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1994-11-13
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27KB
Date: Tue, 17 May 94 20:34:03 PDT
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 #540
To: Info-Hams
Info-Hams Digest Tue, 17 May 94 Volume 94 : Issue 540
Today's Topics:
Amateur Radio Newsline #873 6 May 94
Any club at BYU?
First QSO
HAM RADIO RUDENESS
HF SKED Anyone?
IPS Daily Report - 17 May 94
MASS QSO PARTY
May 17 Mid-Atlantic Hamfest Listing
sacred frequencies
Willful Interference
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: Tue, 17 May 94 18:05:29 -0500
From: yale.edu!noc.near.net!news.delphi.com!usenet@yale.arpa
Subject: Amateur Radio Newsline #873 6 May 94
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
<emd@ham.island.net> writes:
>I think you're overreacting. Apart from the fact that some Region 1
>broadcasters seem to target Region 2 listeners, both the hams AND the
>broadcast stations are legitimate users of the band.
Jeff was referring to deliberately operating within a broadcast station's
known "footprint." Seems to me that that's the same as the "Is the frequency
in use" situation discussed elsewhere.
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 17 May 1994 13:56:02
From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!swrinde!gatech!news-feed-1.peachnet.edu!news.duke.edu!eff!news.kei.com!ssd.intel.com!chnews!ornews.intel.com!ccm.hf.intel.com!brett_miller@network.ucsd.edu
Subject: Any club at BYU?
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
In article <2r6i48$s4n@carina.unm.edu> f5jtl@unm.edu (F5JTL aka WX3W) writes:
>Is there any radio-club station at BYU? I'll be visiting Provo-Orem at the
>beginning of August with a French friend of mine and we would like to operate
>from
>there...
>73 de Laurent
Yes there is. It is located in the Wilkenson Center on campus. I don't
belong to it, so I don't have any names for you to contact. If you don't get
other replies, I'll find the info for you. Let me know.
Brett Miller N7OLQ brett_miller@ccm.hf.intel.com
Intel Corp.
American Fork, UT
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 17 May 94 20:04:24 GMT
From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!gatech!udel!news2.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!sundog.tiac.net!usenet.elf.com!rpi!newsserver.pixel.kodak.com!kodak!kodaki.kodak.com!swohl@@.
Subject: First QSO
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
This is being posted for a friend who doesn't have net access.
It is not an official statement or a policy statement of any
organization, especially Eastman Kodak. Please reply to
dkerk@ctp.org or davev@atkc.com. Any mail sent to this
address will be discarded.
======================================================================
I wrote this a few nights ago, right before my license came.
KE6GXD, eventually to be found on 40 meter CW. Reply to
davev@atkc.com
------------------------------------------
I passed my Tech license exams in February, but am still waiting for my
ticket. I bought an ICOM IC 720 A through a posting in rec.radio.swap,
completely sight unseen of course. I had never even seen a 720A before.
I picked the rig based on what small amount I could afford and old
ARRL information on harmonics suppression. Choosing a rig by TVI.
It arrived at the office on Firday. Like a kid, I was opening it up at
the main reception lobby where it was delivered. It was much smaller
than I imagined it would be. One of the vice presidents of the company
walked in. "What is this," she asked, and wanted to know if the company
was being billed for it. I expained what it was, and then she told me
to clean up the mess.
Friday afternoon at the office drifted on by blissfully, with visions of
code practice from something other than Super Morse and other random
QSO generation programs, then came the BUSINESS DINNER FROM HELL!!!
Till 11:30 at night. No time to unpack my new toy then.
Saturday morning, bright and early, five hours sleep or not, I was raring
to go. I had the rig, but no power supply and no antenna.
After going through the electronics junk drawer and after a trip to
Radio Shack and to Albertson's for a gallon of milk for the baby, I
had a 12 volt 2 amp supply and a simple long wire antenna tucked under
the balcony of my first story apartment. When I fired the rig up, I
got nothing but static and the faintest cracklings of one station
around 15.2 MHZ in Spanish. Not even WWV! I knew the location had
a power lines about 60 feet away, but it couldn't be that bad. What
seemed worse, every time I changed bands, the rig made four clacking
noises like it was going to pop. "Oh my gosh, " I said to my self.
"I've been suckered. $400 down the drain, and there is nothing I
can do." Somebody I've never met hundreds of miles away has cashed
the check, and I am left with nothing. I got ahold of Bob, who I
know through my church and who is a general class operator. He said
his wife had some "Honey Do" tasks for him that would take a couple
of hours, but later he'd call me back and we'd try the rig on his
power supply and his antenna.
