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- Date: Sun, 16 Oct 94 04:30:01 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: List
- Subject: Info-Hams Digest V94 #1126
- To: Info-Hams
-
-
- Info-Hams Digest Sun, 16 Oct 94 Volume 94 : Issue 1126
-
- Today's Topics:
- 40 MTR Vert Advice (2 msgs)
- advice on 40 Mtr vertical
- Email callsign servers
- IC-W21A HELP
- keplerian elements
- Kindness and ham radio
- Q-Codes .. any hints to learn them ?
- Sound Operated Phones
- subscribe (2 msgs)
- USA-EUROPE (???watts)
- What is "Amateur Radio"?
- WTB: Radar gun...
-
- 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: Sat, 15 Oct 94 14:43:12 -0500
- From: Leland Van Koten <leevankoten@delphi.com>
- Subject: 40 MTR Vert Advice
-
- Chip Dematteo <dechip@delphi.com> writes:
-
- >Hi.. I bet somebody out there has some advice for me concerning
- >the relative merits of various vertical antennas on the market.
- >I'm thinking about maybe the Hustler 6-BTV or maybe the GAP
- >Challenger or perhaps the Butternut HF-2V. I've got an R7 but
- >its pretty lousy on 40 mtrs. and I've got a beam for 10-20 so I
- >don't care about that. Mostly interested in 40 but 80 would be
- >nice too. I'd appreciate any advice but keep it simple because
-
- If you've got one reasonably tall tree and a couple of shorter vertical
- surfaces to use for support, I don't think I'd go with a vertical at all.
-
- I have a Cushcraft AP-8 that I rarely use now that I put up an inverted V.
- The peak of the inverted V is only about 30 feet up, and the ends are maybe
- 15 feet, but it consistenly gets better signal reports than the vertical. I
- feed it with ladder line through a tuner, and while it's cut for 80 meters,
- I use it on everything from 160-10 meters. It's far from an ideal 160 meter
- antenna, but I did work between 30 and 40 states during last winter's 160 meter
- contest (including all the west coast states), plus a handful of countries
- (although none outside the western hemisphere, unfortunately).
-
- It also isn't great on 10-20 meters, but I do have about 150 countries worked
- with it, with pretty limited operating time. It kills the vertical on 40 and
- 80 though, including on DX. If I could put down an ideal ground system for
- the vertical, that might not be the case, but in order to get the vertical a
- reasonable distance away from a power line, I had to place it pretty close to
- the property line, so that most of the ground system is to one side. However,
- that side is toward the northeast, and the inverted V CONSISTENTLY gets signal
- reports from Europe that are 1-2 S units better than the vertical.
-
- 73 de Lee, KE3FB in Md.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 16 Oct 94 03:02:16 -0500
- From: Bob Ross <rrross@delphi.com>
- Subject: 40 MTR Vert Advice
-
- Chip Dematteo <dechip@delphi.com> writes:
-
- >I'm thinking about maybe the Hustler 6-BTV or maybe the GAP
-
- I use the GAP chalanger and 40 meters is the BEST band for the GAP.
- I works pretty well on the other bands but 40m is where it shines!
-
-
-
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- BOB ROSS N7RBP ADVANCED
-
- PACKET .... N7RBP @ KI7AE,OR,PNW,NOAM
-
- INTERNET..... rrross@delphi.com ..... rrross@aol.com
-
- _____________________________________________________________________________
- TREES.....FROM THE CASCADE MOUNTIANS OF THE GREAT PACIFIC NORTHWEST.....TREES
- *****************************************************************************
-
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 16 Oct 94 03:08:33 -0500
- From: Bob Ross <rrross@delphi.com>
- Subject: advice on 40 Mtr vertical
-
- Chip Dematteo <dechip@delphi.com> writes:
-
- >Hi...I'm hoping somebody out there has some experience they can pass
- >on to me about 40/80m verticals. I'm thinking about the Gap Challenger
-
- I use the GAP and the BEST BAND for that antenna is 40m.
-
-
-
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- BOB ROSS N7RBP ADVANCED
-
- PACKET .... N7RBP @ KI7AE,OR,PNW,NOAM
-
- INTERNET..... rrross@delphi.com ..... rrross@aol.com
-
- _____________________________________________________________________________
- TREES.....FROM THE CASCADE MOUNTIANS OF THE GREAT PACIFIC NORTHWEST.....TREES
- *****************************************************************************
-
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 15 Oct 1994 12:25:42 GMT
- From: ac742@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Greg Danylchenko)
- Subject: Email callsign servers
-
- In a previous article, gaus@islandgirl.crd.ge.com (Rick Gaus) says:
-
- >
- >
- > Can anyone please send me information on the addresses of
- >any email callsign servers? I had one old address that does not seem
- >to work now. I need to access a callsign server by email.
