@MSGID: <537F2584.556.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>Howdy! Sam,
In a message dated 05-21-14, Roy Witt said to Holger Granholm:
The pages and text of my 1960 Radio Amateurs Handbook are still
as vibrant as they were when new. Only the binding of the back
has loosened
My 1960 copy of the Handbook has exploded into sections.
In 2030 the Copyright will expire and probably someone will put it on
the internet on some site like Project Gutenberg.
A copy of The Radio Amateur's Hand Book 1922 by A. Frederick Collins is EV>at their web site.
It isn't current, but it is interesting to read about how to build
a Spark Transmitter.
A copy of The Radio Amateur's Hand Book 1922 by A. Frederick Collins
is at their web site.
It isn't current, but it is interesting to read about how to build
a Spark Transmitter.
Are you shure that 1922 is correct. I own a 1926 edition of "The
Radio Amateurs Handbook" "First edition" that was included with the purchase of the 80th anniversary of ARRL handbook.
Please note: That 1926 Handbook was published by ARRL, not by some
A. Frederick Collins.
@MSGID: <5396E086.599.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>Howdy! Holger,
In a message dated 06-07-14, Ed Vance said to Holger Granholm:
Hi Ed,
My 1960 copy of the Handbook has exploded into sections.
In 2030 the Copyright will expire and probably someone will put it on
the internet on some site like Project Gutenberg.
For what purpose? New handbooks are published every year.
A copy of The Radio Amateur's Hand Book 1922 by A. Frederick Collins is
at their web site.
It isn't current, but it is interesting to read about how to build
a Spark Transmitter.
Are you shure that 1922 is correct. I own a 1926 edition of
"The Radio Amateurs Handbook" "First edition" that was included
with the purchase of the 80th anniversary of ARRL handbook.
Please note: That 1926 Handbook was published by ARRL, not by
some A. Frederick Collins.
@MSGID: <53978238.602.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>Howdy! Roy and Holger,
@REPLY: <5396E086.599.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>
Greetings Holger!
Are you shure that 1922 is correct. I own a 1926 edition of "The-snip-
Radio Amateurs Handbook" "First edition" that was included with the purchase of the 80th anniversary of ARRL handbook.
A. Frederick Collins authored the 1922 Radio Amateur's
Handbook, it isn't by any means the Radio Ameateur's Handbook
of today or even 1926. Merely a history of radio up to 1922.
Modern readers need to know this is not the ARRL Handbook for
Radio Communications and it was not written by Art Collins of
Collins Radio. It is actually a collection of early Amateur
Radio information and projects, complete with how-to-build-it
information. While the content may not have been
forward-looking for 1922, having several stages of technical
history compressed into one volume is enlightening and
entertaining for today's readers.
Please note: That 1926 Handbook was published by ARRL, not by
some A. Frederick Collins.
Yes!, that's correct, notice that the Collins book has a space
between the words Hand and Book.
Did F. E. Handy Plagiarize Collins work when he wrote the First
"The Radio Amateur's Handbook" for the A.R.R.L. in 1926 (or 1925 as
Richard Baldwin says in the front of my 1975 RAHB)???
Go get the Wolff Hong and use it on that critter, or did that slip
under The Old Man's oversight at the A.R.R.L.?
__. ._. .. _.
@MSGID: <53A16C8D.609.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>
In a message dated 06-14-14, Ed Vance said to Holger Granholm:
Hi Ed,
Please note: That 1926 Handbook was published by ARRL, not by
some A. Frederick Collins.
Yes!, that's correct, notice that the Collins book has a space
between the words Hand and Book.
Did F. E. Handy Plagiarize Collins work when he wrote the First
"The Radio Amateur's Handbook" for the A.R.R.L. in 1926 (or 1925 as Richard Baldwin says in the front of my 1975 RAHB)???
I don't know cause I wasn't along at that time.
Go get the Wolff Hong and use it on that critter, or did that slip
under The Old Man's oversight at the A.R.R.L.?
__. ._. .. _.
IIRC an old "Carl and Jerry" article told of them tearing into a
portable AM radio and modifying it so they could send an Emergency EV>Message on the local CW Traffic Net Frequency to get some needed help.
They did that because they didn't have any Ham Gear with them, just the EV>portable battery powered radio.
