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In article , Radio Amateur KC2HMZ
writes: Oh, you mean like "disconnecting" antenna rotor control boxes with a pair of dikes? Yes, indeed. Is that how you highly technical CW ops handle it? Wow, I'll have to suggest that to our ops next year...NOT! John: Actually, it's not as bad an idea as it sounds. We do it that way because we leave the color-coded wire ends on the control box terminals, making it easy to duplicate the setup the next time. Wiring charts tend to get lost. Now, if only I could figure out a way to make my technically- inclined fellow hams stop putting 3-element HF Yagi antennas together with the director and reflector elements reversed! And don't suggest that I number the elements and boom 1,2,3…that doesn't seem to cut any ice with them! 12 hours to set up, 2 to tear down! Amazing what you can do when gravity is working in your favor rather than against you, isn't it? That wire that took six shots with a slingshot to get over just the right tree branch comes down on the *first* try when you cut the rope, almost as if by magic! Yup, it sure does! And some idiot usually manages to get whacked by the balun when it does -- which is why we pass out the hard hats! Fortunately, I'm not that hard on my own equipment, just a bit unmotivated to get the station set back up for at least a month after Field Day. Most of my FD stuff is still in my van. However, since that's where it also spends most of the rest of the year, that's no problem. Still, I could stand to do some tidying up in the rear cargo area. Well, the living room of my apartment is my computer room/ham shack. Trust me, even on my better days, I'll never be called to do a photo spread for Better Homes and Gardens! Then again, I would have a bit of a hard time competing for QST's "Messy ham shack" contest! Since I run the digital mode station for my club, I have to take not only my radios, but my whole bloody computer system as well. Sorry to break it to you now rather than before Field Day, OM, but there now exist these wonderful little devices called laptop computers. For that matter you can do some digital stuff with a Palm handheld computer. Want a quick hundred bonus points next year? Get somebody to load the APRS software on a Palm and mate it to their HT, and demo APRS. I think there's also PSK31 software for the Palm. I've been using personal computers virtually since the day after they were invented, and never owned a laptop! One of my fellow club members brought some badly clapped-out used laptops to FD this year for logging purposes, and out of four, we got one working! Last year, our club President got his brand-new Dell laptop toasted, we don't know if it was a power surge or stray RF, but the darn thing never came back to life, and Dell couldn't fix it! For a lot of reasons, the traditional desktop systems seem to work better and tolerate a lot more rough handling than laptops. I made one concession, however, and purchased a flat-panel monitor, which is much more easily transported than my old 17" CRT monitor, which I gave away to my YL friend when hers went South. BTW, don't try it at night unless you're good with the Palm graffitti. Typing on that little Palm "keyboard" at a FD station at 3:00 in the morning is bound to make your eye doctor independently wealthy. Been there, done that, bought the t-shirt, later burned the t-shirt. :-) I prefer full-sized keyboards, since I'm something of an accomplished typist. At home, I use the best keyboard available -- a Northgate OmniKey Ultra, which I purchased in 1990 and is still going strong. It has the same key size, placement, weight, and stroke as the old- fashioned IBM Selectric typewriter keyboard. It has other features like programmable function keys, and F-keys both across the top and down the left side of the main keyboard. For FD, however, I just bring the OEM cheapie that came with my computer. At FD sites, things tend to get spilled. Fortunately, that's the easiest thing to return to functional normalcy at the home QTH. Can't be missing out on rrap now, can I? Well, I managed to live without it for about four years, but then again, here I am back again. Hmmm. I don't seem to remember you from four years ago, but then again, I don't remember what I had for lunch! 73 de Larry, K3LT |
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