Re: [Elecraft] Band button

2008-07-06 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 7/6/08 2:36:25 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 What does top band mean?
 

160 meters (1.8 to 2.0 MHz)

The name derives from the time when we thought primarily in terms of 
wavelength. Going to a longer wave was going up and to a shorter wave was 
down. 
Hence Clinton B. Desoto's book title 200 Meters and Down (yes, it should be 
metres)

160 is the longest wave hams can use, hence it's the top band.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Band button

2008-07-05 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 7/5/08 6:25:50 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 Nowhere is it written that the bands assigned to the Amateur service must 
 be
 referred to by wavelength. 

Agreed. 


Indeed, here in the USA, our FCC refers to the
 
 slices of spectrum we're assigned as Frequency Bands, not Wavelength
 Bands.
 

Actually, both terms are used by FCC. I just checked Part 97, and the terms 
are used almost interchangeably.

For example, the title of 97.301 is Authorized Frequency Bands. But when 
you look at the charts which tell who can operate where in what region, the 
leftmost column is labeled Wavelength Bands.

Even odder, FCC refers to 3.5-3.6 MHz as 80 meters and 3.6-4.0 MHz as 75 
meters as if they were not right next to each other.

I am not making this up. When I first heard about it, I thought my leg was 
being pulled, so I went and checked. 

73 es yes it's trivia, but it's my trivia de Jim, N2EY


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[Elecraft] Lightness of the K3

2008-07-01 Thread n2ey
I have to ask

Is the lightness of the K3 unbearable?

(runs, hides, looks for missing sock)

73 de Jim, N2EY

...bowler hats?
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Re: [Elecraft] FD: QRO + QRP with pwr multiplier

2008-06-30 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 6/30/08 5:16:58 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:

 For this year and last year, I've added a QRP station to our club's  
 QRO FD setup, but I submit it as a separate entry.  As far as I can  
 tell, this is within both the rules and spirit of Field Day -- it  
 provides another station, another example of radio use for anyone to  
 check out, try, or just talk about, while I share in the social  
 aspect of the club event instead of being off on my own.

What you've done is to have a separate FD station that just happens to be 
near another one.

 
 I ran 1A-Battery (solar), using the call W0SAA, while the rest were  
 5A using W0SA (having those two calls available was a coincidence,  
 but cute). The QRP station was my K2, with two wire antennas, a bit  
 
 away from the main stations, which this year consisted of four  
 kilowatt stations, plus a 100-watt digital station and a VHF  
 station.  I was off to the side a bit, but still within the 1000-foot  
 circle of the main group. 

You didn't have to stay within the circle. W0SAA was a different FD entry 
than W0SA, and could be separated by any distance since the scores were 
separate.

 I'm not a competent contester yet -- I got 154 contacts, all CW SP  
 -- but I had a darn good time.

I'm not sure what your definition of competent contester is, but IMHO, if 
you gave out 154 QSOs and had a good time, that's a core competency!

--
IMHO, it should be possible to have multiple power levels on FD. Here's one 
way it could be done:

FD considers each band/mode a separate entity. IOW 40 CW is separate from 
40 phone, 20 phone is separate from 40 phone, etc. When you fill out the 
summary sheet, you enter the number of QSOs per band/mode.

Why couldn't each band/mode have its own power level, and all QSOs *of that 
band/mode* would be scored at the highest power level of that band/mode? A club 
could then run a mixture of the three power levels if desired. Only a minor 
change to the summary sheet would be needed. That way, a club might decide to 
run QRO on 75 'phone, low power on 20 digital, QRP on 40 CW, etc., and each 
band/mode would get its own power multiplier. That would maximize interest and 
avoid the need for things like the W0SA/W0SAA split described above.

IIRC, one of the purposes of FD is exposure to new and different things. So 
the QRO folks could see QRP in action, and the reverse. 

It used to be done that way. Before 1971, the same FD group could have 
multiple power levels by band/mode. (I wuz there!)

The change was made for FD 1971 to simplify scoring. But that was long ago, 
back in the days before computer logging and online log submittals, when 
everything was done by hand. That's ancient history now; why not a better 
system 
that rewards diversity?

The way to get it is for lots of us to write the Contest Advisory Committee. 
I would not be surprised if none of them knew that, at one time, multiple 
power levels were allowed in the same FD group.

Just IMHO

73 de Jim, N2EY




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Re: [Elecraft] They Laughed At My K1

2008-06-29 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 6/29/08 3:47:46 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 Plus, just think of those multiplier points for QRP and for solar power.

Unfortunately, there probably weren't any.

The way the Field Day rules are written, the power of the most-powerful rig 
in an FD setup is the power of all the rigs. All QSOs get the same power 
multiplier. IOW you don't get the QRP-battery multiplier unless every FD QSO is 
made 
running QRP-battery.

There's a 100 point natural power bonus (not a multiplier) for making at 
least 5 QSOs with a rig powered by an alternative energy source (usually a 
solar 
panel). At K3TU we earned this bonus with a K2 and solar panel.

IMHO it would be a great thing if a multi-rig FD setup could have different 
power levels on different band/modes.

73 de Jim, N2EY 


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Re: [Elecraft] Re: K3 Key-down on power-up [Solution?]

2008-06-29 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 6/29/08 8:43:06 AM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 Why anyone would let a stupid user 
 operate their  2K radio at a field day site is beyond me. 

OTOH:

One of the things FD is supposed to be is a training/education exercise. 
While it's certainly not a 100%-accurate simulation of a real emergency drill, 
there's always something to be learned. (I've done ever single FD since I was 
licensed in 1967, and learned something on every one.)

Part of that education is learning about stuff we don't ordinarily do. The 
first Elecraft I ever saw in real life was N3IUT's K2, whose sn is under 200. 
All the ads, numbers and testimonials in the world did not have the impact of 
using that rig under FD conditions. 

Sure it's a risk to let someone else use a rig - of any price. I've always 
thought that one should not bring something on FD that one cannot tolerate 
losing, or having damaged. 

But I'm still grateful to those many amateurs over the years who let me and 
others use FD rigs we could not have owned ourselves at the time, and so learn 
what distinguishes a great rig from a good one.

In 1970 I was a 16-year-old, licensed just three years. Yet the let me run 
the 40 meter CW setup overnight on FD that year. The rig was a Drake 
R-4B/T-4XB, 
worth something like $1200 at the time. More like $5000-6000 in today's 
money.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] FD - Some Comments about the Event

2008-06-29 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 6/29/08 8:00:14 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 FD is not a contestit is an operating event.  

I would say FD is not *just* a contest or Contesting is only one aspect of 
FD. 

Like Amateur Radio itself, there are many ways of doing FD, some of which are 
very different from others. Some groups take scoring very seriously, others 
don't think much of it and it's more of a social event. Some are very into the 
publicity angle, or the emergency-preparedness thing, or the 
training-less-experienced-hams part. 

  I don't think the League even likes to rank 
 station that participate as to who made how many points.  

If you look up the scores database, that's how results are sorted (high score 
to low). Same in the QST report.

If FD allowed multipliers (rather than mode points) then we would have a 
contest.  

The FD multipliers are for power level. A QRP-battery QSO can be worth 5 
times the points of a QRO QSO, or 2.5 times the points of a low-power QSO.

FD rules are so loose you can change your class at anytime.

Only in a very limited way (number of transmitters), and only for specific 
reasons. 

For example, if a club started out with three transmitters (3A) but then 
somebody showed up with a fourth and lots of folks to put it on the air, they 
could reclass themselves as 4A. Or if they could not get one rig working at 
all, 
they could reclass themselves as 2A *if* they'd never had three rigs on the air 
at once. 
 It would be interesting to see how many vertical and dipole antennas were 
 used this year.

We used a Windom and two G5RVs. Squalos and verticals for VHF/UHF. Yes there 
are better antennas but the resources needed to put them up and take them down 
are considerable. 

 FD is about training (both in technical and operating) skills.

I would add practical radio to that as well. Theory is one thing, getting 
something to work in the real world is another. I was never a Boy Scout but I 
learned a heckuva lot about knots and handling lines on FD.

Random comments:

1) Send in your entry, no matter how insignificant it may seem. Log entries 
are votes in a very real sense.

2) If there is something you want to see changed in the rules, suggest it in 
a specific way to ARRL. For example, you might want sections to count as 
multipliers on HF, grid squares on VHF/UHF. If so, *tell the ARRL contest 
folks*! 

3) While the memory (and the bug bites, sunburn, poison ivy and aches/pains 
are still fresh, write down what you learned this year. What worked and what 
didn't, what you'd do the same and what you'd change. Put those notes in a 
folder marked FD 2009. Trust me, it's a big help for next year!

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Bass in audio is good

2008-05-05 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: S Sacco [EMAIL PROTECTED]


We're not broadcasters, we're communicators.


That's true. But there are all sorts of communication!


That extra frequency response takes away from the spectrum available
for our fellow Amateurs.


Hold that thought


Don't even get me started on that ESSB stuff...and why is AM even
LEGAL anymore, anyway?


It's legal for two reasons:

1) A considerable number of hams like it and use it.

2) No one has come up with a proposal to ban it that hasn't generated 
overwhelming opposition from the amateur community.


Ban AM (particularly from the HF amateur bands) proposals have popped 
up from time to time since before I became a ham 40 years ago. Always 
the same basic reason: AM is too wide.


Now about tak[ing] away from the spectrum available for our fellow 
Amateurs - if using the minimum amount of spectrum is the issue, why 
are any modes wider than a few hundred Hz allowed? Ten CW or PSK31 QSOs 
can fit in the space of one SSB QSO, so why is SSB still allowed?


73 de Jim, N2EY

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Re: [Elecraft] Bass in audio is good

2008-05-05 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: Joe Subich, W4TV [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Most HF users
want AM and ESSB (occupied bandwidth greater than required for
communications quality - 2.6 to 2.8 KHz) banned.


On what information do you make this claim?

73 de Jim, N2EY
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Re: [Elecraft] Bass in audio is good

2008-05-05 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 5/5/08 5:14:48 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 Many years ago Bell Labs 
 (and others) proved rather thoroughly that 2.4 to 2.6 KHz 
 was more than adequately for communications purposes.  Their 
 tests were specifically in relation to toll grade audio for 
 long distance telephony.  

Which is *not* amateur radio communication! Things like QRM, QRN and 
selective fading are not usually encountered in landline telephones.

Note also that despite the quality standards, people often have to repeat 
themselves on the telephone, spell out words and names, etc. 
 
 The FCC rules specifically required a maximum bandwidth of 2.6 
 KHz on the US 60 meter channels.  That should provide a strong 
 example of what FCC and NTIA consider to be the maximum 
 bandwidth necessary for single sideband operation in amateur 
 allocations.  

No, they shouldn't.

The 60 meter channels are shared with other services. Amateurs are secondary 
users there, and must conform to the primary user's standards.
 
 Most amateur transceivers use 2.4 KHz bandwidth filters for 
 SSB generation - even cascaded 2.4 KHz filters with an effective 
 bandwidth in the 2.2 KHz range.  The default SSB transmit bandwidth 
 for the K3 should be 300 - 2900 Hz or 200 - 2800 Hz in order to 
 not be excessively wide and meet the FCC regulations for use on 
 the US 60 meter allocation. 

Agreed! But that's only on 60 meters.

Should we stop using LSB because other services don't generally use it? 
Should we channelize our bands because that's what other services do?

I say there's room for all.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] OT: Wanted 60Hz vibrating reed freq meter

2008-04-28 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 4/28/08 2:10:17 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 Looking for a vibrating reed type of 60Hz frequency meter for a generator
 monitor I'm trying to build for field day.  

Sorry, I don't have one. 

But I do know an alternative.

Way back in QST for March, 1971, there was an article about a line voltage 
and frequency monitor. The frequency measuring section consists of a couple of 
resistors, a pair of zener diodes, a 0.22 uf capacitor, a bridge rectifier, a 
calibration pot and a 0-1 mA meter. I built one and it works very well. 

73 de Jim, N2EY








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Re: [Elecraft] CW Mistakes

2008-04-27 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 4/26/08 11:43:23 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 
 Learning to translate dits and dahs into letters and other characters.
   Slow code encourages translation!

I think what you mean is counting - hearing H as four dits rather than 
a single sound-group. That's why Farnsworth-spacing is a good idea.
 
 Learning code from a book or other visual source.  (Not including learning 
 about code from a book such as Pierpont: The Art  Skill of Radio Telegraphy).

Agreed!
 
 Starting after age 50.  Grin.
 

Actually, research has shown that one of the ways to slow the aging process 
is to learn new things throughout life. Particularly things that are *very* 
different than what you've done before, not just extensions of existing stuff. 

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] CW Mistakes

2008-04-26 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 4/25/08 8:08:58 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 2) Letting a self-important bad operator discourage you because he/she 
 can't
 or won't QRS to your speed or tells you that you don't have the skills to
 get on CW, or to operate on a specific band. (I worked a guy who told me he
 never used 20 meter CW because he was told by some idiot that it was a
 expert operator's band and folks there didn't tolerate anything less!) 

It seems to me that a true expert is able to operate effectively at both 
low and high speeds, with both experienced and inexperienced operators at the 
other end.

So if someone won't/can't QRS for a beginner, it says more about that 
person's skills than it does about the beginner.

