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- Date: Fri, 5 Nov 93 16:31:30 PST
- From: Info-Hams Mailing List and Newsgroup <info-hams@ucsd.edu>
- Errors-To: Info-Hams-Errors@UCSD.Edu
- Reply-To: Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu
- Precedence: Bulk
- Subject: Info-Hams Digest V93 #1312
- To: Info-Hams
-
-
- Info-Hams Digest Fri, 5 Nov 93 Volume 93 : Issue 1312
-
- Today's Topics:
- "outdoor antenna" ban
- Baud vs Bauds
- characteristic impedance
- JVFAX6.x - which ftp site ?
- MorseTrainer for Mac
- Plectron - where are they now?
- Postal Rates and IRC
- Problems routing to ARRL.ORG
- qsl to cuba (2 msgs)
- Questions about Yaesu FT-411E
- Radio Shack HTs
- Swan 350 Info wanted
- TS440 tnc connections
-
- Send Replies or notes for publication to: <Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu>
- Send subscription requests to: <Info-Hams-REQUEST@UCSD.Edu>
- Problems you can't solve otherwise to brian@ucsd.edu.
-
- Archives of past issues of the Info-Hams Digest are available
- (by FTP only) from UCSD.Edu in directory "mailarchives/info-hams".
-
- We trust that readers are intelligent enough to realize that all text
- herein consists of personal comments and does not represent the official
- policies or positions of any party. Your mileage may vary. So there.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: 4 Nov 1993 07:39:11 CST
- From: ftpbox!mothost!schbbs!maccvm.corp.mot.com!CSLE87@uunet.uu.net
- Subject: "outdoor antenna" ban
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- It sounds as though you have already found a great defense tactic, that
- of being temporary. However, after 29 years of hamming, I would be very
- suspicious that there is a deeper reason for the complaint: interference
- Take time to check with several of your neighbors to make sure that
- you are not wiping out the [cable/master antenna] TV system, stereos,
- cordless phones, etc. When you find a problem, the most powerful test
- will be that the interference occurs in your presence, NOT operating a
- radio transmitter. The location of the antenna, indoors or out on the
- balcony, obviously drops out of the equation at this point.
- If you do uncover some outside interference source, be a good guy
- and work with your neighbors to locate and resolve it. Tis far better
- to give up a few hours time, regain your operating priveledges, and
- improve the public image of amateur radio than it would be to flame
- the complainant and end up losing your lease!
- ------------------------- Original Article -------------------------
- From: jim@sytex.com (Jim Arnold)
- Subject: "outdoor antenna" ban
- Date: Thu, 4 Nov 1993 05:29:18 GMT
- Lines: 22
-
- Anyone have any good ideas on how I can fight a complaint
- about my "outdoor antenna"? It's a 2 meter ground plane
- that I take in and put out (it's mounted on a wooden stick).
- for a couple of hours each evening, and on weekends.
-
- I live in an apartment co-op that doesn't allow antennas.
-
- Well, its just a temporary antenna at that, and no worse
- than someone hanging a power cord out their window to
- vacuum their car!
-
- Any hints and tips?
-
- Much obliged...
-
- jim - AD4JE
-
-
- ---
- jim@sytex.com (Jim Arnold)
- Access <=> Internet BBS, a public access internet site
- Sytex Communications, Arlington VA, 1-703-528-4380
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 5 Nov 93 14:38:14 GMT
- From: news-mail-gateway@ucsd.edu
- Subject: Baud vs Bauds
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Text item: Text_1
-
- >As a friend recently pointed out to me, saying "1200 bauds" is very much
- >like saying "1200 Hertzes". Both units have identical singular and
- >plural forms -- it's not right to add an "s" to either.
- >Stephen Trier KB8PWA
-
- Here's a generic observation. At least half of the discussions, like
- this one, that go on and on and on... never need to have started in
- the first place if one would just consult the dictionary (and/or the
- ARRL Handbook). I previously posted that the dictionary lists baud as
- the first choice for the plural of baud and lists bauds as the second
- choice. In that respect, it is like the word, fish, where fish is the
- first choice for plural with fishes being the second choice.
