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#11
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Only ten channels? I can get much more than that (local Jackson area
Radio Stations) right here in the daytime and night time on any of my old beat up Radios.Hey,I can get more Radio channels than that on my DirectTV. www.musicchoices.com (I listen to Easy Listening often on my DirecTV) and in two months,I am going to buy meself a Lyngsat free to air satellite rig www.forthepeople.org and get even MORE Radio channels/Radio Stations too.I get much,much,much more with my Linksys Wireless B Music System internet Radio too. www.linksys.com and my computer too. cuhulin |
#12
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Ever heard of poding with a ipod? You can have your OWN radio
station,cheap. cuhulin |
#13
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David wrote:
On Wed, 30 Mar 2005 21:31:38 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: I looked at both XM and Sirius and I wasn't impressed by either. There's your problem. You looked at them. try listening to them. Your sense of humeor must have died a very painful death. How about the pure satisfaction of building a commercial station and transmitting the first signal? I enjoy putting big-ass non-commercial stations on the air a lot more. Commercial radio is generally run by assholes. I don't know about ''pure satisfaction'' though. That sounds a little fruity. Its "fruity" to take a pile of dead and damaged equipment, rebuild it and put it on the air? I dismantled, moved, reassembled and got a 1952 RCA Transmitter ready to use even though parts were no longer available. BTW, it wasn't a commercial station. I was a broadcast engineer at a number of stations, both military and civilian, and yes, I do derive satisfaction from doing what others couldn't. Arrive at a transmitter site to find the current staff had everything so FUBARed that they had given up, then put the transmitter back on the air. In fact, the US Army awarded me their version of a first phone as a civilian acquired skill when I was drafted in the early '70s. As far as "big-ass" I worked on a Comark 130 KW transmitter with a 5 MW ERP that was non commercial. -- Former professional electron wrangler. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#14
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On Fri, 01 Apr 2005 16:12:31 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: David wrote: On Wed, 30 Mar 2005 21:31:38 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: I looked at both XM and Sirius and I wasn't impressed by either. There's your problem. You looked at them. try listening to them. Your sense of humeor must have died a very painful death. How about the pure satisfaction of building a commercial station and transmitting the first signal? I enjoy putting big-ass non-commercial stations on the air a lot more. Commercial radio is generally run by assholes. I don't know about ''pure satisfaction'' though. That sounds a little fruity. Its "fruity" to take a pile of dead and damaged equipment, rebuild it and put it on the air? I dismantled, moved, reassembled and got a 1952 RCA Transmitter ready to use even though parts were no longer available. BTW, it wasn't a commercial station. I was a broadcast engineer at a number of stations, both military and civilian, and yes, I do derive satisfaction from doing what others couldn't. Arrive at a transmitter site to find the current staff had everything so FUBARed that they had given up, then put the transmitter back on the air. In fact, the US Army awarded me their version of a first phone as a civilian acquired skill when I was drafted in the early '70s. As far as "big-ass" I worked on a Comark 130 KW transmitter with a 5 MW ERP that was non commercial. I've supervised and maintained a 120 kW Comark S-Series (3 IOTs). The most powerful TV station in the #2 DMA as a matter of fact. I've emergency repaired 3'' Heliax with beer cans. So what? ''Pure satisfaction'' however sounds like what happens about 10 milliseconds before you die. |
#15
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David wrote:
On Fri, 01 Apr 2005 16:12:31 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: David wrote: On Wed, 30 Mar 2005 21:31:38 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: I looked at both XM and Sirius and I wasn't impressed by either. There's your problem. You looked at them. try listening to them. Your sense of humeor must have died a very painful death. How about the pure satisfaction of building a commercial station and transmitting the first signal? I enjoy putting big-ass non-commercial stations on the air a lot more. Commercial radio is generally run by assholes. I don't know about ''pure satisfaction'' though. That sounds a little fruity. Its "fruity" to take a pile of dead and damaged equipment, rebuild it and put it on the air? I dismantled, moved, reassembled and got a 1952 RCA Transmitter ready to use even though parts were no longer available. BTW, it wasn't a commercial station. I was a broadcast engineer at a number of stations, both military and civilian, and yes, I do derive satisfaction from doing what others couldn't. Arrive at a transmitter site to find the current staff had everything so FUBARed that they had given up, then put the transmitter back on the air. In fact, the US Army awarded me their version of a first phone as a civilian acquired skill when I was drafted in the early '70s. As far as "big-ass" I worked on a Comark 130 KW transmitter with a 5 MW ERP that was non commercial. I've supervised and maintained a 120 kW Comark S-Series (3 IOTs). The most powerful TV station in the #2 DMA as a matter of fact. I've emergency repaired 3'' Heliax with beer cans. So what? ''Pure satisfaction'' however sounds like what happens about 10 milliseconds before you die. Have you built anything that's in use in space? -- Former professional electron wrangler. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#16
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![]() "Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message ... David wrote: On Fri, 01 Apr 2005 16:12:31 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: David wrote: On Wed, 30 Mar 2005 21:31:38 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: I looked at both XM and Sirius and I wasn't impressed by either. There's your problem. You looked at them. try listening to them. Your sense of humeor must have died a very painful death. How about the pure satisfaction of building a commercial station and transmitting the first signal? I enjoy putting big-ass non-commercial stations on the air a lot more. Commercial radio is generally run by assholes. I don't know about ''pure satisfaction'' though. That sounds a little fruity. Its "fruity" to take a pile of dead and damaged equipment, rebuild it and put it on the air? I dismantled, moved, reassembled and got a 1952 RCA Transmitter ready to use even though parts were no longer available. BTW, it wasn't a commercial station. I was a broadcast engineer at a number of stations, both military and civilian, and yes, I do derive satisfaction from doing what others couldn't. Arrive at a transmitter site to find the current staff had everything so FUBARed that they had given up, then put the transmitter back on the air. In fact, the US Army awarded me their version of a first phone as a civilian acquired skill when I was drafted in the early '70s. As far as "big-ass" I worked on a Comark 130 KW transmitter with a 5 MW ERP that was non commercial. I've supervised and maintained a 120 kW Comark S-Series (3 IOTs). The most powerful TV station in the #2 DMA as a matter of fact. I've emergency repaired 3'' Heliax with beer cans. So what? ''Pure satisfaction'' however sounds like what happens about 10 milliseconds before you die. Have you built anything that's in use in space? He built the tinfoil hat he wears does that count? |
#17
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On Fri, 01 Apr 2005 17:42:42 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: David wrote: Have you built anything that's in use in space? Is this a ****ing contest? The point is you said ''pure satisfaction''. This offends me. Nothing is ''pure'' and therefore a perfectionist is never satisfied. Your phrase ''pure satisfaction'' therefore is gibberish. |
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