Reviewing the MFJ 8100K World Band SW Receiver Kit

Being stuck in the house “social distancing” (OMG I’m so bored) has some advantages, one of which is being able to get caught up on a lot of stuff. One of those things is the MFJ-8100K world band shortwave radio kit. That’s the little beastie you see in the photo below that I (ahem) stole borrowed from somewhere on the internet.

Damn, that’s pretty slick looking. It beats the heck out of what the average electronics kit looks like when it’s done. Most of them don’t even offer any kind of decent case. Whether it actually will look like this when it’s done remains to be seen because I haven’t actually built it yet as I write this. Instead of putting it together and taking some photos and talking about it after it’s all done, I’m going to do this live, so to speak, writing and photographing as I go along so you too can experience the joys and pains associated with putting something like this together.

I should warn you ahead of time that this could get pretty lengthy because I’ve done little more than just open the box and it is already looking like this is going to be a problem.

But let’s look at the basics a little more closely before we get started. It’s a world band shortwave receiver with 5 bands. They cover 3.5 – 4.3 mHz, 5.85 – 7.4 mHz, 9.5 – 12.00 mHz, 13.2 – 16.4 mHz and 17.5 – 22 mHz.

As for the basic design, this is a regenerative receiver, a design that dates back to, oh, the 1920s or so, and was quickly abandoned as soon as superhets were developed. And for good reason, as anyone who has ever fallen off their chair from the blast of noise if you tweak the regen just a tad too far and it goes into oscillation can tell you. About the only good thing regenerative receivers have going for them is a fairly low parts count and easy assembly. Well, that’s not really true. They can be decent receivers once you get used to their quirks, but with really high quality superheterodyne designs out there, why even bother with one of these? How did I even end up having this on the shelf in the first place? I don’t remember buying it. Do I have people breaking into the house and leaving me stuff instead of stealing it now?

The first thing I started wondering was why the heck is this thing so expensive?It’s going for $90, for heaven’s sake. And there is nothing exotic or hard to find in the electronics. While that variable capacitor is kind of pricey (that goes for about $20+ alone and I know that because I had to buy one of the things a few months ago) But other than that I think there’s maybe $10 worth of parts in the thing. I suspect that really fancy faceplate and heavy duty metal case probably costs more than the electronics inside does.

But let’s get on with this.

Opening the box and poking around.

This is what the promotional photos tells you is in the box.

First I should point out that this kit starting with the photos below is shown exactly as it came and while I assembled it. The box was still sealed and I hadn’t opened it until I started this. What it really looks like when you open the box is this:

Um, okay… Are those screws and nuts rolling around loose in the box? Yeah, they are. And not just screws and nuts and washers, we got electronic components floating around loose in there too. Oh, goodie.

Opening the box and finding components strewn about all over inside doesn’t exactly inspire confidence about the quality of a product. Whoever originally packed this thing and chucked in the little plastic bags holding the components hadn’t bothered to actually close up the plastic bags.

And as for the case, well, damn, that’s probably the best case I’ve ever seen for a kit in a long time. Beautifully finished, heavy steel, with an equally beautiful brushed polished steel faceplate.

You can’t get much better than that. See what I mean about the case probably costing more than the electronics? It’s – it’s shiny. Oooo

The rest of what was in the box looks like this:

The inductors on the right edge were not included in the kit. See text for explanation

As noted, most of the little baggies containing parts were open and had shed a considerable number of electronic components, screws, washers, etc. all over the inside of the box..

Half of “The Wall O’ Parts.” If I need something, it’s probably in there. Somewhere. Maybe. There’s even an emergency backup espresso machine in there

On the far right of the photo above you’ll see a strip of components held together with bits of yellow tape. Those are 3.3 uH inductors and those were not in the kit. I had to dig those out from my “Wall O’ Parts” because the kit wants one, and MFJ either thoughtfully failed to provide one because they figured I’d be getting bored by this time and needed to get up and stretch or something, or it got lost because of they left the baggies open. I expect I shall have to resort to the Wall O’ Parts several times as I try putting this sucker together. I’ve only just started to look at this and sort through parts and I’m already finding stuff missing, so I’m a wee bit irritated. There is nothing more upsetting than getting into an electronics kit and finding parts missing. Me, I have hundreds of components sitting on the shelf (well, if I can find ’em, that is) but the average person building this is not going to have that luxury and is going to be royally ticked off.

The circuit board looks reasonably well made and the parts locations are all nicely detailed. You could probably put it together without instructions if it weren’t for a few gotchas, like having to wind your own coil on a toroid.

Where’s the fecking Manual???