Hours passed, very very slowly. It was about 7:30 at night. He called and
gave me directions to his house. I quickly put the rig in a small
suitcase, packed the mike, the photocopy of the manual that came with,
and my improvised power supply in a bag, and I went on over to his
place. He put the rig on his emergency power supply, a 12 volt marine
battery he has on a solar trickle charger, plugged it into his inverted
V up about 40 feet. It sounded fine on WWV 15 MHZ, and then we managed
to get the rig tuned to 40 meter SSB, around 7.18. Bob, no longer just
Brother Ruizak but now N6BNN, took the frail looking desk mike that came
with the rig in his hands. The first QSO we heard, the operator didn't let the
key up for about fifteen minutes, but finally he got a chance to break.
Bob gave his QTH as Costa Mesa, California. The operator on the other
end said he was in Arizona, and that the rig sounded fine. He even
said that we were 5 by 9, and that he had a 720 A and that the
horrible noise it made when I changed bands was normal.
"It worked" "It worked." What a relief. Then Bob passed the mike to me,
and I was actually talking to another state on the radio. My first
time transmitting on amateur radio! I was completely eccstatic,
in bliss. Then a friend of Bob's heard us and broke in. "He's a
sheep rancher in Mexico, about 1,200 miles away" Bob said to me before
keying up, and then after answering the break he handed the microphone
to my slightly trembling hands. I thanked him for the chance to
talk, and asked him how it sounded. He said my voice sounded a little
weak, like I didn't quite know how to best use that mike. Of course
not, I'd never used it before.
Then another breaker came in. His QTH was Alabama. 2,000 miles.
Incredible!
It was getting late, and his family called. He tried to transmit
once on my improvised power supply. The meter went dim. Not enough
juice to transmit. Well, at least I can't be tempted to transmit
before my license arrives. As I carefully pack up my rig back in the
suitcase I had so casually put it in before, Bob said that he thinks
he has a straight key and an antenna matcher he will let me have for
cheap and that he'll stop on by and see what kind of antenna would
work best at my place. I thank him repeatedly and bid him good night.
At home, I still can't receive anything and I still don't have my
license, but at least I know why and I know I've even talked DX on
my own rig now.
------------------------------
Date: 17 May 94 17:21:37 EDT
From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!gatech!newsxfer.itd.umich.edu!jobone!lynx.unm.edu!pacs.sunbelt.net!DDEPEW%CHM.TEC.SC.US@network.ucsd.edu
Subject: HAM RADIO RUDENESS
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
In article <rogjdCpy6yC.Gq9@netcom.com>, rogjd@netcom.com (Roger Buffington) writes:
>blood@austin.ibm.com wrote:
>
>: Ive decided to quit saving for a HF rig after following this discussion.
>
>Don't feel that way. Get the HF rig and ignore the few jerks who are
>rude on the air. There are not many of them.
>--
> rogjd@netcom.com
> Glendale, CA
> AB6WR
I agree! If we all got off HF, the jerks would own the bands!
Ddepew
N4QIX
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 17 May 1994 22:35:57 GMT
From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!swrinde!gatech!news.byu.edu!news.mtholyoke.edu!world!dahunt@network.ucsd.edu
Subject: HF SKED Anyone?
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
Hello there,
I'd like a sked on 40 CW some time during the MA Qso Party; See my later post
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 17 May 1994 23:18:01 GMT
From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!EU.net!sunic!trane.uninett.no!nac.no!ifi.uio.no!wabbit.cc.uow.edu.au!news.ci.com.au!metro!ipso!rwc@network.ucsd.edu
Subject: IPS Daily Report - 17 May 94
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
SUBJ: IPS DAILY SOLAR AND GEOPHYSICAL REPORT
ISSUED AT 17/2330Z MAY 1994 BY IPS RADIO AND SPACE SERVICES
FROM THE REGIONAL WARNING CENTRE (RWC), SYDNEY.
SUMMARY FOR 17 MAY AND FORECAST UP TO 20 MAY
No warning is current.
-----------------------------------------------------------
1A. SOLAR SUMMARY
Activity: very low
Flares: none.
