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Old March 2nd 04, 09:02 PM
JJ
 
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Len Over 21 wrote:

elf.

Go ahead, make our day, put a pacemaker wearer right next to
a mismatched 1 KW transmitter connected to an antenna with
open-wire lines. Do you want to "experiment" with something
that might kill a person? Would the gunnery nurse do that?


Go re-read my post again about the ham and the pacemaker incident. A
pacemaker was placed next to the operating position of the hams station
and operated at the full legal limit. Nothing happened to the pacemaker.
Senility is really affecting your reading comprehension lennyboy.
Now go back to the front desk and ask the kind nurse to point you the
way to your room so you can lay down and get your afternoon nappie in.

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Old March 2nd 04, 09:05 PM
JJ
 
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Len Over 21 wrote:


I'm not blaming "all those nasty hams." :-) Just the PHONIES
with federal merit badges in here who think they are all gunnery
nurse candidates in search of a real self. :-)


Your aren't even a ham, can't pass the test, have nothing to do with ham
radio, so why would you even care?
Show me one ham with a federal merit badge.

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Old March 3rd 04, 05:25 AM
Steve Robeson, K4CAP
 
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JJ wrote in message ...
Len Over 21 wrote:


I'm not blaming "all those nasty hams." :-) Just the PHONIES
with federal merit badges in here who think they are all gunnery
nurse candidates in search of a real self. :-)


Your aren't even a ham, can't pass the test, have nothing to do with ham
radio, so why would you even care?
Show me one ham with a federal merit badge.


TSBAKAL believes that his one and only appearance before an FCC
examiner in 1950-something was all that he should have ever had to
do...He passed THAT test, ergo he "knows it all" and should be exempt
from the laws that pertain to every other citizen.

What a putz.

Steve, K4YZ
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Old March 3rd 04, 07:06 PM
Len Over 21
 
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In article , JJ
writes:

Len Over 21 wrote:


Go re-read my post again about the ham and the pacemaker incident. A
pacemaker was placed next to the operating position of the hams station
and operated at the full legal limit. Nothing happened to the pacemaker.


Anonymous source of unreferenceable news, anonymous none?

You really shouldn't make up those stories. They aren't believable
and they have no references for anyone to check validity.

Senility is really affecting your reading comprehension lennyboy.


Now, now, Anonymous None, be careful or you will lose fantasy
and imagination privileges... :-)

LHA / WMD


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Old March 3rd 04, 09:20 PM
JJ
 
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Len Over 21 wrote:


Anonymous source of unreferenceable news, anonymous none?

You really shouldn't make up those stories. They aren't believable
and they have no references for anyone to check validity.


Check with the Dallas, Tx FCC office, they can verify it.

And here is another, get some 6 year old to read it and explaine to you
so you will understand.

****
HAM RADIO AND PACEMAKERS
This is from Angela, VE7ANG’s Newsletter.
Richard/VE7SRB has had a pacemaker installed recently. At first he
thought he might not be able to continue Ham Radio, but after some
research he came up with the following. Perhaps it will be of interest
to others.

We have researched the literature concerning the effects of amateur
radio broadcasts and their potential effects on implanted pulse
generators. Most articles concerning the effects of electromagnetic
interference (EMI) on pulse generators touch very briefly on the effects
of radio frequencies.

We have done testing on types of interference most likely to be
encountered by pacemakers patients. One category of interference we
tested was radio frequency. This covers the HF and VHF bands from 1 MHz
to 200 Mhz. Amateur radio, broadcast AM and FM, TV two way
communications, short-wave diathermy and CB radios are in this range.
Many transmitters have large power capability. Radio amateurs are
allowed a one kilowatt input in eight bands, commercial short-wave goes
to 250 KW, broadcast to 50 KW, two way radio in emergency short-wave
regularly uses 150 watts in mobile installations. Implantable pulse
generators may be affected depending on the details of shielding and
filtering in the device and modulation of interference signal.

Testing was performed on 106 pacemakers comprising 20 different models
from various manufacturers. Testing was conducted at interference
frequencies of 3.4, 7, 14, 21 and 28.6 Mhz. No effects on pacemaker
operation were observed in the presence of field strengths less than 200
volts/meter. Field strengths of this magnitude are unlikely except in
the immediate vicinity of a high power transmitting antenna.

Overall, our testing indicates that pacemaker patients are very unlikely
to encounter problems with radio frequency fields. Certainly we would
recommend avoiding direct contact with transmitting antenna.
*******

Now go ask the nurse for another blood pressure pill lennyboy so you
don't have a stroke.

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Old March 4th 04, 02:11 AM
Len Over 21
 
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In article ,
(William) writes:

(Steve Robeson, K4CAP) wrote in message
.com...
JJ wrote in message

...
Len Over 21 wrote:

I'm not blaming "all those nasty hams." :-) Just the PHONIES
with federal merit badges in here who think they are all gunnery
nurse candidates in search of a real self. :-)

Your aren't even a ham, can't pass the test, have nothing to do with ham
radio, so why would you even care?
Show me one ham with a federal merit badge.


TSBAKAL believes that his one and only appearance before an FCC
examiner in 1950-something was all that he should have ever had to
do...He passed THAT test, ergo he "knows it all" and should be exempt
from the laws that pertain to every other citizen.

What a putz.

Steve, K4YZ


TSBAKAL? Poor, poor Stebe. Ripping off my style? Go get your own life!


He doesn't seem to have any sort of original life. He freely rips off
others'
phrases and word use and claims them as "his own" later on.

No independent thought. He uses spoon-feeding from the league as
his guide, demanding all do as he did or get called names. Tsk, tsk.

Then he makes all those repeated LYING statements such as
attributing false, very false "motivations" to me. Tsk, tsk squared.

I'm just advocating an end to morse code testing for all radio operator
license examinations...but the gunnery nurse cannot possibly allow
such terrible thoughts against the proud, heroic, noble traditions of
the corps...er, I mean, the Amateur Community! [hard to tell the two
apart in his messages]

It's truly remarkable all that Rage and Frustration demonstrated by the
PCTA in here just for others wanting an end to morse code testing! :-)

LHA / WMD
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