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Michael A. Terrell May 16th 06 07:08 AM

AMERICA AND STATE-RUN DRM "PUBLIC" RADIO SHORTWAVE BROADCASTING
 
Telamon wrote:

In article . com,
"Stephanie Weil" wrote:

On analog radios, look by the band switch indicator. You'll see them.

Ditto on ghetto blasters, look underneath the frequency numbers - 120
M, 90 M, 75 M, etc.

I'm looking at mine at work right now - a JVC from Singapore (from like
the early-mid 1990s). Unfortunately I can only pick up local FM in
this office building.


Every time I used meter band indication I got complaints from other
posters on the news group. People wold rather you stated the frequency
so I post 15 MHz band instead of 19 meters. I don't think anyone would
complain if you stated both.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California



Some of them would complain if you hung them with a new rope! ;-)


--
Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to
prove it.
Member of DAV #85.

Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida

Stephanie Weil May 16th 06 04:53 PM

AMERICA AND STATE-RUN DRM "PUBLIC" RADIO SHORTWAVE BROADCASTING
 
Telamon

Every time I used meter band indication I got complaints from other
posters on the news group. People wold rather you stated the frequency
so I post 15 MHz band instead of 19 meters


I guess it has to do with what you've gotten used to.

See, I grew up listening to SW stations on ghettoblaster (jam box)
radio/cassette units. So I got used to spinning the regular knob until
you reach the desired wave band, then diddling the fine-tuning knob to
zero in on the frequency.

And that's how I think. Meter band and then that particular frequency
within that band.

Stephanie


David May 16th 06 06:10 PM

AMERICA AND STATE-RUN DRM "PUBLIC" RADIO SHORTWAVE BROADCASTING
 
On 16 May 2006 08:53:57 -0700, "Stephanie Weil"
wrote:

Telamon

Every time I used meter band indication I got complaints from other
posters on the news group. People wold rather you stated the frequency
so I post 15 MHz band instead of 19 meters


I guess it has to do with what you've gotten used to.

See, I grew up listening to SW stations on ghettoblaster (jam box)
radio/cassette units. So I got used to spinning the regular knob until
you reach the desired wave band, then diddling the fine-tuning knob to
zero in on the frequency.

And that's how I think. Meter band and then that particular frequency
within that band.

Stephanie

That's how hams do it. And R. Moscow never gave frequencies, just
meter bands. In the age of the digital readouts you have to divide
the meter band into 300 to figure out what people are talking about,
unless you have that **** memorized (which I refuse to do).


Telamon May 17th 06 04:11 AM

AMERICA AND STATE-RUN DRM "PUBLIC" RADIO SHORTWAVE BROADCASTING
 
In article . com,
"Stephanie Weil" wrote:

Telamon

Every time I used meter band indication I got complaints from other
posters on the news group. People wold rather you stated the frequency
so I post 15 MHz band instead of 19 meters


I guess it has to do with what you've gotten used to.

See, I grew up listening to SW stations on ghettoblaster (jam box)
radio/cassette units. So I got used to spinning the regular knob until
you reach the desired wave band, then diddling the fine-tuning knob to
zero in on the frequency.

And that's how I think. Meter band and then that particular frequency
within that band.


That is a good way to think. Paying attention to wavelengths helps make
antenna and transmission line concepts more understandable when dealing
with real world three dimensional objects. Frequency is more convenient
to use in circuit analysis.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California


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