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The way CBers using power mikes and linears were dealt with was to stick a pin
through their antennas' coax feeds. As crappy as much consumer electronics is made, probably a tone-modulated ham or CB rig with 100 watts or so might get into the guy's gear and demodulate somewhere, if there's such a thing as a high gain stage in solid state audio stuff. Back in the old tube days... Bill, K5BY |
WShoots1 wrote:
The way CBers using power mikes and linears were dealt with was to stick a pin through their antennas' coax feeds. As crappy as much consumer electronics is made, probably a tone-modulated ham or CB rig with 100 watts or so might get into the guy's gear and demodulate somewhere, if there's such a thing as a high gain stage in solid state audio stuff. Back in the old tube days... Bill, K5BY \ So Bill K5BY, did you ever really 'pin' a CBers "coax feed" or do you know someone who did or are you simply waving your dick around trying to make yurself look like a real anti-CB honcho? I suspect the latter. -Real Bill WX4A |
JMBCV wrote in
et: I have a neighbour who drives me beserk by playing loud music at all hours and just shouts abuse when I ask him to stop. I'm currently going through the long and tedious route of complaining to the local Environmental Health people but that doesn't stop the noise in the meantime. I found an old post on Google which claimed that a shortwave transceiver and a power amplifier could be used to create interference, distorting the neighbour's music so he turns it off. It sounds very tempting. Would this method work if he was just using his hifi to play a CD? I'm not sure if it's supposed to work by interfering with his speakers or his radio reception. Thanks in advance for any comments You have spammed several groups with this nonsense.. I suggest you purchase one baseball bat and let your emotions rule. |
A cb radio ought to work too. You could read the Declaration of
Independance, and the Constitution :) I remember being in church one time when a CB'er cranke dup his set. It came across the amplifier system as pretty as you please g. Interuption of the power supply is also useful. "JMBCV" wrote in message et... I have a neighbour who drives me beserk by playing loud music at all hours and just shouts abuse when I ask him to stop. I'm currently going through the long and tedious route of complaining to the local Environmental Health people but that doesn't stop the noise in the meantime. I found an old post on Google which claimed that a shortwave transceiver and a power amplifier could be used to create interference, distorting the neighbour's music so he turns it off. It sounds very tempting. Would this method work if he was just using his hifi to play a CD? I'm not sure if it's supposed to work by interfering with his speakers or his radio reception. Thanks in advance for any comments |
Warpcore wrote:
A cb radio ought to work too. You could read the Declaration of Independance, and the Constitution :) I remember being in church one time when a CB'er cranke dup his set. It came across the amplifier system as pretty as you please g. Interuption of the power supply is also useful. ....and God said to the disciples, breaker breaker for a radio check. :-) -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
This worked for a friend of mine with a bass-
heavy rap music lover for a neighbor. My friend lived in a apartment building that had a common utility room where all the circuit breaker panels were. When the offending neighbor started to crank the bass and become obnoxious, he would sneak to the panel, and trip the breaker in the neighbor's breaker panel on a prominent heavy bass note. He would then sneak around the building and back to his apartment, unseen. After playing this cat and mouse game for a few weeks, "bass-man" figured out his stereo was tripping the breaker and learned how far he could turn it up before it crapped out. |
WX4A: So Bill K5BY, did you ever really 'pin' a CBers "coax feed" or do you
know someone who did or are you simply waving your dick around trying to make yurself look like a real anti-CB honcho? I suspect the latter. Wrong, OM. I'd only heard, from other CBers, of it being done. You see, I was pro CB. I even remember my CB call, KBM5321, back when they were issued. Before I organized a ham emergency organization, the Clear Lake Emergency Amateur Radio Service, in the late 1970s, I organized a CB group, the Emergency Communications Network, in the early 1970s. Only one other ham/CBer would join the group. Later on, my ham group and that CB group worked together. Some of the CBers became hams -- and CLEARS members -- because of my attitude. Besides my 2M rig in the car, I have a CB rig for backup -- to the 2M rig, that is. My primary radio these days is a cell phone. 73, Bill, K5BY Licensed since 1947 Extra Class since 1952 Also have 2nd Class Radiotelegraph license # T2GB040061 with radar endorsement. |
Really simple solution....go to the power pole, get out a set of garden
shears and cut ONLY the neutral wire to the house, sit back and watch the fireworks display as things that should get 120 volts get about 20 and things that should get 120 get about 200. The refridgerator motor will stall and the stereo should erupt in a ball of fire :) You see...household wiring is 2 phase..thats two legs of 120 and a common neutral return. When you cut it the loads unballance, putting some things like heavy items (fridge) and light items (stereo) in series across 240 volts.....SPECTACTULAR! One minor problem...CAN result in multiple fires...use with caution....Eddie "JMBCV" wrote in message et... I have a neighbour who drives me beserk by playing loud music at all hours and just shouts abuse when I ask him to stop. I'm currently going through the long and tedious route of complaining to the local Environmental Health people but that doesn't stop the noise in the meantime. I found an old post on Google which claimed that a shortwave transceiver and a power amplifier could be used to create interference, distorting the neighbour's music so he turns it off. It sounds very tempting. Would this method work if he was just using his hifi to play a CD? I'm not sure if it's supposed to work by interfering with his speakers or his radio reception. Thanks in advance for any comments |
"Eddie Haskel" wrote in message . .. Really simple solution....go to the power pole, get out a set of garden shears and cut ONLY the neutral wire to the house, sit back and watch the fireworks display as things that should get 120 volts get about 20 and things that should get 120 get about 200. The refridgerator motor will stall and the stereo should erupt in a ball of fire :) You see...household wiring is 2 phase..thats two legs of 120 and a common neutral return. When you cut it the loads unballance, putting some things like heavy items (fridge) and light items (stereo) in series across 240 volts.....SPECTACTULAR! One minor problem...CAN result in multiple fires...use with caution....Eddie If the home is up to code, cutting the neutral wire at the pole won't do much.. since the neutral and ground are common at the service entrance.. as long as they have a ground, the split phase will stay split, although the voltage may go down on either end due to losses.. |
"Brenda Ann" wrote in message ...
"Eddie Haskel" wrote in message . .. Really simple solution....go to the power pole, get out a set of garden shears and cut ONLY the neutral wire to the house, sit back and watch the fireworks display as things that should get 120 volts get about 20 and things that should get 120 get about 200. The refridgerator motor will stall and the stereo should erupt in a ball of fire :) You see...household wiring is 2 phase..thats two legs of 120 and a common neutral return. When you cut it the loads unballance, putting some things like heavy items (fridge) and light items (stereo) in series across 240 volts.....SPECTACTULAR! One minor problem...CAN result in multiple fires...use with caution....Eddie If the home is up to code, cutting the neutral wire at the pole won't do much.. since the neutral and ground are common at the service entrance.. as long as they have a ground, the split phase will stay split, although the voltage may go down on either end due to losses.. Hello People, Lets Get Real: Do not mess with some one else's Home [.] CAUTION: If the "CODE" Requires that a fully functioning Neutral Wire be properly 'installed' for Safety: Then disconnecting it 'violates' the required Code and renders the household electrical wiring system Un-Safe. WARNING: If you are not a 'qualified' Electrician "Do Not Mess" with your Main Circuit Breaker Box and your Service Entry. Get a Licensed Electricial to do the work for you. jm2cw ~ RHF .. .. |
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