IMHO

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] CW Mistakes

2008-04-25 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 4/25/08 6:27:49 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 What are some of the most common errors for
 beginning CW Operators.

WELCOME!

In no particular order:

1) Not getting on the air. While it is a good idea to do some practice 
off-air and get some basic skills down, you don't need to be an expert to 
make 
lots of CW contacts and have lots of fun.

2) Sending too fast for the situation.

3) Expecting too much too soon. 

4) Trying to use a rig that's not very good for CW (doesn't apply to Elecraft 
rigs!)

5) Not being familiar with abbreviations and procedures. Make a list of the 
common ones and have it handy. Listen to a few QSOs and get the general idea of 
how it's done.

6) Not asking questions or requesting help. (you've avoided this one!)

73 es GL de Jim, N2EY




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Re: [Elecraft] K3 - some FW wishes...

2008-04-24 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: Alexandr Kobranov [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

# General LOCK for all knobs (if somewhere - sorry, not found) 

 
If you can lock *all* the knobs, how do you ever unlock the rig?

73 de Jim, N2EY
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Re: [Elecraft] Alternatives to PowerPoles?

2008-04-07 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: Mike S [EMAIL PROTECTED]

At 11:07 PM 4/6/2008, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote...


What would you use instead? Particularly given the desire for a
genderless
connector that can carry considerable current (20+ Amps)?


Considering these are used for carrying polarized power signals, why 

do

you want/require that they be genderless?


Convenience and flexibility.


There's a very good reason
that wall outlets aren't hermaphroditic.


That's because they are much higher voltage, and always a source. 
They're also meant to be used by people who know almost nothing about 
electricity. As radio amateurs, I'd hope we'd know a little about what 
we are doing. We use the same RF connectors (although gendered) for 
everything from the legal limit of power down to receiver inputs; make 
a mistake and the results can be very unpleasant. Is 12 volts somehow 
more dangerous?



The only reasonable argument I've seen is that it allows charging
batteries without adapters. But, given that improper charging of 

many

modern battery technologies can be dangerous if a specialized charger
isn't used, making it easy to connect a 13.4V, 20A regulated supply to
a 12V lithium pack doesn't seem wise.


The problem is that with adapters it's just as easy to make such 
mistakes. If you adopt gendered connectors, you'll get in the habit of 
having adapters everywhere, and there goes the advantage.

.
There's also the advantage of a universal standard - all cable ends the 
same; you never have the wrong end, multioutlet systems are all the 
same.


---

And there's still the original question: what would you use instead? If 
there were a gendered PowerPole configuration, would that solve the 
problem?


73 de Jim, N2EY






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[Elecraft] Alternatives to PowerPoles?

2008-04-06 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 4/6/08 11:00:03 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 APPs are bad design, bad technology, just bad why?

What would you use instead? Particularly given the desire for a genderless 
connector that can carry considerable current (20+ Amps)?

Not trying to argue, just wondering about alternatives. Ten Tec and some 
others use Molex but they're not genderless, they're one-use, etc.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Wait times... [OT]

2008-04-05 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 4/5/08 3:24:41 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 No engineering project is EVER on budget.

Yes, they are; I've worked on many that were.

 Forget about that one. And no 
 
 engineering project is EVER allowed a reasonable development schedule by 
 Marketing and Executive Management. Forget about that one too. 

I've worked on engineering projects that had reasonable schedules.

What you don't often find is both characteristics (adequate schedule and 
reasonable budget) together.
 
 I've heard and read of military contractors in the World War II era like 
 Douglas Aircraft and others bringing in a new warplane on spec, ahead of 
 schedule, and under budget. They say it's true, and I believe it, I guess. 
 But 
 whatever they were doing right in those days just doesn't happen any more.

Whole bunch of things were different then. 

For one thing, there was a war on, and the nation's resources were completely 
dedicated to fighting it. The Army and Navy weren't going to haggle much over 
development price of a new aircraft that could give them an advantage in 
combat.

There were also lots of projects that went nowhere. For example, the P-47 and 
P-51 are well known WW2 fighters. Anyone with an interest in WW2 aircraft 
knows them. But there were also the XP-48, XP-49, and XP-50 between them, which 
never went into production. Look down the list and the projects that never went 
into production far exceed those that did.

There were also lots of versions, variants and modifications. The first 
couple of versions of a plane were often quickly superseded. While the P-51 
prototype flew less than 6 months from the day the order was placed, the plane 
went 
all the way to the H model before the war ended. How much was spent developing 
all those versions? Imagine if there were  K3 models all the way to H..

Finally, there was IMHO a much greater tolerance for odd and even dangerous 
characteristicsm as long as the basic specs were met. The P-51 was fast and 
powerful, but a pilot had to trim the heck out of it before takeoff to counter 
the enormous propeller torque. Forget to do so and the plane would crash. That 
sort of thing was accepted as the price of high performance.

Think about how many features there are in any Elecraft rig and how few real 
problems.

73 de Jim, N2EY
 




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[Elecraft] OT: Pilotless F-106

2008-04-04 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 4/3/08 7:32:33 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 I worked on the F-106 for 4 years and never saw a connection on a connector 
 
 that wasn't soldered.
 

Ever work on 58-0787? In 1977, it landed itself after the pilot ejected:

http://www.f-106deltadart.com/71fis.htm

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Just Say No.

2008-03-01 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/29/08 8:08:46 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 it was made in China?
 
No. Justno.

73 de Jim, N2EY



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Re: [Elecraft] K3 build rate

2008-03-01 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 3/1/08 8:10:51 AM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 In round numbers, output now seems to be
 around 200 per month, 

 For many, it must be like watching an old-fashioned egg timer - the
 big pile of sand on top with only a few grains at a time passing
 through the waist to exit at the bottom.  I am glad that I now have
 mine, but I remember the long wait (8 months for mine). 

Remember too that a lot of the wait was for the first production units to be 
completed. There were several months when none were shipped but many were 
being ordered, so the backlog was building; now it's been reduced. Perhaps the 
publication of the reviews and the record-breaking results of Ducie Island (at 
the bottom of the cycle, too!) will generate huge numbers of new orders.

Meanwhile - where's that piggy bank?

73 de Jim, N2EY




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[Elecraft] Would This Power a K1 or KX1?

2008-03-01 Thread N2EY
In case anyone missed this on QRP-L:

http://www.thebackshed.com/Windmill/assemblyMini1.asp

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Chasing the numbers

2008-02-28 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: Gary D Krause [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I've been wondering how the numbers really affect what we hear. If a 
ham were to sit down in front of all the top rigs, blind folded and 
not allowed to touch them, would he or she be able to pick out the one 
with the best receiver by just using his or her ears? Lets assume that 
this ham has good hearing and that every rig is set the same. I realize 
that people have different reasons for picking a rig and that it isn't 
always based on lab tests otherwise we would all own the same rig 
assuming money is not a factor :-) But is there really a difference in 
the lab numbers as close as they are or are we just chasing numbers? 


IMHO:

It depends on what you are doing.

Under good conditions (decent signal strength, not a lot of QRM or QRN, 
etc.), you won't hear much difference between a K3 and any other 
half-decent rig.


It's when things are less-than-good that the differences really begin 
to show. Like when you're trying to dig out an S1 signal next to an 
S9+40 signal. Or when the band is full of signals of all kinds and 
strengths, but you only want to hear one of them. Etc. What tough 
conditions do is to show up the weaknesses in a rig.


There's also the inability to set every rig the same. Filter responses 
and DSP settings vary all over the place, as do gain controls, notches, 
etc.


The numbers show what can be measured objectively. But that's not the 
only measure of a rig. What really shows the quality of a design is a 
combination of the numbers and other factors, like how tiring is it to 
operate the rig, how well it makes contacts of the kind you like to 
make, etc.


IOW, for me, the real test is this: How much fun do you have with the 
rig?


73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Someone suggested camo ...

2008-02-27 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/27/08 3:31:01 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 Believe it or not, camo has been suggested as a 
 color option we should offer in our line of Elecraft 
 covers ... 
 

I went shopping for camo clothes yesterday.

I couldn't find any.

73 de Jim, (thank you Steven Wright) N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] K3-Latest K3 Review on EHAM

2008-02-24 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/24/08 8:57:10 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 The reviewer (Solardx) gives the results of a test he ran on his K3. 

With all due respect

We don't know if the reviewer has a problem K3 or a problem test setup. For 
that matter, we don't know if the reviewer even has a K3! 

IMHO, 99%+ of eham.net reviews are not reviews at all, (in the sense of 
objectice reports) but are really just personal opinions. In some cases they 
are 
based on very little experience with the rig, too.

Anybody with internet access can write an eham review on anything. I could go 
on eham and say the IC-7800 is ten times better than the K3 - even though 
I've never seen nor used either rig!

Solardx is completely anonymous - no call, no name, no K3 serial number.  
Yet his rating affects the score as much as somebody who's got one of the first 
ones and has many hours of experience testing and using it, and who signs his 
name to his words.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] K3-Latest K3 Review on EHAM

2008-02-24 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/24/08 1:40:27 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 Someone posts an honest review of
 their experience and loads of people attack them for criticising their baby
 by not giving it full marks?

No.

The criticism is that someone is posting an anonymous review saying the K3 
SSB transmit audio is terrible *without* giving the company a chance to solve 
the problem. A company which has a hard-earned and well-deserved reputation 
for service, service, and more service. 

That is, if there even really is a problem - since the reviewer is anonymous, 
we don't know for sure if the review is for-real or not. *Anybody* can post 
a review on eham even if they've never even seen the rig they're reviewing.

 Perhaps the transmitter is faulty - it is entirely possible the PA bias has
 failed or there is a problem with the driver, in the alignment or elsewhere. 
 

Of course that's possible. Perhaps the rig was damaged in shipping, or, if a 
kit, assembled improperly.

Or perhaps there's something wrong with the test setup, and nothing wrong 
with the K3. 


 Perhaps solardx really has a point. 

Perhaps - but why not contact the company and try to fix it? 

Whatever, their experience is still just
 
 as valid as anyone elses.
 

If, indeed, it's a real experience. We don't know for sure if solardx has 
ever been near a K3.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] OT: Attn CPU gurus - one more thing

2008-02-23 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/23/08 8:54:42 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 1T external drive for backups.
 

Western Digital makes a series of external drives that look like a book.

The case ventilation holes in the top spell out various words in Morse Code.

I am not making this up.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Class - A operatiom (was K3 #441 received)

2008-02-20 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/20/08 11:29:20 AM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 isn't Class A not very efficient? 

That depends on how you define efficiency.

First off, an ideal Class A amplifier that is not overdriven and is dealing 
only with symmetrical waveforms draws the same DC power regardless of signal 
level. That means its efficiency goes up and down with signal level. Also means 
that the amp must be capable of dissipating the full DC input with no signal, 
or at low signal levels.

At full power, when amplifying sine waves, an ideal Class A amplifier can 
deliver 50% efficiency. IOW, on CW or FM/FSK, an ideal Class A amp can deliver 
1 
watt of RF for every 2 watts of DC. So even at full power and ideal 
conditions, a Class A amplifier dealing with sine waves has to dissipate half 
the DC 
input.

Of course in the real world you don't get ideal efficiency. 35-40% overall is 
very good - I don't know if manufactured rigs are that good.

 You can get more power out of class AB1 or AB2 but you have to keep to the 
 linear portion of the curve to avoid distortion.  I guess what is happening 
 is that the rigs are not keeping to the linear portion of the curve because 
 of over drive by the operator or by the circuitry to compensate for something 
 or other.  A linear amp has to operated in the linear part of the curve. 
 Right?  So, what are these rigs doing?

The linear part of the curve is pretty limited for real-world devices. Yet 
to get max power, the whole curve is used.

It only takes a little bit of nonlinearity to create distortion products. For 
example, suppose an amplifier with 100W output has enough nonlinearity to 
produce a distortion product that is 1 watt. Such an amp's distortion is only 
20dB down. To reach 40 dB down, (.01%) the distortion product would have to be 
only 10 milliwatts. 

73 de Jim, N2EY




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Re: [Elecraft] Best way to secure RF ground from 2nd floor?

2008-02-19 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/19/08 8:50:41 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 Here is a solution from a very old QST,

It's not from QST.

 and all I can say is it works 
 
 for me. My shack is on the 2nd floor and I run several rigs w/ amps . I 
 was having RF everywhere until I tried this:
 - Run coax ( RG-8 or similar) from rig to a  real  good ground . Put a 
 .01 cap across the shield and center conductor at both ends. Cap needs 
 to be 2KV or better. You will be using the center conductor as your 
 connection to rig and the ground rod.You should also use an ATU as 
 mentioned in an earlier reply.

Have you tried just using the coax as a ground conductor, without the 
capacitors, and the center conductor tied to the shield?

73 de Jim, N2EY








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Re: [Elecraft] wish list for K3/RTTY

2008-02-15 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/15/08 11:11:17 AM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 How about a little bit of Ozone smell too?

Sure - just go here:

http://w5jgv.com/downloads/MVI_0101.AVI

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] electronic product standards

2008-02-13 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/13/08 5:45:39 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 There was a time when a 4 pin mic plug had pin one as mic and 2 as ptt and 
 3 as gnd.  Johnson, Heath, and all the other xmitter makers AGREED.
 

When was that?