Now, the more sharp eyed amongst you might have noticed something missing from those photos up there. Where the heck is the manual/assembly instructions? Well, you don’t see it because there isn’t one. Instead of a manual there is a half sheet of paper telling me I need to download the manual from the MFJ website, giving me a URL to go to. So I go to the webpage as instructed and find a bad PDF of the circuit diagram which was so low resolution I couldn’t even make out the symbols or component labels. It looked like someone had almost deliberated fuzzed out all of the labels and component symbols, and the “manual” was actually a booklet in PDF telling me how to use the radio, not how to put it together. No assembly instructions. No readable schematic. Oh, goodie…

This exactly what the schematic I found looks like. Can you read that? Yeah, neither can I

A search on MFJ’s site using its own search function turned up a reference leading straight back to the useless info I’d already seen. I finally ran a general search on Google and found the real assembly manual tucked away somewhere on MFJ’s site and I printed it out.

(Update 3/27/20: And now I can’t even find that website, for pete’s sake! I was going to put the link to the correct PDF in here as I edit this before posting it, and when I just tried I get a “page not found” error. MFJ is apparently upgrading its website and I can’t find it at all. Good job, there, MFJ. I didn’t keep a copy of the PDF, but at least I printed the thing out so I can at least take a stab at this. But anyone else wanting that booklet, well, it looks like you’re on your own.)

The manual itself (if you can find it) is actually pretty good. Sort of. Clearly written, mostly, with lots of detail, but sadly lacking in illustrations.

So let’s sling some solder and see what happens.

Now that’s interesting. Look at the 4 inductors up there. Notice anything different about one of ’em? Yeah, the third from the left is about half the physical size of the other three. The big three were supplied with the kit while the small one is my replacement and is about half the physical size, but it is the right specification according to the color codes and I put it on my tester just to double check, and it should be the right one. Is this going to be an issue? No idea at this point. All of the inductors I have in stock are the smaller size.

Also, more missing parts. Just found two resistors are missing. Look at this pic:

R3 and R6 were missing so I had to pull those off the shelf. Notice that they’re an entirely different color from the kit supplied one, R17. I use the generally more reliable metal film resistors (the blue ones) while the kit supplies carbon resistors (the tan ones). Now very, very rarely the type of resistor can make a difference, so I’m hoping that isn’t the case here.

Later – Missing parts list now sits at 1 missing inductor, 4 missing resistors, and 2 missing capacitors.

And now there’s an issue with one of the electrolytic capacitors.

C14 there next to the IC socket is, according to the instructions, supposed to be a 10 uF cap, but the kit supplies a 1 uF. Or at least I think that’s the one because the 1 uF is the only one left. Do I follow instructions and put in a 10, or use the 1 uF supplied? I finally pulled a 10 uF off the shelf and used that in the hopes that the instructions are right and the parts picker was wrong. (Later – Apparently the 10uF was the right choice because now that it’s done it works)

Watch out for solder bridges or pins with cold solder joints. Here on the bottom row of pins, the third from the left is a bad joint.

And speaking of IC sockets, and this applies to whenever you’re soldering a socket, use caution soldering the pins because it is very easy to apply a tiny bit too much solder and end up with solder bridges shorting out the pins. And it’s easy to do a bad joint as well. Double check under a magnifier.

Time to install the variable cap which is how you tune this puppy. And…

And the solder lugs on the cap are way too big for the holes in the circuit board. I could either drill the holes out, which I don’t want to do because the solder pads are none too large to begin with, or I could trim off the lugs. I finally trimmed the lugs off.

Above here I’m trying to mount the volume control and the regen control. They don’t make this easy either. We’ve gone from holes being to small to holes being way, way too big. Note how some of those holes at the top edge of the board have been double drilled, which makes them way too large for the solder lugs on the potentiometers that are supposed to fit in there.

And speaking of soldering, look closely at those solder pads on that board. It’s difficult to see in the photos but almost all of them seem to be covered with some kind of oxidation that makes it difficult for the solder to adhere. I’ve been using a bit of a scotch brite pad held in a needle nose pliers to buff them before I solder anything.

Then there’s the band switch. The switch has 8 pins, the board has 7 holes. Hmm… Let’s look at the manual. Ah, here we are… Oh, nothing. Says nothing about what to do about the missing hole. Oh, goodie.

I ended up bending the extra pin out of the way and keeping my fingers crossed that it wouldn’t get mad at me. (Later – Don’t know if I was supposed to do this or not but the thing is working this way.)

That circle thing with the white wire wound around it is a coil made by winding 8 turns of wire around a provided toroid core. Some people get a bit weird about winding their own coils. I’m not sure why. A small one like this is a piece of cake. They don’t get nasty until you start having to make ’em with, oh, 30 or 40 turns.

