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On Fri, 17 Jun 2005 21:18:26 +0000 (UTC), "Reg Edwards"
wrote: Thinking that the discussion we've been having involves 0.01 dB of gain and milliwatts of coax radiation indicates a lack of understanding of the possible magnitudes of the effects we're talking about. Roy Lewallen, W7EL ================================ Roy, quite correct. You've been reading Lord Kelvin again. ---- Reg. Are you referring to his presentation to the Royal Society on his new tide-graphing machine? It's said he was criticized for using a pencil as the recording device instad of the rcently-invented fountain pen. He answered, "There is sufficient power available in the ocean to drive a pencil." Truly a man who understood the concpt of fly crap. |
#92
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Old Ed wrote:
Hi Dan, My, you are a bit on the arrogant and foul-mouthed side, aren't you! It would be tedious to try and dissect your attributions of positions that I did not take, so I'll skip that. I'll just point out that as an E.E. with three degrees from a top-5 engineering school, and a lifelong specialization in RF engineering, I don't need any patronizing lectures from you. "Physician," heal thyself... or at least try to understand the difference between theoretical niceties and practical effects. Reading Dave's posts might help. (He's much more patient with twits than I am, and explains things well.) BTW, I have nothing against coax "baluns," unless they become physically awkward, or noticeably increase cable loss. Just catching up on things a week or so after the post you made. I suspect you have 3 EE degrees because you stated such, so you are obviously worlds smarter than I am, especially if it's from a "top 5 school", but since when does a coax choke balun cause loss of anything except feedline radiation, which you don't want anyway? Tom K0TAR |
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