-
- 73 to baud vs bauds, Cecil, kg7bk@indirect.com
- (I do not speak for Intel on Internet)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 5 Nov 93 18:32:33 GMT
- From: hp-cv!hp-pcd!hpcvsnz!charlier@hplabs.hp.com
- Subject: characteristic impedance
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Gary Coffman (gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us) wrote:
- : In article <CFzBGt.3oH@hpcvsnz.cv.hp.com> charlier@lsid.hp.com (Charlie Panek) writes:
- : >Gary Coffman (gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us) wrote:
- : >: In article <claude.752056704@bauv106> claude@bauv.unibw-muenchen.de (Claude Frantz) writes:
- : >: >What is the prefered method to measure the characteristic impedance
- : >: >of a coax line ?
- : >
- : >: If you're measuring at a relatively low frequency, there's another way.
- : >: Just terminate the line with a variable carbon resistor, feed a wee bit
- : >: of power up the line, and "dip" the SWR reading with the pot. The pot's
- : >: value will be the line's characteristic impedance regardless of the
- : >: meter impedance.
- : >
- : > Since Tom Bruhns is away on a trip, I'm going to have to fill his
- : >shoes :-)
- : >
- : > I don't think your 2nd method will work with the typical SWR meter
- : >that Joe Ham has. Look at it this way: if I hook a 100 ohm resistor
- : >directly on the antenna terminal of my 50 ohm SWR bridge, I will
- : >see a 2:1 SWR indication. If I hook a piece of 100 ohm coax to the
- : >antenna terminal, with a 100 ohm resistor on the far end, the SWR on the
- : >coax will be 1:1, but my 50 ohm swr bridge will still indicate 2:1,
- : >because it still "sees" a 100 ohm resistor on its output.
-
- : Yes it will. Now hang a 200 ohm resistor on the end of the cable.
- : What SWR does the meter read now? It won't be 2:1, it'll be higher.
- : Now when you adjust the resistor for a *dip*, in the reading, and
- : then measure the resistor with an ohmmeter, it'll be at the
- : characteristic impedance of the line. Try it, it works. Note,
- : low frequency, non-inductive pot.
-
- : The reason that it works is that the transmission line is acting
- : as a transmission line transformer at any SWR other than 1:1 on
- : the line. When the line is "flat", the meter just sees the cable
- : impedance of X ohms, but when the line is not flat, it sees the
- : transformed impedance of the pot at the meter end of the line.
-
- No, that's exactly the reason your method *won't* work!
-
- : It's possible to get a *peak* instead of a dip at certain line
- : lengths and frequencies, but the principle remains the same.
-
- No. The absolute peak in the SWR will occur for a load that
- absorbs no power at all, i.e. a purely reactive one. (or zero ohms,
- or an open circuit.
-
- Just suppose your piece of 100 ohm coax is exactly 1/4 wave length
- long. If you put a 200 ohm resistor on the far end, its impedance
- will be transformed to
-
- Z1 = Z0^2/Z2 = 100^2/200 = 50 ohms.
-
- Now the dip is with the pot at 200 ohms. This is similar to
- the technique that Alan Bloom refers to.
-
- If the coax is much much less than 1/4 wavelength, the dip will occur
- very near 50 ohms, because not much impedance transformation is occurring at
- all. This is also true if the line is a multiple of 1/2 wavelength long.
-
- The impedance at the far end corresponding to minimum return loss is
- entirely a function of the electrical length of the line.
-
- --
- Charlie Panek KX7L Hewlett Packard Company
- charlier@lsid.hp.com Lake Stevens Instrument Division
- Everett, Washington
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 04 Nov 1993 06:18:01
- From: news.cerf.net!pagesat!netsys!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!news.kei.com!news.oc.com!utacfd.uta.edu!rwsys!ocitor!FredGate@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: JVFAX6.x - which ftp site ?
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- > Recently I saw a post on JVFAX6.0. Today I queried
- > archie for the program
- > with no results. Anybody out there who knows where I
- > can find it ?