@MSGID: <53A4B139.613.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>Howdy! Tom,
IIRC an old "Carl and Jerry" article told of them tearing into a
portable AM radio and modifying it so they could send an Emergency
Message on the local CW Traffic Net Frequency to get some needed help.
They did that because they didn't have any Ham Gear with them, just the
portable battery powered radio.
That reminde me of the Old General Test. You needed to be able
to draw from memory some circuits like a Hartley or Colpitts
oscillator
__. ._. .. _.
I knew that You and some of the others here could decode my Morse
msg for the word GRIN without looking at a Chart, and to create a
puzzled look on the readers of my msg that feel like CW is a Lost
Art.
__. ._. .. _.
is easier written and read, hi.
I knew that You and some of the others here could decode my Morse
msg for the word GRIN without looking at a Chart, and to create a
puzzled look on the readers of my msg that feel like CW is a Lost
Art.
In fact that means nothing to us that never had to read/write morse characters with dots and dashes on a paper. For my (and most others) learning morse by ear was the way we were taught and learned it.
@MSGID: <53A6B286.615.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>GM Holger ... ._ __ ,
In a message dated 06-19-14, Ed Vance said to Holger Granholm:
GM Ed,
__. ._. .. _.
I knew that You and some of the others here could decode my Morse
msg for the word GRIN without looking at a Chart, and to create a puzzled look on the readers of my msg that feel like CW is a Lost
Art.
In fact that means nothing to us that never had to read/write
morse characters with dots and dashes on a paper. For my (and
most others) learning morse by ear was the way we were taught
and learned it.
GM Ed,
GM Holger ... ._ __ ,
__. ._. .. _.
<BG> is easier written and read, hi.
Today, CW is a lost art, with less and less amateurs able to copy
it.
In fact, learning to copy past the 'wall' at 13wpm wasn't as easy as
it was to learn to recognize words instead of characters.
You start with learning single letters, then progress to recognise some common "words" like RST, QTH and name. After that phase you begin to "store" the operators name and qth in your head and continue from there
to recognize several words at a time and finally you arrive at the stage where you copy first whole sentences and finally entire paragraphs.
I admit that I have lost at least the paragraph copying because of not having trained that in a long time but it will come back with training.
Today, CW is a lost art, with less and less amateurs able to copy
it.
I didn't know it before but now I do. I'm an art lover, I love Morse.
In fact, learning to copy past the 'wall' at 13wpm wasn't as easy as
it was to learn to recognize words instead of characters.
There's no trick involved, it comes naturally when you use it.
You start with learning single letters,
then progress to recognise some common "words" like RST, QTH and
name. After that phase you begin to "store" the operators name and
qth in your head and continue from there to recognize several words
at a time and finally you arrive at the stage where you copy first
whole sentences and finally entire paragraphs.
I admit that I have lost at least the paragraph copying because of
not having trained that in a long time but it will come back with training.
GM Holger ... ._ __ ,
Years before my Junior High School friend let me hear WWV on his
S-38 RX I got a 2 piece Telegraph Set.
But I didn't think of typing the 'Sounds' when I used the Underscore
and Period characters on the keyboard to 'send my GRIN message'.
I also remember seeing a Morse Code Chart on a page in my older
brothers Boy Scout book, and probably if I had joined the Scout's I
would had been introduced to hearing the sounds of the Code instead
... if u cn rd ths u 2 cn thnk up shrt clvr tglns
@MSGID: <53A9F73D.623.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>Howdy! Roy,
Greetings Ed!
GM Ed,
GM Holger ... ._ __ ,
__. ._. .. _.
<BG> is easier written and read, hi.
--. is easier to read than __. = don't have to use the shift
key either.
Note the small space between the -- vs the non existant space
here __.
.... .- ...- . .- -.. .- -.-- -.-.--
@MSGID: <53AB48BD.629.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>
@REPLY: <53AAA701.626.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>
Greetings Holger!
Today, CW is a lost art, with less and less amateurs able to copy
it.
I didn't know it before but now I do. I'm an art lover, I love Morse.
You are a dying breed. I learned morse to get a novice ticket
c1970, then had to give up AR for a few years for lack of
money, only to have to go through the testing again for another
novice ticket, c1977. Got on the air to practice morse in a
Years before my Junior High School friend let me hear WWV on his
S-38 RX I got a 2 piece Telegraph Set.
