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On Feb 7, 10:42�am, Art Clemons wrote:
�I suspect that there presently isn't a ham equivalent of a Lister engine and unless somebody builds one, there won't be. Take a look at www.elecraft.com particularly the K2 and K3 transceivers. Besides for ham radio, such rigs would need spare parts and some place to work on them. �A spare radio would still be a better choice than one that can be fixed in five hours when time is of concern. Of course! But the point is to be able to use what's available. Of course if you can find or design a kit that's functional, reliable and has easy to acquire spare parts, I'ld like to try building one. See the above reference. Thousands of Elecraft rigs have been built and used, with a minimum of tools and test equipment. One other point, making rigs simple often amounts to having to limit what frequencies are covered. �It doesn't do much good to have let's say an 80M cw rig if contacts are more likely on 40M, or that's where people can hear you. Of course. But there's also the opposite extreme, where it is expected that one rig will do everything. �The Icom MKIIG and Yaesu FT-857 are relatively small, relatively reliable, run on 12 volts and are relatively simple to operate. �I have a TS50 for HF, but it's getting really long in the tooth, not sure I'ld want it as my sole rig in an emergency. � All good rigs but how reliable are they really? And how fixable? One trend I see in Amateur Radio, which IMHO isn't a good one, is the idea that ham rigs are like consumer electronics, with a useful life of maybe a decade, and "no user-serviceable parts inside". For an emergency, I would prefer one of them especially if I had several. Having several of anything is good planning in an emergency. But it's also expensive! �Switching power supplies are relatively tolerant of voltage variations produced by generators so they could be used to power such rigs assuming you have fuel available for a genset. � IMHO a better option is rigs that can run from a variety of energy sources so that you aren't tied to a genset or auto electrical system. Finally, maybe we're both ignoring the possibility that the best approach would be complicated rigs that diagnosed their own problems and indicated which module to replace or repair. �Given a collection of the modules most likely to fail, that would be the real ideal choice. The problem is that the complexity required to do that can reduce the overall reliability... I know the following is a blue-sky fantasy, but here's what I'd like to see. In the world of PCs, there are lots of standards which have evolved over time and been adopted by many different manufacturers. The result is that you can assemble, upgrade or repair most PCs made in the past 15 years or so with just a screwdriver. Wouldn't it be great if ham rigs were built the same way? 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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