And there it is, ready for testing. It runs off 9V and supposedly a 9V battery will last for weeks and weeks as long as you remember to turn it off. I don’t have a 9V battery, tho, so I hooked it up to my DC power supply and…

Damn, I wish my upload speed wasn’t about 15K baud so I could put up a video of this, but the damned thing actually works! I won’t go through all of the alignment procedures because they will bore you to tears. This is, believe it or not, an actual, working SW receiver. Not a very good one, granted, but it will pick up something.

But then there’s this

This is it fully assembled, mostly. You will note that I don’t have the knobs on. There is a reason for that. MFJ neglected to include the collar nuts you need to actually attach the front properly, anchor the controls down so I can put the knobs on. Now there were indeed collar nuts in the box. You probably saw that in the photos from the box opening. But they were for control shafts about twice the size of these. Sigh… Thanks again, MFJ. Complete assembly is going to have to wait until I can get the right sized nuts.

Okay, this has gone on long enough. Let’s wrap this up. What’s the overall assessment of this beastie?

Well, on the plus side it looks good. It is, amazingly enough, a working radio receiver, although not what I’d call a good working radio. It wasn’t hard to put together. Just about anyone who knows which end of a soldering iron to grab could put this together. Well, mostly, with the application of a bit of common sense. And that case sure looks cool.

Elenco AM/FM superhet kit under construction

But then we come to the negative side.

First problem is the price. They’re getting $90 for this thing, my friends. While the Elenco AM/FM receiver I put together a couple of weeks ago is far more sophisticated, much more sensitive, has an actual amplifier so it can drive a speaker and not just headphones, and sells for half the cost of the MFJ kit at about $44. Granted, it doesn’t come with the fancy case, but you can always cobble together something to throw the Elenco into. And when you’re done with the Elenco you’ll have a radio you can actually listen to, whereas the MFJ is never going to be more than a curiosity for most people.

Then there are the missing parts. A half dozen or so resistors, two capacitors, an inductor, the collar nuts to hold the controls in place, all missing. I don’t know if this was a problem with the person who packed up the parts in the first place, or if they were lost somehow because the bags weren’t closed, or what. My guess is that they were never in there to begin with, because while parts did spill out, the box was sealed and there were no openings for anything to fall out.

As I said before missing parts isn’t much of a problem for me, but for someone who doesn’t have a “Wall O’ Parts”, like some kid doing this for a STEM project or someone who just enjoys occasionally tinkering with kits, this could be a real problem. Sure, you could probably email MFJ and they’d probably replace the parts. Eventually. Maybe. But come on, they should have all been in there in the first place.

Then there’s the manual. Or, rather, the lack of one. What’s the matter with you people over at MFJ? You could throw an 100 page product catalog into the box but you couldn’t be bothered to run off a 30 page manual on the office printer and throw that in too? And then even worse, direct me to a website to find the manual that doesn’t exist? Or to utterly useless schematics?

I’m really disappointed with this because this could have been a really good kit if MFJ had bothered to just just be a little more careful.

So, because of the high price, the missing parts, the missing manual, etc. I can’t score the 8100 very high. On a scale of A to F, where A is excellent and F is abysmal, I’d give the 8100 kit a D+.

Author: grouchyfarmer

Yes, I'm a former farmer. Sort of. I'm also an amateur radio operator, amateur astronomer, gardener, maker of furniture, photographer.

27 thoughts on “Reviewing the MFJ 8100K World Band SW Receiver Kit”

  1. I have had good luck with MFJ manufactured products, but I’ve never tried a kit. And ninety bucks for an AM radio using technology that has been obsolete for 80+ years is over the top. Thanks for the insight!

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    1. I was disappointed. I’ve had good luck with MFJ products in the past but this gave me serious doubts about their quality control. And the price – oh brother. A fair price might be, oh, half what they’re charging for it.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Hello Grouchy farmer,
    I recently bought the MFJ-8100K, and experienced the same issue as you Missing nuts and washers). Yes, my band switch has Eight pins as well. My question is witch pin did you eliminate from your switch? Its hard to tell by your photo? And did your receiver work with your modification?
    Thank you, Edmond

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    1. When you hold the switch with the shaft facing you, I bent up the pin on the left side so it goes unused. It does work, although that regeneration control can be really fiddly. I can only pick up super strong AM shortwave stations, though, so how well it will work depends on the antenna you’re using and propagation conditions.