Hey, I think that the first receiver I owned for ham radio was a S-38
but it was broad as a barn door so it was only an intermediate step
while I built myself a 14 tube double conversion superhet.
I have a Vibroplex Bug too but found out I send better CW with the J-38 EV>Key.
GM Holger ... ._ __ ,
__. ._. .. _.
<BG> is easier written and read, hi.
--. is easier to read than __. = don't have to use the shift
key either.
Note the small space between the -- vs the non existant space
here __.
.... .- ...- . .- -.. .- -.-- -.-.--
I prefer using the Shifted Underscore Key because to me, using the
Hyphen Key makes the Morse Characters looks like they are being sent
with a Frequency-Shift Keyer for CW instead of turning the Oscillator
On and Off with a Telegraph Key.
. = Low Tone
- = High Tone
I still would prefer using the J-38 Key with the Plastic Base
reversed on the Key by removing the Two Screws, reversing the Base
and re-fastening the Two Screws.
I have a Vibroplex Bug too but found out I send better CW with the
J-38 Key.
NNNN
... I just figured out PI to the seventy-fifth decimal place.
You are a dying breed. I learned morse to get a novice ticket
c1970, then had to give up AR for a few years for lack of
money, only to have to go through the testing again for another
novice ticket, c1977. Got on the air to practice morse in a
I didn't know the Novice License was Re-Newable.
'Twasn't when I got mine.
I know You're sure glad You could get a Novice License again.
Ham Radio has lots of different areas to interest us Hams.
We all don't do the same thing, but We Do It as Amateur Radio
Operators and Enjoy what We Do.
As I have been reading this Thread the thought has come to my mind of
how many participate in CW Contests?
I'd think that would be a fair way to find out if CW is a lost art or
not, don't You think?
I didn't know it before but now I do. I'm an art lover, I love Morse.
You are a dying breed.
My interests lay more in building antennas than being on the cw
portions of the HF bands.
Did that as a boy scout in the 50s. I knew morse code at the age of
13. Teens aren't that interested in morse or radio as much as they
are girls at that age.
I admit that I have lost at least the paragraph copying because of
not having trained that in a long time but it will come back with training.
I suspect that my HF rig, Kenwood TS520 bought c1977, has blown some
pwr supply caps as it has blown the fuse when turning it on.
I've mentioned this before but I'll do it again.
I admit that I have lost at least the paragraph copying because of not having trained that in a long time but it will come back with training.
Getting faster and faster at it, at least for me when I got my first
ham license as WN5WQN in 1952, was VERY easy ......
Our whole family is hugely musically oriented. I'd learned Morse
Code from 78RPM records mu Uncle Billy sent me from Erie,
seven years old. It hit me. The steam loco whistle dah dah dit dah
for crossing a road from the engineer was the letter "Q" and dit dit
was to start forward was the letter "I" and dit dit dit was the
letter "S".
POOF! I started converting all the traffic street sign letters to
Morse Code as I drove along to practice going Morse Code faster and
faster! Then I began doing that for all kinds of signs while I was
driving! My Dad was FURIOUS when he discovered I actually could get
my Model A Ford to go 75MPH with it's 21 inch wheels! And after
several months of this trick I was was WAY over 25 or 30 WPM at what
I could do on CW.
Later on, I could use a keyboard to get to 50-60 WPM on the air, but
also with my complete computer controlled entire station operations
I know You're sure glad You could get a Novice License again.
It was the difference between being tested by my Elmer and paying a visit RW>to the FCC office in San Diego. It meant a Novice ticket vs a Technician RW>ticket.
As I have been reading this Thread the thought has come to my mind of how many participate in CW Contests?
I've done that with a DX group. They were Extras, I was a Novice, then a RW>Technician and finally a General.
I'd think that would be a fair way to find out if CW is a lost art or not, don't You think?
Hey, I think that the first receiver I owned for ham radio was a S-38
That was my First Reciever also.
I have a Kenwood R-1000 now but do not do too much listening
anymore.
@MSGID: <53ABF883.632.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>
In a message dated 06-23-14, Ed Vance said to Holger Granholm:
GM Holger ... ._ __ ,TKS or is it TNX that's used on CW?
.... .. . -..
Years before my Junior High School friend let me hear WWV on his
S-38 RX I got a 2 piece Telegraph Set.
