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[TenTec] Updated "Lineage" Release to Public (long)

To: <tentec@contesting.com>
Subject: [TenTec] Updated "Lineage" Release to Public (long)
From: k9iua@juno.com (Kevin L Anderson)
Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2001 22:52:30 EST
Ten Tec Fans --

Below you will find the updated "lineage"
document that I have been working on.
It is as complete as I can get it without
more specifics, such as from Ten Tec itself.
Copies have already been sent to JB for
his use on the "unofficial" Ten Tec site and
to Paul Valko for his use on his "virtual 
museum" web site.

Now someone else will have to do the same
for the other Ten Tec components, such as
the amplifiers, as I don't have any of that 
big iron <grin>.

Enjoy.   Cheers/73.         Kevin, K9IUA
-------------------- cut here -----------------------
Summary Discussion (First Release) regarding
the Lineage of Ten Tec HF Amateur Equipment
*******************************************

Ten Tec Amateur HF Transceivers

The following is an attempt at describing the lineage
and characteristics of HF amateur radio transcievers
as manufactured by Ten Tec.

This summary is based on discussions held on the Ten Tec
e-mail reflector list (January 2001), material on the 
"unofficial" Ten Tec web site, and various other sources.

This summary is in three parts:  (a) order of development/
production; (b) "lineage" of transceivers (grouping into
to market segments or basic design evolution); and 
(c) design innovations/considerations (basic engineering
specifications).

Last edited 27 January 2001, by Kevin Anderson, K9IUA
K9IUA@juno.com

=================================================================

A. Order of development/production:
-----------------------------------

     [Dates indicate year of production start, if known
     (dates in parenthesis are QST or CQ reviews); 
     Most of the start-production dates have question marks,
     as we won't know for sure until Ten Tec tells us.]

Powermite series
 -- modules TX-1, MX-1, VO-1, AA-1 -- 1969?
 -- models  PM-1, PM-2 / PM-2A / PM-2B, PM-3 / PM-3A  -- 1969/1970

"Hollow state" Modules (TX-100, RX-10, VFO-200) -- 1971/1972 ?

Argonaut 505 -- 1971

Argonaut 509 -- 1973

Triton I/II  -- 1973 and 1974 ?

Triton IV 540 -- 1975

Century 21 Analog -- 1976? (12/77)

Triton IV Digital/Model 544 -- 1977 (others told me 1978) (7/79)

Century 21 Digital -- 1978?  (In a 1979 AES catalog)

Argonaut 515 -- c1978/1979

Omni A -- 1979
Omni D -- 1979

Delta 580 -- 1979?

Omni A/D Series B -- late 1979?

Omni C -- 1980 (production late 1980 & 1981)

Argosy 525 -- 1980? (10/80)

Corsair I -- 1982?

Argosy II 525D -- 1982 (10/82)

Century 22 -- 1984 (5/85)

     [An advertisement in QST for AES, which was selling Ten Tec
      back in 1984, lists the Century 22, Argosy II, and Corsair I,
      with the original Argosy 525 on closeout at $399.95!]

Corsair II -- 1987? (8/87) (production 1987 to 1990)

Paragon I 585 -- 1988? (5/88)

Omni V -- 1990?  (11/90)

Argonaut II -- "Available Oct 1990"? (1/92)
Delta II  -- "Available Nov 1990"? (1/92)
     (My Ten Tec brochure, which must have been printed 
      sometime in late 1990, indicates the above two availability
      dates for the Argonaut II / Delta II, but it may have
      been just wishful thinking and it was early 1991)

Omni VI -- 1992 (1/93)

Paragon II 586 -- sometime before July 1993

Scout 555 -- early 1993 (12/93)

     [I have a brochure I received in late 1993 from Ten Tec
      that pictures the Paragon I, Delta II, and Argonaut II,
      but with separate inserts for the Scout 555 and Omni VI 563.
      The included July 1993 price list gives the Paragon II, 
      Omni VI, Scout 555, and the Argonaut II/Delta II]
 
Argo Scout 556 -- late 1993 or early 1994?