Observed 10.7 cm flux/Equivalent Sunspot Number : 095/041
1B. SOLAR FORECAST
18 May 19 May 20 May
Activity Low Very low Very low
Fadeouts None expected None expected None expected
Forecast 10.7 cm flux/Equivalent Sunspot Number : 095/041
1C. SOLAR COMMENT
None.
-----------------------------------------------------------
2A. MAGNETIC SUMMARY
Geomagnetic field at Learmonth: quiet to unsettled
Estimated Indices : A K Observed A Index 16 May
Learmonth 12 3233 3322
Fredericksburg 13 26
Planetary 15 30
Observed Kp for 16 May: 4454 6433
2B. MAGNETIC FORECAST
DATE Ap CONDITIONS
18 May 10 Quiet to unsettled.
19 May 08 Quiet.
20 May 08 Quiet.
2C. MAGNETIC COMMENT
None.
3A. GLOBAL HF PROPAGATION SUMMARY
LATITUDE BAND
DATE LOW MIDDLE HIGH
17 May normal fair-normal fair-normal
PCA Event : None.
3B. GLOBAL HF PROPAGATION FORECAST
LATITUDE BAND
DATE LOW MIDDLE HIGH
18 May normal normal fair-normal
19 May normal normal normal
20 May normal normal normal
3C. GLOBAL HF PROPAGATION COMMENT
NONE.
-----------------------------------------------------------
4A. AUSTRALIAN REGION IONOSPHERIC SUMMARY
MUFs at Sydney were near predicted monthly values with 20%
depressions 19-20UT. Spread F was observed 11-20UT and may
have degraded night communications.
Observed T index for 17 May: 41
Predicted Monthly T Index for May is 30.
4B. AUSTRALIAN REGION IONOSPHERIC FORECAST
DATE T-index MUFs
18 May 35 Near predicted monthly values.
19 May 35 Near predicted monthly values.
20 May 35 Near predicted monthly values.
4C. AUSTRALIAN REGION COMMENT
None.
--
IPS Regional Warning Centre, Sydney |IPS Radio and Space Services
email: rwc@ips.oz.au fax: +61 2 4148331 |PO Box 5606
RWC Duty Forecaster tel: +61 2 4148329 |West Chatswood NSW 2057
Recorded Message tel: +61 2 4148330 |AUSTRALIA
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 17 May 1994 22:45:52 GMT
From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!swrinde!gatech!newsxfer.itd.umich.edu!zip.eecs.umich.edu!panix!ddsw1!news.kei.com!world!dahunt@network.ucsd.edu
Subject: MASS QSO PARTY
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
MASSACHUSETTS QSO PARTY 1994
The 1994 Mass QSO Party is organized by Framingham Amateur Radio Association.
Contest period: 1800Z Saturday, May 21 to 0400Z Sunday, May 22 and
1100Z to 2100Z Sunday, May 22
Classes: Outside MA; MA single, MA multi-single, MA multi-multi, MA portable
Exchange: RS(T) and QTH (state, province, DXCC country, or Mass county)
Points: 1 point per QSO on Phone and 2 points per QSO on CW/Digital/Video.
50 points for Massachusetts Club Bonus Stations.
Multipliers: For stations outside Massachusetts, the number of Massachusetts
counties worked per band (max 14 per band).
For Massachusetts stations, states + provinces + DXCC countries
per band.
Scoring: Final score equals total QSO points times total multipliers.
Frequencies: CW - 1810, 3550, 7050, 14050, 21050, and 28050 KHz
SSB - 1850, 3890, 7290, 14270, 21390, and 28390 KHz
Novices - 3705, 7130, 21130, 28130 KHz
Awards : Certificate for the highest score in each contest class and for the
highest score in each state, Canadian province, and DXCC country.
Send logs by June 21, 1994 to Framingham Amateur Radio Association
P.O. Box 3005
Framingham, MA 01701
For full rules, send an SASE to the above address, or send a request
by e-mail to dave_hoaglin@abtassoc.com .
(This announcement posted by Dave, K8JLF.)
------------------------------
Date: 17 May 1994 21:08:58 -0400
From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!news.intercon.com!news1.digex.net!access.digex.net!not-for-mail@network.ucsd.edu
Subject: May 17 Mid-Atlantic Hamfest Listing
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
MID-ATLANTIC HAMFEST LISTING May 17, 1994
The following is a listing of known hamfests in the Mid-Atlantic area.
I will update this list as necessary. Please send any additions or
corrections to me at cps@access.digex.net so that others may benefit.
