C A L P L L after calibrating the Control Circuits (050-099)
4.000-MHz oscillator
Use C A L F C T R with probe on TP1 and Problem Troubleshooting Steps
tune very slowly through about 10 kHz of 050 Regulated Remove all option boards, since any one of
VFO range; if you see any sudden jumps of > voltage(s) incorrect them might be causing a short on a regulated
50 Hz over this range even after doing CAL supply line
PLL, your 12.096-MHz oscillator crystal may Make sure that the DC input voltage at J3 is
be defective (RF, X1). > 8.5 (the minimum voltage needed by the
030 VFO frequency You must align both the VCO and BFO using voltage regulators)
jumps or drifts, or the C A L P L L and C A L F I L before If +5V is too low (< 4.5V) go to 052
operating frequency operating the K2; otherwise the VFO cannot If +8V is too low (< 7.5V) go to 053
appears to be entirely be tuned properly and the synthesizer may 051 General problem Check all DC voltages using the voltage
incorrect not be locked (see Operation as well as RF with control circuits tables (later in this section). Start with the
board Alignment and Test, Part II) (switches, knobs, control board.
Make sure the supply voltage is above 8.5V display, bargraph, T-R If the problem involves the front panel,
at all times or the 8V regulator may not switching) measure those voltages next. If the problem
function correctly. is with T-R switching, check the RF board
If you used solder with water-soluble flux, voltages next. You may have RP1 or RP2 on
you may have conductive paths all over the the front panel board installed backwards.
PC boards. These can cause numerous 052 +5V too low Remove the front panel to see if it is was
problems with the VFO, BFO, and logic (< 4.75V) pulling the 5V line low. If not, the problem is
circuits (anything high impedance). Try likely to be on the control board.
cleaning the entire board with hot water and a Pull the control board out and inspect the
Q-tip, or follow solder manufacturer’s entire 5V line looking for heat-damaged
recommendations (except immersion). components or shorts. The schematic can be
If you used C A L F I L to change the BFO used to identify components on the 5V line.
settings, make sure you placed the BFO on Remove the microprocessor to see if it is
the correct side of the zero-pitch value for loading the 5V line down.
each operating mode (see Operation, Filter Unsolder the output pin of the 5V regulator
Settings) and bend it up slightly to break contact with
If you tune beyond the lock range of the the PC board. If the voltage is still too low
VCO, the frequency will stop changing and measured at the pin, replace the regulator.
may “hunt” near the end of this range. If you
3
053 +8V too low Inspect the entire 8V path on the RF and 060 No display on If the bar-graph is also not working, check
(< 7.5V) control boards. Look for heat-damaged LCD the 5V regulator (052)
components or solder bridges. Remove the front panel hardware and panel
Unsolder the output pin of the 8V regulator from the front panel PC board and inspect the
and bend it up slightly to break contact with entire board for shorts or incorrect
the PC board. If the voltage is still too low components. You may have LCD driver U1
measured at the pin, replace the regulator. in backwards or it may have a bent pin.
There are a number of places where you can Check the values of R15 and R16 on the
easily break the 8V line to eliminate parts of bottom of the board; these resistors set the
the circuit in your search for the problem. voltage for the LCD itself.
One example is RFC16 on the RF board. If Re-install the front panel board and turn on
you lift one end of this inductor it will the K2. Using a voltmeter, measure the
disconnect the entire synthesizer from the 8V voltages on pins 16 and 17 of front panel
line. connector J1 (ICLK and IDAT). These lines
A number of circuits have resistors in series should show DC voltages between 0 and 5V
with the 8V line, for example R112 in series due to data transmission from the
with the I.F. amplifier (U12). If you measure microprocessor to the LCD driver. If the
voltage on both sides of these resistors you voltages are fixed at either 0 V or 5V rather
may find a circuit that is drawing high than being somewhere in-between, the MCU
current or is shorted. Example: If you may not be functioning (075)
measured 7V on one side of R112 and 3V on 065 Relay Problem If you suspect a ground short in any relay-
the other, it would indicate that U12 had a controlled circuit (LPF, BPF, VCO) you can
current drain of 180 mA, which is much too simplify debugging by pulling out the control
high (I = E/R = 4/22 = 0.18). board, then turning power ON and back OFF.
This places all relays in the RESET condition
(see schematic).
If you hear no relays on power-up, check the
IOC (080)
4
075 Possible MCU Measure the voltage on pin 32 of the MCU 081 AuxBus problem You may have an option board installed that
problem (U6, control board). If it is not 5V, check the is causing a problem with the AuxBus. Try
5V regulator (052). removing each option board and turning
Remove the control board and carefully power off and back on.
inspect the microprocessor. Make sure it is Verify that R64 is installed (RF board, near
not installed backwards, has no bent pins, and U1).
is seated firmly in its socket. Check the voltage at pin 1 of the IOC (RF,
Verify that the MCU oscillator components U1). If it isn’t approximately 6V, U2 may be
all have the correct values and are soldered bad (6V regulators).
properly, with no shorts (X2, C21, C22). Check the voltage at pin 28 of the IOC
Listen for the 4-MHz oscillator signal using (RF–U1). It should be between 5 and 6V. If it
another ham-band receiver. If you can't hear is zero volts, you probably have a short
the signal, try putting a 1M resistor across X2 somewhere on the AuxBus line. Turn power
on the control board. Also try rotating C22. OFF, then measure pin 28 of U1 to ground. If
080 IOC Problem If you saw the message I N F O 0 8 0 , the it is a short, pull the control board out to see
I/O controller (IOC, RF-U1) or other auxBus if the short is on that board.
device did not respond to messages from the If the voltage at pin 28 is between 5V and
main processor (MCU). Turn power OFF and 6V, try pressing the B A N D + button a
back ON; if you hear some relays switching number of times while watching the voltage
on power-up, the IOC may be OK, and the carefully (use an oscilloscope if possible).
problem is likely to be with the AuxBus The voltage should drop below 5V briefly if
(081) the MCU (CTRL-U6) is sending a message
If you do not hear any relays switching on to the IOC. If the voltage does not change at
power-up, your IOC (RF-U1) may be all, the MCU itself may not be sending
defective. Inspect U1 carefully to see if you AuxBus messages.
have installed it backwards or if any pins are Check the AuxBus signal at the MCU, pin 40
bent. (CTRL-U6). If you don’t see this voltage
Pull U1 out, check its pins, then re-install it, drop below 5V briefly when the band is
making sure all pins make good contact with changed, the MCU may not be functioning
the IC socket. Check the 4-MHz oscillator (075).
