I thought I'd see if anyone here is interested in discussing this. Out of curiosity I bought a kit for one of these:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Assembled-9-13-8V-S-PIXIE-CW-QRP-Shortwave-Radio-Transceiver-7-023Mhz-Case-Cover/193561205516It is basically the Pixie-2 designed by WA6BOY in 1995 which copied the Foxx designed by GM3OXX in 1982 but substituted an LM386 for the transistor AF amp of the Foxx. So far as is known, the Foxx was the first instance of the PA also serving as the mixer.
Mine came from a US seller with 10 xtals. It's a *very* minimal radio, 2 transistors and one IC. The PA is also used as the mixer for a DC receiver. It puts out about 500 mW.
The output RF filter doesn't comply with current FCC regulations, though that is easily corrected by changing the filter parts.
Here's what the xmit spectrum looks like on an HP 8560A:
Additional issues with these are:
no keying shaping
no selectivity
minimal gain
no useful VXO, just RIT of 700-900 Hz
I want to design some low power drain QRP transceivers. So as a warm up exercise, I'm redesigning the radio from scratch under the constraint of 2 transistors and one IC.
Goals are:
~ 5 kHz VXO range using 2 xtals in parallel with separate RIT
1 uV detectable signal
1-2 watt RF output at maximum input voltage
50 Hz wide audio filter with 80-90 dB of adjustable AF gain
operation over a wide input voltage range
FCC spurious emissions compliance
freedom from key clicks
minimal current drain both Rx and Tx
GPL'd board files with good RF layout
The PDF schematic for the kit I bought and the other is what I used to finish the kit when I couldn't read the values. I've also attached the schematic for an AF filter with potential for 80-90 dB of gain and a Q of 14-20.
The Elsie calculated responses for the filter in my kit and an alternative Cauer design are attached as well.
Have Fun!
Reg