-
- IP net = 140.98.2.1, anonymous ftp access @ ftp.fidonet.org
-
- lee - wa5eha
- wa5eha@delphi.com
-
- * Origin: Com Port 1 DFW Amateur Radio BBS (214) 226-1181 (1:124/7009)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 3 Nov 1993 13:27:48 -0600
- From: swrinde!dptspd!TAMUTS.TAMU.EDU!news.utdallas.edu!corpgate!crchh327.bnr.ca!kharker@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: MorseTrainer for Mac
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In article <CFx6Ix.3yt@cbnewsm.cb.att.com>, hellman@cbnewsm.cb.att.com (eric.s.hellman) writes:
- |> I have not been able to run any MorseTrainer pgms. I'm a DOS person
- |> so perhaps I need a little guidence doing this for a Mac. I got the
- |> file by ftp, removed the header and binHexed the .Hqx file. That leaves
- |> a .sit file but neither stuffit or compactPro recognize the file.
- |> Any experienced users? reply to:
- |> dara@physics.att.com Shel
-
- You may have an older version of Stuffit than the one that was used to
- compress the copy of Morse Trainer you have. If you can find the latest
- version of Stuffit Expander, it should decompress it for you. Stuffit Expander
- is a very useful freeware utility, as it can decompress both .sit and .cpt
- archives, and it support drag-and-drop.
-
- --
- ======================================================================
- Kenneth E. Harker BNR "Any opinions expressed
- kharker@bnr.ca Richardson, Texas, USA are solely mine and do
- N1PVB (214) 684-5115 not represent BNR"
- ======================================================================
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 5 Nov 93 19:47:22 GMT
- From: ogicse!uwm.edu!linac!att!cbnewse!parnass@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Plectron - where are they now?
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- I have a few dozen Plectron brand FM monitor receivers but
- haven't bought anything from Plectron in 10 years.
-
- The Plectron company has been passed around more times
- than a bottle of cheap whiskey, and I've lost track of them.
-
- Anyone know the current phone number or address of Plectron
- or the company who now owns them?
-
- They used to be located in Overton, Nebraska, but there's
- no telephone listing for Plectron there anymore.
-
- Thanks.
- --
- ==============================================================================
- Copyright 1993, Bob Parnass, AJ9S
- AT&T Bell Laboratories - parnass@ih4gp.att.com - (708)979-5414
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 5 Nov 93 13:59:01 GMT
- From: news-mail-gateway@ucsd.edu
- Subject: Postal Rates and IRC
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Here is the promised table. However, the table form that I
- first envisioned was not adequate and I hope the information
- presented is useful. The format is as follows; the first
- column is the destination, the second is the cost for the
- first unit of postage and the third is for the second unit
- of postage.
-
- Here are some useful conversions:
- 1 oz = 30g
- 1/2 oz about 5 QSL cards (my QSL cards other my vary)
-
- Finland
-
- Destination 20g 50g
-
- Finland: 2.00 mk 2.30 mk
- Nordic&Baltic ctrys: 2.30 mk 2.70 mk
- Europe: 2.90 mk 4.20 mk
- Outside Eu: 3.40 mk 6.30 mk
-
- 1 IRC -> 3.4 mk
-
- France
-
- Destination ??g ??g
-
- Outside Eu 4.3 Frc
-
- 1 IRC -> ???
-
- Germany
-
- Destination 5g 5g
-
- Europe 1.00 DM
- outside Europe 3.00 DM 1.00 DM
-
- 1 IRC -> ???
-
-
- Israeli
-
- Destination 1oz ??g
-
- Outside Israel 1.7 Shekels
-
- 1 IRC -> 1.7 Shekels
-
- Italy
-
- Destination 20g ??g
-
- Eu
- NA L 1250
- VK/ZL/Oc more
-
- 1 IRC -> L 850
-
-
- Japan
-
- Destination 10g 10g
-
- Asia 80 60
- Oc,ME Asia, NA, CA 100 70
- Eu, Af, SA 120 100
-
- Switzerland
-
- Destination 20g ??g
-
- non EU 1.80 Swiss Frs
-
- 1 IRC -> ???
