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On Jun 28, 12:30?pm, wrote:
ARRL publishes a wide range of books and periodicals, has the Maxim Memorial station on the air every day, sponsors a wide variety of contests and operating activities, is present at most major hamfests, is constantly involved with FCC, has the QSL bureau, ARRL VEC, and a host of other things, all amateur radio related. One more thing ARRL does: in-depth, Consumer-Reports-style Product Reviews. The ARRL Lab runs Amateur-Radio-related products through a wide variety of independent lab tests and on-the-air operating environments, and publishes detailed reports of the results. They've been that sort of review for over 25 years, and the Product Reviews from all that time are available to members free. Want to know the difference between a TS-950SD and a TS-950SDX, or compare them to a current- production rig? Just download the reviews. In some cases, such as the Elecraft K2, there is an expanded review at the website. The way I figure it, if a Product Review from ARRL helps me make better-informed choices, the whole cost of membership may be recouped in savings. One Maxcom Matcher situation can spare a lot of hams a lot of expense and wasted effort. (A Maxcom Matcher cost about as much as an ARRL Life Membership at the time). Yes, there are product reviews on websites like eham.net. They are valuable because they are owner's opinions and experiences. But AFAIK, nobody does extensive independent lab testing of amateur gear except ARRL. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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