If you know of any hamfests not in this list, please let me know about
them so that they may be included in the next edition.
Hamfests that I know of, but need details: Gaithersburg, MD (Sept),
York, PA (Sept).
Thanks,
Chris Smolinski, N3JLY
(*) Marks new additions / revisions.
May 20-22, 1994:
* ROCHESTER, NY
60th Annual Rochester Hamfest & Computer Show, NY ARRL Convention.
$6 adv, $8 at door. Tailgating $5
Monroe County Fairgrounds, Rt 15 & Calkins Rd.
May 21, 1994:
HARMONY, NJ
Cherryville Hamfest, 8AM-2PM, $6 admission, $10 tailgating, $15 tables
Warren County Farmers Fairgrounds, Rt 518 North, Harmony, NJ I78-exit 3.
Contact Keith Burt, KF5FK, (908) 788-4080 before 10PM
VE Test Session Contact Marty Grozinski, NS2K, (908) 806-6944 before 9PM
Talk-In 147.375+ & 146.820-
* EPHRATA, PA
Lancaster County Hamfest, 8AM-?, $4 adm, $6 inside, $3 tailgating
Ephrata Senior High School, 803 Oak Blvd
Contact EARS, 906 Clearview Ave, Ephrata, PA 17544 (717) 36-2514
Talk-In 145.450, 444.650
* ROANOKE, VA
Roanoke Mayfest, 9AM-4PM, $5 adv, $6 door, tailgating $5, inside $10
Roanoke Civic Center
Contact RVARC, (703) 343-6794, FAX (703) 342-1250
Talk-In 146.985-, 442.50+
* FLATWOODS, WV
Central WV Swapfest, 8AM-?,
Braxton County High School, Exit 67 off I-79
Talk-In 145.29-, 146.6-
May 22, 1994:
HAGERSTOWN, MD
Great Hagerstown Hamfest, 8AM-3:30PM, $5 adm, $5 tailgating, $20 tables
Hagerstown Jr College Rec Center, Exit 32B from I-70, right at Edgewood Rd
Contact Page Pyne or Fred Bailey (301) 714-0688
VE Exams 9AM contact Pat KQ8E at (304) 289-3576
Talk-In 146.34+
May 28, 1994:
* HIGHTSTOWN, NJ
May Meet. Hightstown Country Club, nr exit 8 of NJ Turnpike, off rt 33.
7AM - 3 PM.
May 29, 1994:
WEST FRIENDSHIP, MD
Memorial Day Hamfest, 8AM-3PM, $5 adm, $5 tailgating, $20 tables
Howard County Fairgrounds, West Friendship, MD
Off Interstate 70, west of Baltimore, MD
Contact: Mel Seyle (301) 249-614
License Exams: Les McClure (410) 833-8667
Talk-In: 146.7, 224.76 and 444.00
June 4, 1994
* TEANECK, NJ
Hamfest. 8AM-2PM. $2 adm, $10 spaces
Farleigh Dickenson University, Rt 4 Ricver Road Exit
Talk-In 146.19/79, 146.52
Contact Jim Joyce K2ZO, 201-664-6725 before 10pm.
June 5, 1994:
MANASSAS, VA
Ole Virgina Hams ARC Hamfest, 8AM-3PM $5 adm, $5 tailgating
Prince William County Fairgrounds, SR 234 Manassas, VA
Talk-In 146.97-, 224.66-
Contact Jim Hawk N3ODZ, PO Box 1255 Manassas, VA 22110
* BUTLER, PA
40th Annual Hamfest, 8AM-4PM, $1 adm, $1 tailgating, $20 indoor tables
Butler Farm Show Grounds, PA Rt 68E from I79 & US Rt 19, W fm PA rt 8
Talk-In 147.96/.36
June 18, 1994:
DUNELLEN, NJ
Raritan Valley Radio Club Hamfest, 8AM-2PM $5 adm, $7 tailgating
Columbia Park, Dunellen, NJ (Central NJ)
Talk-In 146.625-, 53.73- (PL110.9), 224.8- (PL110.9), 442.250+
(PL141.3),146.52
Contact Bill K2DI wmb@joplin.att.com, John WA2F (908) 722-9045 (before
8:30 PM) or Bob WB2CVL (908) 846-2056 (before 8:30 PM)
Tailgating registration recommended -- checks payable to"RVRC"
Send to Guy KE2CG, 240 Grant Ave, Piscataway NJ 08854
June 19, 1994:
WALKERSVILLE, MD
Father's Day Hamfest, 8AM-3PM, $5 adm, $5 tailgating