I've had Johnson transmitters that used the Ampenol MC1 type mike connector, 
and Heaths that used the odd 2 pin connector that is hard to find today. 
Others used the 1/4 stereo plug, except those that used the version which is 
0.206 (PJ-068?)

Of course it was common in those days to modify the rig to use the connector 
you liked, and there was lots of room in the rig to do it. But the original 
equipment connectors were all over the map.

The four-pin connector was a Japanese standard for a while. But then came 
mikes that needed voltage at the mike for the element, mikes that had DTMF pads 
on the back, mikes with built in preamps, mikes with up/down frequency 
switches, etc. 

One more reason to use CW!

73 de Jim, N2EY 


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Re: [Elecraft] K3 : standby current

2008-02-09 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/8/08 11:15:13 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 I think most car batteries 
 are at least 100 AH.

No, more like 50 AH. 

The biggest car battery I ever dealt with was for a VW diesel, and it was 
only 63 AH. Had to turn a 2 horsepower starter against the 23:1 compression 
ratio 
of the engine, *and* feed the glow plugs which required more than 30 amps.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] OT - Battery ratings

2008-02-09 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/9/08 3:24:59 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 The real AH ratings for batteries ... the kind we're referring to
 in this topic ... are difficult to learn.  Most automotive-related
 ratings are specified incranking amperes, and this is -not- the
 rating that of interest here. 

Agreed. That's because amp-hour rating doesn't mean much by itself in auto 
applications.


 It's consumer hype.

Not at all.

A modern car battery really has only two jobs:

1) To deliver the enormous currents required to start the engine, in all 
temperatures and after having sat idle for long periods of time.

2) To power the electrical system for short periods when the engine isn't 
running or the charging system fails.

1) is the main job, 2) is secondary. Modern alternator/charging systems are 
designed to power everything on the car with the engine at idle. 

What we hams want for backup (small currents for long periods of time) is the 
opposite of what an engine-cranking battery is built to do.
 
 I'm retired from an electric utility's communications department
 where we used various typed of LARGE battery banks.  Our 
 microwave stations all had large battery banks.  

I work in railroad signalling, with similar requirements. The battery banks 
can get quite impressive, such as sixty 420 AH lead-acid cells for the switch 
machines - and that's one bank in one medium-size location.

For standby service, some RRs use wet-cell NiCads, made by SAFT and other 
companies. They have better regulation, longer life, and tolerate things like 
being discharged down to almost nothing. They also stand extreme temperatures 
better. But they are only 1.25 volts per cell and cost more than lead-acid. 

Two other factors:

Car batteries have to tolerate not only heat and cold but shock and 
vibration. Stationary batteries usually have much better conditions.

Amp-hour ratings are dependent on discharge rate and final voltage - the 
higher the rate and/or final voltage, the lower the apparent amp-hours. A 
typical 
rating is 8 hours and 1.75 volts per cell such as 40 AH at the 8 hour rate, 
to 1.75 volts per cell, which means that a fully-charged new battery can 
deliver 5 amps for 8 hours before its voltage falls to the specified 1.75 volts 
per 
cell. (Note that 1.75 volts per cell in a six-cell battery is only 10.5 
volts) 

At higher rates, the same battery will appear to have fewer AH - at a 
discharge rate of 10 A, it may only last 2 hours before reaching 1.75 volts per 
cell. 
OTOH, at low rates the cell may deliver much more than the 8 hour rating. 
Similar results from accepting higher or lower final volts-per-cell.

73 de Jim N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/6/08 2:59:17 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 It seems strange that some hams would find this sort of technology
 objectionable. 

Not to me.


After all, aren’t we all about technology? 

No. While technology is a big part of ham radio, it's not the only thing. If 
it were, we'd have stopped using modes like CW, AM, FM and FSK RTTY long ago. 
We'd have channelized, ALE-type rigs, etc.

Why would we hang
 
 around this forum if we weren't looking for a leg up. Just because someone
 has found a tool to work a new one doesn’t mean anything except to the ham
 that did it.

That's fine in everyday operating. But in a competitive situation like a 
contest it's a different thing entirely, because competition is a mix of 
technology and operator skill.

Some analogies:

What if someone wanted to use a hybrid bicycle in the Tour de France? One 
that would store the energy from a downhill run to be released on an uphill 
climb? For that matter, why aren't mopeds allowed?

I could probably win the Boston Marathon if they let me use roller skates 
(and everyone else didn't).

Corked bats in baseball - super-distance golf balls - turbine-powered Indy 
cars - lots of ways technology can give someone an edge and change the game 
completely.


 There are times when I take out my homebrew DC receiver and a
 
 homebrew transmitter and pound away. There are times when I like to take my
 KX-1 to Central Park. There are times when I have three or four ham programs
 running all connected to my K3 during a contest. I do it because I want to
 and because its fun.

No problem with any of that. The question is, where is the line at which a 
contest station is no longer single-operator unassisted?


 If it wasn’t, I could go play golf (and really make
 
 myself miserable).
 
 They call it golf because all the other four-letter words were already taken.


73 de Jim, N2EY



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Re: [Elecraft] K3 (yada yada)

2008-02-06 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/6/08 10:27:18 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 The term yada yada became popular after its use in the tv comedy
 show Seinfeld.  

Not that there's anything wrong with that!

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [OT] Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/6/08 4:51:37 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 A substantial proportion of people are naturally conservative. They don't 
 react well to things being changed. 
 
 Another substantial proportion of people are naturally progressive. 

I would say change oriented. 

All progress involves change, but all change does not involve progress.
 
 These two forces are in a never-ending circular dance of engagement, even 
 struggle. This is basically the thesis-antithesis-synthesis process of 
 Hegelian dialectic, if you remember your Philosophy 101. If either side, 
 thesis or antithesis, becomes all-powerful, the dialectic process is 
 subverted 
 and things tend to go wrong eventually.

I think there is a third kind of person: the one who is balanced between the 
two forces.

 This is because Nature does have a slight built-in bias in favor of change. 
 
 It's called adaptation. An individual, a species, even life collectively 
 either adapts or eventually becomes extinct. Nothing stays the same forever. 
 
 Stasis is not an option in this universe.
 

I don't think we know anywhere near enough about the Universe to say that.

Some forms of life here on earth have remained unchanged for tens of millions 
of years, if not longer, because they were and are well-adapted. Others have 
changed radically in much shorter times (domesticated animals, for example) 
because it was adaptive to do so.

The laws of nature don't seem to change over time - we assume that they are 
the same since the Big Bang. 

One law of nature that is too often forgotten is the Law of Unintended 
Consequences. When one has run afoul of that Law, one tends to be a little 
cautious.

 This small bit of potentially relevant  philosophy is brought to you as a 
 brief respite from the ravages of taking some things in our wonderful hobby 
 way too seriously. :-)
 
I am seriously tempted to quote the Philosophy Song from Monty Python, but I 
will leave that for the reader to look up.

Instead I will say this:

Contesting and DXing are essentially competitive games many of us hams play 
because we think they are fun. And like any game, most of the rules are 
arbitrary. And it's not life-or-death if a rule is broken, or stretched.

But that does not mean the rukes should not be taken seriously! Just the 
reverse.

---

Some posts back I made a reference to a QST fiction article from 1953 about a 
ham who built a totally automated SS contest station. It was science-fiction 
back then, but not so fictional today. In fact, it may actually be possible 
today. We already have Pactor robots on the ham bands.(not going there!)

What if someone actually built a completely automatic contest station? One 
that could keep pace with the very best contest ops, would never get tired or 
make a mistake, would listen to every band simultaneously and analyze far more 
data than any human could to maximize score, would access an enormous database 
of info, etc., etc. 

Should such a station be allowed to compete in the same entry class with 
stations that actually need an operator?

IOW, where is the line drawn?

73 de Jim, N2EY




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Re: [Elecraft] OT: new concept/tool for cw DXing and contesting.

2008-02-03 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/3/08 10:02:53 AM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:

 The reality is that it is just one step up from the DX  
 clusters.
 

Except that using clusters in many contests will put you in a different entry 
class. 

The trend towards such automation is not new. 

Some time back, W3FQB (SK) wrote a story called The Man Who Broke The Bank 
about a techno-ham who built a fully automated SS station and proceeded to 
make an incredible score. The computer did everything - tuned across all the 
bands looking for new ones, called CQ, made the QSOs, kept the log, decided 
where 
the best points-rate could be found, etc. He just sat and watched it go, and 
occasionally keyed it manually just to have something to do. 

The article was in QST for May, 1953.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] OT: solved: K7NEE/8R1 Dan (Guyana) on 30m

2008-02-02 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/2/08 1:27:56 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 I don't know if it is a 
 violation for the FCC to use an improper call when portable 
 outside the US 

IANAL/IMHO:

Technically, FCC has no jurisdiction in 8R1.

However, FCC does have the authority to consider character issues when 
issuing/renewing licenses. 

Everyone who applies for a license is assumed by FCC to be of good-enough 
character to be issued the license if they meet the other requirements. 

However, if they prove by their actions that they cannot follow the law, 
particularly
if the violations are serious and intentional, their license may be in 
jeopardy.

And it doesn't have to be an amateur radio violation. Some hams have lost 
their licenses for things like freebanding because those things are clear 
violations of the Communications Act. A felony of any kind can result in loss 
of all 
FCC licenses, too.

This doesn't mean every ham who gets a speeding ticket has to worry about 
losing
their amateur radio license. But a ham who willfully violates 8R1's radio 
laws by, say, using a bogus call, may give FCC reason to be concerned about 
that 
ham's ability to follow Part 97. 

FCC doesn't always go after the licensee right away, either. Sometimes they 
wait until the licensee tries to renew the license.

Again, all IMHO and IANAL.

73 de Jim, N2EY



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[Elecraft] Believers, Translations, 2nd Receivers, Bugs, Fixes, Deposits, etc.

2008-01-20 Thread N2EY
I've been reading this reflector a long time, but recently all the complaints 
about the K3 not being ready on a specific date, not having the second 
receiver, not having NIST-certified numbers for every possible specification 
and 
mode, etc.,  have become quite annoying. 

Then I was reminded of this story:

A little boy and his grandmother are at the beach. The little boy is playing 
in the shallow water while grandma watches from the sand.

Suddenly a rogue wave comes without warning and sweeps the little boy out to 
sea.

One of the lifeguards jumps in after the little boy and swims toward him with 
powerful strokes. The other lifeguards launch the rescue rowboat and row 
furiously after them. 

Just as the first lifeguard reaches the little boy, he disappears from view. 
Lifeguard dives and pulls him up. Shark fins are sighted heading for them, and 
the rescue rowboat arrives just in time to pull them aboard. The sharks are 
so intent that they attack the rowboat itself.

One of the lifeguards gives the little boy artificial respiration, two more 
row for shore with all their might while two more are fighting off the 
attacking sharks and bailing the now-leaking rowboat. Meanwhile an even larger 
rogue 
wave is seen bearing down on them. 

But the lifeguards somehow manage, through superhuman efforts, to fight off 
the sharks, resuscitate the little boy, and get to land before the second rogue 
wave hits. The lifeguards bring the little boy back to his grandmother, safe 
and sound. Then they collapse on the sand,  soaked and exhausted.

Grandma's only comment is:

He had a hat.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] [K3] QST Labs review? -- Pool?

2008-01-16 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 1/16/08 7:33:22 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 It is more likely 
 that they will wait until the firmware is more mature, the subreceiver is 
 available, and all modes are working. 

Reasonable guess, too.

There's also these factors:

- there's a considerable amount of time between when a rig arrives at Hq and 
when the article appears. They do extensive lab tests (whether you agree with 
their methods or not), try the rig on the air, and more. 

- They will almost certainly get a kit K3/100 with a lot of options, too. And 
there will probably be an extended report on the website, same as with the 
K2.

- They will probably want a couple of ops to try it out, just to see how 
different people react to it.

---

How about a pool? 

My guess is the K3 review will appear in QST for December, 2008.

Anybody else?

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] AM bandwidth, the rest of the story :=)

2008-01-15 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 1/15/08 3:18:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 500kW? I assume that must be a typo. AFAIK, the limit on the AM BCB is 50kW 
 in 
 Canada and the US.
 

There was one 500 kW AM BC station in the USA, however. IIRC, it was WLW, and 
it ran that power level in the 1930s. Special experimental permit or some 
such. WW2 caused reduction to 50 kW - I don't know if WLW was allowed to 
increase 
power after the war.

Google WLW for history, pictures, etc.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] dipole antenna efficiency

2008-01-06 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 1/5/08 11:40:39 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 We simply do not have conductors that will handle RF with anything like the
 efficiency they will handle DC or low frequency AC. That's because all the
 RF current 'crowds' onto the very surface of a conductor. 
 
 As we make an antenna physically smaller, the impedance drops. As the
 impedance drops, the RF currents and resistive losses go up. Even silver or
 gold - the best electrical conductors known - are not nearly good enough for
 the sorts of currents we see in small antennas. 
 
 As an antenna is made shorter the resistive losses far exceed any other
 losses in the system. Of course those resistive losses occur in the matching
 network too. It's not just the antenna itself that converts RF into heat
 better than it makes electromagnetic waves. 

This is so well said that it deserves repeating.

In *theory*, a dipole 1.3 feet long can be made to radiate 80 meter RF almost 
the same as one 130 feet long. But in *practice*, the resistive losses of 
real-world practical antenna systems of those sizes are very different.  