-
- United States
-
- Destination 1/2oz 1/2oz
-
- Outside UA $0.50 $0.45
-
- 1 IRC -> $0.50
-
-
- I would like to thank everyone for there information and if
- there are any correction or additions please send them to
- me at
-
- skitch@nadc.navy.mil
-
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 5 Nov 93 03:02:28 GMT
- From: ogicse!emory!dragon!nj8j!ben@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Problems routing to ARRL.ORG
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- landisj@drager.com (Joe Landis - Systems/Network Mgr. - x2621) writes:
-
- > Hi,
- > For some reason, every time I try to mail to anyone at arrl.org, my mail gets
- > bounced by our forwarder (uu.psi.com). I don't have problems with anyone
- > else on internet that I've sent mail. Is there something weird about the way
- > arrl.org is set up? I think I've noticed some posts about this a while back.
-
- The problem is that there exists a UUCP map entry for arrlhq which
- equates arrlhq with arrl.org, and indicates that it is linked to a psi
- machine(uupsi, I think). It looks like the map entry was made by the map
- coordinator for CT. The problem is that the name arrlhq is evidently not
- known at psi. If your mail passes through a mail forwarder which converts
- the mail address to a bang-path, it ends up as ...!uupsi!arrlhq!<username>
- (e.g. ...!uupsi!arrlhq!lhurder). This directs it to the psi machine,
- which bounces the mail because it doesn't know about arrlhq. Evidently,
- arrlhq is the machine name that was used back when ARRL was getting its
- feed from a local university.
-
- The quick fix would be to get psi to recognize arrlhq as an alias to
- arrl.com. My understanding, though, is that Luck would like the arrlhq
- moniker to go away entirely. The arrlhq UUCP map entry needs to be
- nuked, but the problem will probably persist for a month or two after
- this is done, due to the time it takes map changes to get moved around
- the net and/or when and how various machines use the changes to update
- their own routing. I'd suggest getting the entry nuked, having PSI use
- arrlhq as an alias for arrl.org for a few months to let the mail get
- through while the map change percolates through the net, and then
- finally dropping the arrlhq machine name entirely.
-
- I did call Luck a while back about this, but I don't think I was near as
- lucid as I have been above. He did pretty much tell me, though, that he
- could use a hand with this. Is there a UUCP guru in the Hartford area
- that could give Luck a hand with this?
-
- Ben
-
- +---------------------------------------+---------------------------------+
- | Ben Coleman NJ8J | "All that is not eternal is |
- | AX.25: NJ8J@W4QO.#EAL.#ATL.GA.USA.NA | eternally out of date." |
- | Internet: ben@nj8j.atl.ga.us | C. S. Lewis |
- +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 3 Nov 1993 20:42:02 GMT
- From: spsgate!mogate!newsgate!hofbrau.sps.mot.com!a229aa@uunet.uu.net
- Subject: qsl to cuba
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- I know this was discussed some time ago, but, does arrl outgoing buro
- handle cuba? Does cuba have an incoming buro? Is there a manager?
- Do we have to go direct?
-
-
- * Chris Terwilliger, AA7WD a229aa@email.sps.mot.com *
- * Motorola "And now, *
- * Phoenix Corporate Research Labs the sequence of events, *
- * 2100 E. Elliot Rd. EL508 in no particular order." *
- * Tempe, AZ 85284 - Dan Rather *
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 3 Nov 1993 20:43:06 GMT
- From: spsgate!mogate!newsgate!hofbrau.sps.mot.com!a229aa@uunet.uu.net
- Subject: qsl to cuba
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- I know this was discussed some time ago, but, does arrl outgoing buro
- handle cuba? Does cuba have an incoming buro? Is there a manager?
- Do we have to go direct?
-
-
- * Chris Terwilliger, AA7WD a229aa@email.sps.mot.com *
- * Motorola "And now, *
- * Phoenix Corporate Research Labs the sequence of events, *
- * 2100 E. Elliot Rd. EL508 in no particular order." *
- * Tempe, AZ 85284 - Dan Rather *
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 3 Nov 1993 19:31:19 GMT
- From: rd1.InterLan.COM!rm1.interlan.com!tavernin@uunet.uu.net
- Subject: Questions about Yaesu FT-411E
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- I have a couple of questions about the Yaesu FT-411E and would appreciate
- any help ...
