My Trusty Ol’ Heathkit HW-8

Reminiscing about my early days in ham radio, one of the things that really stands out is a gift my parents gave me 32 years ago — a Heathkit HW-8, an 80/40/20/15 meter QRP CW transceiver! It was an utter surprise to me; I never had the slightest inkling that it was coming. I was 12 years old and had never built anything like that before. How wonderfully mysterious all those parts looked as I pulled them out and set them on the dinner table!

Looking back on it now, I realize how patient my mother was to let me take over that table in the dining room. As I recall, I worked nonstop to build the little rig and its power supply. Ten days later, on January 3, 1980, it was finally ready. My dad took a look at it and said it was ready for the “smoke test.” You can imagine how I held my breath as we plugged it in and turned it on. I was waiting for something on the circuit board to go up in a puff of smoke! Nothing exploded, so I was ready to take it into the shack and hook it up to an antenna and straight key. “Ready” is an understatement — I was so excited to get that rig on the air I was nearly bursting at the seams!

I picked up the phone and called Dr. Bernard “Bernie” Northrup, KAØDKN, a friend of mine across town, to see if he would get on the air and give me a signal report. Dr. Northrup (later NØCIE, now a silent key) was a professor at Central Baptist Theological Seminary of Minneapolis and a fellow member at Fourth Baptist Church, Minneapolis. Not long before, he had gotten his license after hearing me talk incessantly about ham radio at church (I’m afraid back then I was more interested in ham radio than spiritual things.). Anyhow, I called him (around suppertime, I see by my log!) and he graciously agreed to get on the air.

And sure enough, my HW-8 worked! After a half hour with Dr. Northrup on 15 meters I was ready for my first “real” QSO, as I thought of it. Tuning around the band, I heard ZL4KI. My heart started thumping as I prepared to call him. Could he really hear me even though I was sending with no more power than that of a small flashlight? My hand was shaking as I tapped out ZL4KI ZL4KI ZL4KI DE NØART NØART NØART KN and waited, flushed with excitement. I could hardly believe it when I heard my callsign as he came back to me! To think that the signal from this little radio, built with my own hands, was being heard 8,700 miles away in Invercargill, New Zealand! Amazing!

Other radios have come and gone, but that trusty ol’ HW-8 is still with me. As a boy I brought it with me to church camp and set it up in the lodge, tapping out CW while the other boys played games. Once on a trip to Louisville, KY I set it up on the second floor of my grandparents’ house — with a TV-twin-lead dipole my father had built — and worked a station in Poland. When I moved into my first apartment as a newlywed, I set it up with that same dipole in my (below-grade!) apartment. On a couple of memorable, crisp, autumn days, I brought it to a local park with a thermos of hot cocoa, sat down on a carpet of pine needles, and thrilled to the sound of soft static and CW.

And last summer, when I just couldn’t wait until I got my shack set up at my new QTH, I set it up on the picnic table in my backyard with an OCF dipole tossed into the trees. Even though that antenna was so low its feedpoint rested on the picnic table, I still worked both coasts on 20m with my trusty ol’ Heathkit HW-8! What a great little rig. Thanks, Mom and Dad, for giving me such a great gift!

(Click here to view the HW-8 Manual)

6 Comments

Filed under Heathkit HW-8, Kit Building, QRP

6 responses to “My Trusty Ol’ Heathkit HW-8

  1. Todd,

    Thanks for sharing. I had an HW-8 that I built myself many years ago; but like a fool, I have since parted with it. Without a doubt that was the single, most bone-headed thing I have ever done in Amateur Radio. I wish I had it back. Like you, I had many great hours of fun with that radio. Once on a dare, I hooked it up to the springs in the box spring of my bed. Worked Germany with 1 Watt that way! There’s nothing cooler than that.

    73 de Larry w2LJ

    • Todd Mitchell

      Larry,

      What a great story! I would have loved to see that. I’ve heard about people trying to tune up bedsprings, but I’ve never heard of such a magnificent success!

      Sorry you don’t have your HW-8 anymore. But I suspect that KX-3 of yours will take its place rather nicely!

      73,

      Todd, NØIP

  2. sam

    Nice to hear your experience in building and operating HW8 and making contact with ZL land. Thanks for sharing. Looking out for HW8 /HW9 in working condition.Hi Hi
    73s De Sam vu2usa.

  3. Todd there was just recently a Heath kit (in kit form) that was just sold on Ebay for around 3,000!! There are so many things I could had kept and today sold them and been wealthy. Todd I am adding your site to my other new blog…VE3WDM Elecraft k2 build…..
    Mike

  4. John

    I bought one from one of my elmer’s who built it in a week in 1981. He coined the term “QPRING” to me. He did a few mods like a lighted meter and wide/narrow filter. I worked about 37 states in the 1980’s. I remember putting it in a backpack and taking it to the woods with a 40 meter dipole (my favorite band) and two six volt lantern batteries. Life happened, marriage, kids and several moves 20+ years later I realized the bandswitch has problems. I hope to get it working better better but I really enjoyed the simple rig. The Small Wonder Labs DSW 40 and the QRP Labs QCX is probably the best kit I have assembled.
    73’s John, N4HNO

    • Todd Mitchell

      I love the QCX! I built one and brought it on my thru-hike of the Superior Hiking Trail a few years ago. I wrote about it in my trail-journal: trailjournals.com/todd

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