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#91
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![]() I replied the same places you have. jim menning You are a moron Jim. Get a clue Back OT, I always liked the look of the Allen Bradly carbon comps, really lit up the underside of an audio amp. The only drawback, other than resistance shift, I remember hearing that they were quite noisy as plate resistors. Maybe so, but there is a heap of carbon comps out there! And that comment to Jim Menning was uncalled for. Jim will forget more accidently than you will _ever_ know. Tom |
#92
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is apparently off limits for Ron. If
he drew attention to his lack of curiosity on this matter, it would hint that something is being papered over in order to conceal a point. If that were so, then a previous occurrence in Jim Truitt's career would bear mentioning, since it quite closely resembles what he did later in 1976. In August of 1961, Truitt had called Bradlee and said he had evidence that Kennedy had been previously married before his wedding to Jackie, and that this fact had been covered up. Both Bradlee and Truitt pursued the story. But before they printed it they asked Kennedy about it. He referred them to Pierre Salinger, his press secretary. Salinger had already heard the charge from rightwing commentator Fulton Lewis. He had all his points lined up and proved the story false. Bradlee's account in Conversations With Kennedy (pp. 43-49) seems to suggest that Truitt and Bradlee still worked on the story after they were shown it was wrong. Also intriguing is a flourish added in Rosenbaum's version, which appears heavily reliant on the Truitts and Angletons as sources. Rosenbaum writes that Mary's diary, although usually laid upon her bedroom bookcase, was found in a locked steel box in her studio. Rosenbaum doesn't probe as to why it was not found in its usary&resting place. The locked steel box is not a part of any other version of the story I know, including Tony Bradlee's, and, in all versions, she supposedly found the diary. Of course, a locked box suggests intrigue, but it strains reality. Are we to believe that every time Mary wanted to make |
#93
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is apparently off limits for Ron. If
he drew attention to his lack of curiosity on this matter, it would hint that something is being papered over in order to conceal a point. If that were so, then a previous occurrence in Jim Truitt's career would bear mentioning, since it quite closely resembles what he did later in 1976. In August of 1961, Truitt had called Bradlee and said he had evidence that Kennedy had been previously married before his wedding to Jackie, and that this fact had been covered up. Both Bradlee and Truitt pursued the story. But before they printed it they asked Kennedy about it. He referred them to Pierre Salinger, his press secretary. Salinger had already heard the charge from rightwing commentator Fulton Lewis. He had all his points lined up and proved the story false. Bradlee's account in Conversations With Kennedy (pp. 43-49) seems to suggest that Truitt and Bradlee still worked on the story after they were shown it was wrong. Also intriguing is a flourish added in Rosenbaum's version, which appears heavily reliant on the Truitts and Angletons as sources. Rosenbaum writes that Mary's diary, although usually laid upon her bedroom bookcase, was found in a locked steel box in her studio. Rosenbaum doesn't probe as to why it was not found in its usary&resting place. The locked steel box is not a part of any other version of the story I know, including Tony Bradlee's, and, in all versions, she supposedly found the diary. Of course, a locked box suggests intrigue, but it strains reality. Are we to believe that every time Mary wanted to make |
#94
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builds another scaffolding: he now postulates that Exner
was Kennedy's conduit to the CIA-Mafia plots to kill Castro (Ibid p. 324). What is breathtaking about this is that this is something that not even Exner had uttered yet, at least not for dissemination. And she won't until her get-together with Kitty Kelley in the February 1988 cover story for People. This curious passage leads one to think that Davis may have planted the seed from which the Kelley story sprouted. To go through the entire Davis book and correct all the errors of fact, logic, and commentary would literally take another book. But, in line with my original argument about anti-Kennedy biography, I must point out just two parts of Davis' discussion of JFK's Vietnam policy. The author devotes a small chapter to this subject. In his hands, Kennedy turns into a hawk on Vietnam. Davis writes that on July 17, 1963, Kennedy made "his last public utterance" on Vietnam, saying that the U.S. was going to stay there and win (p.374). But on September 2, 1963, in his interview with Walter Cronkite, Kennedy states that the war is the responsibility of "the people of Vietnam, against the Communists." In other words, they have to win the war, not Americans. Davis makes no mention of this. Davis similarly ignores NSAM 111 in which Kennedy refused to admit combat troops into the war, integral to any escalation plan, and NSAM 263, which ordered a withdrawal to be completed in 1965. This last was published in the New York Times (11/16/63), so Davis could have easily found it had he been looking. In light of this selective presentation of the recor |
#95
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builds another scaffolding: he now postulates that Exner
was Kennedy's conduit to the CIA-Mafia plots to kill Castro (Ibid p. 324). What is breathtaking about this is that this is something that not even Exner had uttered yet, at least not for dissemination. And she won't until her get-together with Kitty Kelley in the February 1988 cover story for People. This curious passage leads one to think that Davis may have planted the seed from which the Kelley story sprouted. To go through the entire Davis book and correct all the errors of fact, logic, and commentary would literally take another book. But, in line with my original argument about anti-Kennedy biography, I must point out just two parts of Davis' discussion of JFK's Vietnam policy. The author devotes a small chapter to this subject. In his hands, Kennedy turns into a hawk on Vietnam. Davis writes that on July 17, 1963, Kennedy made "his last public utterance" on Vietnam, saying that the U.S. was going to stay there and win (p.374). But on September 2, 1963, in his interview with Walter Cronkite, Kennedy states that the war is the responsibility of "the people of Vietnam, against the Communists." In other words, they have to win the war, not Americans. Davis makes no mention of this. Davis similarly ignores NSAM 111 in which Kennedy refused to admit combat troops into the war, integral to any escalation plan, and NSAM 263, which ordered a withdrawal to be completed in 1965. This last was published in the New York Times (11/16/63), so Davis could have easily found it had he been looking. In light of this selective presentation of the recor |