(075). 090 EEPROM test #1 If you saw the message I N F O 0 9 0 or
Remove the bottom cover and verify that all failed I N F O 0 9 1 on the LCD, one of the
pins of U1’s socket are soldered, as well as EEPROM write tests has failed.
those of the 6V regulator (RF-U2), and U1’s 091 EEPROM test #2 Check all voltages on the EEPROM (CTRL-
4 MHz oscillator (RF-Z5). failed U7).
With power ON, check all voltages Remove the control board and inspect U7 and
associated with U1. You should see 6V at surrounding traces. Verify that U7 is properly
pins 1 and 20 at all times, even when the IOC soldered.
is sleeping (not being accessed by the MCU).
5
Receiver (100-149) 110 AF amp not Use the menu to set a sidetone level of 60
working (S T L 0 6 0 ). Hold S P O T . If you hear a
strong tone, the A.F. amplifier itself is
Problem Troubleshooting Steps
probably working; check the mute circuit
100 Low (or no) audio If you hear audio output on some bands but
(CTRL-Q6 and Q7) and trace the volume
output from receiver, not all of them, check the band-pass and low-
control lines back to the product detector
or general receiver pass filters and T-R switch (120)
(RF-U11)
gain problem Make sure you have headphones or speaker
Remove the control board and inspect the
connected, and AF GAIN not at minimum
entire A.F. amplifier and mute circuit for
Check for missing audio filter option
mis-installed components, shorts, and opens
(KDSP2 or KAF2) or their bypass jumpers
114 AGC or S-meter If AGC appears to be working but the S-
Check the key jack for a short to ground
not working meter isn’t, try re-calibrating the meter using
Make sure RF GAIN is at maximum
C A L S H I and C A L S L O . If the S-
The AGC threshold control (R1, Control
meter is “stuck,” you may have an open,
board) may be set incorrectly. Typical
short, or incorrect component in the area of
voltage at U2 pin 5 is 3.90 volts (no antenna,
U2 on the control board.
RF GAIN at max). You can set R1 for a
Make sure the RF gain control is at
slightly higher voltage at U5 pin 5 to increase
maximum
the no-signal I.F. gain. If R1 is adjusted,
If the AGC and S-meter are both not
you'll need to re-adjust CAL S HI and CAL S
working, you may have a dead 5.068 MHz
LO (S-meter).
oscillator crystal, X1 (control board). Listen
If you have the 160 m/RXANT option board
for the 2nd harmonic of X1 at about 10.136
installed, you may have menu entry R A N T
MHz while touching a screwdriver blade to
turned ON but no receive antenna connected;
pin 7 of U1 (NE602). If you can’t hear this
this may affect only one band since R A N T signal, try soldering a 22 k resistor from pin 7
can be set individually for each band. to pin 3 on U1 (NE602).
Peak the band-pass filters if you have not 120 Signal loss only If you have the 160 m/RXANT option
already done so on some bands installed, make sure you have menu entry
Check for ground shorts in the LPF and BPF r A N T set to O F F , or if it is O N that you
by first resetting all of the relays (065)
have a receive antenna connected
Turn the AF GAIN to maximum
If K60XV option connectors are installed
If you don’t hear any “hiss” at the receiver
(J13 and J15 on RF board), but the module is
output, troubleshoot the AF amplifier (110)
removed, install C6 and W6.
Check the 8V regulated supply voltage and
Peak appropriate band-pass filters
troubleshoot if necessary (053)
Inspect T-R switch components and voltages
Measure the 8R line (+8V receive) at the
Trace signal from band-pass filters to the
anode of D6 on the RF board. It should be 8V
antenna using an RF signal generator
+/- 0.5V. If not, look for a problem in the 8V
Make sure the VCO is oscillating on affected
switching circuitry (control board).
bands by using the frequency counter
Try using signal tracing (see procedure later
in this section)
6
140 Receiver current If you saw the message I N F O 1 4 0 , your detector; you may have two resistors
drain is too high receive-mode current drain was measured at swapped (R67/R68, R66/R69) or the wrong
over 500 mA during normal operation. detector diode (D9, should be 1N5711)
Continue with the checks below. You may have a short in the LPF or BPF;
Use DISPLAY to show voltage and current reset all of the relays before trying to look for
on the LCD. If the current shown is > 300 shorts (065)
mA with no incoming signal or > 200 mA Examine transformers T1-T4 carefully; these
with the bargraph turned OFF and no signal, must be wound as indicated in part III of the
you may have a short or excessive load on RF board assembly section (see this section
the 8V or 8R lines (053). for drawings)
You may have the speaker and/or external Check all DC voltages in the transmitter (RF
speaker jack wired incorrectly. This can place board, Q5/Q6/Q7/Q8) as well as the ALC
a short across the audio amp output, causing circuitry (control board, U10A and RF board,
very low audio output (if any) and current as Q24).
high as 500 to 800 mA. One component that should be checked
specifically is R50 (driver), which can open
Transmitter (150-199) if the driver current goes too high.
Make an RF probe and signal-trace through
the transmitter to find where signal is lost
Problem Troubleshooting Steps (see probe and procedure later in this section)
150 General If power output is too low, go to 155 Check for any components getting hot
Transmitter problem If power output slowly increases during key- Turn the K2 OFF and remove the heat sink;
down, go to 160 inspect all parts and check for shorts or opens
If current drain on transmit is too high for the 160 Power output If you stay in key-down (T U N E ) mode for
given power level or you see HI CUR, go to fluctuates several seconds, it is normal to see some
175 increase in power; this is due to slow junction
If the transmitter output power seems to be heating in the final amplifier transistors. It is
unstable go to 160 not indicative of a problem unless current
If the transmitter stops transmitting by itself drain is too high for the given power output.
go to 170 If power goes up and down significantly
If the keyer isn’t working properly, go to 180 during normal keying, you may have a
Use the signal tracing procedure poorly-matched antenna OR you may have
155 Power output is You may have CAL CUR (current limit) set power set too high for your battery or power
low or zero too low; 2.00 A recommended at 10 W supply to handle; try reducing power to see if
Check power output when using a 50Ω it stabilizes
dummy load; if the output is correct on a If you have seen a slow (10-20Hz) oscillation
dummy load but not when using an antenna, superimposed on the transmitter's output
your antenna is probably not matched signal, it could be due to ALC modulation.
