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On Apr 29, 3:01�pm, K�HB wrote:
Hans, What's your take on the "MIL-STD 810" compliance of some Yaesu gear? Good marketing. �MIL-STD 810 related to shock, vibration, salt sp ray, etc. It is unrelated to any "performance" criteria. The HT's involved probably have their design roots in a military contract which required that level of durability, so crediting the testing into th eir COTS product offering is good marketing practice. Good answer, Hans. Having worked 3 years in environmental testing at Hughes Aircraft (El Segundo Division) in 1956 to 1958, I've got a fair amount of experience in that. Essentially, consumer grade electronics(and some industrial grade) will simply fall apart when subjected to thefull brunt of MIL-STD-810. With newer electronics becoming more compact there is less mass to be affected by shock and vibration, will survive better than big clunkyold electronics. Designers don't go full bore on temperature testing of circuits for lower-grade environment products so those can fail there. Salt spraywon't affect plastic cases much but there are seldom any good seals betweencase and controls in amateur radio equipment. Just some general examples. I'm not saying that "all" amateur equipment will fail, only most of it if stuck with the full brunt of MIL-STD-810 testing. Handheld transceivers see most sales to professional users so it isnormal to do a releatively-simple (nowadays) frequency modification to run themon amateur frequencies. Few HTs sold to pro users get full-on 810 testing (810 has more variations now than a half century ago) so the marketing come-on phrasing of "compliance" isn't always accurate to indicate "toughness." So few here have had any experience in testing equipment under military environmental conditions that they can't talk about it with accuracy. I've seen some pros with experience survive such testing rather crestfallen with "I should have anticipated that condition" after they fished out the components that had vibrated loose at low-frequency shaking. Was I a victim of that same "should have anticipated" grouping? Yes.Back in the days of slide-rules, no calculators, I slipped a decimal point for a zener temperature compensation circuit for a voltage reference. Found it during a temperature cycling test. Went back into the log book, found the error, fixed it with an Engineering Change Request and in hardware and published it in one night's extra work (not paid for) at RCA. A few weeks later my HP-35 arrived and I double-checked my correction. :-) 73, Len K6LHA |
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