Walkersville Fire Co, Walkersville, MD, rt 15 to rt 26 to rt 194
Frederick Amateur Radio Club, PO Box 1260, Frederick, MD 21702
Talk-In 146.52, 147.06+, 448.425-
July 10, 1994:
TIMONIUM, MD
Maryland Hamfest, 8AM-?, tailgating opens at 6AM
Timonium Fairgrounds, York Rd, I-695 to I-83 to Timonium Rd
BRATS, PO BOx 5915, Baltimore, MD 21208
VE Exams 10AM, Pre-registration required
Talk-In 147.03+, 224.96-
July 16, 1994:
LANCASTER, PA
Red Rose Repeater Assn, 9AM-3PM $5 adm, $5 tailgating, $20 tables
McCaskey High School, Reservoir & N Franklin Streets, Lancaster, PA
Red Rose Repeater Assn, PO Box 8316, Lancaster, PA 17604
Talk-In 147.015+
August 7, 1994:
UPPER MARLBORO, MD
Southern Patuxent Hamfest, 7AM-2PM, $5 adm, $5 tailgating, $25 tables
Prince George County Equestrian Center, Upper Marlboro, MD
Rt 301/ Rt 4, exit 11-A (Rt 4 Pennsylvania Ave) from DC Beltway I-495
Contact: Southern Patuxent ARC, PO Box 399, St Leonard, MD 20685
(410) 586-2177
Talk-In 147.15
BUCKS COUNTY, PA
Hamfest 94, 8AM-?, $5 adm, $3 tailgating
Bucks County Drive In Theater, rt 611, 6mi N of Pa Turnpike exit 27
Mid Atlantic Radio Club, PO Box 352, Villanova, PA 19085
Talk-In 147.06, 145.13
August 14, 1994:
WESTMINSTER, MD
SARA Carroll County Hamfest, 8AM-?, $5 adm, $5 tailgating, $8 tables
Carroll County Ag Center, Smith Ave, Westminster, MD
Contact: Alan Parker, KS3L, (410) 859-1475
SARA Hamfest, 607 Brentwood Rd, Linthicum, MD 21090
Talk-In 146.52, 224.68, 224.64
EASTON, PA
Hamfest & Computerfest, 8AM-?, $4 adm, $7 tailgating, $25 tables
Career Institute of Technology, Easton, PA
Delaware-Lehigh ARC, RR 4 Greystone Bldg, Nazareth, PA 18064-9211
(610) 820-9110
Talk-In 146.70
September 17&18, 1994:
VIRGINIA BEACH, VA
Virginia Beach Hamfest $6 adm, $15 tailgating, $30 tables, $125 booths
Virginia BEach Pavillion
Manny Steiner, K4DOR, 3512 Olympia Lane, Virginia Beach, VA 23452
(804) HAM-FEST
September 18,1994
PENNSAUKEN, NJ
South Jersey Radio Assn, 8AM-3PM, $5 admission, $5 tailgating
Pennsauken High School Parking Lot, near US rt 130 / NJ rt 73
Contact Diane Nafis, N2LCQ, (609) 227-6281, (609) 228-8088
VEC Test Session registration at 9:30 AM
Talk-In 145.290-
October 30, 1994:
WESTMINSTER, MD
Mason Dixon Hamfest 8AM-?, $5 adm, $5 tailgating, $15 tables
Carroll County Ag Center, Westminster, MD
Mason Dixon Hamfest, PO Box 763, Hanover, PA 17331
VE exams $5.60, 9AM, reg 8AM, Page Evans NE3P, (717) 359-7610
Talk-In 145.410-
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 17 May 1994 23:26:32 GMT
From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!library.ucla.edu!csulb.edu!csus.edu!netcom.com!slay@network.ucsd.edu
Subject: sacred frequencies
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
: This 14300kc interests me. First, I guess the author really meant 14.3
: kc.
: Also, I guess that kc was used because it is supposed
: to show a long term connection with radio. However, kc was always
: incorrect as used because it was always supposed to be kc/s. A time
: blah blah blah ....
: This kind of identification with "the true antiquity" of radio by
: using quaint "older" terms.
