Ron,

I too am a firm believer in the KISS principle.
Too much automation drives me crazy trying to remember what the 
automation is trying to do for me.  Oft times the automation does not do 
what I want to be done.  "manual controls forever".

This is not a vote against automation and ease of use, but there are 
times when it is more effective to bypass the automatic controls, engage 
the brain, and get what one wants accomplished.  Automation cannot 
substitute for individual preferences - that takes 'brain power' - so THINK!

73,
Don W3FPR

Ron D'Eau Claire wrote:
> That is an interesting idea Keith. I've been reducing the gain by hand
> whenever the band noise is objectionable while sending. Been doing that
> since I was using a regenerative receiver back in the early 1950's.
>
> But I also grabbed the gain control on the board at KVCR when I was spinning
> platters (the real VINYL platters) when I wanted to talk over the music back
> in the 50's too. 
>
> So I guess it's a good idea whose time has come, just like people on the
> board don't need to play with the gain control any longer. 
>
> But I wonder just how automatic our world is becoming? 
>
> A popular theme in sci fi fiction back in the 50's was that the human race
> would so completely automate things that the "computers" would see to our
> physical needs and we'd become disembodied beings floating in an energy
> field because we no longer needed bodies to manipulate anything ourselves -
> until the computers decided they didn't need us any longer. 
>
> Guess I'm archaic. I still enjoy running on the beach, sketching a scene
> with an old pencil and paper, wiggling my own CW key or turning my own gain
> controls. 
>
> I'm definitely one of the ones who is now obsolete I guess... But happily
> obsolete :-)
>
> Ron AC7AC
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
>
>
> No, the manual way to achieve this effect is to turn down the AF gain
> while you're transmitting.  Sidetone is still there nice & loud but the
> RX audio that you hear between elements is reduced.  When you're done
> sending, you reach for the AF gain and turn it back up to the normal
> listening level.
>
> Now, imagine it was automatic.  As soon as you send, the K3 turns AF
> gain down and leaves it down until a second or so after you finish
> sending, then it turns it back up to where it was.  This way, while
> you're sending, the AF signal that you hear between dots & dashes is
> quieter than when you're just listening.
>
> Is that any clearer?  If not, ask more questions :-)
>
> - Keith N1AS -
> - K3 711 -
>  
>
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