      I really wish MFJ would do something about their quality control. They have some good products but little things like bad solder joints, missing hardware, etc. really has given the company a questionable reputation

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      1. Well, I had bought a MFJ 8100 about 5-6 years ago everything went together just fine with a 30’ wire antenna. So fast forward to 2020, and the MFJ 8100 caught my interest again, so I bought one and guess what? The two pots didn’t come with any nuts and washers, missing nuts to secure circuit board to the metal frame. The band switch shaft was cut to long, and yes , the band switch came with eight pins.
        I called MFJ, with my concerns, and talked to an older gentleman about the missing parts. Well he sent the missing parts , three weeks later I received them. .I’ll update you on my progress.
        Enough of my rambling on.
        Thank you, Ed

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  3. I omitted the pin on the right to try to adhere to the silkscreen on the PCB and I can receive all over North America but the bandswitch does pretty much nothing, so I think your placement must have been right. I submitted a ticket to MFJ, so hopefully I’ll know the right thing soon.

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    1. information on that radio seems scarce for some reason. There are videos on Youtube but those all focus on using it, not actually building it, and no one talks about that dopey switch. I did see a couple of photos that show the left pin bent up so that’s the way I went with mine and it worked. I should probably send an email to someone at MFJ too outlining the problems I had as well.

      I’ve since talked to three people now who bought the kit recently, you and two others, and all three have had the same problems I found – missing parts, wrong parts, issues with the instructions, etc. That’s a real shame because except for that this is an excellent little radio receiver and a very good quality kit.

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      1. MFJ came back with my ticket about the band switch and it sounds like everyone was correct; omit the pin on the left when facing the panel. Now my band switch actually does something by the sound, but I have better luck on 40 and 80 at night, so I’ll try again then.

        I was shorted the 3.3uH inductor, which seems to be a common issue. After receiving 3 or 4 10uH, I got one and was able to complete it.

        Ten Tec made a neat shortwave regen (1154?) that was considerably more complex to build and operate, but I think they’ve changed focus toward commercial radios now.

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        1. Glad you got a reply from MFJ! And glad to hear they confirm that it’s the left pin. I need to hook mine to a better antenna. I’m only using a length of wire about 15 feet long tacked to the ceiling in the basement at the moment. It picks up only a few super strong signals and I know it can do better than that. I’ve tried repairing my OCFD and hopefully will have that strung up again this weekend if all goes well and once I get that back up I’ll try hooking the MFJ to it and see what kind of results I get.

          I don’t know what’s going on with Ten Tec any more. I keep hearing rumors about a new ham rig coming out, but I suspect that’s all it is. As you said, they seem to be focused entirely on commercial/military gear at the moment and there seems to be no big push to get back into the amateur market.

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  4. Well, at least MFJ is consistent with their failings. I bought the exact same kit late last year which was missing the 3.3uH inductor, but instead of a bandswitch that worked with too many pins, I got a bandswitch that is completely wrong with the right number of turns. The one they provided me is a 12 position switch, of which none of the positions EVER result in continuity between the common and the other pins. I have contacted them and they are sending me the parts – it’s just frustrating since I live outside the US and getting things here is notoriously expensive. I would have rather had a complete kit when I received it in the first place.

    I do have a “wall of parts” but no rotary switches, nor 3.3uH inductors unfortunately. Why couldn’t they miss a pile of resistors or electrolytic capacitors. Those I have!

    Have fun with the radio – I too enjoy building kit transmitters and receivers.

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    1. Oh wow – Sorry to hear you had problems too. I’ve talked to about six people now who’ve done that kit and all of us have had missing or incorrect parts. Someone is really failing over at MFJ or whatever company makes these things.

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      1. Update! MFJ shipped out the missing / incorrect parts. Turns out that the bandswitch was not incorrect at all. It was 1: incorrectly soldered onto the board and 2: they had not included a stop nut on the switch. Only way I figured it out was that they only sent the rotary switch and not the board that it mounted to. When I toned out the switch (off the board) it was obvious that it was mounted 90 degrees wrong. There are 4 center solder pads, only two across from each other are used. Once I rotated the switch and soldered it in to the right place on the carrier board, it started behaving as I expected it to. Silly me for not doing that in the first place, but the pinout from the carrier board made no sense at all based on the expected behavior and I wasn’t originally planning on removing the switch from the board. Now all has been revealed. Still missing hardware but I can work around that. At least I have the switch and the inductors sorted out.

        Kudos on MFJ for getting them to me quickly once I got back on them, but usual sloppy manufacturing again.

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        1. I had the same issue with the band switch. I bought the kit around the same time you posted this comment. I had put my kit together, missing pieces and all….couldn’t receive more than one band. About an hour ago I saw your comment and revisited my kit. Sure enough, band switch was 90 degrees off. After some finger burning and cussing, I got mine working properly!