: I guess the Kc is supposed to show that the poster came
: from a time when "hams were ham" and modern changes didn't affect the
: hobby. Or maybe I'm just being too critical of a slip.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Slip or not ....... you're right ... your are being too critical. ;-)
de Sandy slay@netcom.com
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 17 May 94 19:14:46 EDT
From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!ns.mcs.kent.edu!kira.cc.uakron.edu!malgudi.oar.net!hypnos!voxbox!jgrubs@network.ucsd.edu
Subject: Willful Interference
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
md@pstc3.pstc.brown.edu (Michael P. Deignan) writes:
> jherman@uhunix3.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu (Jeffrey Herman) writes:
>
> > As long as your evidence is so solid why not go public? Send the details
> > to your local newspaper and see if they write up a story, or at least
> > send a letter to the editor.
>
> Do you really think that a local newspaper would even CARE about this
> sort of topic? I think they would read about it and place it in the
> circular file.
During a repeater war between two repeaters about 75 miles apart
which insisted on using the same pair, with one upside down, the
winning side accomplished it by sneaking to the other town and
putting a small battery powered white noise generator near the
site. The resulting noise desensed the receiver so much the
repeater was unuseable unless you were close enough to hit it
with a snowball. None of the victims thought to use a non-FM
receiver for tracking possible QRM and thought the problem was
inside their hardware.
Do the same to this turkey. Render it impossible for him to hear
without even setting foot on his property. He'll soon tire of
talking to himself.
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Jim Grubs, W8GRT Voxbox Enterprises THIS SPACE FOR RENT |
| jgrubs@voxbox.norden1.com 6817 Maplewood Ave. RATES REASONABLE |
| Fido: 1:234/1.0 Sylvania, Ohio 43560 Home: 419/882-2697 |
| AMATEUR RADIO - The National Park of the Mind |
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
------------------------------
Date: 17 May 1994 21:44:25 GMT
From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!convex!news.duke.edu!news-feed-1.peachnet.edu!apollo1.cacd.rockwell.com!newsrelay.iastate.edu!news.iastate.edu!wjturner@network.ucsd.edu
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
References <940516145034@emerald.nist.gov>, <horak.769115710@convex.com>, <940516161823@emerald.nist.gov>ne
Subject : Re: HTX-202 problem
In article <940516161823@emerald.nist.gov>, proctor@news-reader.nist.gov (James Proctor) writes:
|> No, I'm not talking about missing the first 3/4 second of a qso. Please
|> give me a little bit of credit! :-) I'm talking about the receiver suddenly
|> turning on into a qso that has obviously been going on for some time (just
|> by the content of the conversation).
So you don't feel alone, I too had that problem. I don't think I ever
had it that bad, but I know it was up to a couple of seconds at a time
at least.
Other than that, I've had absolutely NO problems with my HTX-202.
--
Will Turner, N0RDV ---------------------------------------------
wjturner@iastate.edu | "Are you going to have any professionalism, |
twp77@isuvax.iastate.edu | or am I going to have to beat it into you?" |
TURNERW@vaxld.ameslab.gov ---------------------------------------------
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 17 May 94 18:09:48 -0500
From: yale.edu!noc.near.net!news.delphi.com!usenet@yale.arpa
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
References <Cpq86n.2DF@news.Hawaii.Edu>, <p+6tFKl.edellers@delphi.com>, <CpvA8q.I6E@news.Hawaii.Edu>a
Subject : Re: Amateur Radio Newsline #873 6 May 94
Jeffrey Herman <jherman@uhunix3.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu> writes:
>Oh my. Ed, open up a copy of WRTV or Passport and ask yourself why
>the legitimate users of the 7100-7300 kc segment are beaming to
>Region 2 countries; I didn't think that was legal.
Very, very true. That does not mean that ALL 7100-7300 broadcast signals
HEARD in North America are BEAMED to Region 2 -- and if they aren't, they're
legal. That's my point.
>Also, if I'm conducting a QSO on a clear freq in that segment and
>suddenly get blasted to the moon due to an oncoming BC'er then
>who's the jammer? Hmmm, shouldn't Radio Phnom Penh have checked
>to see if the freq was clear prior to starting their beamed-to-Region 2
>bcst?
If they're beaming to Region 2, they shouldn't be there at all whether you are
or not. If they aren't, then they -- as a broadcaster -- have NO obligation to
listen on the frequency before starting a transmission. (They are, however,
supposed to notify the IFRB of their intended frequencies, hours and beam
headings/widths in advance.)\\\\\
-- Ed Ellers, KD4AWQ
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End of Info-Hams Digest V94 #540
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