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#11
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90% of the listings on this NG are the EBAY pros advertising their listings.
I would hardly think your questions would be any more out of place. Phil "JimC" wrote in message et... I'm not sure whether I qualify to post notes on this newsgroups, since I don't know what qualifies as a boat anchor radio. I'm interested in general coverage receiving, but I'm not a Ham and haven't got into transcievers or transmitting stations. - I have a Realistic DX-160, bought recently from Ebay, and also a Radio Shack portable similar to the Sangean ATS-909. Is this group directed only to HAM radio, or would general DX receivers also qualify? I would guess that my small portable wouldn't, but I'm not sure about the DX-160? Can anyone tell me what whether general DX receiving would be within the general subject matter of the ng? Thanks, Jim Cate |
#12
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"PJ" ) writes:
90% of the listings on this NG are the EBAY pros advertising their listings. I would hardly think your questions would be any more out of place. Phil To ask whether it fits isn't quite off-topic, but there is indeed a distinct difference between this newsgroup and rec.radio.shortwave where the actual questions would belong. The fact that there is junk here is not an excuse to let more junk in. And of course, one could balance the junk with actual on-topic posts. Michael VE2BVW "JimC" wrote in message et... I'm not sure whether I qualify to post notes on this newsgroups, since I don't know what qualifies as a boat anchor radio. I'm interested in general coverage receiving, but I'm not a Ham and haven't got into transcievers or transmitting stations. - I have a Realistic DX-160, bought recently from Ebay, and also a Radio Shack portable similar to the Sangean ATS-909. Is this group directed only to HAM radio, or would general DX receivers also qualify? I would guess that my small portable wouldn't, but I'm not sure about the DX-160? Can anyone tell me what whether general DX receiving would be within the general subject matter of the ng? Thanks, Jim Cate |
#13
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How do you keep the spouse from not seeing the FedEx truck, that's my
problem.......... -- Regards, Gary...WZ1M "geek" wrote in message news ![]() On Fri, 02 Feb 2007 02:40:49 +0000, COLIN LAMB wrote: The true determination is generally made by your spouse. If you can walk in the front door with it, without your spouse asking "and what are you planning to do with that?", it is not a boat anchor. Boat anchors are brought in during the night or on long weekends. That is CLASSIC! :-) Cheers, Gregg |
#14
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Look up the FedEx Delivery time. Give the Spouse a gift certifiacte to the
mall (a just because gift), you and I both know she will be gone for hours. Get a buddy to help haul in the BA. Conceal the BA in the basement, attic, or wherever. When she finds it and she will, state your keeping it for Joe, Sam whoever. Works every time. (;-) CL "gkb" wrote in message ... How do you keep the spouse from not seeing the FedEx truck, that's my problem.......... -- Regards, Gary...WZ1M "geek" wrote in message news ![]() On Fri, 02 Feb 2007 02:40:49 +0000, COLIN LAMB wrote: The true determination is generally made by your spouse. If you can walk in the front door with it, without your spouse asking "and what are you planning to do with that?", it is not a boat anchor. Boat anchors are brought in during the night or on long weekends. That is CLASSIC! :-) Cheers, Gregg |
#15
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"How do you keep the spouse from not seeing the FedEx truck, that's my
problem.........." Well, if you work, you can have FedEX drop the package off at work (done that). Then, hide the package in the covered pickup and bring it home and wait until your spouse is asleep to cart it in. At some point, after studying and perfecting The Shadows techniqe of mind clouding, your spouse will not see the FedEx truck. In the end, my wife has given up and simply makes comments on occasion to let me know that her mind is not clouded. The only problem I have is when my wife goes on a retreat for a weekend with her girl friends. Her friends all tell her how they control their husband and they do not tolerate anything lke she does. It is not intentional or malicious that they do this, just they are using their husbands for their personal welfare rather than mutual welfare. It sometimes takes 2 or 3 weeks before I have convinced my wife that indeed I am a better husband with all of the junk than they are without. I have to convince her that the other women indeed do not love their husband and indeed their husbands have other faults which I do not have. Sometimes I sweat a bit for the first few days as I have to come up with all of their faults and my qualities. We have been married for 28 years and I do have a 150 foot tower with numerous wire antennas going every which direction, so I have no complaints. It does require constant vigil, though. 73, Colin K7FM |
#16
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On Feb 1, 9:40 pm, "COLIN LAMB" wrote:
I cannot tell you all my secrets, but I can now get one or two boxes a week without more than a mutter from my wife. It is based upon years of practice and honing a fine art. Some ideas I read about: 1) Bring purchase home in trunk of car. Under cover of darkness, move purchase from car to basement window well. Open basement window and bring purchase inside. (Only works with basement shacks near openable windows) 2) Keep large trash can in basement. Make a big show of how much useless stuff you are getting rid of each trash day. Bring purchase home in trunk of car. Under cover of darkness, after trash day, while retrieving empty can, put purchase into can and bring into basement. (Only works with basement shacks) 3) Mail parts and small purchases to yourself, with computer-made official-looking labels from ham rig makers. Labels should say "FREE SAMPLE" and "FOR EVALUATION BY (your call)". Helps to include official- looking questionnaire and return envelope. (Only works with small items in new condition) 4) Dismantle purchase at friend's house. Bring parts into house using various methods listed above. Mix in with parts stock, which must be big enough that additions are undetectable. Reassemble gradually so it takes shape slowly and is not noticed. "And I built it myself from parts I had on hand". (Works best with kits and homebrew that need restoring anyway). 5) Sell 3 or 4 big things that you don't use and which are virtually worthless, in order to buy one thing you really want. Helps to have lots of useless big things around for such deals. 6) Deny, deny, deny. "That? I've always had that. Got it at the Podunk Hollow hamfest in 1998. Cost over $700 new, I got a deal for less than $50. You just never noticed it before." 7) Ham friend comes over, drops purchase off at your house. Says he's moving, vacationing, having work done to his house, etc., and would you hold onto the thing "for a while" so it won't get dirty, lost or damaged? (Works best if ham friend does you, or better yet 'hon', a bunch of non-ham-radio favors, so you owe him several favors back, and can't refuse him. Meanwhile you've done the same things for *him*, so he can do the same deal.) The following three can only be used once, so save them for that dream purchase. 8) If you only have permission to buy one thing, but want two things, have "radio store" (ham friend) send you both. Call "radio store" on phone and complain about second item sent to you "by mistake". Spend a lot of time on phone trying to convince them it's *their* mistake, that you refuse to pay for the item, it's not on your credit-card bill, etc. Finally have "radio store" send you official-looking apology letter saying they're sorry, they discovered the mistake, and you can just keep the second item for free as a goodwill gesture from them. (Helps to practice one- sided phone conversations by listening to old Bob Newhart routines). 9) Bring purchase into house when no one is home. Wrap up in unlabeled, dusty, old, cardboard box. Hide in unusual place, away from your ham gear - attic if shack is in basement, garage, etc. Bury it under stuff that hasn't been disturbed in a long time, and won't be normally moved. After a suitable time has elapsed, get family to do "housecleaning". Best if someone else discovers box. You act surprised, overjoyed, cradle unit in your arms, tell family you thought it was lost years ago and you thought it was gone forever, you'd never see it again, etc. Long detailed story of how you delivered papers for three years to save up for it helps. (Only works with old items that you could have once owned). 10) Go to hamfest. Don't buy a thing (officially) - better yet, sell a bunch of stuff. Leave early. That night, receive phone call from excited ham friend telling you that you won the grand prize in the doorprize/raffle. Pick up "grand prize" (your purchase) at his house - which you dropped off there on the way home. (Only works with new items. Mad scramble looking for raffle ticket stubs in car, clothing, etc., with heroic rescue just before they go in the washing machine, helps divert attention). -- Not that I've actually *done* any of the above, mind you. Wouldn't dream of it. Not me! Just something I read somewhere - QST about 1970. Yeah, QST....that's the ticket. Yup, QST. 73 de Jim, N2EY No, really - there *was* such an article. I'm not making this up. Honest. It was when QST was still in the small format. Had the raffle ticket thing and all. You can look it up. Would I lie? |
#17
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Sorry to hear of all the trials and tribulations you guys have,
sometimes. Things are a bit different, here. If I dwell too long on an item at a hamfest or show a genuine interest in some radio gem in QST, the XYL will go back and buy it. Well, truth told, she generally asks first, but not always. My stuff comes through the front door in broad daylight, unless its just too heavy. If that's the case, she'll help and unlock the basement door.......... I had to use her SUV to get my T-368 home. No foolin'!! de K3HVG |
#18
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Good work Jim. You exposed some of my secrets, but I got some new ones.
Colin K7FM |
#19
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There is always someone who has it better - but we cannot dwell on that.
I thought I had it pretty good, but I go over to my neighbor's house one hot summer day and he is in a lawn chair under a tree sipping on some lemonade. His wife is at the bottom of a 5 foot hole at the end of a shovel, getting it ready for pouring the concrete for his new tower. His son and his wife had done all of the digging. Another ham in England reported to me that his wife climbed a tall tree to install the wire antenna and she does all the antenna work for him. But, volunteering the SUV for a T-368 is pretty good, too - that is a ship or fleet anchor. 73, Colin K7FM |
#20
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In message k.net,
COLIN LAMB writes Another ham in England reported to me that his wife climbed a tall tree to install the wire antenna and she does all the antenna work for him. Yes were are quite well looked after over here, my wife bought me a 60 foot tower as a birthday present and allows me two rooms and the attic for the shack and store room!!!!!!!!!! -- Bill G8IAY |
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