- >
- >
- > 73,
- > Rick Gaus
- > WA3INC
-
- Try sending an e-mail to:
-
- qsl-info@aug3.augsburg.edu
-
- There should be a blank subject and in the body of the message put the
- call sign you are looking up. You should get an e-mail reply to your query
- rather quickly. I tested it this morning and the response was within seconds.
-
- 73
- --
- Greg Danylchenko ac742@FreeNet.Carleton.CA
- VE3YTZ
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 15 Oct 1994 05:49:48 GMT
- From: aw871@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Jim Wishner)
- Subject: IC-W21A HELP
-
- hello...i am considering upgrading my 2-meter equipment...
- i currently use a kenwood 2500 (circa 1982, i evelieve).
- saw an ad for an ICOM IC-W21A on sale. i looked
- through over two years of qst's for a review or
- specifications...but found different. i did find
- some sililar-sounding models (e.gh IC-W21AT) but
- the specific model number i'm considering is the
- W21A. I WOULD greatly appreciate any
- comments, criticisms, observations you have on
- this unit. specifically, would you buy/use
- it again. i find the subjective comments of hams
- much more valuable than those found in the
- trades. i promose to acknowledge all replies.
- pse post here, or to my e-mail address below.
- thanks! jim/kd0lb
- jwishner@mpr.org
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 14 Oct 94 01:57:24 PDT
- From: Ted_Eugene_Viens@cup.portal.com
- Subject: keplerian elements
-
- >Hi,
- >Does anyone know which NASA anonymous ftp site holds keplerian elements
- >of all satellites ?
- >thanks Assi
- >
- >---------------------------------------------------------------------
- > Assi Ben-Shalom 4Z7ABA
- > Electrical-Engineering student at Technion Institude of Technology
- > Amprnet: 4z7aba@4z7aba.ampr.org
- > 4z7aba@haifa.ampr.org
- > Internet: s2902081@techst02.technion.ac.il
- > Packet: 4z7aba@4x4hf.isr.mdle
- > Microsats: 4x4ht @UO-22,KO-23,KO-25
- >----------------------------------------------------------------------
- >
- Actually, the most accessible ftp site for 2 line keplerian element sets
- is not a nasa sight at all. It is:
-
- archive.afit.af.mil (129.92.1.66)
-
- I do not believe this is located at the actual site where the sets are
- generated daily from radar data. I believe it is a second site that was
- chosen as more accessible. Shucks, I forget the subdirectories, but they
- are easy to find. The master set is there along with several subsets with
- related satellites.
-
- Hey, the military may not tell us what we want to know about ET's, but
- they will let us keep track of our own spaceships...
- Bye... Ted..
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 14 Oct 1994 21:29:09 GMT
- From: gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us (Gary Coffman)
- Subject: Kindness and ham radio
-
- In article <1994Oct14.021924.26491@egreen.wednet.edu> jmollan@egreen.iclnet.org (John Mollan - Harm) writes:
- >There was a time when this was a small world and everyone waved as the
- >passed each other.
-
- Yes, and people never locked their doors at night, left their keys in
- their cars, sat on their front porches, enjoyed the passing parade,
- and felt safe. Only in the huge disarmed rat warrens like NYC were
- people frightened, barricading themselves in their hives, avoiding
- eye contact on the street, starting at shadows, rude to strangers,
- etc. That attitude is now becoming common even in some small towns
- and rural areas. But it really isn't any more dangerous out there
- than it was 30 years ago (somewhat safer in fact for most of us,
- according to the FBI UCR).
-
- We've become a frightened people. Scared of AIDs, scared of radiation
- from power lines, scared of nuclear power, scared of Alar, scared of
- 24D, scared of global warming, scared of ozone holes, and scared of
- crime. We're afraid to drive without seatbelts and airbags. We're
- terrified someone may drive at the design speed of our highways so
- we attempt to enforce ludicrous speed limits. We're afraid to eat
- red meat. We're worried about the fate of some horned toad or snail
- darter more than we are about the fate of people. Etc, etc, etc.
-
- Yes, we've changed. Most of us have become cowering rabbits starting
- at invisible terrors, mostly of our own imaginings. We've become
- insular and withdrawn, afraid of contact with others. We cower inside
- and watch the lies and exaggerations of a pandering glass box instead
- of going out and living our lives to the fullest. We've lost our
- confidence, and we've lost our nerve.