Hey, I think that the first receiver I owned for ham radio was
a S-38 but it was broad as a barn door so it was only an
intermediate step while I built myself a 14 tube double
conversion superhet.
BTW, talking about output power I forgot that I still have a
Heathkit HA-24 PA with the HP-24 AC-power supply. It's useless
however since the pair of 872B's are "finito" probably because
of overdriving with a Drake TR-4c.
But I didn't think of typing the 'Sounds' when I used the Underscore
and Period characters on the keyboard to 'send my GRIN message'.
The underscore is a very poor substitute for a dash. Two
underscores join each other so you have to look real close if
that is intended as one or two dashes.
I also remember seeing a Morse Code Chart on a page in my older
brothers Boy Scout book, and probably if I had joined the Scout's I
would had been introduced to hearing the sounds of the Code instead
I've never been a Boy Scout even though I at one time was
interested in the concept and I really don't recall where I got
this love for morse but when I was called in for military duty
(while living in Finland) I had already started in a amateur
radio license course so I asked for a placement in a signal
corps battalion and where placed there.
... if u cn rd ths u 2 cn thnk up shrt clvr tglns
I prefer to send tag lines that anybody can understand, not
only us weird types called hams, hi.
* MR/2 2.30 * I'm not lost! I'm "locationally challenged."
@MSGID: <53AC9A3B.635.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>Howdy! Roy,
Greetings Ed!
GM Holger ... ._ __ ,
__. ._. .. _.
<BG> is easier written and read, hi.
--. is easier to read than __. = don't have to use the shift
key either.
Note the small space between the -- vs the non existant space
here __.
.... .- ...- . .- -.. .- -.-- -.-.--
I prefer using the Shifted Underscore Key because to me, using the
Hyphen Key makes the Morse Characters looks like they are being sent
with a Frequency-Shift Keyer for CW instead of turning the Oscillator
On and Off with a Telegraph Key.
In a printed medium such as this, the spacing is what makes or
breaks your morse. i.e. your D reads like an R. __. vs --.
where the latter shows enough of a space between Dahs to
recognize the character.
. = Low Tone
Dit - high tone
- = High Tone
Dah - low tone
I still would prefer using the J-38 Key with the Plastic Base
reversed on the Key by removing the Two Screws, reversing the Base
and re-fastening the Two Screws.
I never used any speed aides, I was able to send faster than I
could read with a regular key.
I have a Vibroplex Bug too but found out I send better CW with the
J-38 Key.
I had a Vibroplex key, but gave it to somebody who had a better
use for it than I did.
... I just figured out PI to the seventy-fifth decimal place.
PI are the last two letters of my original Advanced call. KB6PI
... Kissed By Six Pretty Indians
@MSGID: <53AD4A02.637.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>Howdy! Holger,
In a message dated 06-25-14, Roy Witt said to Holger Granholm:
I suspect that my HF rig, Kenwood TS520 bought c1977, has blown some
pwr supply caps as it has blown the fuse when turning it on.
Yeah, that's a common problem with old equipment.
* MR/2 2.30 * Smoke signals: The dawn of digital
communications.
@MSGID: <53AC9A39.634.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>
I have a Vibroplex Bug too but found out I send better CW with the J-38
Key.
I have a Vibroplex also. Shows I was serious about learning
Code but it just did not work out for me.
@MSGID: <53AC9A3B.636.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>Howdy! Roy,
Greetings Ed!
As I have been reading this Thread the thought has come to my mind of
how many participate in CW Contests?
I've done that with a DX group. They were Extras, I was a
Novice, then a Technician and finally a General.
I'd think that would be a fair way to find out if CW is a lost art or
not, don't You think?
It might help to clean up some of the man-made noisy interfence
on the phone bands.
@MSGID: <53ABF883.632.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>Howdy! Again Holger,
In a message dated 06-23-14, Ed Vance said to Holger Granholm:
GM Holger ... ._ __ ,
.... .. . -..
BTW, talking about output power I forgot that I still have a
Heathkit HA-24 PA with the HP-24 AC-power supply. It's useless
however since the pair of 872B's are "finito" probably because
of overdriving with a Drake TR-4c.
Hey, I think that the first receiver I owned for ham radio was a S-38
That was my First Reciever also.
I have a Kenwood R-1000 now but do not do too much listening
anymore.
