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//sympathy flag set//
Discussion of technical subjects between some hams can be frustrating to listen to when you are accustomed to a lifetime of technical discussions and experience with a sound understanding of the basics in the field. It is indeed baffling to them, with all the seemingly black magic rules, semi-truths and misconceptions they have heard over the years. Couple this with one or two personal experiences which provide anecdotal "evidence" and you can here some truly interesting interpretations. Some of it is amusing; some is sad and some degrades to childish. A genuine interest is a jewel and when someone expresses this, it is a joy to pass along the knowledge you have gained over the years. Roy, While somewhat experienced in the field, I always enjoy your knowledgeable and clear explanations. Some are informative, some are what I already understand and some serve to affirm what I believe to be true based on some related, but not direct experience. The latter is a joy as it affirms that your (my) basics haven't failed you (me). Thanks, Keep a stiff upper, and all that. //sympathy flag cleared// (:-) 73, Steve, K9DCI Hmmm. Interesting that MSoft Word wants to convert my smiley into some obscure block character...sigh and some of it is difficult to listen to without wanting to join-in and add some correction. "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... Mike Coslo wrote: Roy Lewallen wrote: A step attenuator which is completely adequate for HF and can easily resolve 1 dB can be made from a few cheap slide switches, some PC board material, and a handful of ordinary 5% quarter watt resistors. Detailed instructions can be found in numerous sources, including the Web -- a Google search brought a large number of hits, the first of which was http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/pdf/9506033.pdf. But I'm afraid that this level of homebrewing is beyond the interest if not the ability of the majority of today's amateurs. Got it - Thanks, Roy! - 73 de Mike KB3EIA - You're very welcome. The reason for my rather grumpy comment at the end is that I've recommended countless times for many years that people interested in evaluating antennas build a simple step attenuator -- an evening project. It allows you to make direct, quantitative comparisons between two antennas -- yours or someone else's, as well as calibrate your "S" meter. But to date, I've never gotten an iota of feedback that a single person has actually taken the trouble to build one. Rather, they continue to debate, ad nauseum and without any meaningful data, whether one antenna is better than the other, or at best quote differences in "S-units" read from their meters, without the foggiest idea how many dB it might represent or how different it is from someone else's meter (or from the same meter on a different band or a different part of the scale). The conclusion I've reached is that A) Hams would much rather argue than actually determine the facts, or B) The vast majority are unable to build a homebrew project consisting of slide switches, circuit board material, and resistors. I'm afraid both are probably true. Maybe you'll be the first to actually build one. If so, please drop me an email and let me know -- it'll make my day! Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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