And what we're looking for are practical, real-world antennas that we can put 
up in the limited space we have available.

---

Another factor to remember is that under good conditions we can do pretty 
incredible stuff with very low power.100 watts into an antenna system that has 
1% 
efficiency will radiate the same amount of RF as 1 watt into an antenna 
system with 100% efficiency. So even a poor antenna will sometimes let you make 
a 
QSO.

---

It seems to me that one of the biggest stumbling blocks we amateurs have with 
antennas is seeing and understanding the entire antenna *system* - which 
includes the antenna itself, its surroundings, the feedline, matching networks, 
etc. We have to consider all of them together. And like the links of a chain, 
the weakest one will be the problem. A great antenna in poor surroundings will 
work poorly, etc.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] dipole antenna efficiency

2008-01-05 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 1/4/08 4:31:49 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 The most expensive thing is ground to install
 them where antenna restrictions don't bring down the
 wrath of the taste police. 

AMEN!!

(I have been trying for
 
 over 50 years to convince the world that antennas are
 beautiful, but without success) 

Me too. 

I've always found it odd that the very people who want the convenience of 
modern technologies often consider the technologies themselves to be 
unattractive, and want things to look like a time when life was much more 
difficult. 

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] dipole antenna efficiency

2008-01-05 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 1/4/08 4:34:29 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 I've never understood the popularity of the G5RV.  It's
 achieved a sort of cult following.

It's an ingenious compromise antenna for several bands, that's all.
Actually, just a ~102 foot dipole with a matching system that gives
low (but not unity!) SWR on several HF bands, so that a simple
ATU can match it.

  The original design
 
 was for a 20M -ONLY- antenna, 

Not true!

I have PDF's of the original articles by G5RV himself, and from the very 
beginning it was a multiband design. He had a small garden (back yard to us 
Yanks) and wanted to get on the air easily, quickly and simply. For his 
application, it worked.

But it must be remembered that when G5RV designed the antenna, the ham bands 
were somewhat different than today. 30, 17 and 12 meters weren't ham bands at 
all. 9-/75 meters in G land was 3.5 to 3.8 MHz only, and 40 meters was 7.0 to 
7.1 MHz.

Most important of all, the rigs in use were capable of matching reasonable 
levels of SWR - meaning 3 or 4 to 1 wasn't considered to be worth worrying 
about for the bands and short lines being run.  

and somehow has
 
 morphed into a do everything hoax.

Not a hoax, but there's a lot of misunderstanding about the antenna.

The biggest misunderstanding is that too many folks expect to put up a 
G5RV-like antenna and get 1:1 SWR on all parts of every HF band from 80 thru 10 
meters, automatically. And work the world with the same ease as folks with big 
aluminum. 

That's just not going to happen. It's just a dipole with an ingenious feed 
system, not magic.

 I do antenna talks at conventions and hamfests, and
 I always ask; How many of you use a G5RV? The
 hands go up and it's usually about 50% of the audience.
 I say; Gosh, I'm sorry, and try to show them how much 
 easier and more efficient it would be to simply use the
 open wire feeder portion of the antenna and a balun at/in
 the (required) tuner.
 

It's easier to do it that way *IF* you can make the feedline and antenna 
length such that the balun doesn't have to deal with very high, very low, or 
highly reactive impedances on the bands of interest. Or if you can run the 
balanced 
line all the way to a true balanced tuner that can handle the impedances 
presented to it. 

 Some years ago the Carolina Windom had the same
 sort of following
 

And for the same reasons - with the same limitations.

The G5RV and Windom antennas can be useful solutions in many cases. The main 
thing is to understand how they work and what their limitations are.

---

Comparing HF antennas can be very misleading because of all the vagaries of 
propagation and expectations. For example, suppose two hams with identical 100W 
output rigs put up identical dipoles, but Ham A's dipole has a feedline/tuner 
system that is 88% efficient and Ham B's dipole has a feedline/tuner system 
that is 22% efficient.  

Ham A loses only 12 watts in the feedline/tuner system - that's about as good 
as it gets on HF. Ham B loses *78* watts in the feedline/tuner system - 
almost six times the loss of Ham A! 

Yet at the receiving end, the difference is only one S unit - 6 dB. Slight 
differences in propagation could easily mask that and make Ham B's antenna 
appear to be as good or better than Ham A's.

A lot of hams will say a particular antenna works great for them. But what 
does that really mean? I remember one multitransmitter Field Day, some years 
ago, when a variety of antennas were tried out by the various station teams. 
All reported their setups worked great when notes were compared a few hours 
into the contest.

But for one team, that meant they were able to average 40-60 QSOs/hour, and 
for another team, it meant 10-15 QSOs/hour!  Their expectations were completely 
different. (And compared to truly competitive setups, neither was a 
world-beater).

73 de Jim, N2EY


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[Elecraft] Re: [QRP-L] Re: As good as it gets...for now?

2008-01-01 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 1/1/08 9:22:31 AM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 Four wires, each approximately 3-4m (10-13 feet) long. The PW-1 is
 ground mounted with radials stretched out orthogonal to each other.
 
 I also failed to mention the bands that I tried. The were 40, 30 and
 20m.

Well, there's part of the problem: Too few radials, and too short for the 
band. Try adding more wires, and making them longer.

The other issue is skip distance. Verticals less than about 5/8 wave long 
have good low-angle radiation (towards the horizon) but poor radiation at 
higher 
angles. If you are trying to work someone a few hundred miles away, a vertical 
may not put enough RF at the correct radiation angle.

73 de Jim, N2EY 


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[Elecraft] Sienna Transceiver

2007-12-30 Thread N2EY
(Insert standard no connection disclaimer HERE)

W5WVO asks:

 Where's the beef?

Main website:

http://www.dzkit.com/


Specifications:

http://www.dzkit.com/sienna_specs.htm


Datasheet:

http://www.dzkit.com/sienna.htm


All I had to do was google Sienna transceiver

Sure it costs a lot, but it includes things like an embedded PC. And it's not 
new at all.

Remember that Elecraft was once an unknown company with a single transceiver 
product. I recall more than a few people telling me that nobody in his right 
mind would pay over $550 for a CW-only QRP kit rig from an unknown company...

Frankly I don't see any reason to prefer the Sienna over a K3. I do see a 
couple hundred to a thousand reasons to prefer a K3 over a Sienna.

Still, as KK7P points out, is is a good thing to see another American company 
producing a serious HF transceiver kit.

73 de Jim, N2EY



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Re: [Elecraft] Kinda OT, about changes ....

2007-12-30 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 12/30/07 11:33:11 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 And pricing? The K3/100 is right on par with the great Heath SB-101 
 from the 1960-70's, when you factor in government CPI adjustments.
 

The SB-101 was from the mid-1960s. Replaced by the SB-102.

IIRC, the bare-bones SB-101 kit cost $360 less shipping 40 years ago. That 
works out to $2160 today, adjusted for inflation.

What you got was a good basic 100 watt SSB/CW transceiver that covered 80, 
40, 20, 15 and 10 meters. No RIT, no AGC choice, no noise blanker, no memories, 
no keyer, no sidetone on SSB, no built-in speaker, no ATU, no general 
coverage, no WARC bands, no second rx, etc. 

You could add one optional four-pole filter for CW ($22 then, $132 now), and 
a second VFO ($100 then, $600 now) could be added externally. Some years 
later, an external digital readout became available, for $180 IIRC (works out 
to 
about $900 today...).

Of course both the SB-101 and K3 need power supplies if you want to run them 
from AC power. But the SB-101 also needed a power supply to run from 13.8 
volts DC.

And as much as I am a fan of Heath gear, the SB-101 was in no way competition 
grade. Not compared to rigs like the Drake twins, or the Collins S-line, 
whose receivers alone, with no options, cost much more than the SB-101.

 But to me, the most amazing change is the flip of what happened 
 30-40 years ago when the offshore equipment pushed Heath and 
 Hallicrafters out of the picture.
 
 Within the last few years, there are 3 companies that looked at 
 Japan, and said, Oh ya? Watch this!
 
 Elecraft, Ten-Tec and Flex Radio. All 3 right here in America. (cue 
 the patriotic music!)
 

Actually, Ten-Tec appeared in the late 1960s, with simple QRP rigs. By the 
1980s they were making general-purpose HF transceivers like the Omni and 
Corsair. 

IMHO, it was Ten-Tec that pushed amateur HF transceiver design towards better 
CW performance. Before TT got into the act, manufactured HF transceivers were 
designed for SSB and had CW added as an afterthought. Nobody offered a 
transceiver with true QSK before TT did so. And it was Ten Tec that first 
pushed QRP 
out of the super-simple class.

 It does make me happy to see this. I am impressed with all three 
 companies. A good friend of mine bought the SDR-5000 and it is a great 
 radio. I, for my reasons, chose the K3. It is a joy to be able to have 
 the choice.
 

Consider the choices in new ham rigs available in 1967 and the choices 
available now. And what they cost. 

Good times then - and good times now.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Which Heil Prosets should we carry?

2007-12-29 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 12/29/07 10:32:21 AM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED] 
writes:


 Why carry any microphones (or keys, for that matter)?  Why act as a 
 retailer
 for any standard accessories that can be purchased from dealers or the
 manufacturer?

Two reasons:

1) You can make one big order rather than a couple of smaller orders.

2) You are guaranteed that the unit you buy will work with your Elecraft rig. 


73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] K1 band selection -Friendly opinions

2007-12-29 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 12/29/07 11:51:41 AM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED] 
writes:


 The WARC bands (including 17 meters) are great, but the simple truth is
 they are not as well populated as the old standbys (10, 15, 20, 40, 80,
 160). I think that's due, in part, to the popularity of multi-band coax-fed
 antennas. 

Yes, and that's a major reason for hams who have limited antenna resources 
(lot size, high supports, space on the tower, etc.) 

Of course the classic dipole-fed-with-ladder-line and end-fed-random-wire 
antennas can be made to work on those bands easily - if you can put one up.

But there are other reasons.

One biggie IMHO is that they are not included in contests, so they don't get 
the exposure that contests generate, and the big gun contesters do not build 
stations for those bands.

Another reason is that they are relatively narrow (30, 17 and 12 meters 
together are only 250 kHz, which is narrower than any other single Region 2 HF 
amateur band). Plus 30 meters is CW/data only in the USA.

There's also the fact that their propagation isn't much different from the 
adjacent bands, with the possible exception of 30 meters.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] K3 - Tuners

2007-12-08 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 12/8/07 6:49:45 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 K9ZTV wrote:
  Why in the world would you want to use an external tuner when the K3 
  has an internal one?

Besides the remote tuner, one big reason is because you already have the 
external tuner.

Another is if you want to feed a balanced line and don't want to deal with 
the balun problems that can happen if the load Z is very high, very low and/or 
very reactive.

Interesting article:

http://www.somis.org/bbat.html

One of the great things about Elecraft rigs is that you can add or remove the 
ATU at any time.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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[Elecraft] 66 cents a day

2007-12-01 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 12/1/07 9:23:38 AM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 Since the K3 is modular, I would presume plugging in a  new DSP board would 
 
 supply whatever horsepower is needed.  We'll be  replacing boards and 
 software, 
 not entire radios.

That's true only within the limits of the original hardware. Look at a PC - 
upgradeable in theory, but in practice it's often not long before it's cheaper 
and easier just to buy a new computer.

That said, note that there are plenty of 20+ year old rigs whose performance 
and features are very good and whose price can be very reasonable. 

 
 If I get to enjoy my K3  for 5 years and sell it for half what I paid, I 
 still got a bargain - my hobby  only cost $1,200/5 = $240 a year or the 
 equivalent 
 of a couple of rounds of  golf, two nice dinners out or a visit to the 
 dentist.
 

This was a selling point Collins used a half-century ago: their gear was 
expensive to buy, but its resale value was also high.

Here's another way to look at it:

If it costs you $1200 to own your K3 for 5 years, that's 66 cents a day. 

73 de Jim, N2EY








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Re: [Elecraft] OT - American hamming in UK

2007-11-30 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 11/30/07 7:36:09 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 It was 18 AWG solid copper wire with a cotton covering,
   usually white with a colored stripe, and was widely used to
   hook up ...bells, what else!
 

I still have a roll.

No, it's not for sale.

73 de Jim, N2EY, WCP (World Class Packrat)



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Re: [Elecraft] OT: US call areas

2007-11-26 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 11/26/07 2:29:09 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 I suspect that when the original call sign issuing system
 was created, the US population was a lot less mobile
 than today.  From what I've read about the 20's and 30's,
 it was common for people to have lived their entire
 lives within one state.  

In those days it was common for people to live their entire lives within one 
*town*.

But that had nothing to do with the call sign system.

That probably helped condition the
 
 idea of call sign goes with location.
 

Nope. 

The original licensing concept in the USA was that there were station 
licenses and operator licenses - and the callsign denotes a station, not an 
operator. A licensed station had to be operated by a licensed operator.

This idea was most useful in radio services like maritime radio. A ship or 
shore station would be assigned a callsign, which would not change even though 
many different licensed radio operators would operate the station. And the 
callsign could indicate things about the station.

The idea was adapted to amateur radio, but over the years it has gradually 
been de-emphasized. Once upon a time, it was possible to have an amateur 
operator license but no station license, or to have several station licenses. 
It was 
even possible to have more than one operator license.

