![]() |
|
"moth ." wrote in message
... Just to add to this, I plugged in the toaster, the microwave oven and several other appliances and the only thing that caused the socket to buzz when I key the HT is the hair dryer which is on OFF (but not reset). When I pushed the reset button with the hair dryer still off, the socket didn't buzz. I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS |
"moth ." wrote in message
... Just to add to this, I plugged in the toaster, the microwave oven and several other appliances and the only thing that caused the socket to buzz when I key the HT is the hair dryer which is on OFF (but not reset). When I pushed the reset button with the hair dryer still off, the socket didn't buzz. I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS |
"moth ." wrote in message
... Just to add to this, I plugged in the toaster, the microwave oven and several other appliances and the only thing that caused the socket to buzz when I key the HT is the hair dryer which is on OFF (but not reset). When I pushed the reset button with the hair dryer still off, the socket didn't buzz. I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS |
"NO SPAM" wrote in message erio.net...
"moth ." wrote in message ... Just to add to this, I plugged in the toaster, the microwave oven and several other appliances and the only thing that caused the socket to buzz when I key the HT is the hair dryer which is on OFF (but not reset). When I pushed the reset button with the hair dryer still off, the socket didn't buzz. I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA |
"NO SPAM" wrote in message erio.net...
"moth ." wrote in message ... Just to add to this, I plugged in the toaster, the microwave oven and several other appliances and the only thing that caused the socket to buzz when I key the HT is the hair dryer which is on OFF (but not reset). When I pushed the reset button with the hair dryer still off, the socket didn't buzz. I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA |
"NO SPAM" wrote in message erio.net...
"moth ." wrote in message ... Just to add to this, I plugged in the toaster, the microwave oven and several other appliances and the only thing that caused the socket to buzz when I key the HT is the hair dryer which is on OFF (but not reset). When I pushed the reset button with the hair dryer still off, the socket didn't buzz. I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA |
"Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message
m... "NO SPAM" wrote in message erio.net... "moth ." wrote in message ... Just to add to this, I plugged in the toaster, the microwave oven and several other appliances and the only thing that caused the socket to buzz when I key the HT is the hair dryer which is on OFF (but not reset). When I pushed the reset button with the hair dryer still off, the socket didn't buzz. I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living. I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. NS |
"Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message
m... "NO SPAM" wrote in message erio.net... "moth ." wrote in message ... Just to add to this, I plugged in the toaster, the microwave oven and several other appliances and the only thing that caused the socket to buzz when I key the HT is the hair dryer which is on OFF (but not reset). When I pushed the reset button with the hair dryer still off, the socket didn't buzz. I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living. I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. NS |
"Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message
m... "NO SPAM" wrote in message erio.net... "moth ." wrote in message ... Just to add to this, I plugged in the toaster, the microwave oven and several other appliances and the only thing that caused the socket to buzz when I key the HT is the hair dryer which is on OFF (but not reset). When I pushed the reset button with the hair dryer still off, the socket didn't buzz. I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living. I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. NS |
" I would like to understand exactly what
internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! Oh, sorry. Well, - first, check if anything is plugged into the socket. (Very important - stops spawning of silly theories from newsgroups participants) See if noise vanishes when object removed. If it does, then socket not faulty and radio problem solved. Go to Alt.Electronics.Hairdryers and post hairdryer fault question so hairdryer experts can offer plausible explanation. As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living.I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. Certainly, "not all" is simple - thats why we have people studying quantum mechanics. And one of the things you learn very early in electronics (or , indeed, any other field) is that a rocket science approach is usually not necessary - try the simple things first. As for the reason the hairdryer was making buzzing noises - who cares....... but if you are REALLY, REALLY interested and have lots of time on your hands, nothing more meaningful do do with your life, then there are countless ways you can hypothesise(sp) but until you get your hands on the actual hairdryer they are just that, idle speculation. And really, if there wasnt a single working hairdryer on the planet, would it bother you all that much? And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. |
" I would like to understand exactly what
internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! Oh, sorry. Well, - first, check if anything is plugged into the socket. (Very important - stops spawning of silly theories from newsgroups participants) See if noise vanishes when object removed. If it does, then socket not faulty and radio problem solved. Go to Alt.Electronics.Hairdryers and post hairdryer fault question so hairdryer experts can offer plausible explanation. As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living.I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. Certainly, "not all" is simple - thats why we have people studying quantum mechanics. And one of the things you learn very early in electronics (or , indeed, any other field) is that a rocket science approach is usually not necessary - try the simple things first. As for the reason the hairdryer was making buzzing noises - who cares....... but if you are REALLY, REALLY interested and have lots of time on your hands, nothing more meaningful do do with your life, then there are countless ways you can hypothesise(sp) but until you get your hands on the actual hairdryer they are just that, idle speculation. And really, if there wasnt a single working hairdryer on the planet, would it bother you all that much? And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. |