Install the bottom cover (all six screws) to Increase the value of R98 (RF board) to the
prevent RF pick-up by low-level circuits largest size that permits full output on 10 m.
Check all component values in the RF If the transmitter is truly unstable
7
(oscillating) even when connected to a 50-Ω Operation and Alignment (200-249)
load, you may have an incorrect component
value or a toroid-winding error; go through
the checks at 155 Problem Troubleshooting Steps
Make sure none of the diodes in the T-R 201 EEPROM I N F O 2 0 1 is an informational message
switch circuits are in backwards initialized only, not a problem indication. You will see
170 Output power If you have transmit power set too high for I N F O 2 0 1 one time on power-up. The
drops to zero suddenly your battery or power supply, the supply only other time you might see this message is
voltage may drop so low on transmit that it if you install a new version of the firmware
resets the MCU (CTRL-U6) or the I/O that requires a reformat of EEPROM. (In
controller (RF-U1). Reduce power. most cases new firmware should not cause an
175 Current drain too You may have power set higher than the final EEPROM reformat, however.)
high on transmit (or amplifier can achieve, resulting in overdrive 230 BFO not I N F O 2 3 0 is displayed if you try to use
HI CUR warning) of all transmitter stages. Try reducing power connected to frequency C A L F I L without the frequency counter
to see if normal current drain is observed at counter connected to the BFO test point (RF-TP2)
lower power levels 231 VCO not I N F O 2 3 1 is displayed if you try to use
Damaged PA transistors or other components connected to frequency C A L P L L without the frequency counter
could cause inefficiency in any stage of the counter connected to the VCO test point (RF-TP1)
transmitter. Check all DC voltages and 232 CAL PLL on I N F O 2 3 2 is most likely to be displayed
components; signal trace if necessarily (155) wrong band if you use C A L P L L without first
180 Keyer Problem If the keyer is stuck at a fixed speed or the
selecting 40 meters.
sidetone pitch won’t change, go into the
235 PLL ref. oscillator I N F O 2 3 5 is displayed if C A L P L L
menu and see what sidetone pitch your have.
range error cannot complete VFO linearization due to
If it’s not in the range of 0.40-0.80 kHz, you
inadequate PLL reference oscillator range
may have bad data in the EEPROM. See
(RF-Q19).
“Resetting the Configuration to Defaults” in
You may have the frequency counter probe
the Advanced Operating Features section.
on the wrong test point (should be on TP1)
If the keyer is generally erratic when
Re-test the PLL reference oscillator using the
transmitting and seems to get worse as power
procedure described under “PLL Reference
is increased, you probably have RF leaking
Oscillator Test” in Part II of the RF board
into the keyline. Try bypassing your key with
Alignment and Test section.
.001 µF capacitors; also try 100 µH RF
If the PLL reference oscillator range is found
chokes in series with the paddle and ground
to be inadequate, X1 may be defective. Also
connections.
check D16, D17, C84, C85, and L31 for
If your antenna is connected directly to the
proper value.
rig with no coax (i.e., internal ATU), the only
way to cure RF problems with the keyer and
other circuits may be to reduce transmit
power, seek a better antenna match, or
improve your ground system
8
Signal Generator
Signal Tracing
A simple crystal oscillator (Figure 2) can be used in lieu of a signal generator.
Signal tracing is the primary method by which radio equipment is tested and This oscillator takes its output from the crystal itself, resulting in fairly low
repaired. You can solve nearly all receiver and transmitter problems yourself harmonic content. This results in very slight “pulling” of the oscillator
by following the steps in this section carefully. frequency as you adjust the output level, but this is of no concern for signal
tracing. The oscillator will run on voltages as low as 8 V, but 12 V or more is
RF Probe Assembly recommended to guarantee enough output for all signal tracing steps. The
components are not critical, and can vary 20% with little variation in
Your K2 kit includes a complete RF probe, including the PC board, coax, performance. Nearly any NPN RF transistor will work in the circuit.
and connectors. The switch spacing tool, which you used in assembling the
Front Panel, doubles as the PC board for the probe. The RF probe (Figure
1) converts RF signals to DC so they can be measured using a DMM. The DC +
readings on your DMM will be approximately equal to the signal voltage in .01µF
Vrms (root-mean-square). 8-14VDC
- 22K
10 MHz (see text)
C1 R1 COAX,
E1 .01µF 24" (60 cm) 2N2222A,
4.7Mohm P1 RF OUTPUT
probe 2N3904, etc.
(+)
tip Level
D1 P2 39pF
1N34A (-) 560Ω
10K
E2
To DMM 150pF
ground 50 or 100Ω
(non-inductive)
Figure 1
Assembly Instructions: Use a discarded lead from a large diode such as an Figure 2
SB530 or 95SQ015 as the probe tip (E1). It should be about 1" (2.5 cm) long.
All other components for the probe can be found in the MISCELLANEOUS Any crystal frequency that falls in or near a ham band can be used, but 10
bag. An insulated alligator clip is provided for ground (E2). It should be MHz is recommended since our signal tracing measurements were done using
connected to the board using 4" of black insulated hookup wire. Two banana this band. If you have only completed the K2 up through part II of the RF
plugs are supplied for connecting the probe to your DMM (P1-P2). Use board (40 m), you'll have to use a crystal in the 6.8 to 7.5 MHz range.
