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- Date: Sun, 13 Feb 94 09:31:52 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 V94 #147
- To: Info-Hams
-
-
- Info-Hams Digest Sun, 13 Feb 94 Volume 94 : Issue 147
-
- Today's Topics:
- GB2ATG (February 1994)
- License from Panama?
- Long range digital links
- MICOWAVE OVENS
- Power Supply Questions
- Vertical Antennas
-
- 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: Wed, 9 Feb 1994 03:59:00 -0700
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!sdd.hp.com!cs.utexas.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!cyber2.cyberstore.ca!nntp.cs.ubc.ca!alberta!ve6mgs!usenet@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: GB2ATG (February 1994)
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- BARTG * GB2ATG * NEWS * BARTG * NEWS * GB2ATG * BARTG
- This is the - British Amateur Radio Teledata Group - News Broadcast Service
- for all Amateurs and Short Wave Listeners interested in RTTY Amtor, Pactor and
- Packet Radio.
-
- This news is broadcast during the first full week commencing Monday each
- month, to the following schedule..
-
- Evening transmissions at 1930 GMT. on 3.584 MHz. Mark. +/- for QRM.
- RTTY on Monday-AFSK, Wednesday-AFSK, and Friday-FSK.
- Pactor-FEC on Tuesday.
- Amtor-FEC on Thursday and Saturday.
-
- Morning transmission at 1000 GMT. on 7.041 MHz. Mark. +/- for QRM.
- RTTY on Sunday-AFSK.
-
- An edited version of this bulletin is available on the Packet network as a
- BARTG @ GBR. file thanks to: Andy (G3ZYP) @ GB7MXM.#36.GBR.EU.
-
- It is also posted on the "INTERNET" system via the INFO-HAMS list on UCSD.EDU.
- thanks to Iain (G6ARO) who is available on the "JANET" network as
- Iain@HUMBER.AC.UK
-
- News for February 1994. Bulletin No. 014. (all times are GMT).
-
- RTTY DX Activity.
- 3.5 MHz.
- 4U1ITU 1830, OH0MFP 2200,
-
- 7 MHz.
- GI4SRQ
-
- 14 MHz.
- ZL2JON 0800, LU8DGS 0900, PJ2MI 1000, ZL1AMO and T91ENS 1130, LI30OWG 1400,
- RA2FB 1430, OD5PL and SV5AZP 1500, 4U1ITU and A45ZX 1600, 5R8DG 1700,
- PJ0/N9FTC 2000,
-
- 21 MHz.
- TZ6FIC 1030, KG4HG and CU1AC 1330, VP5/WA0VQR, KP4GC and 4O9S 1400,
- 4U1ITU and PJ0/N9FTC 1430, KP4GC, C6A/AA5AU and HK1LAQ 1500, YV5KWS 1530,
- VE2MP 1600, CP1FF and VE9NC 1630, CU1AZ 1700.
-
- Pactor DX.
-
- 3.5 MHz.
- US5WV 1930.
-
- 14 MHz.
- VS6FN 1200, 1B1AD 1400, VQ9TN 1530, ZB2FU/MM 1630.
-
- 21MHz.
- LU1DO 1500.
-
- QSL Information.
- KG4HG was asking for cards via the Guantanamo Bay ARC listed as KG4AN in the
- callbook.
- 4O9S via YU7KMN.
- PJ0/N9FTC via home call.
- 4U1ITU via DK7UY.
- VP5/WA0VQR via home call.
- OH0MFP via OH3MFP.
- 1B1AD via DK7ZZ.
- TZ6FIC via F6KEQ.
-
- Contests.
-
- The BARTG HF RTTY contest starts 0200 Saturday March 19 until 0200 Monday
- March 21 on all 5 HF bands 80 through 10 meters. Single operator and SWL
- stations permitted a maximum 30 hours operating. Rest periods in blocks not
- less than 3 hours.
- Multi-operator stations may work the full 48 hour contest period.
-
- Categories:
- 1. Single operator all band.
