From: on Nov 27, 7:21 am
wrote:
From: on Sat, Nov 26 2005 4:49 pm
Dave Heil wrote:
wrote:
From: on Tues, Nov 22 2005 8:12 pm
Hmmm...not a brand I recognize in this corner of the USA. The
"Newman's Own" line of food products may not be popular farther
east in the USA? I've tried "Newman's Own" Ranch dressing but
personally prefer the "Hidden Valley" brand for Ranch dressing.
I had you pegged as a "Hidden Agenda" man.
Says "Sun-dried Tomato" from WV.
Squash him before he spoils everything...
Too late. He's gone balsamic on us.
...forever sour and bitter... :-)
That may have been the topic in the cozy lodge or it may have been your
tiny, old, dusty Johnson. That Anderson Powerpole bit may be a bit of
self-aggrandizement on your part.
Everyone seems to have "thier" own opinion on the subject.
"Obvioulsy"
Anyway, probably a better solution than a twisted pair and a wire nut.
;^)
Tsk, Davie missed the discussion on Anderson PowerPole connectors
for mobile and portable radio installations that went on for
quite a while in rec.radio.amateur.homebrew. I think he should
have jumped right in and sprinkled his usual balsamic vinegar
in there...showing everyone his mighty radioness... :-)
Marinated herring is pretty good with rye bread, but kippers
became the IN thing for breakfast in jolly old UK. The British
Isles had the blue face paint thing. See the fictious film
biography of Scotsman William Wallace in "Braveheart."
That wasn't factual?
Names and dates were correct. The rest is up to history buffs
of the northern British Isles...
Heil wishes to have all who disagree with him drawn and quartered
in the manner of William Wallace? [with the five remaining body
parts buried in far-distant locations?]
Is there a CQ WWW this weekend? Never heard of it.
:-)
Maybe John Dorr could shed some light on your "assertion of fact."
Don't let the Dorr hit Davie's assertion on the way out...
A free issue of World Radio magazine showed up in my mail last week.
One editorial had some interesting things to say about emergency comms
(or is that "coms?") being incompatible with a rtty contest.
shrug Morse code MUST shine forever and ever just as it did
in 1912. Radio amateurs have always been first responders in
each and every emergency/disaster with their miraculous CW
rigs that managed to survive when the entire infrastructure of
commercial/professional communications failed.
Ergo, cellphones are no huckin good for anything. :-)