RG174 coax between the probe board and the banana plugs. The coax should
be secured to the board using one cable tie. Thread the cable tie through the You may wish to build the oscillator into an enclosure fitted with a BNC
two holes provided, near the coax end of the board. connector and level control. Use short leads for all wiring. Use very short
leads (2”) or coax to connect the signal generator to the K2’s antenna jack.
To use the Probe: Connect E2 to the nearest ground test point, and plug the
banana jacks into your DMM. Set the DMM for DC volts (20 or 30 V scale).
Avoid touching the tip or discrete components while taking measurements.
9
Preparation for Receiver Signal Tracing
1. Connect the RF probe’s ground clip to the ground jumper near the
Figure 3 synthesizer circuitry.
2. Reference Oscillator Output: Measure the reference oscillator signal at
pin 1 of U4 (MC145170), which is near the front-left corner of the RF
Receiver and Synthesizer board (near the control board). Expected: 0.8-1.8 Vrms. Actual: ______.
In the following steps you’ll use the RF probe and other techniques to find the 3. VCO Output: Measure the VCO signal at pin 3 of U3 (LT1252).
stage where the received signal is getting attenuated. (Figure 3 shows the Expected: 0.30-0.40 Vrms. Actual: ______. If this signal is zero, you
approximate location of the synthesizer, receiver, and other circuits on the RF may have the secondary winding of T5 reversed.
board.) You can then use voltage tables, resistance checks and close 4. VCO Buffer Output: Measure the signal on pin 6 of U3. Expected:
examination to find the bad component or connection. 0.60-0.75Vrms. Actual: ______.
5. Check the VCO frequency (RF Board, Alignment and Test Part II).
Perform all measurements in the order listed. In general, your measurements
can vary 20-25% from those shown and still be acceptable. Space is provided
to record your own measurements (in pencil), which will be very useful if you
need to re-test a particular circuit after repairs.
10
BFO (RF, sheet 2) Mixer, I.F. Amplifiers, and Crystal Filter (sheet 2)
1. BFO Output: Measure the signal on U11, pin 6 (NE602). Expected: 1. Attenuator Off Test: Measure the signal at the end of R72 closest to
0.20-0.70 Vrms. Actual: ______. Q21. Expected: .077 Vrms. Actual: _____.
2. Use the menu to select C A L F C T R . Press EDIT again to confirm; the 2. Preamp Off Test: Measure the signal at the end of R73 closest to Z6.
display will now show a frequency reading (it will depend on where you Expected: .077 Vrms. Actual: _____. (Preamp gain will be tested later.)
have the frequency counter probe connected). 3. Composite Mixer Output: Measure the signal at the right end of R80.
3. BFO Buffer Output: Measure the amplitude of the signal at TP2 using Expected: .079 Vrms. Actual: _____.
the RF probe. Expected: 0.025-0.070 Vrms. Actual: _______. 4. Post-Mixer Amp Output: Measure the signal at the case (collector) of
4. Exit C A L F C T R . Check the BFO frequency (RF Board, Alignment Q22 (2N5109). Expected: 2.20 Vrms. Actual: _____.
and Test Part II). 5. -5 dB Pad Output: Measure the signal at jumper W2, near the crystal
filter. Expected: 1.40 Vrms. Actual: _____.
Low-Pass Filter, Bandpass Filter, and T-R Switch (RF, sheet 3) 6. Crystal Filter Output: Touch the RF probe to jumper W3, near the
crystal filter. Adjust the VFO for a peak in the DMM reading. Expected:
1. Turn both the attenuator and preamp OFF using P R E / A T T . 0.35 Vrms. Actual: _____. If this reading is low, it may be due to a non-
2. Set RF GAIN to minimum. optimal setting of the BFO in CAL FIL. Try a different BFO setting, then
3. Set AF GAIN to about 10% and connect a pair of headphones. adjust the VFO for peak again and re-measure the filter loss. (Note: this
4. Switch to the 30 m (or the correct band for your signal generator). measurement exaggerates the filter loss because the input to the filter is a
5. Connect a signal generator or test oscillator to the antenna jack. Set the composite of many signals besides the desired one.)
signal generator for 0.14 Vrms as indicated by the RF probe. 7. T7 Step-Up Ratio: Measure the signal at U12, pin 4 (MC1350).
6. If possible, tune the VFO until you hear the signal. It may be quite strong Expected: 0.4-0.8 Vrms. Actual: _____. Note: Limited by D40-D41.
even if your receiver is attenuating the signal somewhere. Find the 8. I.F. Amp Saturated Output: Measure the signal at U12, pin 8. It may
approximate signal peak by ear. Set AF GAIN to minimum. be anywhere between 0.00 and 0.30 Vrms. Adjust the signal generator
7. Align the band-pass filter for the current band if possible: (a) Put the RF level until the DMM reads approx. 0.15 Vrms. (If your signal generator
probe on the banded end (cathode) of D6 (to the left of the I/O controller, is running from a 9-V battery you may have trouble getting the output
U1); (b) adjust the band-pass filter for the current band for a peak this high. Try running the generator from 12V or more in this case.)
indication on the DMM (on 30 m: adjust L8 and L9). 9. 2nd Crystal Filter Output: Measure the signal at U11, pin 1 (NE602).
8. Aligning the band-pass filter may have changed the input impedance of Expected: approx. 0.27 Vrms. Actual: _____.
the receiver. Put the RF probe back on the antenna input and adjust the 10. Product Detector Saturated Output: Measure the signal at U11, pin 5
signal generator for 0.14 Vrms again. (NE602). Expected: 0.58 Vrms. Actual: _____.
9. Low-Pass Filter Output: Measure the signal at jumper W1, near the PA
transistors (Q7/Q8). Expected: 0.13 Vrms. Actual: _______. AGC (Control Board)
10. T-R Switch #1 Output: Measure the signal at W6, which is just to the
right of the transverter/60 meter option connector, J13 (near the back 1. Disconnect the RF probe from the DMM. Connect the DMM’s (-) lead to
edge of the board). Expected: .093 Vrms. Actual: _______. chassis ground.
11. Band-Pass Filter Output: Measure the signal at the left side of D6. 2. Turn the signal generator completely OFF (remove its power).