- 2. Single operator single band.
- 3. Multi-operator all band.
- 4. Multi-operator Multi-transmitter.
- 5. Short Wave Listener.
-
- Categories 1, 2, and 3 may not transmit on 2 or more bands at the same time.
- No station may enter more than one category.
-
- Exchange message to consist of:
- RST plus a 3 figure group serial number starting with 001
-
- QSO points:
- Each completed QSO scores one (1) point. Stations may be contacted again on
- other bands for QSO credit. All duplicate contacts on the same band must be
- clearly marked in the log.
-
- Multipliers:
- All DXCC countries (including W, VE and VK) and all W, VE and VK call areas
- count as multipliers on each band.
- Note:: Any country or W/K, VE/VO or VK area may be counted again if
- worked on a different band but continents are counted once only.
-
- Scoring:
- QSO points times multipliers times continents (max 6).
-
- Logs:
- Use separate log sheets for each band. Logs must show band, date, time GMT,
- callsign, message sent and received, countries and points claimed.
- SWL logs must contain date and time GMT of logging, callsign of station heard,
- report sent by that station and callsign of station being worked.
-
- Summary sheet.
- To show full scoring, times of operation and address for correspondence. In
- the case of multi-operator stations, the names and callsigns of all operators
- involved with the station operation during the contest.
- All logs must be received by May 31 1994 to qualify. Sample log and summary
- sheets are available from the contest manager. UK entrants send large (A4)
- S.A.E. outside UK please send 6 IRC'S to cover postage. Computer generated logs
- containing all specified information are welcomed.
-
- Please send your contest or check logs to:
- Contest Manager
- John Barber G4SKA
- PO. Box 8.
- Tiverton, Devon EX16 5YU, England.
-
- Certificates will be awarded to the top 3 stations in each category, the top 5
- single operators in each continent and the top single operator in each W/K,
- VE/VO and VK area.
-
- Contestants contacting 25 or more DXCC countries on two-way RTTY during the
- contest may claim the Quarter Century Award (QCA) issued by B.A.R.T.G. for
- which a charge of 6 US. dollars or 30 IRC's is made. Existing QCA holders may
- add new countries to their existing records.
- A separate sheet showing bands, callsign and countries claimed must be
- included with the contest log.
-
- Comments on the contest would be much appreciated.
-
- Notes of interest.
- 1B1AD is Northern Cyprus which does not carry DXCC status at present.
- US5WV is a special call for CIS Europe.
- LI30OWG is a special call being used from Gjovik for the Olympic winter games
- in Norway. There is also LI20OWG and LI40OWG.
-
- Changes affecting the Russian CIS prefix allocation from January 1 1994 as
- follows:
-
- Republic. Old prefix. New prefix.
- ----------------------------------------------------
- European Russia (UA1,3,4,6) RAA-RIZ, UAA-UIZ.
- Ukraine (UB,UT,UY) EMA-EOZ, URZ-UZZ.
- Byelorussia. (UC) EUA-EWZ.
- Azerbaijan. (UD) 4JA-4JZ, 4KA-4KZ.
- Georgia. (UF) 4LA-4LZ.
- Armenia. (UG) EKA-EKZ.
- Turkmenistan. (UH) EZA-EZZ.
- Uzbekistan. (UI) UJA-UMZ.
- Tadzhikistan. (UJ) EYA-EYZ.
- Kazakhstan. (UL) UNA-UQZ.
- Kirghizia. (UM) EXA-EXZ.
- Moldavia. (UO) ERA-ERZ.
-
- For Russian stations;
-
- UW => RU - UV => RX - UZ => RK
-
- Previous changes to other USSR prefixes include:
-
- Lithuania. (UP,RP) LY. SINCE 1990
- Latvia. (UQ,RQ) YL. SINCE 1990
- Estonia. (UR,RR) ES. SINCE 1990
-
- To complete the list the following prefixes remain in force, (as far as I am
- aware):
-
- Franz Josef Land. 4K2, EK, UA1O
- Kaliningrad. UA2F,RA2F
- Asiatic Russia. UA7-UA0, UZ7-UZ0.