Amateur callsigns were assigned to stations, not operators, and were 
originally only assigned to fixed stations. (Mobile and portable operation were 
not 
originally allowed to US hams). Callsigns were originally issued by the 
district 
offices, not the central Hq. of FCC and its predecessors. 

Before WW2, there were only 9 districts, all CONUS hams had calls beginning 
with W, and all hams in the possessions and territories had calls beginning 
with K. Some states were split into two call areas (NY, PA, NJ to name just 
three)

After WW2 the district borders were shuffled, 0 calls were added and split 
states were eliminated. Possessions got distinctive prefixes and CONUS stations 
could begin with K.

We went through periods when all calls were sequentially issued, when Novices 
and repeaters had distinctive calls, when mobile operation required a special 
license, and much more.

What we have today is a remnant of those old systems. Each rule had its good 
and bad features. 



One of the biggest problems with the old gotta-change-when-you-move system 
was that hams who moved a lot went through a lot of callsigns - and QSL cards. 
Hams could run across old friends on the air and not realize it because they'd 
changed calls when they moved. 

Also, as the number of hams grew, getting a corresponding callsign in the new 
district could be impossible. 

Now we have a choice. A good thing IMHO.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Transmission line loss

2007-11-17 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 11/17/07 12:02:32 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 For today's
 discussion, let's assume the power is 100 watts, total run is 100 feet, that 
 I
 can tune this vertical up to 50 MHz, and the SWR at the antenna hits 5:1 (it
 won't, as I'll have a remote tuner there, but just for discussion...).

For comparison, check out the online loss calculator at:

http://www.ocarc.ca/coax.htm

 Davis RF-brand RF-9914F Bury-Flex has a published matched line loss of 
 1.1
 dB/100 ft at 50 MHz.  Per the Handbook, a 5:1 SWR at the load will add 
 around
 1.2 dB of loss, for a total of 2.3 dB over the run, for about 60% 
 efficiency.
 (I'm still fuzzy on the percentage calculations.)

According to the online calculator, the matched loss of that coax is 1.009 
dB/100 ft.  It shows the additional loss due to 5:1 SWR as 1.13 dB, so the 
total 
loss is 2.139 dB and about 62% efficiency. Insignificant difference between 
your calculations and the online calculator. .

 A variety of brands of RG-8X have a matched line loss of 2.0 dB at 50 MHz 
 per
 100 ft.  A 5:1 SWR adds 1.7 dB, for a total of 3.7 dB loss, for a little 
 over
 42% efficiency.

The online calculator shows Belden 9258 (which is RG-8X type) as having 
slightly higher matched loss (2.188 db/100 ft @ 50 MHz) which makes the SWR 
loss 
1.784 dB and the total loss 3.972 dB. Efficiency almost exactly 40%. Again, an 
insignificant difference between your calculations and the online calculator. .
 
 Am I reading something wrong here, or is the 1.4 dB difference between the 
 two
 cables correct?  Can you extrapolate that to an S-meter at 6 dB/S-unit?  If 
 so,
 I'd say the 1.4 dB would be barely noticeable on the receiving end at best, 
 and
 the extra cost of lower loss coax isn't worth the money.  Operation at HF 
 would
 be even less of an difference than at 50 MHz.

All the numbers I have are close to the numbers you got. But there are other 
factors to consider.

First is the actual coax length. IIRC, you need 128 feet, not 100 feet, and 
that pushes the losses up a bit. In practice the coax length will probably need 
to be greater - maybe 150 feet when all is said and done. For example, you 
want to leave some slack at both ends of a buried cable. 

Second is the cost of a dB. If the difference between a K3/10 and a K3/100 is 
ten dB and the price differential is $380, that's $38 per dB  - but only on 
transmit. If better coax reduces the overall loss by, say, 2 dB, and the cost 
differential is $50, that's $25 per dB. And it works on both transmit and 
receive, not just transmit.

Remember too that a lot of the 'cost' of the installation will be in the work 
it takes to put it up. 

Third is maxing out performance. While an S-unit of loss will normally not be 
noticeable most of the time, when things get tough it can be the difference 
between a QSO and no QSO. This is one big reason the big guns work stations the 
rest of us don't.

Fourth is purely esthetic - some folks like knowing that they have the 
highest efficiency reasonably possible. 

73 es GL de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Kester Resin Five 50/50 alloy solder

2007-11-17 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 11/17/07 8:45:43 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 Can anyone tell me what Kester Resin Five 50/50 alloy solder is made of.  
 
 Is it a rosin core solder?

Resin, rosin. Tomayto, tomahto. Same stuff.

It's 50% lead, 50% tin, rosin core. Higher melting point than 60/40 or the 
eutectic 63/37 mixes usually used for electronics. Save it for big stuff like 
antenna connections and PL-259s.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] OT: pwr rating of RG6, etc

2007-11-13 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: Samuel Strongin [EMAIL PROTECTED]

RG6 is 75 ohm cable. Why would you buy a great radio and worry about 

performance,then go use the wrong cable. You start out at a 1.5:1 swr.

Because RG-6 may not be the wrong cable, and the SWR may not be 1.5 
to 1.


IMHO, the question of what cable to use requires evaluating the entire 
antenna/transmission line *system* and taking all the issues into 
account. Depending on the antenna impedance, frequency, length of line 
and comparison coax, RG-6 might be lower loss than 50 ohm line (say, 
RG-58 or even RG-8X).


For example, suppose I had a wire dipole at a height such that the 
feedpoint Z was 75 ohms, and it needed a long feedline to reach the 
shack. Feed it with RG-6 and the SWR on the line will be 1:1. All I 
need to do is match that 75 ohms to 50 ohms at the shack, which can be 
done with an unun or the ATU in the rig. With 50 ohm cable the load SWR 
will be 1.5 to 1, and I'll probably still need to match it at the shack 
end - but the shack-end Z can be anything inside the 1.5 to 1 SWR 
circle on the Smith Chart. Depending on the line used, the loss with 50 
ohm cable may be greater, too.


73 de Jim, N2EY


 

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Re: [Elecraft] Co-ax for the K2

2007-11-13 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 11/13/07 3:19:30 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 Almost universally, there seems to be  
 no recognition that even though the feedline is matched at the radio,  
 it is indeed NOT matched beyond the tuner. The feedline can see  
 humongous mismatch (high SWR) and the operator doesn't know because  
 the tuner hides it. 

That's only true if the load impedance is far from 50-75 ohms, or is highly 
reactive.

In these cases, the feedline will see high  
 
 voltages (perhaps very high), which causes heating in the dielectric  
 and will eventually destroy the coax. 

*If* the mismatch is considerable and the power is high enough. But at the 
hundred-watt level and SWRs under about 4 to 1, that's not going to be an issue 
with most coax.

 So why is hardline so much preferred? It has next to no non-air  
 dielectric to be heated/destroyed.
 

The reason hardline is preferred is that its loss is less. All the TV 
hardline I've seen has foam dielectric, btw. 

 And last, what is the best solution? Most likely to remote the antenna  
 tuner so that it always provides a good match on the local feedline  
 for the transmitter to see. The ultimate, of course, is to place the  
 tuner at the antenna. Why doesn't everybody do this? Because it is  
 rather difficult to do. Ham radio, along with the rest of engineering,  
 is all about finding the best compromise that provides the best results.

And knowing what is really going on in the system. An SWR of 2:1 at HF on 100 
feet of most coax types isn't a big deal. 10:1 is a different thing 
completely!

 
 So, if you can assure a good match between the antenna and the coax,  
 or perhaps even one that transforms the antenna feed impedance to the  
 transmitter's at all operating frequencies, then you have found the  
 right solution for you and should go forward with whatever coax fits  
 that solution...

Agreed - but a good match doesn't have to be a perfect match. 

73 de Jim, N2EY




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Re: [Elecraft] [OT] K3 Serial Number 000037 is in Switzerland

2007-11-12 Thread n2ey


-Original Message-
From: Richard HIll [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Why in my day I had to walk two kames to the post
office and back -- in the snow -- just to retrieve my kit, and then I 

had to

assemble it myself, connect tuners and antennae, and pray for sunspots!


Luxury.

http://youtube.com/watch?v=QsWd5QC7K5E

http://youtube.com/watch?v=FatHLHG2uGY

http://youtube.com/watch?v=Xe1a1wHxTyo

73 de Jim Two Sheds N2EY

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Re: Re[2]: [Elecraft] OT: Motorola buys Yeasu. Wow!

2007-11-08 Thread n2ey
?


Partly.

The big reason IMHO was this:

Heath (and Eico, and EFJ, and a number of other electronic kitmakers)
made their money on the fact that assembly labor was a big part of the
cost of electronics in those days. Automated assembly changed all that.

In addition, they were faced with the challenge of designing stuff that
could not only be built by the average person with a few tools, but that
could also be aligned by them without a lot of test gear. That was easy
in DX-40 days but became increasingly challenging in SB-104 days.

Make no mistake - a lot of the reason so many hams built a Heathkit
was that it cost so much less than an assembled rig.


Most people either don't have the time or desire to build
from scratch and if they do, no matter how badly they screw it up,
they expect the item to work the first time, or they expect the kit
maker or someone else to fix their problem.


Google my call.


Why do you think guys had a small business of assembling K2's? I
saw the book and the instructions are pretty clear, and 

straightforward.

Some people want the rig, but not the work that goes into building or
making it. They want to buy a finished product, not a kit and am
willing to pay someone else to pick up parts and solder it together.


And some people can't physically build one. Vision and other 
impairments prevent it.



as you stated,
the price is the same for everybody. Why should it be any different at 

a

ham store?


Agreed.


Last time I needed to fix an appliance (old Maytag D8300 dryer -
yes, even Maytags
break) I got the parts online. Ordered Saturday, at my door
Tuesday.



No argument here, but a question Where did you buy the dryer?


It came with the house. If it ever became unfixable, I'd shop around
for a new one.


the point I'm making is that you went
somewhere local, agreed on a model, and either brought it home yourself
or had it delivered from a local merchant.


Sure - because transport charges would be enormous for something like a
dryer.


If your dryer broke during it's
warranty period, your merchant was expected to provide (or at least
assist you) with service for that unit.


In many cases, warranties are serviced by the manufacturer and not the
dealer, in my experience. I've had to deal with Dell computer 
warranties,

and they were top-notch.


I had a few
Maytag items break too, but I do admit I got a lot of years out of them
before they did!!


Part of this is that I subscribe to the old Yankee saying:

Use it up,
Wear it out
Make it do
Or do without

I think of that philosophy as a big part of ham radio, too.

If you're comfortable buying something for several thousand dollars 

off a

webpage then great. But I'll tell you, from my experience, there are
still a lot of guys out there that want to turn the knobs a bit before 

they pull
out their wallet. Even if the purchase is made later using a 800 

number or
the net' later on, they'll travel to a show or store (even hours away) 

to see

the item before they buy it.


Agreed. It's all up to the person and the item.

The big thing is educating hams on what it really takes to run a 
business. Any

business.

73 de Jim, N2EY

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Re: Re[2]: [Elecraft] OT: Motorola buys Yeasu. Wow!

2007-11-07 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: Joseph M Grib [EMAIL PROTECTED]


this is
a 2% business for major gear.


I've heard this from other sources and I think it's true. Even if it
were a 10% business that doesn't give a lot of wiggle room.


Why do you think that ham dealers across the US have been folding?
Why do you think there's been a lack of dealer and manufacturer 

presence

at hamfests and shows?



It's because it's not profitable to do it.


Yup. But that's not our fault, is it?


Do you work for free?


The days when most people had 9 to 5 M-F jobs and paid overtime for 
anything
outside those strictly defined limits are pretty much over. How many 
hours do

you think Wayne, Eric and the others have put in on the K3?


What you the consumer are paying for is the service behind the sale and
the ability to actually see things before you purchase them.


Agreed. And the products have to be priced to support that.


When I was on the other side of the counter, I heard all
the time how I can get it cheaper
by the 1-800-XXX number. Then fine and go use the 800 number but when
it's needing
repairs or you need advice, go call the 800 number and don't come 

bother

me.


Yup.

The question is, why do the rigmakers allow their product to be 
distributed
that way? Don't they realize that, by doing so, they are killing off 
their

distribution network?


You don't walk into your local grocery
store and argue
with the checkout clerk how cheap you can get milk somewhere else do 

you?


Then why do you do it at a ham store?


But when you go to buy a car, haggling over the price is often part of 
the deal -
even a new car that's in demand. Same for when you buy real estate. Why 
is it
OK to haggle for those things but not a ham rig that costs hundreds or 
thousands

of dollars?

One thing that has kept me homebrewing and Elecrafting for many years 
is the
ads in ham magazines that show a rig but don't show a price. Sorry, but 
how

much it costs is an important specification!


Sure there's tons of places to get stuff on the internet and I'm sure a
lot cheaper, but if the ham
community wants ham stores to be around and not everthing to be either 

a

800 number or on
the internet, then you will have to support your local store and local
dealers, or they'll disappear.


Or perhaps times have changed...

For a very long time, Heathkit was only available by mail order. The 
price of a
 Heathkit was what it said in the catalog and in the magazine ads. 
Unless you
lived in MI you didn't pay sales tax but you did pay shipping. Heath 
eventually

opened retail stores, but they didn't last too long.