My main transceiver is a Drake TR7 but I still, after many years, miss
the TR4c that I sold. In addition I have a Yaesu (Sommerkamp) FT-290R
with a 144 MHz to HF transverter. Several other VHF/UHF transceivers and
and transverters needed at my caravan site and for portable expeditions.
CU L8ER, Sam, OH0NC
aka Holger
06-26-14 06:54 TOM WALKER wrote to ED VANCE about Re: StorageJ-38
@MSGID: <53AC9A39.634.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>
I have a Vibroplex Bug too but found out I send better CW with the
Key.
I have a Vibroplex also. Shows I was serious about learning
Code but it just did not work out for me.
Howdy! Tom,
I looked at the bottom of my Vibroplex and it is a Champion model.
I bought it in 1961 at a Amateur Radio Store in Oakland, CA.
I got the Bug Case there too.
... NO CARRIER, but I've got a few warships and F-15's...(1:2320/105.1)
--- MultiMail/MS-DOS v0.49
--- SBBSecho 2.12-Linux
* Origin: telnet & http://cco.ath.cx - Dial-Up: 502-875-8938
While I was in the Ham Shack I glanced at my Log and the last time I
fired up my TS-520S was in 2001 while it was still connected to the
20M antenna.
I suppose I could give it a "Smoke Test" by loading it in the
Heathkit Cantenna.
* MR/2 2.30 * Smoke signals: The dawn of digital
communications.
My base units consist of a Kenwood TS-130, TS-440 and a TS-50
the Mobile units are a Kenwood TR-7730 144M, Icom IC-2330A 144/220
and a Alinco DR-635 144/440
Plus an assortment of handhelds for 144/220/440
@MSGID: <53B13E82.650.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>
In a message dated 06-27-14, Ed Vance said to Holger Granholm:
While I was in the Ham Shack I glanced at my Log and the last time I
fired up my TS-520S was in 2001 while it was still connected to the
20M antenna.
I suppose I could give it a "Smoke Test" by loading it in the
Heathkit Cantenna.
* MR/2 2.30 * Smoke signals: The dawn of digital
communications.
Yeah, do that and you'll get back to the dawn of digital
communications.
In a message dated 06-29-14, Tom Walker said to Holger Granholm:
Hi Tom,
My base units consist of a Kenwood TS-130, TS-440 and a TS-50
the Mobile units are a Kenwood TR-7730 144M, Icom IC-2330A 144/220 HG>TW> and a Alinco DR-635 144/440
Plus an assortment of handhelds for 144/220/440
Yeah, I know that Kenwood makes excellent kitchen machines <BG>.
In a printed medium such as this, the spacing is what makes or
breaks your morse. i.e. your D reads like an R. __. vs --.
where the latter shows enough of a space between Dahs to
recognize the character.
D typed my way, _.. R. would look like, ._. .
Oh!, I think You meant "your G" instead "your D" above???
. = Low Tone
Dit - high tone
- = High Tone
Dah - low tone
I didn't know of a FSK CW Standard when I chose what Tone for the
Morse Code Elements.
I saw Your line of CW as a period being lower in elevation than the
hyphen was, so I assigned the Tones as they looked to me on my
screen.
I still would prefer using the J-38 Key with the Plastic Base
reversed on the Key by removing the Two Screws, reversing the Base
and re-fastening the Two Screws.
I never used any speed aides, I was able to send faster than I
could read with a regular key.
A J-38 Key is IIRC a Military Number for a Hand Key, I'm surprised
that You thought it was a "speed aid".
The Plastic? (Phenolic?, Bakelite?) Base the Key was mounted on
allowed the Knob on the Key Lever to extend over the operating table, instead of over the Base, and to use the Key to send CW I would have
to hold the other end of the Key down so it wouldn't flip up and down
when I was sending CW.
I learned of a 'Tip' to reverse the Base so the Knob would be over
some of the Base and I wouldn't have to hold the Key down when I used
it, the 'Tip' IIRC was printed in a A.R.R.L. Book called "Hints and Kinks".
I have a Vibroplex Bug too but found out I send better CW with the
J-38 Key.
I had a Vibroplex key, but gave it to somebody who had a better
use for it than I did.
I thought of building an Accu-Keyer and getting a Key for it, but
never did.
... I just figured out PI to the seventy-fifth decimal place.
