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On 2014-02-18, gareth wrote:
There was a time, back inthe 1920s and 1930s, that any active device (valves in them thar days, tubes for the leftpondians) would cost nearly a week's wages for the average working man, and so it was good economical sense to try and use it as many ways as possible simultaneously. Times have changes, and active devices with performance into the tens of MegaHertz are now ten-a-penny, so what is achieved by competitions such as the "Two Transistor Challenge" where it is the costs of switching (manual, relays) which would be the major outlay? I remember my first home build radio: a earphone with just a 1N34 diode in parallel, an outdoor antenna and a good ground. Lots of listening hours of a nearby AM 1230 KHz transmiter. With a single FET regenerative receiver I could listen shorwave radios from all over the world. I like to work with very simple electronic equipment: I am reading and replying to this news group with a 20 MHz 80286, 1 MBy memmory and all programs in a 1.44 diskette (no Hard Drive). Alejandro Lieber LU1FCR Rosario Argentina -- SDF Public Access UNIX System - http://sdf.org |
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