-
- During the ARRL Roundup contest a number of strange new CIS prefixes were
- being used. There is no doubt this will make the job of the contest manager
- more difficult until we can be sure which Republic the prefix in use
- represents. Some stations were informing contacts during the exchange. For
- instance RU3AT (ex UW3AT) avoided and doubt but others are going to be
- difficult to pin down. I can only suggest you add a note with your submitted
- log indicating areas of doubt. This should help the committee to locate and
- correct any misunderstandings.
-
- Thanks this month to:.
- G3ZYP, GW3LYF, DXNS.
-
- BARTG caters for all DATA interests with information-components-kits -ready
- built units and software from experts. Members receive a 120 page quarterly
- journal devoted to data modes. Beginners guides for most data modes are
- available. The group sponsors HF and VHF RTTY contests, administers its own DX
- and members award scheme and runs an annual rally.
-
- This copy of BARTG News is posted by Iain Kendall (G6ARO) who can be contacted
- via Internet e-mail at.. iain@humber.ac.uk Items for inclusion in the
- broadcast may also be mailed to this address, as well as any queries regarding
- membership or services offered by BARTG.
-
- Copy of the news bulletin as distributed by G0ARF 940201.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 13 Feb 1994 15:03:04 GMT
- From: agate!howland.reston.ans.net!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!emory!wa4mei.ping.com!ke4zv!gary@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: License from Panama?
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In article <2jg8p9$acc@klaava.Helsinki.FI> mjokinen@cc.Helsinki.FI (Matti Jokinen) writes:
- >I am one of these hopeless creatures, who cannot raise the 40
- >marks per minute cw-cpy-speed to 60 which is the limit for the senior
- >class licens in our country. In the junior class we are allowed to phone
- >operations only on the 28 mHz band. As I am planning a longer yachting
- >voyage and I would like to be in contact with my fellow countrymen
- >through ham radio, it would be interesting to know if it is true that
- >you may buy for yourself a ham licens from Panama. How much would it
- >cost?
-
- One would hope not, but there are unethical officials in some countries
- who will sell you anything for the right price. While I don't think
- Morse is a valid testing requirement, I certainly wouldn't countenance
- the buying and selling of licenses.
-
- If you can do 8 WPM, you almost certainly can push that to 12 WPM with
- some practice in *writing* faster. That's usually the problem at this
- speed plateau, you haven't finished writing one character before the
- next has started. If you haven't mastered the multi-tasking process
- of "copying behind", and some of us can't due to attention deficits
- or whatever, then you have to develop a shorthand way of writing that
- will allow you to copy in realtime. Work at developing a stylized
- character form that requires minimum strokes to accomplish. Some
- people can do that by using disconnected cursive, others develop
- their own style of printing. Try copying all lower case, it's generally
- faster than upper case block printing. If your authorities will allow
- you to copy with a typewriter or computer keyboard, by all means take
- advantage of that opportunity. It will speed your copy greatly.
-
- Gary
- --
- Gary Coffman KE4ZV | You make it, | gatech!wa4mei!ke4zv!gary
- Destructive Testing Systems | we break it. | uunet!rsiatl!ke4zv!gary
- 534 Shannon Way | Guaranteed! | emory!kd4nc!ke4zv!gary
- Lawrenceville, GA 30244 | |
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Feb 1994 00:33:43 GMT
- From: mvb.saic.com!unogate!news.service.uci.edu!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!emory!kd4nc!ke4zv!gary@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Long range digital links
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In article <CL0F1v.EzK.2@cs.cmu.edu> br@cs.cmu.edu writes:
- >
- > Can any of you radio folks give me a hand with this?