" I would like to understand exactly what
internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! Oh, sorry. Well, - first, check if anything is plugged into the socket. (Very important - stops spawning of silly theories from newsgroups participants) See if noise vanishes when object removed. If it does, then socket not faulty and radio problem solved. Go to Alt.Electronics.Hairdryers and post hairdryer fault question so hairdryer experts can offer plausible explanation. As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living.I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. Certainly, "not all" is simple - thats why we have people studying quantum mechanics. And one of the things you learn very early in electronics (or , indeed, any other field) is that a rocket science approach is usually not necessary - try the simple things first. As for the reason the hairdryer was making buzzing noises - who cares....... but if you are REALLY, REALLY interested and have lots of time on your hands, nothing more meaningful do do with your life, then there are countless ways you can hypothesise(sp) but until you get your hands on the actual hairdryer they are just that, idle speculation. And really, if there wasnt a single working hairdryer on the planet, would it bother you all that much? And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. |
"Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message om... " I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! Oh, sorry. Well, - first, check if anything is plugged into the socket. (Very important - stops spawning of silly theories from newsgroups participants) See if noise vanishes when object removed. If it does, then socket not faulty and radio problem solved. Go to Alt.Electronics.Hairdryers and post hairdryer fault question so hairdryer experts can offer plausible explanation. As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living.I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. Certainly, "not all" is simple - thats why we have people studying quantum mechanics. And one of the things you learn very early in electronics (or , indeed, any other field) is that a rocket science approach is usually not necessary - try the simple things first. As for the reason the hairdryer was making buzzing noises - who cares....... but if you are REALLY, REALLY interested and have lots of time on your hands, nothing more meaningful do do with your life, then there are countless ways you can hypothesise(sp) but until you get your hands on the actual hairdryer they are just that, idle speculation. And really, if there wasnt a single working hairdryer on the planet, would it bother you all that much? And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. YEAH, the guy was asking what the problem was, NOT ME... SO GO **** YOURSELF. NS |
"Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message om... " I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! Oh, sorry. Well, - first, check if anything is plugged into the socket. (Very important - stops spawning of silly theories from newsgroups participants) See if noise vanishes when object removed. If it does, then socket not faulty and radio problem solved. Go to Alt.Electronics.Hairdryers and post hairdryer fault question so hairdryer experts can offer plausible explanation. As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living.I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. Certainly, "not all" is simple - thats why we have people studying quantum mechanics. And one of the things you learn very early in electronics (or , indeed, any other field) is that a rocket science approach is usually not necessary - try the simple things first. As for the reason the hairdryer was making buzzing noises - who cares....... but if you are REALLY, REALLY interested and have lots of time on your hands, nothing more meaningful do do with your life, then there are countless ways you can hypothesise(sp) but until you get your hands on the actual hairdryer they are just that, idle speculation. And really, if there wasnt a single working hairdryer on the planet, would it bother you all that much? And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. YEAH, the guy was asking what the problem was, NOT ME... SO GO **** YOURSELF. NS |
"Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message om... " I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! Oh, sorry. Well, - first, check if anything is plugged into the socket. (Very important - stops spawning of silly theories from newsgroups participants) See if noise vanishes when object removed. If it does, then socket not faulty and radio problem solved. Go to Alt.Electronics.Hairdryers and post hairdryer fault question so hairdryer experts can offer plausible explanation. As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living.I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. Certainly, "not all" is simple - thats why we have people studying quantum mechanics. And one of the things you learn very early in electronics (or , indeed, any other field) is that a rocket science approach is usually not necessary - try the simple things first. As for the reason the hairdryer was making buzzing noises - who cares....... but if you are REALLY, REALLY interested and have lots of time on your hands, nothing more meaningful do do with your life, then there are countless ways you can hypothesise(sp) but until you get your hands on the actual hairdryer they are just that, idle speculation. And really, if there wasnt a single working hairdryer on the planet, would it bother you all that much? And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. YEAH, the guy was asking what the problem was, NOT ME... SO GO **** YOURSELF. NS |
"NO SPAM" wrote in message news:...
"Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message om... " I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! Oh, sorry. Well, - first, check if anything is plugged into the socket. (Very important - stops spawning of silly theories from newsgroups participants) See if noise vanishes when object removed. If it does, then socket not faulty and radio problem solved. Go to Alt.Electronics.Hairdryers and post hairdryer fault question so hairdryer experts can offer plausible explanation. As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living.I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. Certainly, "not all" is simple - thats why we have people studying quantum mechanics. And one of the things you learn very early in electronics (or , indeed, any other field) is that a rocket science approach is usually not necessary - try the simple things first. As for the reason the hairdryer was making buzzing noises - who cares....... but if you are REALLY, REALLY interested and have lots of time on your hands, nothing more meaningful do do with your life, then there are countless ways you can hypothesise(sp) but until you get your hands on the actual hairdryer they are just that, idle speculation. And really, if there wasnt a single working hairdryer on the planet, would it bother you all that much? And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. YEAH, the guy was asking what the problem was, NOT ME... SO GO **** YOURSELF. NS Furthermore, you couldn't answer his question, so you just blew him off to another group. SMOOTH MOVE - EXLAX........ **** happens when you jump in over your head. YOU ARE SO FULL OF BULL ****. I HAVE A LIFE - and I'm not going to waste another minute arguing with a waste of your parents cum and egg. YOU are banished from my list. DICK HEAD.. NS |
"NO SPAM" wrote in message news:...
"Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message om... " I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! Oh, sorry. Well, - first, check if anything is plugged into the socket. (Very important - stops spawning of silly theories from newsgroups participants) See if noise vanishes when object removed. If it does, then socket not faulty and radio problem solved. Go to Alt.Electronics.Hairdryers and post hairdryer fault question so hairdryer experts can offer plausible explanation. As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living.I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. Certainly, "not all" is simple - thats why we have people studying quantum mechanics. And one of the things you learn very early in electronics (or , indeed, any other field) is that a rocket science approach is usually not necessary - try the simple things first. As for the reason the hairdryer was making buzzing noises - who cares....... but if you are REALLY, REALLY interested and have lots of time on your hands, nothing more meaningful do do with your life, then there are countless ways you can hypothesise(sp) but until you get your hands on the actual hairdryer they are just that, idle speculation. And really, if there wasnt a single working hairdryer on the planet, would it bother you all that much? And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. YEAH, the guy was asking what the problem was, NOT ME... SO GO **** YOURSELF. NS Furthermore, you couldn't answer his question, so you just blew him off to another group. SMOOTH MOVE - EXLAX........ **** happens when you jump in over your head. YOU ARE SO FULL OF BULL ****. I HAVE A LIFE - and I'm not going to waste another minute arguing with a waste of your parents cum and egg. YOU are banished from my list. DICK HEAD.. NS |
"NO SPAM" wrote in message news:...
"Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message om... " I would like to understand exactly what internally in the socket is causing that buzz which is extremely loud. Does anyone know? Thanks for your responses to my thread. I defer to the "expert" - can hardly wait to hear the rest of the story. Go ahead Andrew! Lets hear it........ NS What the F**** are you raving on about - all I suggested was simple, basic observational fault finding would be a good place to start - if you want to make it complicated, then you are not doing this sort of thing to make a living! Andrew VK3BFA You didn't tell the man what he wants to know about the rest of it, so since you have all the freaking knowledge, let's hear it! If it is so freaking simple that he could "look" at it, then how come he needs to ask? SO, GUIDE HIM, HELP HIM "SEE" IT. Don't answer me, help the man! Oh, sorry. Well, - first, check if anything is plugged into the socket. (Very important - stops spawning of silly theories from newsgroups participants) See if noise vanishes when object removed. If it does, then socket not faulty and radio problem solved. Go to Alt.Electronics.Hairdryers and post hairdryer fault question so hairdryer experts can offer plausible explanation. As for my experience and income ability, it's none of your business. Has nothing to do with this post. Hams who are not EMPLOYED in electronics fields often have more RF experience than some 2 way radio techs out there who deal with it FOR a living.I'm just saying NOT ALL is so simple as to "JUST" look at it. Certainly, "not all" is simple - thats why we have people studying quantum mechanics. And one of the things you learn very early in electronics (or , indeed, any other field) is that a rocket science approach is usually not necessary - try the simple things first. As for the reason the hairdryer was making buzzing noises - who cares....... but if you are REALLY, REALLY interested and have lots of time on your hands, nothing more meaningful do do with your life, then there are countless ways you can hypothesise(sp) but until you get your hands on the actual hairdryer they are just that, idle speculation. And really, if there wasnt a single working hairdryer on the planet, would it bother you all that much? And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. YEAH, the guy was asking what the problem was, NOT ME... SO GO **** YOURSELF. NS Furthermore, you couldn't answer his question, so you just blew him off to another group. SMOOTH MOVE - EXLAX........ **** happens when you jump in over your head. YOU ARE SO FULL OF BULL ****. I HAVE A LIFE - and I'm not going to waste another minute arguing with a waste of your parents cum and egg. YOU are banished from my list. DICK HEAD.. NS |
"NO SPAM" wrote in message . verio.net...
"NO SPAM" wrote in message news:... "Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message om... And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. YEAH, the guy was asking what the problem was, NOT ME... SO GO **** YOURSELF. NS Furthermore, you couldn't answer his question, so you just blew him off to another group. SMOOTH MOVE - EXLAX........ **** happens when you jump in over your head. YOU ARE SO FULL OF BULL ****. I HAVE A LIFE - and I'm not going to waste another minute arguing with a waste of your parents cum and egg. YOU are banished from my list. DICK HEAD.. NS Thank you, NS - I DO enjoy conversations with the literate and articulate! 73 de VK3BFA "never argue with an idiot - they drag you down to their level and beat you with experience" Anon. |
"NO SPAM" wrote in message . verio.net...
"NO SPAM" wrote in message news:... "Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message om... And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. YEAH, the guy was asking what the problem was, NOT ME... SO GO **** YOURSELF. NS Furthermore, you couldn't answer his question, so you just blew him off to another group. SMOOTH MOVE - EXLAX........ **** happens when you jump in over your head. YOU ARE SO FULL OF BULL ****. I HAVE A LIFE - and I'm not going to waste another minute arguing with a waste of your parents cum and egg. YOU are banished from my list. DICK HEAD.. NS Thank you, NS - I DO enjoy conversations with the literate and articulate! 73 de VK3BFA "never argue with an idiot - they drag you down to their level and beat you with experience" Anon. |
"NO SPAM" wrote in message . verio.net...