PI are the last two letters of my original Advanced call. KB6PI
... Kissed By Six Pretty Indians
I've used Zero Intelligence Quotient, Washers Screws and Bolts and
now Old Dirty Rat (or Oldsmobile Dodge and Ramblers). 73
@MSGID: <53B331BC.655.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>Howdy! Roy,
. = Low Tone
Dit - high tone
- = High Tone
Dah - low tone
I didn't know of a FSK CW Standard when I chose what Tone for the
Morse Code Elements.
I saw Your line of CW as a period being lower in elevation than the
hyphen was, so I assigned the Tones as they looked to me on my
screen.
I used the way they would sound vs what they looked like.
The Plastic? (Phenolic?, Bakelite?) Base the Key was mounted on
allowed the Knob on the Key Lever to extend over the operating table, instead of over the Base, and to use the Key to send CW I would have
to hold the other end of the Key down so it wouldn't flip up and down
when I was sending CW.
I fixed that problem by mounting the key to a 1/2" thick brass
plate with rubber feet.
I learned of a 'Tip' to reverse the Base so the Knob would be over
some of the Base and I wouldn't have to hold the Key down when I used
it, the 'Tip' IIRC was printed in a A.R.R.L. Book called "Hints and Kinks".
You could have done as I did, but instead use old wheel weights
(lead and antimony) to make yourself a mounting plate.
I suppose I could give it a "Smoke Test" by loading it in the
Heathkit Cantenna.
Yeah, do that and you'll get back to the dawn of digital
communications.
While I was searching for the HEATHKIT Catalog I flipped the Power
Switch and the Filament Switch on the TS-520S to ON.
After finding that 1967 catalog I loaded up the XCVR to the
Cantenna.
It dipped to 200 ma CW in the IP Meter Position and I didn't SEE or
SMELL any Smoke in the Ham Shack.
73
NNNN
... The real problem with hunting elephants is carrying the decoys
--- MultiMail/MS-DOS v0.49
--- SBBSecho 2.12-Linux
* Origin: telnet & http://cco.ath.cx - Dial-Up: 502-875-8938 (1:2320/105.1)
Yeah, I know that Kenwood makes excellent kitchen machines <BG>.
Actually the 3 kenwood units were gifts so the price was rignt.
the Kenwood mobile is really ond. It is a TRUE FM unit with me
repeater capability not PL tones. BUT was great for simplex
emergency communications when I was into that for a local Group.
None of my handhelds do have PL nor CTC tones. My mobile rig, a FT-290 HG>all mode transceiver doesn't fit into my present car so I use a hand- HG>held to a mobile magnet mount antenna onthe middle of the roof.
All of my Handhelds do. My Favorate is the Yaesu FT-530 because I
picked up a 10 cell akaline battery holder for it giving me the fill
5 watt capability
@MSGID: <53B53308.658.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>GM Holger,
In a message dated 06-30-14, Ed Vance said to Holger Granholm:
GE Ed,
It has been a busy day today so that's why I continue with echo
mail now
Also we had a taste of summer with 17. C so I made a 10 km
scandinavian walk dressed in shorts and shortsleeved shirt.
For tomorrow we have varying forecasts between 14. and 21. in
the afternoon so the meteos have covered themselves, hi.
I suppose I could give it a "Smoke Test" by loading it in the
Heathkit Cantenna.
Yeah, do that and you'll get back to the dawn of digital
communications.
While I was searching for the HEATHKIT Catalog I flipped the Power
Switch and the Filament Switch on the TS-520S to ON.
After finding that 1967 catalog I loaded up the XCVR to the
Cantenna.
It dipped to 200 ma CW in the IP Meter Position and I didn't SEE or
SMELL any Smoke in the Ham Shack.
To make the smoke test you don't even have to connect a dummy
load. The HV is normally highest while the transceiver is
idling because the HV is there all the time while the final
tubes are only cut-off by the grid bias.
You was lucky that no smoke emerged but don't feel safe yet. It
may come next time you switch on the transceiver. Normally,
starting up old tubes you should let only the filaments on (at
reduced voltage ) fopr several hours to burn away the gases
that have leaked in because the glass seals for the tube
element wires are not air tight.
Then switch on the HV while feeding a reduced (via a variac)
mains voltage to the transmitter to let the electrolytics
recover from a long hiatus. After that the mains supply voltage
may be slowly increased while smelling for smoke or listening
for arcing.