-
- >There was a time in the day of the crystal-controlled vhf transceiver, (less
- >than 20 years ago) when a "monitoring" on a repeater would get a reply in
- >nearly every town and city.
- >
- >In 1994 we have astounding technological devices that will transmit and
- >receive anywhere in modes that were not imagined in the 70's.
- >
- >At the same time as our gear has become sophisticated, we have regressed
- >in our friendliness and common courtesy.
-
- Yes, we're withdrawn and xenophobic. We think speaking nicely to some
- stranger may make us a victim. We must huddle only with our close clan,
- using the "locks" of closed repeaters to enforce our wariness of strangers.
- Once, a stranger was just a friend we hadn't met yet. Now a stranger is
- a potential threat to be avoided.
-
- >It seems as if the humans are failing.
-
- Sadly true. We've lost our confidence, and a pandering government and
- press feed our fears. Frightened people aren't friendly welcoming
- people. Many use anger and hostility to mask their fears. Others turn
- to authority (any authority) to save them from themselves.
-
- Gary
- --
- Gary Coffman KE4ZV | You make it, | gatech!wa4mei!ke4zv!gary
- Destructive Testing Systems | we break it. | emory!kd4nc!ke4zv!gary
- 534 Shannon Way | Guaranteed! | gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us
- Lawrenceville, GA 30244 | |
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 14 Oct 1994 19:35:18 GMT
- From: andreas@sanix.ruhr.de (Andreas D. Preissig)
- Subject: Q-Codes .. any hints to learn them ?
-
- I'm judy trying to make my licence here in Germany...
-
- Can anybody pls help me out with some good hints/tricks how to memorize
- these Codes
-
- Any help would be appreciated ...
-
- thnx
-
- Andreas
-
- --
- ........................................................................
- Andreas D. Preissig * Westfalenstr. 2 * 58455 Witten * Deutschland
- Tel : + 49 - 2302 - 12806 * andreas@sanix.ruhr.de
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 15 Oct 1994 19:11:40 GMT
- From: jmollan@egreen.iclnet.org (John Mollan - Harm)
- Subject: Sound Operated Phones
-
- Recently I have read several books about the US Navy in WWII using
- sound-operated phone systems.
-
- How do these systems operate? What is the electronic theory behnd it?
-
- 73,
- John
- AE7P
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 14 Oct 1994 14:58:59 -0500 (CDT)
- From: Peter Laws <plaws@rigel.uark.edu>
- Subject: subscribe
-
- On Fri, 14 Oct 1994, Andrew Loukes wrote:
-
- >
- >
- >
- We really need to get the message out: SUBSCRIPTION REQUEST GO TO THE
- LISTSERVER'S ADDRESS NOT THE LIST!!!!!
-
- mail listserv@listserver.njit.edu
- (no subject)
- body of message:
- subscribe ham-univ Your Human Name
-
- 73,
-
-
- Peter Laws<plaws@comp.uark.edu>|"Suppose you were a politician. Now suppose you
- n5uwy@ka5bml.#nwar.ar.usa.noam |were an idiot. Ah, but I repeat myself."-Twain
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 15 Oct 94 18:21:04 GMT
- From: Kr7yhugh@aol.COM
- Subject: Subscribe
-
- subscribe
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 15 Oct 94 14:24:59 -0500
- From: Leland Van Koten <leevankoten@delphi.com>
- Subject: USA-EUROPE (???watts)
-
- Andrew Bulucea <andrewb@europe.EBay.Sun.COM> writes:
-
- >What would be the minimum requered power to establish commnication in between
- >USA (california) and France (Europe) on short-wave ?. I don't have a licence,
- >just wondering if it is possible to communicate under 20Watts output power...
- >Or 20Watts is simply an utopia ?.
- >
- >
- >Just curious and considering on getting a licence,
-
- California to Europe on 20 watts is a challenge, but certainly is possible --
- especially with a decent antenna at the higher frequencies. In fact, I know
- someone (or at least talked to them on the radio once) who had worked New
- Zealand from a hotel room in Virginia with a dipole strung around the ceiling
- of the room and using only 5 watts! You're not going to do that very often,
- but lots of things are possible -- in fact, seeing what's possible is what
- is often the most fun in amateur radio.
-
- I've worked all over the world -- including the west coast of Australia, which
- is almost exactly half-way around the world from here -- with never using more
- than 100 watts and very mediocre antennas.