- >
- > I need a system capable of transmitting about 1 MegaBit per second
- > of digital data from anywhere on the planet. This would be a one-way
- > link. I'm sure this can be done, but can it be done reliably without
- > a satellite and lots of very fancy gear? If so, I have some questions:
-
- This is a *very* demanding application. To get global coverage without
- benefit of relay, you're basically forced to use ELF, but you can't get
- high throughputs at ELF because of the limited bandwidth. It's easy to
- get 1 Mbit/s throughput at UHF, but you're restricted to slightly greater
- than line of sight range, or somewhat more if you do high power forward
- scatter. At HF, you can get spot coverage to portions of the globe due
- to ionospheric refraction at certain times, under certain conditions related
- to time of day, solar cycle, etc, but the multipath (selective fading) of
- such channels makes high data rates difficult at best.
-
- This application demands either wireline or satellite relay to be
- practical.
-
- > How much might the equipment to do this cost?
- > How much would this equipment (the transmitter) weigh?
- > How much volume would this equipment (transmitter) occupy?
- > How much power would the transmitter require during operation?
- > How big would the antenna have to be?
-
- All of the above can be answered "a lot" or "huge".
-
- > If the problem is simplified to communicate within a single hemisphere,
- > does that make life alot easier?
-
- A bit. You could bounce the signals off the Moon, but that's not available
- 24x7, and would still require huge amounts of power and antenna gain to
- achieve 1 Mbit/s throughput. Meteor scatter could give you a 1500 km
- radius under ideal conditions, and would require slightly less demanding
- equipment (but only *slightly* less).
-
- The problem is the need for 24x7 communications to *anywhere* on the
- globe at 1 Mbit/s. If you needed spot coverage to selected points on
- an intermittant basis determined by external conditions, or you could
- accept *much* less throughput, then the problem begins to become doable.
- It's still hard without artificial relay, however.
-
- Sounds like this is a balloon experiment from the parameters you set
- out. You're not going to be able to get global coverage at high data
- rate from a balloon borne package without external relay.
-
- Gary
- --
- Gary Coffman KE4ZV | You make it, | gatech!wa4mei!ke4zv!gary
- Destructive Testing Systems | we break it. | uunet!rsiatl!ke4zv!gary
- 534 Shannon Way | Guaranteed! | emory!kd4nc!ke4zv!gary
- Lawrenceville, GA 30244 | |
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 8 Feb 1994 23:33:00 GMT
- From: agate!howland.reston.ans.net!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!news.larc.nasa.gov!grissom.larc.nasa.gov!kludge@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: MICOWAVE OVENS
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In article <39301.85.uupcb@chaos.lrk.ar.us> bob.hilton@chaos.lrk.ar.us (Bob Hilton) writes:
- > "YOU MUST REGISTER YOUR MICROWAVE OVEN
- > The Federal Government requires that records be filed on the
- > location of all microwave ovens. A registration card, packed
- > inside this oven, is used to track the location of our micro-
- > wave ovens. ... If you bought this oven from a previous owner,
- > please establish your ownership by writing to: [address]."
-
- This law was put into place by disloyal French sympathizers in the US
- government, so that when the French invade our country they will know
- exactly where every microwave is located. The French forces will first
- confiscate all American microwaves and make frozen food illegal, thereby
- cutting off the food supply for most of the country. Then they will
- demoralize all right-thinking Americans by forcing them to eat stuff with
- rich sauces all the time. It will be absolutely terrible. It is a proven
- fact that eating lots of artificial flavorings and preservatives extends
- the lifespan.
- --scott
- --
- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 13 Feb 1994 13:53:23 GMT
- From: agate!howland.reston.ans.net!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!emory!wa4mei.ping.com!ke4zv!gary@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Power Supply Questions
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In article <760937769.AA04746@mcws.fidonet.org> Bob.Albert@f943.n102.z1.fidonet.org (Bob Albert) writes:
- >
- >I tend to operate my mobile type rigs (in the shack) at reduced
- >potential to increase reliability and lamp life. Thus, rather than
- >goosing the rig to 14 Volts to get a little more output, I tend to run
- >it at 12.2 or so; that way I may never have to fix the thing.
