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![]() The Extra Class test (I took it in 1985) did include a question or two that required some trig, but I figured out the answer in my head before finishing the equation. It was obvious that the conjugate impedance was going to be capacitive. There was only one answer with a -j, so it was obvious that that would be the correct answer. Ed, NM2K I picked up on that too. If you didn't know what was going on there, you would be left drudging through a math problem. The thing about Trig was having to memorize all the substitutions in order to poke the problem into a manageable calculation, or you wind up losing precision. If that happens, you wont have the clear cut answer for the multiple guess. In some ways I miss tube equipment. Now I have to deal with surface mount technology. Even for a resistor, I risk putting a soldering iron up my nose while squinting through a loupe. I just dread the idea of replacing a chip with 100 legs or more. In the 70's you had to know tubes and everything else too because there was so much transition. Ham Radio magazine was my best friend, and it was an opportunity to learn the discrete versions of complex stuff like synthesizers and various issues that had to be overcome. It's all easier now. If you can figure out what a controller is supposed to do, all you have to do is make sure the rest of the components can comply. But there is so much offshore cheap junk now that almost everything is worthless to fix but cheap to modify. Except for industrial controls and things like that. But now customers are just trained to throw stuff away on a bigger scale. I get the idea that We as American citizens are not allowed to know technology any more. |
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