I've had mine about 3 weeks, I love it. Only issue I have found is that it is prone to overload with strong signals. I use it with a homebrew interface for decoding CW, RTTY & SSTV.
I bought the ATS-20+ version last week, same except for an allegedly better quality rotary encoder, and it has a separate USB-C Jack for charging the battery. Fun little receiver. I haven't done any firmware upgrades yet, but it has a pretty active community of hobbyists/developers.
It can really help to read chips & circuit boards etc if you also use a small flashlight at different angles to the magnifying glass. Great review, thanks! I love my ATS-20, too!
I would be concerned that buttons and encoders held in by solder might have the solder crack over repeated stresses of button pushing and knob turning.
same concerns apply for most designs if directly pressing on the small switches on a circuit board, reversed or not. the longer legs can flex more before cracking solder too. a lot will depend on the force the microswitch needs to actuate.
The ATS-20 is good for tinkerers. At some point the rotary encoder will need to be replaced. The ATS-20+ is a better option for those who don't want to mess with things.
No external VFO so must be u sing an internal PLL, probably a simple one at that. Wonder if you could inject an external VDO in and avoid that problem....
@@Paul_VK3HN the ATS-20 uses an Arduino controlling an SI4732 that's about as much as I know. There's diagrams on the net, as well as some videos opening them up and getting a close look at the board and chips on the board (but the board designs are different on many of them even though they say ATS-20).
Wait, it says TUNE-BFO-ATS , Beat Frequency Oscillator -BFO- is for Morse Code CW reception, remember Hallecaster and Radio Shack shortwave radios BFO was to clarify CW.
Do you know about the Radio Design 101 series by MegawattKS? Here is a link: th-cam.com/video/r_p7AHsSOdw/w-d-xo.html During the epilogue he tests different radios including one based on such a radio on chip. It is not too good at receiving weak signals in presence of stronger signals. Not necessary a problem but just something to be aware of.
I've had mine about 3 weeks, I love it. Only issue I have found is that it is prone to overload with strong signals. I use it with a homebrew interface for decoding CW, RTTY & SSTV.
Please share how you use this for decoding?
I bought the ATS-20+ version last week, same except for an allegedly better quality rotary encoder, and it has a separate USB-C Jack for charging the battery. Fun little receiver. I haven't done any firmware upgrades yet, but it has a pretty active community of hobbyists/developers.
$55 with free shipping from China sellers
$100 or more plus extortion rate shipping from American sellers
The ATS-20+ is the answer for sure.
The company heard the reviews on the ATS-20 and made the necessary changes for the better.
There's also a hardware and software mod you can do for CW decoding. I haven't done this yet.
It can really help to read chips & circuit boards etc if you also use a small flashlight at different angles to the magnifying glass. Great review, thanks! I love my ATS-20, too!
i like how you teardown and scrutinize radios and let us commoners know if its well made or not. Good info.👍🍺🤓
Thanks for an interesting review
Great video I recently bought ats 20+, I wonder where you get the circuit diagram from plse . Regards mark
I would be concerned that buttons and encoders held in by solder might have the solder crack over repeated stresses of button pushing and knob turning.
same concerns apply for most designs if directly pressing on the small switches on a circuit board, reversed or not.
the longer legs can flex more before cracking solder too. a lot will depend on the force the microswitch needs to actuate.
The ATS-20 is good for tinkerers. At some point the rotary encoder will need to be replaced. The ATS-20+ is a better option for those who don't want to mess with things.
Could this be turned in to a p25 police scanner
That is a cool little radio!!
9:38 that's typical with lower end DSP based receivers.
No external VFO so must be u sing an internal PLL, probably a simple one at that. Wonder if you could inject an external VDO in and avoid that problem....
@@Paul_VK3HN the ATS-20 uses an Arduino controlling an SI4732 that's about as much as I know. There's diagrams on the net, as well as some videos opening them up and getting a close look at the board and chips on the board (but the board designs are different on many of them even though they say ATS-20).
Wait, it says TUNE-BFO-ATS , Beat Frequency Oscillator -BFO- is for Morse Code CW reception, remember Hallecaster and Radio Shack shortwave radios BFO was to clarify CW.
The switches are ok but prone to bad joints ,Had to resolder mine on arrivel already bad
nice little dodad to play with
Any link? Thanks for the review!
Search for ATS-20 and you'll find a ton of them.
If you shop eBay they're on there too
I want to build something using that chip si4735 but its out of stock everywhere what a shame! nice pdp11 or 8>?
th-cam.com/video/DLFIBQ1WlmU/w-d-xo.html
Ali express.
@@IMSAIGuy ok looks very similar
Can you add a low pass filter
you can do anything you like
CW is just USB at 500 hz….
Do you know about the Radio Design 101 series by MegawattKS? Here is a link: th-cam.com/video/r_p7AHsSOdw/w-d-xo.html
During the epilogue he tests different radios including one based on such a radio on chip. It is not too good at receiving weak signals in presence of stronger signals. Not necessary a problem but just something to be aware of.
Thumbs up, because they didn't hide/scrub/grind the ident from the ic's.
Scrubbing the numbers from ic's is stupid.
Interesting video on using PCBs for project front panels: th-cam.com/video/Yj0Bv4UEFSs/w-d-xo.html