Ten Tec is only available factory-direct. The prices are clearly shown 
and the
same for everybody. Service is reportedly excellent. I understand that 
once

upon a time TT was available through dealers, but that ended years ago.

And of course Elecraft offers excellent service and advice, spare parts 
and

direct advice from all levels of the company.

This isn't just happening with ham rigs. Want parts? There's Digi-Key 
(guess where
the name comes from?) Mouser, Dan's Small Parts and many others. Wire 
and

cable? The Wireman and many others.

Last time I needed to fix an appliance (old Maytag D8300 dryer - yes, 
even Maytags

break) I got the parts online. Ordered Saturday, at my door Tuesday.

A big part of what makes these things possible are:

- email and the internet
- modern ham gear is smaller, lighter and more reliable than the old 
stuff

- there are many shipping options, and with the smaller/lighter ham rigs
the cost is not *too* bad.

Perhaps the day of the distributor is ending, and 
factory-direct/internet sales

is the new paradigm for a lot of things.

73 de Jim, N2EY

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Re: [Elecraft] K2 and the CW SS

2007-11-06 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 11/5/07 7:22:31 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 I wonder, could a computer just run the thing while you are out
 raking leaves.
 Most rigs can be software controlled, computers can beat people
 at chess, why not just have the computer do the contest?

Because a computer cannot beat a trained operator at contesting. Yet. Chess 
is logic, there is nothing left to skill or chance. Contesting is a lot more 
complex.

And because contesting is essentially radiosport. A moped could win the Tour 
de France, and a rollerblader could win the Olympic marathon in world-record 
time, but that wouldn't be sporting.

 Or has all this been done already?
 
The idea is not new. 

W3FQB (SK) wrote a story called The Man Who Broke The Bank about a 
techno-ham who built a fully automated SS station and proceeded to make an 
incredible 
score. The computer did everything, he just sat and watched it and 
occasionally keyed it manually just to have something to do. 

The article was in QST. May, 1953.

73 de Jim, N2EY



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Re: [Elecraft] Sweepstakes

2007-11-05 Thread n2ey


-Original Message-
From: Joe-aa4nn [EMAIL PROTECTED]

IIRC, I was surprised to get such a low SN from AA4NN.

But then I noticed a number of stations on Sunday that had good big sigs
and yet were giving out low SNs.

I think they were playing the hot and fast game: Show up late in SS
(Sunday morning at the earliest, late Sunday afternoon usually) and 
start calling CQ.
By then, almost everyone, even the big boys, are looking for new ones, 
and you have a few
intense hours of being *very* popular! You won't win that way, but your 
QSO rate will be

phenomenal.


If you insist 
on going for high score, make your goal more realistic and more 
fun by competing with stations in your own ARRL/RAC section 
or local radio club or a friend. In this way you are competing 
with stations in your particular area on this continent. 

 
Or compete in a variety of ways:

- are you ahead of where you were last year, the year before that, etc?
- have you fixed any weak points in your setup (rig, antenna, operator?)
- where do you fit in the overall percentile rank?
- where do you fit in the particular class (QRP ops in your section, 
etc.)


You can also use contests like SS as a way to get those rare states for 
WAS.



Forget the high score and all the pressure that goes with it, and 
just concentrate on getting a *sweep* of all 80 ARRL/RAC 
sections. Now, there's a challenge for you and a quite difficult 
one at that.  


AAARRG

Don't remind me!

I've worked all sections in SS - just never all in the *same* SS!

From EPA, it is really tough to get AK, NT, and PAC, simply
because there are so many hams closer to those sections, they are so 
rare

and so far away, and EPA isn't rare at all.

Got 76 sections including PAC this year. AK heard but couldn't break 
through, NT nowhere to be found.

The other holdouts were WTX, and (sob) DE!

It's only a few miles from here to the Delaware/PA border, yet I never 
heard any DE stations at all this year.


Perhaps they were all tossing pumpkins.

Maybe next year I'll have a different rig for SS...

73 de Jim, N2EY
 

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Re: [Elecraft] Sweepstakes

2007-11-04 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 11/4/07 11:48:07 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


  I have a K2/100 and a decent antenna. 

With all due respect, what do you consider a decent antenna?

When I 
 
 call someone they almost always respond after the first call. My cw 
 skills are pretty good I can exchange contest info at around 30wpm if I 
 have to, although I run between 22 and 25wpm most of the time. I try not 
 to get distracted, another words I try to stay in front of the radio. So 
 I feel as if I should be, at least, competitive.

You *are* competitive - with stations that are similarly equipped.

 But, it happens every 
 
 time. I sit down, eagerly awaiting the start of the contest, ready to do 
 battle, and get slaughtered. Within an hour or so I am hopelessly 
 behind. After 4 or 5 hours it is a joke. after 8 or 10 hours every 
 station I work has 600 contacts! Some of these guys are averaging a 
 contact a minute OVER 8 HOURS! I'm not mad, I am just amazed. My best 
 contact rate was about 30 an hour and that was only for a couple of 
 hours.I usually run a contact every 3 or 4 minutes. 

The question is, what factor limits your QSO rate?

In my case, the limiting factors have always been:

1) My signal isn't usually strong enough to hold a frequency and run QSOs. 

2) Finding new ones to work by hunt-and-pounce.

The folks with 600 QSOs after 10 hours aren't hunting and pouncing much. 
They're holding a frequency and running QSOs two-a-minute. 

So after a while I 
 
 get discouraged and start getting up and watching football for a few 
 minutes or something else and then I really fall behind.  I don't mind 
 not winning, but I am getting clobbered by every one I work by a factor 
 of 7 or 8.

I know what you mean. It's hard to maintain focus when the results are not up 
to expectations. Perhaps the expectations are unrealistic. 

 I have to wonder, am I really that bad? 

No.

The more-important question is, are you getting better? IOW, are you learning 
from the experience? 

One thing I notice about myself is that I'm pretty rusty when the contest 
starts, and it takes me a while to get up to speed. That means I need to do 
more 
little contests, rather than just SS and FD. 

I also need to get the computer fully integrated into the shack well before 
the contest. As it was, all it could do was log and dupe - I did all the 
sending myself. 

---

SS is a really strange contest in some ways:

1) Compared to other contests, SS has a very long and complex exchange. Four 
distinct items to be sent and received besides the callsign. (Used to be 
five!)

2) It's a US-and-Canada contest (I'm old enough to remember when the Canal 
Zone was a section!) which makes it very different from DX contests, because 
you 
need to work close-in stations as well as far off ones. Where you are in the 
country can make a difference

3) Unlike almost every other big contest, you can only work a station once, 
regardless of band. This makes finding new ones harder and harder as the 
contest goes on. It also means you have to use completely different judgement 
than 
other contests, because the station you spend five minutes dragging out of the 
mud on 80 may be twenty over on 20 in a few hours - or minutes.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] K3 S/N 25 arrives

2007-10-31 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 10/31/07 3:56:10 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 I have a feeling most would like to hear about a delivery serial # in 
 three digits.
 
 

Better yet, four digits.

Then five digitsbwaahaahaaa!

Seriously, though, I'd like to see how high the s/n' s go...

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] OT: News Article on Tin Whiskers Ruining Electronics

2007-10-19 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 10/19/07 12:28:43 AM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 But, consider just how many ham rigs end up in landfills - not many in 
 my opinion. 

Agreed - for two reasons.

One is that there simply aren't that many ham rigs around, compared to other 
electronic devices such as TVs or computers.

But the big reason is that we hams try to get as much use out of a piece of 
equipment as possible, rather than just tossing it in the trash when something 
newer comes along, or it develops a problem. Even a rig that is judged not 
worth fixing becomes a parts source to keep others going.

The computer this was written on is a Dell Dimension XPS R400. It was 
intercepted on its way to the dumpster a year or so ago. It cost more than a 
K3-100 
when it was new (about 1999?) yet it was considered to be worthless trash in 
less than a decade. A little work and it does the job. 

Maybe there's a message there we hams need to spread.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] K3 15khz 2nd IF?

2007-10-15 Thread n2ey


-Original Message-
From: Brett gazdzinski [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Just what drives the choice of 15 KHz?


Here's my semi-educated guess. Correct me if I'm wrong, folks!:

The reason for the conversion to a low last-IF is to feed the DSP 
filter-decoder system.
The lower you go, the better, because you get more samples per Hz of 
signal. (If you are
sampling a 15 kHz signal 150,000 times per second, that's 10,000 
samples per Hz, but if you
were to sample a 150 kHz signal the same number of times per second you 
only get 1000
samples per Hz.) All else being equal, more samples per Hz is better, 
as is more bits per sample.

But increasing either means more processor power is needed.

You can't go much lower than 15 kHz without getting down into audio. 
Plus you also
have roofing-filter issues at low IFs (if you tried to convert from the 
first IF to, say, 5 kHz, the
oscillator is only 5 kHz from the filter passband, and the secondary 
image is only 10 kHz away.)


Every design is a series of tradeoffs. 15 kHz is the optimum tradeoff 
for all these issues given the

available parts and other design issues.

---

You are probably familiar with receivers of the 1950-60s era which used 
a last IF in the 50 to 250
kHz range. From the Hallicrafters SX-88/S-76 to the Drake R4B and many 
in between, this was
done because it allowed a reasonable number of practical LC circuits to 
provide the selectivity.
Again, a tradeoff - lower IF was better for selectivity but made the 
secondary-image problem

worse, while a higher IF meant more tuned circuits were needed.

The introduction of practical high frequency xtal filters ended that 
design.


73 de Jim, N2EY

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Re: [Elecraft] [BL1] Seems lossy in all useful configurations

2007-10-14 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 10/13/07 4:58:04 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 There is no difference if the balun is on the input or output side of an 
 unbalanced tuner.

In theory, no.

In practice, there can be a big difference.

 See
 
 
 
 http://fermi.la.asu.edu/w9cf/articles/balun/balun.html#SECTION0005
  
 

He's not looking at the big picture.

If the balun is ideal, or close enough to ideal, or if the shack-end 
impedance of the balanced load are within a certain range, the 
unbalanced-tuner-with-balun-at-the-antenna-end idea works fine.  Thousands of 
hams use it with no 
problems and good results.

But in some cases the shack-end impedance of the balanced line can be very 
high, very low, and/or highly reactive. Under those conditions some baluns 
don't 
work well, and all sorts of odd things happen. Sometimes the end result works 
well enough that the ham doesn't notice anything wrong, particularly if s/he 
has nothing else for comparison.

Sometimes the problems can be fixed by things like changes to the line length 
or adding reactive elements in parallel or series with the line. 

You can't just blindly increase the number of turns on a wound-core balun to 
increase the impedance because you may set up self-resonances that cause all 
kinds of fun.

The best approach IMHO is to model the antenna-feedline system and see what 
the actual shack-end impedances are. Or measure them. Then decide what tuner 
setup is needed to do the matching job.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] K3 Manual Question

2007-10-11 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 10/11/07 4:20:00 AM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 (most hams don't have office-type printers that will print on both
 sides)

I don't know any printer that won't print on both sides. Of course it may 
take two passes through the printer,  but that's why the printing dialog box 
allows you to select only the even-numbered pages or only the odd numbered 
pages.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] K3 Manual Question

2007-10-10 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 10/10/07 5:50:41 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 What's wrong with doing it that way? There must be something wrong with it, 
 
 because nobody in the ham world is doing it. Would most hams not like such a 
 
 manual scheme? I sure would.
 

In my work, things like standard plans, timetables and rule books are often 
done that way. 

When you have a big book that is frequently revised, and is in the hands of 
many people, it makes sense, because the cost of sending everyone a complete 
new book is much more than the cost of keeping page-by-page revision info.

The big downside is that there must be absolute discipline in keeping the 
books up to-date. An old timetable can be worse than none at all. 

But in the amateur radio market, the revisions are few and the numbers small. 
Keeping track of updates is a lot of administrative work. 

It seems to me that having the manuals and revisions on the website is the 
best way to go. That way, anyone can see them.

73 de Jim, N2EY




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Re: [Elecraft] Re: CX Report

2007-10-09 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 10/9/07 6:43:09 AM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 What does make sense to me is to have ALL contests be restricted to less 
 24 hours or less.  Why take a whole weekend?  

Because that way everyone has the same shot at the good times, regardless of 
sunspot cycle.

Besides - how many contests are more than 24 hours? 

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] OT - Heath CW Twins

2007-10-06 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 10/6/07 12:07:38 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 According to 
 Chuck, the HR-1680 was released in the Fall of 1967, 

I think he meant fall of 1976. 

The first advertisement for the HR-1680 that I could find was QST for 
October, 1976. The ARRL Product Review came out in January 1977.

1967 was the year of the HW-100 and soon after the HW-16. Much too early for 
the all-solid-state HR-1680.

The Product Review says the VFO stability deserves special note, as it was 
measured as under 75 Hz from cold start to stabilization, and less than 20 Hz 
per hour after that. 

Using the SSB-bandwidth filter (CW selectivity is provided by an active audio 
filter),
the rx noise floor was measured as -137 dBm, BDR of 108 dB, and IMD two-tone 
IMD as 82 dB.

The review notes some of the corners that were cut to keep the price down 
($200 range). The RF circuits are diode switched, the IF xtal lattice filter is 
only 4 poles and made of discrete components rather than packaged, and the 
builder assembles the VFO. Only the first 1 MHz of 10 meters is covered, and 
there 
is no provision for more band xtals nor other IF filters. 