Omni VI+ -- 1997? (11/97)

T-Kit Single-Band Transceivers (1320, 1330, 1340, etc.) -- 1998

Pegasus -- 1999 -- May @ Dayton  (2/2000)

Jupiter -- late 2000

-----------------------------------------------

B.  Lineage of Transceivers
---------------------------

The following "lineage" view (I would suggest it is more
of an "intended audience" or market view) is from 
Paul Valko, W8KC (prvalko@oakland.edu):

   *=*=*=*
 QRP Rigs
 Power Mite 1, 2, 3 ==> Argonaut 505/509/515 ==> Argonaut II  ==> Argo
                                                    ||
                                                     ==> Delta II (100W)

 Mid-power
 Century 21 ==> Century 22 ==> Argosy ==> Argosy II ==> Scout
 
 Full-sixed/performance
 Triton I => Triton II => Triton IV => Omni A/B/C => Corsair =>
(continued)
                                            ||
                                             ==> Delta
 
   (continued from above) Corsair II => Omni V => Omni VI => Omni VI+
 
 "Hollow State" station
 TX-100, RX-10, VFO 200
 
 PLL attempt
 Paragon
 
 Radio/PC hybrid
 Pegasus ==> Jupiter

   *=*=*=*

Kevin's comments on the above lineage:

>From a purely "market" orientation, Paul's category of "mid-power"
including the Century and Argosy series (ending in the Scout)
makes sense.

But from a technology/design standpoint there is really two series:

 Mid-power -- Novice / CW-only (direct conversion):
 (Powermites) ==> Century 21 ==> Century 21 Digital ==> Century 22 

 Mid-power CW/SSB (economical performance superhet):
 (Argonauts/Triton I) ==> Argosy ==> Argosy II ==> Scout
 
The transceivers indicated in parenthesis are, I suggest, the
antecedents for the Century and Argosy series.  Further,
my sense, being the owner of a Century 22, Argosy II, and Scout
555, is that the Argosy, while sharing many of the same modules
as the C22, is definitely a different beast in overall design.  
The outward appearance between a C22 and Argosy II is striking, 
clearly acknowledging their period of time (1980-1985), but
the use of superhet (same 9 Mhz as other rigs) and inclusion of
SSB in the Argosy suggests parallel, not sequential, production.

Also, it should be noted that in the above listing, the 555 Scout
and 556 Argo Scout have a very different IF frequency as compared
to its predecessors, but do represent the commonality of mid-power
"economy" (or entry level) for a transciever market.

--------------------------------------

C. Design Innovations/Considerations:
-------------------------------------

The following, provided by Dave Kelley, NB4J (davek@psu.edu), 
was originally created by him from notes collected from K0CQ
and N4PY about a year ago.  Dave was interested in engineering
issues such as what types of front-end mixer and amplifier
circuits were used.  (Also included is yet again another list
of the dates for QST/CQ reviews.)

Here is Dave's summary as sent to me:

   *=*=*=*

Here's the information I've been able to gather.  (Much of it
came from K0CQ and N4PY):

[Dates (mo/yr) are for QST Product Reviews]

Triton I: single conversion: IF at 9 MHz
Triton II: single conversion: IF at 9 MHz
Triton III:  [no model carried this designation]
Triton IV (540/544-7/79): dual-gate MOSFET RF stage and MC1496 mixer;
  single conversion: IF at 9 MHz

Omni A: single conversion: IF at 9 MHz;no WARC bands?
Omni D (1/80): single conversion: IF at 9 MHz;no WARC bands?
Omni A-B/D-B: single conversion: IF at 9 MHz;no WARC bands?
Omni C: 17-m not practical, single conversion: IF at 9 MHz; dual-gate
  MOSFET RF amp, tunable preselector

Corsair I: 3 IF filters, same AGC system as Omni-C, dual conversion
  (IFs at 9 and 6.3 MHz and then back to 9 MHz for PBT), stock 4-pole
  9 MHz IF filter, PBT, diode ring mixer followed by transformer
  feedback amplifier stage, band pass filters instead of tunable
  preselector
Corsair II (8/87): same basic receiver, 3 IF filters, dual conversion,
  stock 9 MHz IF filter upgraded to 8 poles, PBT,
  audio filter, NB?, transformer feedback amplifier stages before and
  after first mixer (diode ring), adds 3 selectable audio filters and
  a notch filter within the AGC loop to Corsair I