Expected: .086 Vrms. Actual: ______. 3. Set RF GAIN to maximum.
12. T-R Switch #2 Output: Measure the signal at the right side of D6. 4. No-Signal AGC, Max. IF Gain: Measure the DC voltage on pin 1 of U2
Expected: .077 Vrms. Actual: ______. (LM833). Expected: 3.6 V. Actual: _____.
5. Set RF GAIN to minimum.
11
6. No-Signal AGC, Min. IF Gain: Measure the DC voltage on pin 1 of U2. Final Steps
Expected: 4.6 V. Actual: _____.
7. Turn the signal generator back on. If you have completed receiver signal tracing and any necessary repairs, you
8. AGC @ Saturation: Measure the DC voltage on pin 1 of U2. Expected: should then do the following:
6.9 V. Actual: _____. Adjust the VFO to make sure this voltage is at its
peak. 1. Re-install the bottom cover and heat sink.
9. I.F. Amp AGC Input: Measure the DC voltage on pin 5 of U12 (RF, 2. Re-do calibration of the VCO, BFO, band-pass filters, crystal filters, etc.
sheet 2). Expected: 5.0 V. Actual: _____. as needed (see RF Board Alignment and Test, parts I, II, and III). If you
peaked L8 and L9 when signal tracing through the 30-m band-pass filter,
Product Detector and AF Amp (RF, Sheet 2) you’ll need to re-peak C21 and C23 on 20 m.
3. Leave the frequency counter cable connected to TP2 (BFO)
1. Set up the DMM to read AC volts (use a 2 or 3-V meter range). 4. Connect the speaker and re-install the top cover.
2. Touch the (+) lead of the DMM to pin 5 of U11 (NE602). Decrease the
signal generator level until the AC voltage at pin 5 reads .025 Vrms. (The Transmitter
K2’s RF GAIN control should still be at minimum.)
3. Disconnect the headphones and speaker. Turn the AF GAIN control to The following procedure can be used to isolate problems with the transmitter
maximum. (the transmitter area of the RF board is identified in Figure 3). CW mode is
4. Measure the signal at the speaker jack, P5 pin 1 (near the on/off switch, used for these tests. If you’re having difficulty with the SSB adapter, make
S1). Expected: 1.6 Vrms. Actual: _____. sure the transmitter works on CW first, then proceed with the signal tracing
instructions in the SSB adapter manual.
I.F. Amp Noise Gain (RF, sheet 2)
Once you find a location where the signal appears to be much lower than
1. Turn the signal generator off and disconnect it from the antenna jack. expected, stop signal tracing and check that circuit. Check all component
Connect a 50-ohm dummy load. values and DC voltages (see DC Voltage Tables). Closely examine the PC
2. Turn off all nearby equipment (especially computers or signal sources). board for unsoldered pins and solder bridges. One of most likely causes of a
3. Set AF GAIN to maximum. Set RF GAIN to minimum. transmitter problem is a poorly-soldered toroid lead. Re-heat any suspect
4. Make sure the preamp and attenuator are both OFF. leads or solder joints.
5. Verify that FL1 is selected (bandwidth = 1.50), as well as CW Normal
mode. Preparation for Transmitter Signal Tracing
6. AF Output, Min. IF gain: Setup the DMM for its lowest AC volts
range. Measure the signal at the speaker jack, P5 (near the on/off switch, 1. Make sure basic display and control circuits are functioning before
S1). Expected: 0.000-0.001 Vrms. Actual: _____. attempting transmitter testing.
7. AF Output, Max. IF gain: Set RF GAIN to maximum. Measure the 2. Remove the SSB adapter (if installed) and install temporary jumpers at
signal at P5, pin 1. Expected: 0.007-0.013 Vrms. Actual: _____. J9 and J10. Temporarily re-install C167 (.001 µF or higher) between pins
8. Preamp Noise Gain: Turn on the preamp. Measure the signal at P5. 7 and 12 of J11. (See RF board, sheet 2.)
Expected: 0.030-0.060 Vrms. Actual: _____. 3. 12 V supply check: Use your DMM to check the DC voltage at the
9. Noise Increase w/Antenna: Connect an antenna. The signal at P5 should cathode (banded end) of D10 (right edge of the board). Expected: 9 to 14
increase substantially even if atmospheric conditions are quiet. A typical V. Actual: _____. Verify that the same voltage (or slightly lower) can be
reading on 30 or 40 m is 0.20-0.40 Vrms. In general, the longer or higher found on the case (collector) of Q5 and the tab (collector) of Q6 when the
your antenna is, the greater the noise increase will be. K2 is turned on and is in receive mode.
12
4. If you don’t have an RF probe, you can build the one from Figure 1. Sidetone (Control Board)
Note: do not use the RF probe to directly measure the transmitter’s
power output unless you have the power set for 2 W or less. The 1N34A Note: If the sidetone is already functioning correctly, you can skip this
diode in the RF probe may be damaged at higher power levels. section.
5. Test Shared Circuits: Do the receiver signal tracing (above). This tests
a number of circuits that are shared by both transmitter and receiver, 1. Make sure you’re in CW mode. The sidetone will not function in SSB
including the VCO, BFO, BFO buffer, T-R switches, band-pass filters, modes.
and low-pass filters. It’s important not to skip this step, even if the 2. Disconnect the headphones and speaker.
receiver seems to be working correctly. Shared circuits that are working 3. Use the menu to set S T L to 255 (maximum sidetone level).
marginally may affect the transmitter more than the receiver, so their 4. Use the V O X button to select CW TEST mode (the mode letter will then
actual output levels must be measured. flash). This is a safe setting for sidetone tests, since there is no power
6. Set up the K2 for 40 meters (about 7100 kHz), CW Normal mode. output.
7. Plug in a 50-ohm dummy load (10-W or higher rating). 5. Set your DMM for AC volts, 2 or 3-V range. Touch the positive lead of
8. Set the power level to 5 watts. the DMM to pin 25 of U6 on the control board (18C452). (This is the
9. Connect a hand key or keyer paddle to the key jack. source of the sidetone signal.)
10. Connect a speaker or headphones. 6. Key the transmitter using the hand key (T U N E does not activate the
11. Use the menu to set S T L 030, S T P 0.50, and T - R 0.05. sidetone). Measure the AC voltage on pin 25 of U6. Expected: 2.5 Vrms.