-
- While 12.2 volts is probably fine, beware of carrying this idea to
- extremes. Most of the finals in modern VHF/UHF rigs lose efficiency
- rapidly as voltage is decreased. You can find yourself with low output
- and overheated finals if you allow the voltage to sag too much. Also,
- many of the circuits in the radio become non-linear leading to severe
- distortion and spurious products if operated below their design voltage.
- Lots of radios just won't operate properly at all if voltage drops to
- 11 volts or less.
-
- Mobile rigs are designed to tolerate the range of voltages between
- 12 and 14.8 volts of the automotive electrical environment. Going
- outside those limits in either direction can lead to trouble. The
- ideal voltage for automotive gear is 13.8 volts. You should stick
- as close to that as possible for best results.
-
- If you want to increase lamp life, wire a resistor in series with
- the bulbs. Lamp output drops rapidly with decreasing voltage, but
- life goes up almost exponentially with decreasing voltage. A 10%
- drop from nominal is about the ideal compromise for lamps. This is
- *not* generally true for RF transistors or ICs, so they should run
- at their design voltage.
-
- Gary
- --
- Gary Coffman KE4ZV | You make it, | gatech!wa4mei!ke4zv!gary
- Destructive Testing Systems | we break it. | uunet!rsiatl!ke4zv!gary
- 534 Shannon Way | Guaranteed! | emory!kd4nc!ke4zv!gary
- Lawrenceville, GA 30244 | |
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Feb 1994 02:05:52 GMT
- From: mvb.saic.com!unogate!news.service.uci.edu!usc!sdd.hp.com!col.hp.com!srgenprp!alanb@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Vertical Antennas
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Gary Coffman (gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us) wrote:
-
- : Yes, yes, I understand that, but look at what you're saying, "the
- : current is *still* 1A in *each* 1/4-wave element." Since the dipole
- : has *two* elements, 1+1=2, it's instant flow is twice the current
- : of a single element.
-
- If you installed RF ammeters in each element, they would read the
- same no matter whether the ground plane is present or no. (Since
- the RF generator and both elements are in series, the current must
- be the same in each.) Each 1/4-wave element radiates 1/2 the total
- power no matter whether the ground plane is present or no.
-
- (Is anybody else still following this convoluted discussion?)
-
- AL N1AL
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Feb 1994 00:12:39 GMT
- From: mvb.saic.com!unogate!news.service.uci.edu!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!emory!kd4nc!ke4zv!gary@network.ucsd.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <CKxKI7.1IJ@world.std.com>, <1994Feb9.031017.13806@ke4zv.atl.ga.us>, <CKz3I8.6M4@news.Hawaii.Edu>
- Reply-To : gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us (Gary Coffman)
- Subject : Re: 40 meter QRP (cw or ssb)
-
- In article <CKz3I8.6M4@news.Hawaii.Edu> jherman@uhunix3.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu (Jeff Herman) writes:
- >In article <1994Feb9.031017.13806@ke4zv.atl.ga.us> gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us (Gary Coffman) writes:
- >>In article <CKxKI7.1IJ@world.std.com> barnaby@world.std.com (Richard L Barnaby) writes:
- >>>Any advice for cracking the morse-as-characters to morse-as-words barrier?
- >>
- >>No. I've been a ham 30 years and I still can't do it. If I don't write
- >>it down, I have no idea what's being sent.
- >>
- >
- >Yes. First, put down your pencil and force yourself to copy in your head.
-
- Easy to say. Some of us find it to be impossible however.
-
- >In fast Morse, you don't want to try to pick out individual letters; rather
- >you want to hear entire words. Now , one way recognizing words is to make
- >up code tapes yourself consisting of common words you might hear during
- >a CW QSO: the, rig, ant, qth, ...; send each word at least a dozen times
- >and recognition will come very quickly (this is how I learned Vietnamese -
- >but Gary will quickly deny any correlation between learning a language and
- >learning code even though the methods of learning are the same: repetition!).
-
- Well short words can be considered simply extensions to the alphabet,
- as in Chinese and other pictographic representations of words rather
- than characters. The problem comes with longer or less familiar words.