Hi Tom,
All of my Handhelds do. My Favorate is the Yaesu FT-530 because I
picked up a 10 cell akaline battery holder for it giving me the fill HG>TW> 5 watt capability
I've got a 5-cell alkaline cassette for my Standard C-111 (jap.) but HG>haven't yet got an alkaline holder for my Icom IC-90.
I also had a Group 29 Lead Acid Battery for home use of my Alinco
Mobile unit. On low power it would power the mobile unit for a
little over 10 days
I also had a Group 29 Lead Acid Battery for home use of my Alinco
Mobile unit. On low power it would power the mobile unit for a
little over 10 days
I have a portable 12V power pack consisting of two 8 A/h batteries HG>installed into an old 1 gallon plastic oil container. It's nice to have
a carrying handle. They are mostly used for 10 GHz hilltop operations.
As I have been reading this Thread the thought has come to my mind
of how many participate in CW Contests?
I've done that with a DX group. They were Extras, I was a
Novice, then a Technician and finally a General.
I was asked to keep the Log beside a High Speed CW OT OP the first
Field Day I participated in after I got back home from the Navy.
The Op would ask me, "did You get that?" and I say "sure".
That went on for a few contacts and when I told him when I was in
Navy Radioman School my CW RCVing Speed got up to 26WPM, after I told
him that he never ask me anything again except if the station he was calling was a Dupe contact. They gave me a Flip-Top Telephone Index
for a Dupe Log, to write the Call Signs down of the Stations we
already worked on that frequency, and usually I'd let him know if the Station had already been worked before he'd have the chance to ask
me.
Back when I listened to the W1AW Code Practice audio a few months
ago, I found out how rusty I was at copying High Speed CW.
I'd think that would be a fair way to find out if CW is a lost art
or not, don't You think?
It might help to clean up some of the man-made noisy interfence
on the phone bands.
I'd say have everyone go back to using AM then. hi
I know You're sure glad You could get a Novice License again.
It was the difference between being tested by my Elmer and paying a
visit to the FCC office in San Diego. It meant a Novice ticket vs a
Technician ticket.
I rembember those days. They were in a waterfront building down by
the end of Broadway.
As I have been reading this Thread the thought has come to my
mind of how many participate in CW Contests?
I've done that with a DX group. They were Extras, I was a Novice,
then a Technician and finally a General.
I'd think that would be a fair way to find out if CW is a lost
art or not, don't You think?
According to me Juny QST there wil be 17 contests in July with a CW section. 12 of those will be CW only
@MSGID: <53BA7902.666.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>
In a message dated 07-05-14, Tom Walker said to Holger
Granholm:
GM Tom,
I also had a Group 29 Lead Acid Battery for home use of my Alinco
Mobile unit. On low power it would power the mobile unit for a
little over 10 days
I have a portable 12V power pack consisting of two 8 A/h
batteries installed into an old 1 gallon plastic oil container.
It's nice to have a carrying handle. They are mostly used for
10 GHz hilltop operations.
I know You're sure glad You could get a Novice License again.
It was the difference between being tested by my Elmer and paying a RW>> visit to the FCC office in San Diego. It meant a Novice ticket vs a RW>> Technician ticket.
I rembember those days. They were in a waterfront building down by
the end of Broadway.
That's what I had heard, but was never there. I did visit their offices RW>after they moved to La Mesa? on University or EC Blvd.
GM Tom,
I also had a Group 29 Lead Acid Battery for home use of my Alinco Mobile unit. On low power it would power the mobile unit for a
little over 10 days
I have a portable 12V power pack consisting of two 8 A/h
batteries installed into an old 1 gallon plastic oil container.
It's nice to have a carrying handle. They are mostly used for
10 GHz hilltop operations.
Holger and Tom,
You All talking about Batteries reminded me of a Ham I know who said he EV>had a Belt he could wear that had a Gel Cell Battery on one side and a EV>Regency HR-2 on the other side of the belt that he could go Portable EV>with.
@MSGID: <53BBCA82.670.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>Howdy! Roy,
Greetings Ed!
As I have been reading this Thread the thought has come to my mind
of how many participate in CW Contests?
I've done that with a DX group. They were Extras, I was a
Novice, then a Technician and finally a General.