12. Select hand key mode (I N P H A N D ). Actual: _____. Un-key the transmitter.
13. Set up a transmit current limit of 2.50 amps using C A L C U R . 7. Move the DMM probe to the drain of Q5 (control board, 2N7000). Key
the transmitter and measure the AC drain voltage. Expected: 2.4 Vrms.
Basic voltage checks (RF schematic, sheet 2) Actual: _____. If this is zero, either Q5 is defective or there is no drain
voltage supply from pin 1 of U8 (MAX534, D-to-A converter).
Note: When using T U N E to key the transmitter, be sure to tap T U N E again 8. Measure the AC voltage on pin 7 of U10 (LMC660). Expected: 0.5
within 5 seconds or less each time. This will reduce the chance of damaging Vrms. Actual: _____.
any components in the transmitter that are consuming excess power. 9. Measure the AC voltage on pin 8 of U9 (LM380). Expected: 0.5 Vrms.
Actual: _____.
1. Switch to voltage/current display mode using D I S P L A Y . 10. Measure the AC voltage on pin 6 of U9. Expected: 0.5 Vrms. Actual:
2. Hold T U N E to key the transmitter, and verify that supply voltage does _____. This signal should also be present on the speaker jack, P5 pin 1
not drop by more than about 0.8 V. If it drops more than this, either your (RF board).
power supply is inadequate or the transmitter is drawing excess current. 11. Return the S T L setting to 030.
Actual transmit-mode voltage: _____ V. Current: _____ A. 12. Use the V O X button to put the transmitter back into O P E R a t e mode.
3. Return to normal display mode using D I S P L A Y .
4. Measure the key-down DC voltages on the anodes (right end) of D6 and ALC (control board)
D7 (near U1, the I/O controller). During transmit, the voltage on the
anode of D7 should be about 8 V, and on D6, near 0 V. Actual TX-mode 1. Make sure the POWER control is set for 5 watts, and that you’re in
voltages, D6: _____ V; D7: _____ V. CW/Operate mode.
5. Use T U N E and note the actual power output: _____ W. 2. Set up the DMM for DC volts, 20 or 30-V range.
3. Power Control Test (VPWR line): The VPWR line, pin 2 of U8
(MAX534), is where transmit power control begins. On key-down, the
microprocessor (U6) starts increasing the voltage on VPWR until it sees
the desired power indication from the RF output detector (RF board,
13
sheet 3, lower right-hand corner). To test VPWR, set the DMM for DC 2. Driver Input: Measure the key-down signal on the base of Q6
volts, then measure the DC voltage on pin 2 of U8 when T U N E is (2SC2166; pins are labeled B, C, E). Expected: 0.026 Vrms. Actual:
pressed. Expected: 0.7-2.5 VDC. Actual: _____. _____.
4. If VPWR reading is high (> 4.5 V): The ALC software will set VPWR 3. Driver Output: Measure the key-down signal at the tab (collector) of
to its highest level (about 5 V) if the transmitter cannot be driven to the Q6. Expected: 1.8 Vrms. Actual: _____.
requested power level. This happens for one of two reasons: (a) the 4. PA Input (Q7): Measure the key-down signal at the base of Q7
transmitter gain is low (or transmitter isn’t working at all); (b) the RF (2SC1969 on bottom of the board; pins are labeled on the top). Expected:
detector has an incorrect component. Check all component values in the 0.38 Vrms. Actual: _____.
RF detector. If you can’t find a problem with the RF detector, continue 5. PA Input (Q8): Measure the key-down signal at the base of Q8.
with the next signal tracing section (transmit mixer, etc.). Expected: 0.38 Vrms. Actual: _____.
5. If VPWR reading is low (< 0.4V): VPWR can be too low because: (a) 6. RF Detector Input: Measure the key-down signal on the anode (non-
the ALC software is being “fooled” by a signal from the RF detector that banded end) of D9 (1N5711, middle of the right edge of the board).
says the power is higher than it really is; (b) because U8 on the control Expected: 2.0 Vrms. Actual: _____. (This voltage should be fairly
board is defective or has a pin shorted to ground or not soldered. Check constant regardless of the band used.)
all component values in the RF detector (RF, sheet 3). If these appear 7. PA Transistor Tests: If the PA input voltages were higher than
correct, check DC voltages on U8 (control), as well as resistance to expected, but the RF detector input was too low, one or both PA
ground on all pins. transistors could be defective. After checking DC voltages and
transformer leads, turn off power to the K2 and use your DMM’s
Transmit Mixer, Buffer, Band-Pass Filter, T-R Switch (RF, sheets 2-3) diode/transistor test range to test the transistors. With the DMM’s
positive lead on the base of Q7, you should measure about 0.6 k to the
Note: The measurements in this section and the next may vary widely, emitter or collector. With the DMM’s negative lead on the base of Q7,
especially if you do the measurements on a band other than 40 m. However, you should measure about 1.3 k to the emitter and > 3 k to the collector.
the ratio between any two back-to-back measurements should remain fairly These also apply to Q8.
constant, and is a good indication of gain or loss of a stage in the transmitter.
For example, the ratio of measurements in steps 3 and 2 below is about 12.
DC Voltage Tables
1. Connect the RF probe to the DMM. Set the DMM for a 2 or 3-V DC
volts range. The tables on the following pages provide DC voltages for all ICs and
2. Xmit Mixer Output: Measure the key-down signal at U10, pin 4. transistors on each of the three boards, as well as the diodes in the T-R switch
Expected: 0.016 Vrms. Actual: _____. (RF board). Typically, your readings will match these within 10%.The
3. Buffer Output: Measure the key-down signal at U9, pin 6 (LT1252). voltages were measured using a high-impedance DMM (10-11 Megohm).
Expected: 0.200 Vrms. Actual: _____. The K2’s internal voltmeter can also be used for most measurements.