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          1. Good! I’m glad you got it working. Aas I said it”s a fun little radio. It’s a shame it has all of these relatively minor problems. The last time I looked MFJ was still selling it as a VEC, not an MFJ. I hope they’ve since got things straightened out and have updated the assembly manual. I suspect what happened was they ran out of the parts that were used originally and had to make substitutions that weren’t documented.

            I haven’t used mine in a long time but it’s still up on the shelf and I still think it’s one of the neatest looking kits I’ve ever put together.

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  5. Wow. I’m so glad I found this review. I am in the UK, so the cost of this kit is nearly twice as much as in the US after postage and import charges have been added.. I very nearly bought this a couple of weeks ago, but I had a look at the circuit and realized I had most of the parts already. So, I have hacked together an old cardboard box to mount the dial and other knobs and ports, and the components fit very comfortably on a 9×7 cm prototyping board. I figured that if I had to wait three weeks for the real kit to reach me, I would have been able to put it together from scratch myself in less time. How right I was. I have a couple of mods planned already and i am really glad I saved my money!

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    1. I was really disappointed with this kit. Even worse, I’ve heard from about six other people who tackled this kit and ran into the same problems – missing parts, incorrect parts, missing or incorrectly sized nuts and screws, etc. And then there’s the price. I still think it’s way too expensive for what you get. I haven’t bothered to add up the cost of all the parts but I’d think that most electronics hobbyists would have virtually all of the parts already on the shelf. I do like that faceplate and case, but that doesn’t make the radio work any better.

      As you figured out yourself, you can pretty easily build a pretty good regenerative receiver by yourself. There are a lot of plans floating around out there. And a prototyping board will work just fine. You don’t need the circuit board.

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  6. I also built the MFJ-8100 kit. The two pots were missing, and some other parts.
    So I contacted Radioworld who sells the kit in the UK, they got me the missing parts from MFJ.
    MFJ do need to get there act together.

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  7. A shame. Having a bad experience building one of these kits will put someone off every attempting it again. The buy vs build thing just gets reinforced. I built my first kit over 60 years ago. In my long career I had jobs where I created kits so I know the problems. In this case the kits are packed by people who don’t have any idea of what the bits are. If its in this bin it goes in the bag, no quality control. All this demonstrates the qualities you need. Determination and an ability to deal with frustration. If you keep at it you will learn to fix the mistakes of others. if you give up you’ll go nowhere. So the kits do teach the most important skill, trouble shooting. KC1CCG

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    1. Determination, patience and basic troubleshooting abilities are indeed necessary, but the version of the kit that I had was indicative of serious quality control issues. I couldn’t even find the proper instructions to build it. None were supplied with the kit, just a web address that didn’t actually exist. At the time the only instruction manual that was available on MFJ’s website was not for the kit, it was for the preassembled version of the receiver. I suppose I could have contacted MFJ but I just went ahead and built it, finding the right parts from my own stocks, figuring out how to properly align it, etc. Frankly there was no excuse for for this. Wrong parts, incorrect and missing instructions, they didn’t even include the right screws to assemble the case. Other people have since contacted me that indicated this was not a fluke. Almost everyone I talked to had the same problems. Fortunately those who contacted MFJ did get help and were sent the correct parts. But this should never have been an issue in the first place.

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      1. A lot of the problem is what I call, “going thru the motions”. People who are not focused on the end result, a quality kit, just go thru the motions and never verify a quality result. Seems that the culture is readying people for machines to take over.

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  8. GF – have you tried a earth ground on the thing? I find an Earth can REALLY help sensitivity. Thanx for the review. Bummer that MFJ doesn’t care. I do find that they will help, but you hafta call & get to the right person. 73.

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    1. I have tried grounding and it does help a great deal. All things considered, when (if?) you get it working it’s a nice little receiver.

      I see that this kit and most others are now branded “Vectronics”. I don’t know if they sold the kit line to a different company, spun off Vectronics as a different line or what. Hopefully it will result in better quality control

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  9. I just bought the kit (July 22), and have it assembled. All of the parts were in the box. It has the correct number band switch. It went together quickly. After tweaking the calibration cap. and setting the regen trimmer and RF sensitivity she came to life.

    Using a 100′ longwire and some copper water pipe for ground, I can tune dozens of stations. Using the regeneration control takes some practice – especially on SSB signals. I have it connected to an external battery power speaker and it sounds really good. I’m surprised how sensitive it is – get a wire up outside and this thing really works well!!

    I hope MFJ has their issues worked out after COVID. This was a fun kit to build and I hope others can enjoy this novelty radio.

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