Since the receiver predates WARC-79 by several years, there's no 30, 17 or 12 
meter coverage.

The HR-1680 seems to me to have been meant as a replacement for the HR-10, 
but with much better performance and features. But at over $200 for the kit, I 
don't recall it being a big seller. If you wanted a hamband receiver, a used 
Drake 2B could be had for about that price or less, and offered a lot more 
features. The HW-101 transceiver cost only about $100 more than the HR-1680, 
and 
needed a power supply, but the '101 was a full-scale 100-watt class CW/SSB 
transceiver, covered all of 10 meters, and could be set up with the optional CW 
IF 
filter. 

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] The State of the Art

2007-10-04 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: Bob Waddell [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Elecraft elecraft@mailman.qth.net


I am reminded of our responsibility to communicate
with the state of the art of our day.


With all due respect

Who decides what is state of the art and what isn't?

My K2 was built in 2001 and its design dates to 1999.
My Southgate Type 7 was built in the early 1990s but
its design could have been done thirty years earlier if
someone had thought of it.

I have other rigs too, mostly older.

Where's the line? If a rig puts out a clean signal, is
it state-of-the-art?


This is an exciting time to be a part of our hobby,
amateur radio!


IMHO, it's always been an exciting time.

We had great rigs in the past and great rigs today.
Even better, we have a choice!

73 de Jim, N2EY

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Re: [Elecraft] Heath vs Elecraft

2007-10-02 Thread N2EY
Just a couple of historical notes:

In a message dated 10/1/07 11:10:19 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

T he Novice class in the US was 
 invented in the very early 50's, 

Novice was created as part of the 1951 license restructuring that replaced 
the old ABC system with named license classes. 

There were just 
 
 a lot of Heathkits out there because they were more economically 
 accessible than the host of other rigs that more or less did the same 
 thing for more money.
 

Heath wasn't the only company making ham gear in kit form, just the most 
popular. Price *was* a big part of it: compare the Heath DX-20 ($36) and the 
Johnson Viking Adventurer ($55). 

 the computer was just 
 being invented and it filled rooms with equipment. 

The world's first high-speed, general purpose, electronic digital computer 
was ENIAC, announced in 1946. It was in service until 1955. 18,000 tubes. 
 
 So no, Elecraft is not Heath reincarnated. 

One more similarity: Great manuals. 

  I began wondering what The Aptos Wonders would 
 have engineered with Heath era technology.  Don't know the answer.
 
 
I do:

Great rigs!

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Heath vs Elecraft

2007-10-02 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: Dave Van Wallaghen [EMAIL PROTECTED]


There are some basic similarities,
but certainly different times and technology.


Yep. Here's another difference: advertising.

In the bad old days, if a company wanted to sell to hams,
they pretty much had to advertise in the ham magazines
like QST and CQ. They also needed to print and distribute
catalogs/flyers of their products as widely as possible. And
the more info in the catalog or ad, the more it cost.
Those costs showed up in the product prices.

Today, a small company can put an incredible amount
of info on a website, which acts as a catalog and reference
point. Sure, ads in magazines are still needed, and websites
are certainly not free, but it's a completely different cost
and dynamic than in Heath's time. Imagine being able to
get a free copy of the manual for anything in Heath's
catalog *before* buying

OTOH, we have largely lost the cross-fertilization effect
of the old catalogs. Someone who got a Heathkit catalog
because they were interested in a stereo kit or test equipment
stood a good chance of seeing the ads for ham gear and
wondering what's ham radio?. IMHO, we hams are a lot
less visible today than 30-40 years ago.

I think I would have become dissatisfied with just operating in the 

80's and

90's and not having the chance to play with the hardware.


I've been a ham 40 years come October 12, and there's *always* been
a chance to play with the hardware.

The existence of Elecraft is due in some part to the QRP movement,
which started in the late 1960s. Lots of homebrewing, articles,
and small companies making kits, which reached a growing community
of hams all through the 70s/80s/90s.

All of which is a Good Thing.

73 de Jim, N2EY

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Re: [Elecraft] Today's HW-101?

2007-10-02 Thread n2ey


-Original Message-
From: Darwin, Keith [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Do you guys think it is feasible to design / build a basic 100 watt HF
transceiver kit that would sell for $600?  Something that would give
basic SSB / CW / Data modes, 10-80, with good (not great) performance.


The main problem I see in meeting the $600 price goal is the 100 watt 
requirement.

Look how much the KPA100 costs.

--

If I understand the problem, what you'd want would include:

- 80/40/30/20/17/15/12/10 meter coverage. (leave out 60 and 160 if they
drive the price up, include them if it doesn't cost too much).
- Synthesized VFO with RIT, maybe a couple of memories
- CW, SSB, data modes via soundcard
- PTT, VOX, semi-break-in
- Basic controls on panel (RF gain, AF gain, tuning, band select, AGC 
off/slow/fast, filter narrow/wide)

- Kit form

What you're describing is a basic K2/100 with SSB.

IMHO, if you took a K2/100 and removed features like the preamp, 
attenuator, QSK, direct
keypad entry, dial lock, selectable tuning rate, CW reverse, multiple 
filter widths, scanning,
yada yada yada, I don't think the price would come down much, nor would 
the hardware

be much simpler.

IIRC, an HW-101 with sharp filter but no power supply cost about $280 
in 1968 or so.
Run that price through an inflation-adjustment calculator and see how 
it compares

to the cost of a basic K2 with SSB and KPA100.

Note also that you could build the K2 first, then add the SSB and 
KPA100 later.
Plus other options (audio filter, NB, 160/2nd rx, etc.) that were never 
available for the '101.
And that the HW-101 did not have RIT nor even the option for a second 
VFO.


However, the HW-101 smells better.

73 de Jim, N2EY

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Re: [Elecraft] Today's HW-101?

2007-10-02 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: Brett gazdzinski [EMAIL PROTECTED]
S


heathkit sold a lot of gear, and
a lot of it was the same, the DX100/DX100b ran a while, as the HW100, 

HW101,

and the (almost the same) SB101.


The DX-100/B was on the market for less time than the K2, and there are 
no plans

to discontinue the K2.

Many Heathkit models are similar but *not* the same. When they made 
improvements

they changed the model number. DX-40 is an improved DX-35, etc.

Some years back, Electric Radio published a list of how many EF Johnson 
ham
rigs were actually made in their day. The numbers were surprisingly 
low.

I can look them up if anyone is interested.

It would be really interesting to know the number of Heathkit ham rigs 
produced. I
suspect it's a lot lower than we imagine, particularly for rigs other 
than the big

sellers like the HW-101.

The HW101 was an improved HW-100, which was derived from the 
SB100/101/102
family. The big savings in the HW series was the elimination of the 
expensive
preassembled LMO module and its dial drive, plus some features like 
provision

for a remote 2nd VFO.


Just what was the audio output tube in the HW101?


6GW8 Triode-pentode.


I remember it being sorare, heathkit
was the only place I could find one back then...


It was a standard TV tube. All my catalogs (Allied, Newark) had the 
6GW8 and

the 6BN8 used in the '101.

I guess I just come from a homebrewers standpoint, where I don't need 

to
make so many compromises to cost.I guess that is why I got rid of all 

that

old stuff and went all home brew, too much cost cutting


I did the same thing, but it only works if you have parts sources that 
cost

much less than what manufacturers pay in quantity. No manufacturer can
pull the precision variable capacitor out of a BC-221 frequency meter 
and

build a rig around it, but a homebrewer can. This one did - twice.

A homebrewer who buys all new parts in small quantities will not save
money. Been that way for more than half a century. Heck, I'll bet the
stock parts in a K2, if bought new from Allied/Newark/Mouser/Digikey
in small quantities, would add up to a surprising percentage of the 
kit's

price.

I don't think the rig you describe (hw101 specs) would sell at all, 

unless

it was a kit maybe. You can buy a good used rig for much less.


That's what I heard folks say about the K2 back in 1999. 6300+ K2s
later, I guess they were wrong

Yes you can get a good used late-model rig, but can you work on it?
Does it have top-shelf performance at a bottom-shelf price?
How much does someone learn from buying a used rig vs. building a
kit?

Historical note about Heathkit: The company didn't originally make
electronic kits. They made kit airplanes. Rhinebeck Aerodrome has one.

Heath got their start in electronics kits after WW2, designing things
around war surplus parts they got for pennies on the pound. That's
why the oddball tubes in their early test gear. (1626 as a rectifier?)

You have to keep in mind the state of the art and economy of
their times. Plus inflation.

73 de Jim, N2EY

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Re: [Elecraft] Re: Elecraft Digest, Vol 41, Issue 51

2007-10-01 Thread n2ey
 actually built, which simply cannot be had any other way.

For Heath, cost was a big draw as well. Look up what the average person
earned 40-50 years ago, and then look at rig prices in terms of hours 
of

work to own.


I would be most interested to know what
many thought
was the reason for the end of Heathkit with regards to Ham Radio.


IMHO it was technological change coupled with competition from Japanese 
rigs.


Before the widespread use of automation in electronics manufacture, a
significant part of the cost of anything electronic was manufacturing 
labor.

Heath and other kitmakers saved money by eliminatiing most of that. The
limiting factor was the need to produce detailed assembly manuals, and 
to

come up with designs that could be built, aligned and tested without too
much in the way of specialized tools, jigs and test equipment.

With point-to-point wiring and bolted-in components, there's a lot of 
labor,
so lots of possible savings. Just look at a DX-100. The change to 
printed
circuit boards reduced a lot of the labor to board-stuffing, but it was 
still

significant until that process was automated. See HW-101.

The final blow was the success of imported manufactured rigs at
competitive prices. Why build a Heathkit when you could get a Yaecomwood
with more features for less money?

Heath actually outlasted many other US ham gear
makers (National, Hallicrafters, Hammarlund, SBE/Gonset, EFJohnson, 
etc.)


What Elecraft did was to play a different game. They saw a part of the
market that wasn't being addressed, and met the need. They purposely
abandoned some of the standard paradigms of the past 20-30 years of HF
ham rigs, and made a lot of hams happy in the process.


73 de Jim, N2EY



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Re: [Elecraft] Sherwood on ARRL Testing Methodology

2007-10-01 Thread n2ey


-Original Message-
From: Goody K3NG [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Another thing to note is that ARRL buys all the gear they review, 

right off the shelf just like any other ham would.

And it's bought in such a way that the seller doesn't know it's going 
to be an ARRL test unit.


--

As for fluff in ARRL Product Reviews, I attribute that to the wide 
'dynamic range' of the readership's technical

knowledge.

On the one end are hams who can recite testing methodologies for all 
sorts of performance metrics, including
pitfalls and claimed-vs-observed numbers. At the other end are hams who 
don't understand why you'd want
passband tuning, narrow filters, or what the attenuator/preamp switch 
does. And everything in between.


On top of that are complaints that QST is too technical and/or aimed 
only at the contest/DX/big station hams,

etc., etc.

So we get Product Reviews that are part lab test, part feelings, and 
part an attempt to Elmer. All jammed into a

limited space, and on a limited time, to be done by a limited staff.

The K2 got an expanded report that only appeared online. Went into more 
detail than the mag report. K3 should

get the same.

One ham's fluff is another ham's main interest.

73 de Jim, N2EY

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Re: [Elecraft] K rig's longevity?

2007-09-30 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/30/07 6:17:24 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  Will it be possible to keep a K2 working 35 years? I don't see why not, 
 given 
  that almost all the parts are readily available, the documentation is wide 
 
  open and free, and expert assist is available from several sources. Plus 
 when 
 
 Most of the documentation is closed, as, as you point out yourself, the 
 radio does a lot in software, and the software source isn't released; 
 not even the AuxBus protocol is documented. 

It's documented, just not publicly. That could always change.

 It's also the case that 
 
 component substitution, including piggy backed surface mount parts, have 
 had to be made already.
 
 The impact of the closed software is that, even if you can get the PIC 
 chips, you won't be able to program them.  Also, where the firmware has 
 restrictions for legal reasons, and these go away (e.g. the Thai 
 government permits use of additional amateur radio frequencies, or, on 
 my reading of the UK licence, and assuming the situation has arisen and 
 
 Elecraft have actually complied, if a UK Novice gets a Full licence and 
 is therefore allowed to operate equipment that is not restricted, by 
 design, to authorised frequencies, the user may have trouble getting an 
 upgrade).
 
 ncidentally, making the software public domain is not a good idea, as 
 it will be ineffective in the UK, and most other countries, with the, 
 probable, exception of the USAb, and doesn't allow one to restrict 
 implied warranties.  It's better to use a liberal and perpetual licence.
 

WHich could happen in the future.

 The other issue is that Elecraft is a small company and we have 
 discovered, this week, that one of their founders is turning 50 and 
 another key technician learned algebra in the late 1950s, it seems to me 
 that a lot of the key personnel are reaching the point where they think 
 about retirement.

Heck, I'm 53, and I was thinking about retirement 20+ years ago!

  As well as losing the product knowledge, founders of 
 
 startup companies in that position often want to turn the value of the 
 company into cash to fund their pensions.  To me, the K3 could well be 
 there in order to make the company sellable.  My experience of 
 innovative startups, where the founders sell out, is poor.  I've had to 
 leave my old ISP, because of the consequences of that.
 