- Then you're back to character by character spelling to determine what
- was sent.
-
- I can wait and recognize "the", but when it turns out to be the
- opening character group in "Thessalonian", I'm screwed. Dealing
- character by character on paper insures I get either correctly.
-
- Gary
-
- --
- Gary Coffman KE4ZV | You make it, | gatech!wa4mei!ke4zv!gary
- Destructive Testing Systems | we break it. | uunet!rsiatl!ke4zv!gary
- 534 Shannon Way | Guaranteed! | emory!kd4nc!ke4zv!gary
- Lawrenceville, GA 30244 | |
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 10 Feb 1994 19:26:35 GMT
- From: slinky.cs.nyu.edu!longlast.cs.nyu.edu!jackson@nyu.arpa
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <rohvm1.mah48d-030294075300@136.141.220.39>, <CKo0uy.HzJ@srgenprp.sr.hp.com>, <rohvm1.mah48d-090294083450@136.141.220.39>e
- Subject : Re: A code speed question
-
- In article <rohvm1.mah48d-090294083450@136.141.220.39>, rohvm1.mah48d@rohmhaas.com (John E. Taylor III) writes:
- |> In article <2j8dql$7ul@news.acns.nwu.edu>, rdewan@casbah.acns.nwu.edu
- |> (Rajiv Dewan) wrote, in part:
- |>
- |> > >How many people use typewriters or computers for copying code?
- |> >
- |> > I think that there is one down side to this approach.
-
- So how many of you think I am UTC by learning on a computer?
-
- --
- Steven Jackson New York University
- Assistant to the Chair of Comp Sci Courant Inst. of Mathematical Sciences
- jackson@cs.nyu.edu, jcksnste@acfcluster 251 Mercer St, Room 411,NY 10012
- "Not in my head.. so I don't have to think.." -- Nik Fiend
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 13 Feb 1994 14:45:54 GMT
- From: agate!howland.reston.ans.net!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!emory!wa4mei.ping.com!ke4zv!gary@network.ucsd.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <CKz3I8.6M4@news.Hawaii.Edu>, <1994Feb11.001239.2842@ke4zv.atl.ga.us>, <39@swan.ukc.ac.uk>
- Reply-To : gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us (Gary Coffman)
- Subject : Re: 40 meter QRP (cw or ssb)
-
- In article <39@swan.ukc.ac.uk> ali@ukc.ac.uk (A.L.Ibbetson) writes:
- >In article <1994Feb11.001239.2842@ke4zv.atl.ga.us> gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us (Gary Coffman) writes:
- >>I can wait and recognize "the", but when it turns out to be the
- >>opening character group in "Thessalonian", I'm screwed. Dealing
- >>character by character on paper insures I get either correctly.
- >
- >The way it works in my head seems to be that I have a longish mental
- >FIFO with parallel access for pattern matching. The FIFO seems to run
- >at about 5-10 letters, though access back to 10 letters requires me to
- >think harder than for, say, 5. The length varies with speed too. Oh
- >yes, and there are also algorithms for stuff missed in QRM: I am
- >conscious of rescanning activity going on in my mind to try to `make
- >sense' of whole chunks of partially copied code. This is mostly
- >english grammer context guessing, but there is also a little bit of
- >`that S could have been an H, but not a Q'.
- >
- >The character-by-character loading of the FIFO is subconscious, I just
- >`hear' the words, I guess as my brain picks out whole words from the
- >FIFO. At high speed, near the limit of my ability, I hear whole
- >phrases. I suspect this is why most operators I know have a small
- >speed range (about 5wpm) just below their maximum, where they read code
- >more comfortably than lower speeds. Of course, I use the FIFO as an
- >analogy. Goodness knows what is really going on in my head. I'd have
- >the same difficulty describing how I ride a bike.