I was asked to keep the Log beside a High Speed CW OT OP the first
Field Day I participated in after I got back home from the Navy.
c1960?
The Op would ask me, "did You get that?" and I say "sure".
That went on for a few contacts and when I told him when I was in
Navy Radioman School my CW RCVing Speed got up to 26WPM, after I told
him that he never ask me anything again except if the station he was calling was a Dupe contact. They gave me a Flip-Top Telephone Index
for a Dupe Log, to write the Call Signs down of the Stations we
already worked on that frequency, and usually I'd let him know if the Station had already been worked before he'd have the chance to ask
me.
CW conversations are fun. But I never got that excited about
them.
Back when I listened to the W1AW Code Practice audio a few months
ago, I found out how rusty I was at copying High Speed CW.
Heh! Sometimes I have a hard time copying the IDer on a
repeater and have to listen to it a couple of times to get it.
Now that's rusty!
I'd think that would be a fair way to find out if CW is a lost art
or not, don't You think?
It might help to clean up some of the man-made noisy interfence
on the phone bands.
I'd say have everyone go back to using AM then. hi
Unnnn, that would only add to the noise...
@MSGID: <53BBCA82.671.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>-snip-
@REPLY: <53ADEBBA.639.amtradio@capcity2.synchro.net>
As I have been reading this Thread the thought has come to my
mind of how many participate in CW Contests?
I've done that with a DX group. They were Extras, I was a Novice,
then a Technician and finally a General.
I'd think that would be a fair way to find out if CW is a lost
art or not, don't You think?
According to me Juny QST there wil be 17 contests in July with a CW section. 12 of those will be CW only
Wonderful. If you listen in on those, see if you can pick out
K6XT...he'll no doubt be in the extra bands.
I modified a Automobile Jump Starter unit into a portable power
supply tor the group I used to work with. I picked that particualr
unit because it had a trickle charger base it sits in when not in
use. It had an internal 15 A/h battery in it. I removed the jumper
cables and installed a power pole connector and a digital volt
meter. It was good for about 24 hours running a 5 watt unit.
[FCC offices]
That's what I had heard, but was never there. I did visit their
offices after they moved to La Mesa? on University or EC Blvd.
the only reason I knew about it is because during my First Enlistment
I decided to get my 1st Class RadioTtelephone licence so I could get
a job in that field after getting out. I got a chance to get into the Navy Submarine Nuclear Power Program and re-enlisted so that goal
died.
Which of the two paid more on the outside, once you did get out?
The musical sound of a CQ is among the first letter combination you
learn. There are however several different learning methods based on different theories. I'm not shure any more but IRC the course I started before being called in to military duty started with the EISH5 letters.
I have never actually used a keyboard for sending even though I built
one from a QST article to be used with my Sinclair ZX-81 computer but
that one was succeeded by a CP/M computer and I never made another
attempt to redesign or construct another keyboard.
The musical sound of a CQ is among the first letter combination you
learn. There are however several different learning methods based on different theories. I'm not shure any more but IRC the course I started before being called in to military duty started with the EISH5 letters.
power on 40 meter CW from a 6L6 to an 807, then to an 811 and up to
the first 4-250.
I was curious; how low power could I go and he would still be able
to hear me? We did a 'little' experiment.
I got down to ONE WATT output power.
HE COULD STILL HEAR ME!
Both of us were totally shocked! After we parted company in that
QSO, I was so stunned with what I had learned however I realized I'd
better get ready for my morning newspaper boy run on my Cushman
But interestingly, even Fido can still do a very important honorable
job of caring for people and carrying even all of us upward in life
without poking people in the side. Even back to ring level and
interrupt level code that can Dis And Dat even all over the whole
Earth for thousands of people to hear in good weather. At even a
watt or two of power. From Ham Radio remote sites on CW even on a
few watts around the world. If you want it to. And the HAARP ain't playing, chuckle. Or the Chemtrails ain't moosing the Ions around
our Sphere.
Mike Luther N117C at 1:117/100
Sysop: | digital man |
---|---|
Location: | Riverside County, California |
Users: | 1,028 |
Nodes: | 17 (0 / 17) |
Uptime: | 36:00:28 |
Calls: | 503,616 |
Files: | 136,775 |
D/L today: |
105 files (7,876K bytes) |
Messages: | 443,939 |