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#1
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On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 14:25:14 GMT, John Hall
wrote: I remember years ago my dad's friend had been fiddling with his radio because it didn't work right, he "found some screws loose in those little cans, so tightened them all down". Strangely, that didn't improve things. :-) It's the first thing a lot of folks seem to do when they get the back off a radio, isn't it? -- The BBC: Licensed at public expense to spread lies. |
#2
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#4
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On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 14:13:35 -0500, "Lou"
wrote: I have a bench full of equipment and use it only to get me out of the dark, if no signal at all. Once I get past that, I use my own ears. I get far better audio. Instruments just don't cut it for "listening" audio. Lou A aging G3 friend of mine would agree with you here. He seldom resorts to anything more than a DVM and a capacitance bridge to carry out quite difficult repairs. I, OTOH, am totally stuffed without a full schematic, my 'scope, signal generator, frequency counter, spectrum analyser and just about anything else you can think of. I once knew a totally blind guy from Hastings who repaired radios without *any* test equipment or schematics, seemingly by 'feeling his way around' the circuit board and listening for appropriate responses. No way I could ever do that: incredible. And I've met many others who have similar abilities, too, over the years. -- The BBC: Licensed at public expense to spread lies. |
#5
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![]() "Paul Burridge" wrote in message ... On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 14:13:35 -0500, "Lou" wrote: I have a bench full of equipment and use it only to get me out of the dark, if no signal at all. Once I get past that, I use my own ears. I get far better audio. Instruments just don't cut it for "listening" audio. Lou A aging G3 friend of mine would agree with you here. He seldom resorts to anything more than a DVM and a capacitance bridge to carry out quite difficult repairs. I, OTOH, am totally stuffed without a full schematic, my 'scope, signal generator, frequency counter, spectrum analyser and just about anything else you can think of. I once knew a totally blind guy from Hastings who repaired radios without *any* test equipment or schematics, seemingly by 'feeling his way around' the circuit board and listening for appropriate responses. No way I could ever do that: incredible. And I've met many others who have similar abilities, too, over the years. -- The BBC: Licensed at public expense to spread lies. The blind do have a good sense about them. They have to! It is really amazing what they can do. Lou |
#6
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On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 17:07:59 -0500, Lou wrote:
"Paul Burridge" wrote in message ... On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 14:13:35 -0500, "Lou" wrote: I have a bench full of equipment and use it only to get me out of the dark, if no signal at all. Once I get past that, I use my own ears. I get far better audio. Instruments just don't cut it for "listening" audio. Lou A aging G3 friend of mine would agree with you here. He seldom resorts to anything more than a DVM and a capacitance bridge to carry out quite difficult repairs. I, OTOH, am totally stuffed without a full schematic, my 'scope, signal generator, frequency counter, spectrum analyser and just about anything else you can think of. I once knew a totally blind guy from Hastings who repaired radios without *any* test equipment or schematics, seemingly by 'feeling his way around' the circuit board and listening for appropriate responses. No way I could ever do that: incredible. And I've met many others who have similar abilities, too, over the years. -- The BBC: Licensed at public expense to spread lies. The blind do have a good sense about them. They have to! It is really amazing what they can do. Lou Reminds me of the blind guy who'd say to me, "Good morning, Mike," just from the sound of my footsteps. -- Best Regards, Mike |
#7
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On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 17:07:59 -0500, Lou wrote:
"Paul Burridge" wrote in message ... On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 14:13:35 -0500, "Lou" wrote: I have a bench full of equipment and use it only to get me out of the dark, if no signal at all. Once I get past that, I use my own ears. I get far better audio. Instruments just don't cut it for "listening" audio. Lou A aging G3 friend of mine would agree with you here. He seldom resorts to anything more than a DVM and a capacitance bridge to carry out quite difficult repairs. I, OTOH, am totally stuffed without a full schematic, my 'scope, signal generator, frequency counter, spectrum analyser and just about anything else you can think of. I once knew a totally blind guy from Hastings who repaired radios without *any* test equipment or schematics, seemingly by 'feeling his way around' the circuit board and listening for appropriate responses. No way I could ever do that: incredible. And I've met many others who have similar abilities, too, over the years. -- The BBC: Licensed at public expense to spread lies. The blind do have a good sense about them. They have to! It is really amazing what they can do. Lou Reminds me of the blind guy who'd say to me, "Good morning, Mike," just from the sound of my footsteps. -- Best Regards, Mike |
#8
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![]() "Paul Burridge" wrote in message ... On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 14:13:35 -0500, "Lou" wrote: I have a bench full of equipment and use it only to get me out of the dark, if no signal at all. Once I get past that, I use my own ears. I get far better audio. Instruments just don't cut it for "listening" audio. Lou A aging G3 friend of mine would agree with you here. He seldom resorts to anything more than a DVM and a capacitance bridge to carry out quite difficult repairs. I, OTOH, am totally stuffed without a full schematic, my 'scope, signal generator, frequency counter, spectrum analyser and just about anything else you can think of. I once knew a totally blind guy from Hastings who repaired radios without *any* test equipment or schematics, seemingly by 'feeling his way around' the circuit board and listening for appropriate responses. No way I could ever do that: incredible. And I've met many others who have similar abilities, too, over the years. -- The BBC: Licensed at public expense to spread lies. The blind do have a good sense about them. They have to! It is really amazing what they can do. Lou |
#9
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On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 14:13:35 -0500, "Lou"
wrote: I have a bench full of equipment and use it only to get me out of the dark, if no signal at all. Once I get past that, I use my own ears. I get far better audio. Instruments just don't cut it for "listening" audio. Lou A aging G3 friend of mine would agree with you here. He seldom resorts to anything more than a DVM and a capacitance bridge to carry out quite difficult repairs. I, OTOH, am totally stuffed without a full schematic, my 'scope, signal generator, frequency counter, spectrum analyser and just about anything else you can think of. I once knew a totally blind guy from Hastings who repaired radios without *any* test equipment or schematics, seemingly by 'feeling his way around' the circuit board and listening for appropriate responses. No way I could ever do that: incredible. And I've met many others who have similar abilities, too, over the years. -- The BBC: Licensed at public expense to spread lies. |
#10
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![]() "Paul Burridge" wrote in message ... On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 12:29:26 GMT, (John Crighton) wrote: I am the type that likes to use test equipment as laid down by the alignment instructions in the book. My workmate always achieved better results than me. He would say to me "Can't you hear that the tone just doesn't sound right?" I couldn't hear what he was on about. So we used to have a good laugh about my bench having signal generators to cover 455KHz, 10.7 Mhz and the desired UHF channel. Oscilloscope, noise and distortion meter, frequency meter and dummy load/power meter, modulation meter. If there was a spectrum analyser available I would have a play with that too. I just liked playing with the gear. My work mate got far more two-way radios fixed and out the door than I ever did. He was good. He had the ear for it and magic hands. Hi John, Some people just seem to have an almost supernatural ability to do this with virtually no technical knowledge. I can't begin to tell you the extraordinary feats I've seen done IRO radio mods and tweaks by people who shouldn't, by any reasonable measure, have had an earthly clue about what they were doing! -- The BBC: Licensed at public expense to spread lies. I have a bench full of equipment and use it only to get me out of the dark, if no signal at all. Once I get past that, I use my own ears. I get far better audio. Instruments just don't cut it for "listening" audio. Lou |
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