Omni V (11/90): uses synthesizer rather than PTO; IFs at 9 and 6.3 MHz
  (and then back to 9 MHz for PBT, like Corsairs)
Omni VI (1/93): added RIT, sidetone that follows CW offset, internal
  keyer, low pass DSP filter to reduce IF hiss instead of "tone control",
  increased microprocessor clock speed, crystal oven for xtal osc,
  minor changes in firmware controlled items
Omni VI+ (11/97)

Paragon I (5/88)
Paragon II: upconversion to 45-75 MHz, then IFs at 9 and 6.3 MHz and
  back to 9 MHz again for PBT

Pegasus (2/00): upconversion to 45 mHz, then IFs at 455 kHz and
  12 kHz (the last for DSP)
Jupiter: upconversion to 45 mHz, then IFs at 455 kHz and
  12 kHz (the last for DSP)

Powermites

Century 21 (12/77)
Century 22 (5/85)

Argonaut 505/509/515: single conversion: IF at 9 MHz
Argonaut II (1/92)

Delta 580:  dual conversion: first IF is 11-11.5 MHz, second is
  6.3 MHz (to solve Omni C 17 m problem); digital
  readout does not sum all oscillators directly but is scaled - not
  always accurate
Delta II (1/92)

Argosy I (10/80 or 82)
Argosy II: stock 4-pole 9? MHz IF filter; covers 80, 40, 30, 20, 15 &
10 meters; 2.4 kHz 8-pole SSB and 500 Hz 8-pole CW filter positions
and dual-position AF filter?

Argo
Scout (12/93)

RX-320:upconversion to 45 mHz, then IFs at 455 kHz and
  12 kHz (the last for DSP)
RX-340

   *=*=*=*

In addition, Carl, N4PY, recently posted a similar shortened discussion
to the e-mail list:

>
> The Delta 1 is a double conversion receiver.  The first IF is 11 to
11.5 mHz
> and the second IF is 6.3 mHz.
> It stands by itself in this scheme.   The Tritons, Argonaut I, OMNI
A+D, C,
> Corsair I and II, are essentially single coversion
> receivers using a 9 mHz IF.  The Corsair's had an extra conversion from
9
> mHz to 6.3 mHz and back
> to 9 mHz for passband tuning.  The OMNI V and VI also use the same
scheme as
> the Corsair's.
>
> I do not know the scheme in the Delta II and Argonaut II.
>
> The Paragon I and II , up converted to 72 mHz and then to 9 mHz, also
with
> the passband tuning
> scheme going form 9 to 6.3 to 9.
>
> The Pegasus,  Jupiter, and RX-320 up convert to 45 mHz, then 455 kHz,
then
> 12 kHz for DSP.
>
> Carl Moreschi  N4PY
> Franklinton, North Carolina
> n4py@earthlink.net

And I (K9IUA) can add the following:

Powermite:   Direct conversion
Century 21:  Direct conversion
Century 22:  Direct conversion (VFO 6.0 to 6.5 mHz, with
                                xtals mixed for each band)

Scout/Argo Scout:
  Single conversion, VFO from 2.2 to 2.7 Mhz, IF at 6.144 Mhz,
  two sequenced filters [a 4-pole fixed bandwidth portion,
   and a 5-pole variable bandwidth portion ("Jones" filter)].

--------------------------------------------

Hopefully we can correct the dates (I dream that we eventually
can have both start *and* end dates for production), improve
on the lineage and design changes, and otherwise learn more
about the equipment we love to operate (at least I do).

Cheers/73,

Kevin Anderson, K9IUA
Bismarck/Lincoln, North Dakota

K9IUA@juno.com

NNNN
/EN

-------------------- cut here -----------------------
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Kevin Anderson, K9IUA, Lincoln/Bismarck ND
e-mail:  K9IUA@juno.com     Opinions all my own.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

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