-
- Unfortunately, we're getting to the bottom of the sunspot cycle, so some of the
- really spectacular propagation on the 10 meter band (28 MHz) of a few years
- ago is over for another few years (for example, I once listened to a guy in
- Guam working a friend of his at Guantanamo Bay with only 5 watts, and he was
- perfectly copyable), but you can still do very well on some of the other
- bands. Generally, power levels are more of a factor on the lower bands where
- there is more absorption of the radio waves, and generally you can communicate
- further with Morse Code than voice, but neither of these are hard-and-fast
- rules. In fact, my furthest contact (the one with western Australia) was on
- voice at about 3.8 MHz.
-
- Good luck. It's a great hobby!
-
- Lee Van Koten, KE3FB in Md.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 14 Oct 1994 21:34:21 GMT
- From: gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us (Gary Coffman)
- Subject: What is "Amateur Radio"?
-
- In article <cmatthew.2.0@wpo.uwsuper.edu> cmatthew@wpo.uwsuper.edu (CHARLES R. MATTHEW) writes:
- > Somone askes you "What is Amateur Radio?", can you give them an answer
- >they will understand? Well that's what I have the most trouble with,
- >explaning what ham radio is. And now for a speech class I'm giving a speech
- >on ham radio. The basis is to explanin in lang terms what it is. And I'm
- >having trouble ounce again. So I'm asking you if you could give me your
- >difinition of "Amateur Radio", any lenght. If you can find it in a book,
- >send that along to.
-
- Amateur radio is a group of volunteer non-commercial activities related
- to each other by the use of radio waves. It's a place for exploration
- and experimentation. It's a place for self-instruction. It's a place
- for public service. It's a place to meet new and interesting people.
- It's a place for fun.
-
- Gary
-
- --
- Gary Coffman KE4ZV | You make it, | gatech!wa4mei!ke4zv!gary
- Destructive Testing Systems | we break it. | emory!kd4nc!ke4zv!gary
- 534 Shannon Way | Guaranteed! | gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us
- Lawrenceville, GA 30244 | |
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 15 Oct 1994 02:46:11 GMT
- From: jnormandin@umassd.edu (JERRY NORMANDIN)
- Subject: WTB: Radar gun...
-
- In article <4212@dsinet>, daveb@dgtl.com (David Breneman) writes:
- >JERRY NORMANDIN (jnormandin@umassd.edu) wrote:
- >: In article <373pj9$600@news.it.gvsu.edu>, hutchine@river.it.gvsu.edu (E.Hutchinson-N8XHP) writes:
- >: > I am looking to purchase a CHEAP, USED radar gun...X or K band
- >: >is not important. Wanted to take surveys in the area for school project.
- >: MAKE SURE YOU USE CAUTION WHEN YOU USE THE RADAR GUN!! THEY CAUSE CANCER!
- >: That's why Laser RADAR is now used!
- >
- >THAT'S NOT QUITE TRUE!! :-) If you drive around in a car 10-12 hours
- >a day for 10 years with a radar gun in your lap, you'll definitely
- >hard boil the ol' familial eggs. That's just natural selection at work.
- >I'll brush off the fact that there is no such thing as "Laser RADAR",
- >and comment that LIDAR accounts for only a small percentage of the
- >tax-collector's arsenal. It's cumbersome, expensive, may pose health
- >threats of its own (ie, shining coherent infrared laser light into the
- >eyes of millions of motorists year after year could be dangerous as
- >well - although not to Officer Friendly).
- >
- >
- >--
- >David Breneman Email: daveb@jaws.engineering.dgtl.com
- >System Administrator, Voice: +1 206 881-7544 Fax: +1 206 556-8033
- >Product Development Platforms
- >Digital Systems International, Inc. Redmond, Washington, U. S. o' A.
- Hows does LIDAR calculate speed? I thought Laser Doppler Radar uses DOPPLER
- Doesen't the unit have to transmit a burst of light, pick it up on a
- photodetector, and calculate the time it took? And then try again calculate the
- diffrence.
- i
- LE
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 15 Oct 1994 16:13:41 GMT
- From: georgec@onramp.net (George Csahanin)
-
- References<37e67t$nj1@news.duke.edu> <781976325snz@g4kfk.demon.co.uk>, <1994Oct13.020457.4212@walter.cray.com>
- Subject: Re: ARRL And Gay Hams Settle Complaint
-
- In article <1994Oct13.020457.4212@walter.cray.com>, tinamou@vega.cray.com (Doug Nicholson) says:
-
- >The LARC exists for the same reasons any other ARC exists. The
- >difference is that it isn't populated with the boorishly heterosexual
- >males that seem to abound among your ranks.
- >
- >Doug Nicholson
- >tinamou@cray.com
-
-
- So, what's so bad about being "boorishly heterosexual"???
-
- -G WB2DYB/5
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Info-Hams Digest V94 #1126
- ******************************
-