-
- 1. What's the best way to hook up the unit at home so that I don't use
- a battery pack?
-
- 2. What's the difference between the FT-411 and the FT-411E?
-
- Thanks,
-
- Victor Tavernini
- Racal-Datacom, Inc.
-
- tavernin@sun1.interlan.com
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 5 Nov 93 02:52:06 GMT
- From: ogicse!emory!dragon!nj8j!ben@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Radio Shack HTs
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- drenze@icaen.uiowa.edu (Douglas J Renze) writes:
-
- > levine@mc.com (Bob Levine) writes:
- >
- > >Actually most HT's these days include all that standard. Why spend $250 for
- > >a 2m mono band RS HT and then another $250 (?) for a monband 440 RS HT when
- > >for way less that $500 you can get quality dual banders? My FT530 has no
- > >optional extras and the total price was $429. All of those features you
- > >mention plus a hell of a lot more are included.
- >
- > Problem is, all the dual-banders/expanded coverage HT's I've run across
- > seem to have nasty intermod probs. I haven't had any regrets about buying th
- > '202. Now, if somebody would come out with a narrow bandpass filter kit to
- > replace the tight front-end that these HTs *should* have, then I might agree
- > with what you've got to say about buying a dual-bander...
-
- I'll agree. I recently picked up an FT530, and while I'm fairly pleased
- with it, I DO get a certain amount of intermod on the 2M side while using
- it mobile(with an outside antenna) while tooling around I-285 here in
- Atlanta. If RS had had a dual-bander HT built like the HTX-202, they
- would have gotten my business right off(is anyone at RS listening?).
-
- Ben
-
- +---------------------------------------+---------------------------------+
- | Ben Coleman NJ8J | "All that is not eternal is |
- | AX.25: NJ8J@W4QO.#EAL.#ATL.GA.USA.NA | eternally out of date." |
- | Internet: ben@nj8j.atl.ga.us | C. S. Lewis |
- +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 5 Nov 93 14:16:10 GMT
- From: news-mail-gateway@ucsd.edu
- Subject: Swan 350 Info wanted
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- I have used this rig many years ago. It uses sweep power tubes (I
- think they were 6KD6's) and it's a good tube type, ham band only
- ssb or cw rig for its day. I wouldn't run more than 75 watts or so
- key done continuous for RTTY to keep from destroying the sweep output
- tubes. The antenna transfer circuit used a relay. Like many rigs of
- that day, the relay transfer switching times are not fast enough for
- either AMTOR or Packet. So, before I'd buy one for the specific use
- of HF Packet, I'd check with someone who has done this successfullly
- with this rig or anyone out there who knows about how to improve the
- speed of the transmit/receive transfer relay for Packet and Amtor modes.
-
-
- KC2WE S. Taylor
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 5 Nov 93 14:51:29 GMT
- From: ogicse!uwm.edu!linac!att!cbnewsm!hellman@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: TS440 tnc connections
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Here is the way I conneccted my KAM (also valild for PK 232) to my
- Kenwood TS 440 ACCY2 jack ( I do not know if the TS 450 is the same):
-
- 13 pin connector
- pin 3 RCV Audio (to tnc)
- pin 4,8,12 gnd
- pin11 Transmit Audio (from tnc)
- pin 13 1n914 diode to pin 9
- (diode points to pin 9)
- pin 9 tnc PTT line (and diode)
-
- This will disable the mike during data transmission and allow normal
- use of the mike for ssb. This information was supplied by Kantronics.
- 73 Shel WA2UBK dara@physics.att.com
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 4 Nov 1993 07:00 EDT
- From: nntp.ucsb.edu!library.ucla.edu!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!paladin.american.edu!afterlife!cs.umd.edu!skates.gsfc.nasa.gov!nssdca.gsfc.nasa.gov!stocker@network.ucsd.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <2507@arrl.org>, <FAUNT.93Oct26092331@netcom6.Netcom.COM>, <159661@netnews.upenn.edu>can
- Subject : Re: Was 'Vanity' Call Signs, now paying for call signs
-
- In article <159661@netnews.upenn.edu>, yee@mipg.upenn.edu (Conway Yee) writes...