#96
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On Sat, 11 Dec 2004 18:22:44 GMT, "Jim Menning"
wrote: "Jeff C" wrote in message news ![]() You have been trolled, and duped into polluting news.admin.net-abuse.email. And you have continued the chain. No, I have educated you about what's happening and endeavoured to keep my home froup clear of clooless "WTF" postings. If you guys know the server being used, why haven't you got them to shut down this perp yet? You need to read about dippy first before you ask questions that betray your ignorance. Take care when you're posting to make certain that you post is going to where you think it is. I replied the same places you have. Which means that you have done dippy's dirty work for it. No thanks to you. |
#97
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On Sat, 11 Dec 2004 18:22:44 GMT, "Jim Menning"
wrote: "Jeff C" wrote in message news ![]() You have been trolled, and duped into polluting news.admin.net-abuse.email. And you have continued the chain. No, I have educated you about what's happening and endeavoured to keep my home froup clear of clooless "WTF" postings. If you guys know the server being used, why haven't you got them to shut down this perp yet? You need to read about dippy first before you ask questions that betray your ignorance. Take care when you're posting to make certain that you post is going to where you think it is. I replied the same places you have. Which means that you have done dippy's dirty work for it. No thanks to you. |
#98
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![]() "Bill Turner" wrote in message ... On Fri, 10 Dec 2004 23:19:17 -0800, "Ed Price" wrote: I don't know what you mean by the "life" of a carbon comp resistor. My experience is that they last forever, until you kill them somehow. Drift, under low power, hasn't been a problem for me. I have never seen 40% drifts, except for very abused parts, and if you are using the 2-watt carbon comps, you can hear or smell when you are abusing them. __________________________________________________ _______ Then you just haven't been around long enough. I worked in the TV repair industry for just under 20 years and I have replaced hundreds of carbon comp resistors which were NOT abused in any way, but failed none the less. It's an ancient design which time has passed by. Yup. I just rebuilt an old Heathkit resistor substitution box, 1966 vintage, and the resistors were absolutely wild. Some were better than double the rated value. I don't think I saw any decrease in value. None had any obvious sign of overheating. Having said that, different manufacturers' resistors held up better than others, but today, they are all doubtful. The ABs were good when they were new, the Ohmites were OK, and the IRCs were questionable from the minute they left the factory. |
#99
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![]() "Bill Turner" wrote in message ... On Fri, 10 Dec 2004 23:19:17 -0800, "Ed Price" wrote: I don't know what you mean by the "life" of a carbon comp resistor. My experience is that they last forever, until you kill them somehow. Drift, under low power, hasn't been a problem for me. I have never seen 40% drifts, except for very abused parts, and if you are using the 2-watt carbon comps, you can hear or smell when you are abusing them. __________________________________________________ _______ Then you just haven't been around long enough. I worked in the TV repair industry for just under 20 years and I have replaced hundreds of carbon comp resistors which were NOT abused in any way, but failed none the less. It's an ancient design which time has passed by. Yup. I just rebuilt an old Heathkit resistor substitution box, 1966 vintage, and the resistors were absolutely wild. Some were better than double the rated value. I don't think I saw any decrease in value. None had any obvious sign of overheating. Having said that, different manufacturers' resistors held up better than others, but today, they are all doubtful. The ABs were good when they were new, the Ohmites were OK, and the IRCs were questionable from the minute they left the factory. |
#100
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![]() "Bill Turner" wrote in message ... On Fri, 10 Dec 2004 23:19:17 -0800, "Ed Price" wrote: I don't know what you mean by the "life" of a carbon comp resistor. My experience is that they last forever, until you kill them somehow. Drift, under low power, hasn't been a problem for me. I have never seen 40% drifts, except for very abused parts, and if you are using the 2-watt carbon comps, you can hear or smell when you are abusing them. __________________________________________________ _______ Then you just haven't been around long enough. I worked in the TV repair industry for just under 20 years and I have replaced hundreds of carbon comp resistors which were NOT abused in any way, but failed none the less. It's an ancient design which time has passed by. -- Bill W6WRT I didn't know anybody repairs TV's anymore! g If you had read my entire post, you would have noticed that I wasn't endorsing carbon comps for every resistor design. Consumer electronics is better served by metal film discretes or SMT bricks. I was addressing the sweeping condemnation of carbon comps (I suppose from consumer techs with limited exposure). I suppose you might have noticed when I was talking about my using 2-watt carbon comps in pulse generators and dummy loads; you don't see much of that inside a TV. Just as IC's haven't replaced tubes in EVERY application, carbon comp resistors still are the best solution in a few instances, and I hope the technology isn't completely abandoned. Ed wb6wsn |
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