- >
- >The point I seek to make (long windedly) is that unless you put the
- >pencil down Gary, you deny yourself the chance of developing this `look
- >back and re-evaluate' ability, which is how I copy Thessalonian via
- >"the", "these", "no, what the hell is this word?" and finally
- >"Thessalonian", though I think most of us CW freaks would actually miss
- >the word unless there were preceding context clues. But maybe I
- >shouldn't admit that :-)
-
- OK, Alan, I understand what you're saying. My mental "FIFO", however,
- is 3 characters or less deep. And that doesn't matter whether the
- characters are input via aural Morse, visual flash cards, or spoken
- phonetics. Once the depth exceeds 3, the oldest character is gone off
- the stack. Attention span deficit, poor short term pattern memory,
- or something.
-
- If I can't get the information down where I can take it in as a
- gestalt, I can't understand it. VOA slow English drives me crazy,
- I have to take notes to figure out what they're talking about, and
- my natural text reading speed has been around 1000 WPM since first
- grade. Slow is just no go for me, my mind races so far ahead considering
- contextual pathways that I lose the thread of meaning if the input is
- less than about 120 WPM.
-
- Gary
- --
- Gary Coffman KE4ZV | You make it, | gatech!wa4mei!ke4zv!gary
- Destructive Testing Systems | we break it. | uunet!rsiatl!ke4zv!gary
- 534 Shannon Way | Guaranteed! | emory!kd4nc!ke4zv!gary
- Lawrenceville, GA 30244 | |
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 8 Feb 1994 16:02:25 GMT
- From: mvb.saic.com!unogate!news.service.uci.edu!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!torn!news2.uunet.ca!xenitec!mks.com!richw@network.ucsd.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <ecarpCKrL52.57s@netcom.com>, <CKsGp5.2KF@world.std.com>, <CKt1vn.JL9@world.std.com>net
- Reply-To : richw@mks.com (Rich Wales)
- Subject : Re: Operating in Canada?
-
- David Tucker wrote:
-
- Well, your US licence is good in Canada indefinitely, as
- long as it is valid, as far as I know. If you become a
- landed immigrant, and wish to obtain a Canadian licence,
- I have been told by a government official that you must
- pass all the exams. I have also been told by Rich, who
- went through the process, that you can get credit for
- code and theory and will only have to pass the rules exam.
-
- I'll assume "Rich" in the above refers to me. I can confirm from per-
- sonal experience that when I applied for a Canadian amateur license last
- year, I was given full credit for the Canadian "Basic", "Advanced", and
- "12 WPM" qualifications on the basis of my US "Advanced" license. I was
- required to pass a 26-question exam on Canadian amateur rules and regu-
- lations, but that was all.
-
- Canadian rules also require that reciprocal operators from
- the US be not only US citizens but US residents, too.
-
- This is indeed the way the rules read. I was told by Canadian officials
- that no one would really mind if I operated up here for a while using my
- US call -- but that since I was a landed immigrant, I "should" eventu-
- ally get a Canadian license.
-
- Incidentally, I've retained my US amateur license even though I now live
- in Canada. Since the FCC won't accept a non-US address, I sent in a
- Form 610 and changed my address to that of my parents in California. If
- anything ever gets sent there, they'll forward it to me up here.
-
- Unlike US rules, Canadian rules do not explicitly void
- reciprocal privileges upon taking out Canadian citizenship.
- You could therefore make a case that that means, as long
- as you retain US citizenship, your US licence is valid in
- Canada.
-
- Please be careful here not to fall into the fallacy of assuming that US
- and Canadian citizenship are mutually exclusive. Contrary to popular
- belief, US law does =not= ban dual citizenship; and, for that matter,
- neither does Canadian law. Lots of people are citizens (by birth or by
- naturalization) of both the US and Canada; the US State Department knows
- about them and explicitly doesn't mind. If anyone is interested in more
- info on this subject, I'll be glad to oblige.
-
- --
- Rich Wales (VE3HKZ, WA6SGA/VE3) // Mortice Kern Systems Inc.
- richw@mks.com // 35 King Street North
- +1 (519) 884-2251 // Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2J 2W9
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Info-Hams Digest V94 #147
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