"NO SPAM" wrote in message news:... "Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message om... And my remarks were addressed to you - I was asking you to question your own problem solving methodology (in case you hadnt noticed, the problem HAD been solved ages ago). Anything else you want to get ****ty about? de VK3BFA Andrew. YEAH, the guy was asking what the problem was, NOT ME... SO GO **** YOURSELF. NS Furthermore, you couldn't answer his question, so you just blew him off to another group. SMOOTH MOVE - EXLAX........ **** happens when you jump in over your head. YOU ARE SO FULL OF BULL ****. I HAVE A LIFE - and I'm not going to waste another minute arguing with a waste of your parents cum and egg. YOU are banished from my list. DICK HEAD.. NS Thank you, NS - I DO enjoy conversations with the literate and articulate! 73 de VK3BFA "never argue with an idiot - they drag you down to their level and beat you with experience" Anon. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
In article ,
wrote: Has it been established that the buzzing is in the socket? How about operating the dryer at the end of an extension cord, both tripped and reset, to see if the buzzing follows the dryer plug or stays with the socket? Good point. A lot of hair dryers have a GFCI built right into their plug, so that they can be used with reasonable safety around water even if the wall socket is not itself protected by a GFCI. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
In article ,
wrote: Has it been established that the buzzing is in the socket? How about operating the dryer at the end of an extension cord, both tripped and reset, to see if the buzzing follows the dryer plug or stays with the socket? Good point. A lot of hair dryers have a GFCI built right into their plug, so that they can be used with reasonable safety around water even if the wall socket is not itself protected by a GFCI. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
In article ,
wrote: Has it been established that the buzzing is in the socket? How about operating the dryer at the end of an extension cord, both tripped and reset, to see if the buzzing follows the dryer plug or stays with the socket? Good point. A lot of hair dryers have a GFCI built right into their plug, so that they can be used with reasonable safety around water even if the wall socket is not itself protected by a GFCI. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
I'm not a he. I'm a woman. I think I will cut my hair off like Yentl did
in the movie since this hair dryer story has caused all of this commotion :-) I tried the hair dryer in every socket in the house. The only one it buzzes in are the two in the kitchen. So, it's not just one socket, in fact, I don't think it's faulty sockets at all but rather the proximity to the antenna. I really appreciate your explanations and will print out these posts to show someone when they come over to troubleshoot, preferably another ham this time rather than my building staff. I'll come back here when I decide to sell a closet full of tubes and equipment that my father left behind. Thanks again to Andrew, NoSpam and everyone else who took the time to reply. Hair today, gone tomorrow, LOL..73 |
I'm not a he. I'm a woman. I think I will cut my hair off like Yentl did
in the movie since this hair dryer story has caused all of this commotion :-) I tried the hair dryer in every socket in the house. The only one it buzzes in are the two in the kitchen. So, it's not just one socket, in fact, I don't think it's faulty sockets at all but rather the proximity to the antenna. I really appreciate your explanations and will print out these posts to show someone when they come over to troubleshoot, preferably another ham this time rather than my building staff. I'll come back here when I decide to sell a closet full of tubes and equipment that my father left behind. Thanks again to Andrew, NoSpam and everyone else who took the time to reply. Hair today, gone tomorrow, LOL..73 |
I'm not a he. I'm a woman. I think I will cut my hair off like Yentl did
in the movie since this hair dryer story has caused all of this commotion :-) I tried the hair dryer in every socket in the house. The only one it buzzes in are the two in the kitchen. So, it's not just one socket, in fact, I don't think it's faulty sockets at all but rather the proximity to the antenna. I really appreciate your explanations and will print out these posts to show someone when they come over to troubleshoot, preferably another ham this time rather than my building staff. I'll come back here when I decide to sell a closet full of tubes and equipment that my father left behind. Thanks again to Andrew, NoSpam and everyone else who took the time to reply. Hair today, gone tomorrow, LOL..73 |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:08 PM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com