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Reg, G4FGQ wrote:
"There`s far too much of old wives reading things in books and ill written radio magazines, getting the wrong ideas, and then plagiarising them." Fact and fiction are both repeated. That does not make written material unreliable. It may mean you need verification of data. Reputation of authors is based on their performance. It does not make them infallible, just usually right. Even an anecdotal tale may not repeat in your situation. Repeatibility is reasonably expected or demonstrated in some instances. It is not necessary to make all the mistakes for yourself or to find all the "bugs" yourself. Reading can help avoid failures. Education is worthwhile. T.A. Edison gave us the light bulb, the phonograph, and the movie machine. Nikola Tesla gave us powerful electrical machinery, transmission systems, and the ability to exploit alternating electrical power by appreciation of electrical principles better than others in his time. Tesla`s approach was educated and inspired by what he read in books. You can experiment like Edison (98% perspiration, 2% inspiration) or reason like Tesla. Both methods brought tremendous results. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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