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Old September 19th 03, 09:26 AM
Harold E. Johnson
 
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I well recall Paul's wattmeter- well ( or even way) beyond what others had
done-
the engineering and documentation was superb. Looking forward to his work

on the
VNR.
I am not far from you- near Cashiers on Lake Glenville.

Dale W4OP


Hi Dale, I had no idea that you were that close. Been to Glenville many
times. Why don't you come over on the first Wednesday of any month for our
QCWA lunch. We have a very active group and actually have two meetings a
month, but the first one always has an interesting program. If it poses a
problem doing it in one day, We have a great guest apartment and I'd put you
up for a Tuesday night sort of thing. You can even play with my STAR. A
little DSP transceiver
that Peter Rhodes developed. 160-10 with superb characteristics. There are 9
of those finished now, with another half dozen in various stages of
completion just in the Beta group. I have no idea how many more are being
built
as the project continues to evolve in Radio Communications.

If you liked Paul's wattmeter, you'll be blown away with what he's done with
the VNA. Documentation itself is in 3 parts and looks like a doctoral
dissertation.

Both Paul and Bill Carver were here last month (Wish I had known you were
this close! We met Alan Victor and Jim Scarlett and his son at Shelby for
lunch) and brought their VNA's along
for a round robin test. Under 1 percent variations on the Q of a test
crystal between the units. He's added software to make it perform a half
dozen other tasks, Transmission, Reflection, Group delay and some real time
stuff. I've junked my dual crystal oscillators in the quad
shield for Ip3 tests, the VNA does it on ANY frequency. A real "Lab in a
Box". I think I've run the antenna characteristics on everybody's antennas
within a
10 mile radius.

Regards

W4ZCB