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#1
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Joaquin Tall wrote:
Hello All, I have just gotten my tech license and am eager to get my station up and running. I am starting on a shoestring; currently, I have no equipment whatsoever and don't know what I should buy just yet. In absence of a rig, I am now studying to pass my General license exam next month. I am very interested in building my own HF/VHF/UHF antennas. I've seen the ARRL books, but I was hoping that you good folks might have some favorite websites, book titles or magazine issues [old or new] that you'd be willing to pass along that could get me started. Many thanks for taking the time to respond! 73's to you all! Alain...San Diego Alain Here is one of the best single sources on the net, L. B. Cebik. Worthwhile reading, and lots of it, about antennas of all types, and a lot more besides. Did I get the commas correct Richard? http://www.cebik.com/radio.html tom K0TAR |
#2
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On Fri, 02 Feb 2007 18:15:19 -0600, Tom Ring
wrote: Did I get the commas correct Richard? No. Commas can be used to clear cloudy sentences. You did that in the first sentence, but you also had the suggestion of a comma splice later. Proper usage would have been to replace it with a semicolon, or eliminate it (break the splice) to make another sentence. However the second sentence is not a sentence, much less two of them. There is no predicate. So discussion of proper comma usage is largely moot. I am sure most followed the thoughts through to completion without a blip in understanding. English is quite flexible in that regard. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#3
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Richard Clark wrote:
On Fri, 02 Feb 2007 18:15:19 -0600, Tom Ring wrote: Did I get the commas correct Richard? No. Commas can be used to clear cloudy sentences. You did that in the first sentence, but you also had the suggestion of a comma splice later. Proper usage would have been to replace it with a semicolon, or eliminate it (break the splice) to make another sentence. However the second sentence is not a sentence, much less two of them. There is no predicate. So discussion of proper comma usage is largely moot. I am sure most followed the thoughts through to completion without a blip in understanding. English is quite flexible in that regard. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Well, I knew it was botched up, since I botched it intentionally, which is why I asked. I was sure that you would have an answer worth reading. ![]() I am curious as to why I seldom see my own posts, and even then only after a long delay, while I get most others almost immediately. Obviously my post showed on your news server within minutes of my sending it. I still haven't seen it here. tom K0TAR |
#4
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On Fri, 02 Feb 2007 19:26:27 -0600, Tom Ring
wrote: Well, I knew it was botched up, since I botched it intentionally, which is why I asked. I was sure that you would have an answer worth reading. ![]() Hi Tom, Commas are a recent invention for language and quotation marks even more modern. One writer, outraged by his publisher's demand that he use punctuation put them all at the end of his book and invited readers to draw from them and season his words as they pleased. I am curious as to why I seldom see my own posts, and even then only after a long delay, while I get most others almost immediately. Obviously my post showed on your news server within minutes of my sending it. I still haven't seen it here. NNTP feeds are a strange thing. I'm surprised that it works. There have been years when I had to wait quite long to see my own posts. I am also surprised how computers can flip their bits a billion times a second, and manage to not get lost (so often). 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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