4. Band-Pass Filter Output: Measure the key-down signal at W6.
Expected: 0.030 Vrms. Actual: _____. Receive-mode voltages are listed except as noted. Most of the Control board
5. T-R Switch #1 Output: Measure the key-down signal at the anode of measurements were made with the Front Panel module removed for easier
D1. Expected: 0.029 Vrms. Actual: _____. access. Exceptions are indicated by (**).
Pre-driver, Driver, and PA (RF, sheet 4) Equipment Setup: Supply voltage 14.0 V; no antenna; LCD = NITE; GRPH
= DOT; receive mode; no headphones or speaker connected; RF GAIN mid-
1. Pre-Driver Output: Measure the key-down signal at the case (collector) range; AF GAIN minimum; OFFSET mid-range.
of Q5 (2N5109). Expected: 0.120 Vrms. Actual: _____.
14
CONTROL BOARD (Front panel removed except ** = CAL FCTR mode w/front Panel plugged in; * = approximate and/or may fluctuate)
Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC
Q1 E 8.0 Q12 E 6.3 U6 1 5.0 U6 34 0.0 U9 1 0.4*
B 8.0 B 7.0 2 0.0* 35 0.2* 2 .02*
C 0.0 C 8.0 3 5.0* 36 0.8* 3 .02*
Q2 E 8.0 U1 1 1.4 4 0.2* 37 5.0 4 0.0
B 7.3 2 1.4 5 2.6* 38 1.2* 5 0.0
C 7.5 3 0.0 6 4.7* 39 0.2* 6 6.7
Q3 S 0.0 4 6.9 7 0-5* 40 5.5 7 13.7
G 0.0 5 6.9 8 0-5* U7 1 5.0 8 6.8
D 8.0 6 8.0 9 0 or 5 2 5.0 U10 1 7.7*
Q4 S 0.0 7 7.5 10 5.0** 3 5.0 2 5.0*
G 5.0 8 8.0 11 5.0 4 0.0 3 5.0*
D 0.0 U2 1 6.9 12 0.0 5 5.0 4 8.0
Q5 S 0.0 2 6.9 13 2.3* 6 0.0 5 5.0
G 0 or 5 3 6.9 14 2.4* 7 5.0 6 5.0
D 0-5 4 0.0 15 2** 8 5.0 7 5.0
Q6 G 2.7* 5 7.3 16 0-5* U8 1 0-5* 8 0-8*
S 5-6* 6 7.3 17 2.7* 2 5.0** 9 0-8*
D 5-6* 7 7.3 18 0.0 3 5.0 10 0-8*
Q7 G 2.7* 8 8.0 19 5.0 4 0.0 11 0.0
S 5-6* U3 1 0.4* 20 5.0 5 0.0 12 0-8*
D 5-6* 2 13.7 21 5.0 6 5.0 13 0-8*
Q8 E 7.0** 3 13.7 22 5.0 7 5.0 14 0-8
B 7.7** 4 0.0 23 5.0 8 0 or 5
C 8.0** 5 2.5 24 5.0 9 5.0
Q9 E 0.0 6 2.5 25 0.0 10 0.0
B 0.7** 7 2.5 26 5.0 11 5.0
C 2 ** 8 13.7 27 0.0 12 0.0
Q10 E 0.0 U4 IN 13.7 28 5.0 13 5.0
B 0.7** GND 0.0 29 5.0 14 0.0
C 2** OUT 8.0 30 5.0 15 0-5*
Q11 E 0.2* U5 IN 13.7 31 0.0 16 0-5*
B 0.9* GND 0.0 32 5.0
C 13.5 OUT 5.0 33 5.0
15
FRONT-PANEL BOARD (* = approximate and/or may fluctuate; ** = not accessible due to LCD)
Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC
Q1 E 2.7 U1 26 3.5 U3 1 0.0 U4 15 0.0
B 3.4 27 3.5 2 5.0 16 0.0
C 5.0 28 3.5 3 0.8* 17 0.0
Q2 E 2.7 29 3.5 4 >0 18 0.4*
B 3.4 30 3.5 5 >0 19 0.0
C 5.0 31 3.5 6 4.0* 20 0.0
32 3.5 7 2.0*
33 3.5 8 5.0
34 3.5 9 0.0
U1 1 ** 35 3.5 10 0.0
2 ** 36 3.5 11 0.0
3 ** 37 3.5 12 .02*
4 ** 38 3.5 13 0.2*
5 ** 39 3.5 14 3.1*
6 ** 40 3.5 15 0.8*
7 ** U2 1 5.0 16 4.0*
8 ** 2 0.2* 17 0.1
9 ** 3 5.0 18 3.6*
10 ** 4 5.0 19 0.0
11 ** 5 5.0 20 0.0
12 ** 6 5.0 U4 1 0.0
13 ** 7 5.0 2 5.0
14 ** 8 0.0 3 3.6*
15 ** 9 0.1* 4 >0
16 ** 10 0.0 5 >0
17 ** 11 5.0 6 >0
18 ** 12 5.0 7 >0
19 ** 13 5.0 8 5.0
20 ** 14 5.0 9 0.0
21 3.5 15 0.0 10 0.0
22 3.5 16 5.0 11 0.0
23 3.5 12 .02*
24 3.5 13 0.2*
25 3.5 14 0.0
16
RF BOARD (Shaded areas indicate transmit-mode voltage measurements)
Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC Ref. Pin VDC
D1 A 0.0 Q12 S 0.0 U1 1 6.0 U3 6 4.3 U8 IN 8.0
C 7.5 G 6.0 2 6.0 7 8.0 GND 0.0
D2 A 8.0 D 0.0 3 0.0 8 0.0 OUT 5.0
