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Fred Furlly wrote:
Hey! Way cool, CL! I Love trivia History. One more piece. Back around 1953, my Elmer, (Shorty, SK, W5OLV - old lousy virgin), told me that the "ham" in ham radio originated with the way English cockney amateur radio operators pronounced "'amateur" as in "ham-ateur". One note on antennas: W5OLV talked to those cockneys on 10m with an RG-11 fed 75m dipole. When I later learned that an 80m dipole used on 10m would be 4 wavelengths long, I thought Shorty was pretty ignorant. It's true that 1/2WL on 80m would be 4 wavelengths on 10m but I much later realized that 28MHz/4MHz = 7 and 7/2 = 3.5 wavelengths. As I remember, Shorty's dipole was ~117 feet long. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
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