- >>The only valid objection to paying for licensing services from the FCC
- >>that I've heard is that young people will be discouraged by one more
- >>financial barrier to getting and keeping a license.
- >
- >I disagree that this is a valid objection.
-
- [stuff deleted]
- >
- >higher fees self serving? I am sure that most children who become hams
- >have parents (generally fathers) who are hams; they are not paying the fees
- >themselves. Furthermore, if the child can not afford the few dollars (someone
- >in this newsgroup quoted $15), what makes ANYONE think he can afford to purchase
- >a radio to get on the air? Even the cheapest homebrew QRP rig costs more
- >than that. (Assuming that the kid does not have a well stocked junk box at
- >home. Those that do probably have a ham for a parent.)
- >
- >--
- >411 Blockley Hall | Conway Yee, N2JWQ
- >418 Service Drive | yee@mipg.upenn.edu
- >Philadelphia, PA 19104 |
- >(215) 662-6780 | "Specialization is for insects." -- Lazarus Long
-
-
- Also given the billions of dollars that kids spend each year on all manner of
- things, this argument is absurd. To say that kids would not be able to
- afford a cost roughly equivalent to the cost of a CD makes me laugh. Go to
- Tower records sometime and look at the buying public for these kids (of all
- ages) walking out with 2 or 3 CDs is a normal occurence.
-
- Erich
- N3OXM
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 3 Nov 1993 20:03:26 GMT
- From: news.graphics.cornell.edu!newsstand.cit.cornell.edu!newsstand.cit.cornell.edu!usenet@tcgould.tn.cornell.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <msattlerCFwMLx.9sD@netcom.com>, <seeler.54.752343653@UPEI.CA>, <2b8ous$l47@oak.oakland.edu>edu
- Subject : Re: We've lost him, Jim!
-
- In article <2b8dvg$7j6@oak.oakland.edu> prvalko,
- prvalko@vela.acs.oakland.edu writes:
- >I thing one of the TOP TEN "big ham radio lies" is that you can work an
- >orbiting object with an HT. OSCAR 21 is supposedly one such satelite
- >and from my experience you need several dozen watts and a yagi which can
- >be pointed at the "bird" as it fly overhead.
-
- Well...yes and no. I've tried to work AO21 with the mobile and the HT and
- not had any luck, and did work it with the big rig at home (100W, 14dbd)
- But I think that is more a function of who you are competing with than
- the capabilities of the satellite. There have been a number of well
- publicised instances of people working AO21 and either MIR or
- the Shuttle with HT's or mobiles. I hear mobiles on AO21 with
- fair regularity (though I think some are using beams while parked).
-
- If you listen to the low orbit satellites and manned equipment, all of
- them are running HT level power (well, I think MIR can crank out 25w if
- they want to with the new gear, but I doubt they do) and simple whips or
- in the case of the shuttle, even worse antennas - and we hear them just
- fine. I mean they are LOS and in some cases only a couple of hundred
- miles away. If you can hear them running a couple of watts to a whip,
- then they should be able to hear you *IF* you aren't down in the noise
- compared to a couple of big guns capturing the receiver. The fact that
- it is occasionally done seems to say that the satellite is capable of
- doing it, if only it isn't swamped by a bigger signal. Maybe we need
- QRP days on AO21. It must be in the realm of regular doings as the
- proposed IRIDIUM leo satellite system is supposed to work with
- handheld radios of not much more capability than current HT's.
-
- If you want point and shoot satisfaction, go for the 100watt amp
- and the yagi or helix. If you are willing to do a little stalking and
- wait for a quiet time and the right antenna orientation and pass
- geometry - you might keep trying with the ht. I'm doing both.
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- 73 de Kevin, WB2EMS
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- End of Info-Hams Digest V93 #1312
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