C 7.5 Q13 E 0.6 4 0.0 U4 1 2.1 U9 1 0.0
D3 A 8.0 B 1.3 5 0.0 2 2.4 2 6.9
C 7.5 C 7.5 6 0.0 3 0.0 3 6.9
D4 A 8.0 Q16 E 0.0 7 0.0 4 2.3 4 0.0
C 7.5 B 0.6 8 0.0 5 5.0 5 0.0
D5 A 0.0 C 2.2 9 0.2 6 5.0 6 6.9
C 8.0 Q17 S 0.0 10 0.15 7 0.0 7 13.8
D6 A 8.0 G 2.2 11 0.0 8 0.1 8 0.0
C 7.5 D 2 to 3 12 0.0 9 0.0 U10 1 1.4
D7 A 0.0 Q18 G -1.0 13 0.0 10 0.0 2 1.4
C 7.5 S 2 to 3 14 0.0 11 0.0 3 0.0
Q2 S 0.0 D 6.3 15 0.0 12 0.0 4 5.0
G 8.0 Q19 G 0.0 16 0.0 13 4.0 5 5.0
D 0.0 S 0.8 17 0.0 14 5.0 6 6.0
Q5 E 0.6 D 8.0 18 6.0 15 5.0 7 5.5
B 1.3 Q20 S 0.0 19 0.0 16 5.0 8 6.1
C 12.4 G 8.0 20 6.0 U5 1 0.0 U11 1 1.4
Q6 B 1.1 D 0.0 21 0.0 2 5.0 2 1.4
C 13.3 Q21 E 1.6 22 0.0 3 5.0 3 0.0
E 0.4 B 2.3 23 0.0 4 5.0 4 5.0
Q7 B 0.6 C 13.2 24 0.0 5 0.0 5 5.0
C 13.4 Q22 E 1.3 25 0.0 6 2.0 6 6.1
E 0.0 B 2.0 26 0.0 7 0 to 4 7 5.6
Q8 B 0.6 C 12.5 27 0.0 8 5.0 8 6.1
C 13.4 Q23 S 0.0 28 5.5 U6 1 0 to 8 U12 1 7.9
E 0.0 G 0.0 U2 IN 13.7 2 0 to 4 2 7.9
Q10 S 1.6 D 8.0 GND 0.0 3 0 to 4 3 0.0
G 8.1 Q24 G 0.0 OUT 6.0 4 0.0 4 2.5
D 1.6 S 1.2 U3 1 0.0 5 4.0 5 3.9
Q11 E 0.0 D 1.3 2 4.3 6 4.0 6 2.5
B 0.6 3 4.1 7 0 to 8 7 0.0
C 1.3 4 0.0 8 8.0 8 7.9
5 0.0
17
C5 J15 1 D2 D3 D4 C114 C191 K8 J4 C192
C39 L2 R38 R39
C7
C9 C8 Q2 C190 L17
R1 L1
J1 R37 J14 C201 + J3
L3 C13 C4 K3 K1 L4 J13 D1 RFC3
Q6 Q7 C203 C202
W1 C197
R41 B
R40 C
E Z1 L20
R2 80m Q5 C199
C11 K2 K9
A 5 6 L19
1 L18
3 3 C214 L22 1 P6
C15 B C E 1
L5 T2 C T3 AUX
C24 L9 2 B
C22 K5 4 4
RF
L8 1 3 2
T1
D 8 7 K10 C212
2 4 C218 L21 C222
C35 C37 B Z2 T4 C196
C19 C221
K4 C116 C
C30 C36 R45 E Q8
C25 C124
C31 C32 L11 K11 C220
C34 R61 Q11 Q13 C138 +
L10 C33 R59 L24
Q10
+ L23 C227 C229
K7 C125 C139 R60 C126 C225
C42 C48 C137 R62 C226
R64
+
L13 U1 C140
K6
U2
16C72 (SOCKET) L25 K12
K2 RF Rev. B R67
L12 C43 R46 C 2002 ELECRAFT D9
Q17 Q16 C45 C47 D6 C55 C57 Q22 C77
Q12 R68
C59 C44 C52 K16 K17 R73
Z5
C46 - + P3
D11 C141
R83 1
R16 D7 C53 Q21 C162
R9 R10 T5 C61 RFC13
C79 R6 R8 R85
C81 1 3 TP1 R84 AUX 12V
C80 C58 W5
4 R11 R7 1 J12 C170
C82 R17 C146 T6 R79
L30 2 R80
K13 K14 K15 R78 F1
C158 Z6 R88 1 J9
R93
Appendix F
R81
1252 R89 W2
U3 R92 RP4 D29
C163 1
U9 1252 100K
Q20 R97 R90 X7
C64 R12 C160 C164 D30
C63 C144 C153 X8
D23 D25 R82 D31
D19 D21 R31 R13 C155 R101
C71 R32 C67 R14 C166 X9
C96 R33 C154 C167 C168 1
U8 R15 TP2 D32 X10
D24 D26 R91 Q25
D20 D22 R30 +
C94 C92 J11 Q24 D33 X11
R28 SSB RP6 100K R107
C100 RP2 R25
C95 1 C169 2 T7 1 RP5
10K R24 C172 100K
C93 D37 D38 C165 W3 D12
1 +
C85 C175 X3 J10 P5
662 145170
C84 1 4 3
D16 D17 U6 C89 X6 1
Q19 RFC16
1 U4 X5
X1 R22 TP3 J5
RP3 10K SPKR
X4 D39
C86 C177 C178
X2 RFC14 1 4 5 1 U5 J7
C176 C181
R21 1 LIFT 1 L34 R111
J6 S1
R20 J8
C106 C105
+ + Q23
J2 R36 CONTROL C111
R35 BOARD FRONT PANEL BOARD R113 R115
E1 C1 D1 R1 RF Probe
E2
TIP .01 1N34A 4.7M Elecraft
C1 RP2 1 2 0 R12
1
S1 U1 AND ITS SOCKET ARE MOUNTED +
DS2 BEVELED CORNER ON THE OTHER SIDE
R6
S2 D2 D3
R7 S8 S9 S10
S3 +
1
DS1 R9
S4 R1 R2 Q2 S11 S12 S13
C7 C8 R10 1
R11 Q1
S5
LINEAR LINEAR C2
D4
S6 Z1 S14 S15 S16
R13 Q3 D5 U3
D6
RP3 10K
S7 C3
4 3 2 1
C4 C5 C6 K2 FP Rev. B
AUDIO LINEAR LINEAR
J2 R3 R4 1 10 20 R14 R5 C 2002 ELECRAFT
Appendix F Parts Placement Drawing, Bottom