Of course that could happen.

But support of older products is an issue with *any* company nowadays. How 
many ham-rig manufacturers today give full support to rigs they made 20, 25, 
30, 
35 years ago? 

 From what I know of the hardware, I would be most worried about the K2 
 headphone jack, as it is not particularly generic and a known weak 
 point. 


 I'm also somewhat concerned about the relays.  They are almost 
 
 impossible for an individual to source and they have a limited life, and 
 the KAT2, in particular, hits them hard.
 

I didn't know they had a limited life - how many operations? What is the 
failure mode?

---

It should be remembered that in most cases, the way old rigs are kept alive 
is a
combination of:

- replacing old parts with new equivalents (orange drop caps replacing old 
wax-and-paper caps), 

- custom-making new parts to replace the old (usually done to mechanical 
pieces)

- finding old caches of parts (this is how I fixed a GE Fanuc Workmaster unit 
to program Series Six PLCs a few months ago)

- cannibalism of parts-rigs to keep good ones working. 

73 de Jim, N2EY



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Re: [Elecraft] K rig's longevity?

2007-09-29 Thread N2EY
 right down
to it, the hardware part isn't all that complicated because so much is done 
in software. 

73 de Jim, N2EY






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Re: [Elecraft] Best band for low cost DXing?

2007-09-28 Thread n2ey


-Original Message-
From: Darwin, Keith [EMAIL PROTECTED]


DX on a shoe string


Depends on how big the shoes are. What is a minor expense for one person
is a major expense for others. Same for antenna space.


- 40 meters.  A vert of 1/4 to 3/8 wave makes you very competitive on
this band.


*IF* it's a good one, with a good ground/counterpoise/radial system, and
in the clear. If the RF has to go through trees, buildings and other 
absorbers

to get to the sky, you may find a dipole is better.


A dipole at 1/2 wave high is tough to do.


Depends on your situation (trees, etc.) What do you have?


A Yagi is even
tougher.  The tall vertical is relatively easy and cheap while 

providing

a better low angle signal than a low horizontal antenna.



- 30 meters.  Again.  3/8 vertical.  The power limit on 30 makes for a
more level playing field.


No DX contests either.


- 15 meters.  Antenna sizes and heights are manageable.  Here a
mono-band yagi on a 25' pole will work well at a moderate cost.


But at this point in the cycle, 15 is at best undependable. And
what you describe involves pole, rotator, etc.


Those are my thoughts.  What are yours?


1) Why ignore 20 meters? Sure, the Big Boys will overpower you
there, but it's where the DX is.

2) What resources do you have? Large open space (rooftop is ideal)
for a vertical with radials? Trees/tall house for a dipole?

3) You seem to favor a vertical. If you can put one up with a good
ground/counterpoise/radial system, and in the clear, that may be
the way to go *if* a high dipole (50 feet is plenty) isn't possible.

The problem I see with most manufactured verticals is that they're
expensive and have multiple traps.

What I'd suggest is a low-resistance (tubing, aluminum downspout,
multiple copper wires) vertical about 28-30 feet high - whatever
works out to be about 5/8 wave on 15 meters. With as extensive
a ground system as possible. A remote-controlled L network matcher
at the base permits tuning the antenna to resonance/low SWR on
any band from 40 to 15 meters. If 15 isn't a priority or you get a
Yagi for the band, go for more height to increase performance on
the lower bands. At around 42 feet, you'd have a 5/8 wave on 20
and more than a quarter wave on 40.

While manufactured remote-control matchers exist, you can make your
own and save $$. The trick is that the matcher only needs to match
your particular antenna on the bands you use. Such a matcher could
consist of a single tapped air inductor (large and homebrew, to save
money and be low loss) with one tap for each band,
taps being selected by relays. One variable capacitor turned by an
old electric-screwdriver motor does the rest. If you want to cover
4 bands (say, 40/30/20/15), you only need 3 relays and 4 control
wires plus ground. (There are tricks to reduce this even more but
for simplicity I'm going basic). Sure you have to find the taps by
experiment, but you only have to do it once.

Just my ideas. IMHO. YMMV. LSMFT

73 de Jim, N2EY



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Re: [Elecraft] K3 in the marketplace

2007-09-22 Thread N2EY
I'll say this and then be quiet.

I find phrases like the following to be extremely offensive:

designers had K2-its

human factor... so often ignored by purist engineers...

attacks from rabid fans

experts (ex-spurts)

Real engineers seem to stall out when they try to confront intangible human 
factors

toy sized

I don't see what the point is in these comments. If you don't like a product 
- any product - just don't buy it. That's one of the great things about ham 
radio: we don't have to buy any particular thing, and we have lots of choices.  
KR2Q stated the choices perfectly, dittoes to what he wrote.

Please - it's enough to say I prefer A over B. The derogatory comments 
about engineers, toys, experts, rabid fans, etc. are really, really offensive.  

The K3 has jumped Elecraft into the arena of the ORION 2, FT-9000 and 
IC-7800 and great specs are great, but.This means they can still be beaten 
in 
the marketplace when their specs indicate they should be the only hi end rig of 
choice.

How much do each of those other rigs cost? 

Can you leave out features you don't find essential to lower the price, then 
add them later if you want to?

For me, a 100 watt K3 kit with ATU and one optional roofing filter would be 
the starting point. Priced at about *half* of an Orion II with ATU. Put every 
available option in the K3 and its price will not reach 75% of the price of an 
Orion II with ATU.  And the Orion II is much lower priced than the FTdx-9000 
or the IC-7800.

Elecraft's game has always been to produce high performance rigs (not toys 
- RIGS!) that are uniquely different from what's on the market, at a lower 
price and with much more owner involvement. That their products could even be 
considered competition to rigs costing so much more simply amazes me. 

Sorry for the rant, thanks for the BW

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] smaller?

2007-09-20 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/19/07 11:41:37 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 All respondents really gave me only one answer... cheaper... and I 
 understand that, but cheaper does not always drive consumer products see 
 
 the BMW 730i or the celebrity handbag costs ESPECIALLY IN A NICHE MARKET 
 like those and like ham radio.

How many 730is are sold in the USA, compared to total car sales? Apply that 
percentage to the total number of ham transceivers sold. 

 
 I still think a ham radio the size and shape of a flat panel display... 
 where the controls are spread out, plentiful, and large over a big panel 
 space would sell well.
 

How much more would  you be willing to spend for one?

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Six Days, not Seven Days

2007-09-19 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: Thom LaCosta [EMAIL PROTECTED]


created Heaven and Earth in Seven Days. 

 
Six days. Seventh day was a rest day. Which Eric and Wayne haven't 
gotten in a while, I bet!


73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] smaller caps?

2007-09-19 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/19/07 8:12:18 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 What is the motivation driving smaller and smaller electronic 
 products?
 
 smaller means using less stuff to make it and thus cheaper?

Yep. Also less cost to pack, to ship, and to store. 

Look at the cost of packing, shipping, and storing, say, a DX-100 and K2/100. 
That all comes out in the price.
 
 But when the hand phone, the caculator, the iPod, the mp3 player, the memory 
 
 stick, the 706, etc etc are so small that they can not be easily be operated 
 
 with normal human fingers, what is going on?

Depends what you mean by normal. And people buy the things.

 One of my students had her computer thumb memory thingy hanging from her 
 ear lobe.
 

I remember carrying punched card decks, reels of computer tape (magnetic and 
paper) and those multiplatter removable disks that went into drives the size 
of a washing machine. No thanks.
 
 The greying of America and of ham radio indicates the need for bigger type, 
 bigger radio buttons, etc., AND louder cel phones and louder everything, 
 too.
 

How much more are you willing to pay for it?

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] How Many Hams In USA?

2007-09-15 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/14/07 11:05:26 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 One might find it very interesting to compare the annual income per family, 
 during the times shown.

Yes, but it would have to be adjusted for inflation. Back in the 1950s, a 
gross family income of $5,000/yr was solidly middle-class, and $10,000/yr was 
Easy Street. 

 I would even further offer that it may be that the harder it is for families 
to make a 
 good living, the easier it is for folks to become hams. 
 
You're obviously looking at the enormous growth of the 1930s, despite the 
Great Depression. I don't have a simple explanation of why there was so much 
growth then. 

But if the family-income theory is true, why so much growth in the 1950s and 
so little in the 1960s? Why the downturn in recent years?

It seems to me that the biggest change in personal economics in my lifetime 
has been a sort of inversion of the cost of necessities and luxuries. When I 
was a kid, 40-50 years ago) it seemed that necessities (food, clothing, 
housing, transportation, utilities, energy, health care) were relatively 
inexpensive. Particularly if you went for the basic model and took care of it 
yourself. 
But luxuries (TV, vacations, restaurants, ham radio, etc.) were relatively 
expensive, unless you were somewhat ingenious. 

Now it seems that the necessities are expensive and the luxuries inexpensive! 
Almost everyone can have a computer, iPod, etc., but the house to put them in 
is another story.

What this meant to ham radio was that, in the past, lots of folks had a home 
with room for a decent antenna and shack, but not a lot of money for a fancy 
rig. So there were lots of articles and examples of how to do ham radio on a 
shoestring budget, and they were practical because of the economics of the 
time. 
A lot of hams homebrewed, converted surplus and built kits because there was 
simply no other affordable option. (How many of us built an Elecraft to save 
money, compared to those who built one for its performance?)

I suspect that for every ham with an S-line on the air there were a dozen 
hams with ARC-5s and S-38s. Today it's the other way around!

I think there are lots of other factors, many of them complicated. For 
example, in the 1930s there were lots of inexpensive parts on the market, 
partly 
because of mass-production techniques developed for broadcasting and partly 
because of business failures. After WW2, and well into the 1970s, there was an 
enormous amount of war-surplus parts and equipment around at low prices.

Sunspot peaks and lows have a considerable effect.

I think a lot has to do with people's living situations. In the 1930s, 
putting up a wire for your radio set was something everyone did. Now it's 
forbidden 
in many places! 
In the 1950s, a lot of Americans were moving out to the 'burbs, with lots of 
room and no restrictions. That's changed greatly.

73 de Jim, N2EY






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Re: [Elecraft] How Many Hams In USA?

2007-09-14 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/14/07 7:38:44 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 in 1971  210,000 would have been pretty  close to actual number, in US.

More like 275,000.

Here are some numbers to think about while waiting for the sunspots to come 
back and the K3s to start shipping:

US population vs. hams - (numbers are rounded off, accurate to within 2%)


1930: US population 122 million, US hams 18,000, 1 ham per 6778 Americans 
1940: US population 131 million, US hams 50,000, 1 ham per 2620 Americans 
1950: US population 150 million, US hams 90,000, 1 ham per 1667 Americans 
1960: US population 179 million, US hams 230,000, 1 ham per 779 Americans 
1970: US population 223 million, US hams 270,000, 1 ham per 825 Americans 
1980: US population 227 million, US hams 350,000, 1 ham per 649 Americans 
1990: US population 249 million  US hams 550,000, 1 ham per 453 Americans 
2000: US population 281 million, US hams 683,000, 1 ham per 411 Americans 
2007: US population 301 million, US hams 655,000, 1 ham per 460 Americans

Note the tremendous growth (compared to the total population) in the 1930s 
despite the Great Depression, the fast growth of the '50s followed by the loss 
of the 1960s, and then the steady growth from 1970 to 1990. 

73 de Jim, N2EY












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Re: [Elecraft] Revised Shipping date for K3

2007-09-14 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/14/07 6:41:54 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 you know how you sometimes get all fidgety and itchy when you're close
 to the end of a good book?
 

Or waiting for someone to finish the last Harry Potter book so you can start 
it (went through that the weekend it came out).

SPOILER:

At the end of Deathly Hallows, Harry discovers that Rosebud is a sled. 
Then he wakes up, middle aged, next to Suzanne Pleshette.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Elecraft news story

2007-09-14 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/14/07 8:29:53 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 Actually in the US in 1962 (the year I was licensed) there were
 over 250,000 hams in the US.  The callbook I saved to show my
 first call was the summer 1963 and it lists 258,000 hams.
 

Is that 258,000 operator licenses or 258,000 station licenses? Just curious.

In those days, there were considerably more amateur station licenses than 
operator licenses, because there were a more than a few club, military, RACES, 
and second-station licenses. When amateur repeaters became popular (about a 
decade later), the difference swelled even more.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Use of Heathkit SB200 amp

2007-09-13 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/12/07 11:12:05 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 the Heathkit SB-200 has several
 modifications that can be made to it, one of which is the reduction of drive
 power to excite it.

What is modified to do this?

 
 Does anybody have any idea what the lowest power required to excite an
 SB-200 amp is?
 

I presume you meant what the lowest power required to excite an SB-200 amp 
to full rated output is

The SB-200 uses a pair of 572B triodes in grounded-grid. The data sheets list 
the 572B as needing 50 watts of drive in that service, so a pair will need 
100 watts of RF to drive them. 


 Without mods, it is around 100 watts, but I use to have one with the 
 reduced
 drive mods, and I drove it with 30 to 50 watts for around 300 watts out. 

The tube ratings (for a pair) say that 100 W of drive will give 600 W output, 
so 50 W of drive would give 300 W output. 

I don't see what could be modified to reduce the drive requirement for full 
output, except perhaps changing to grounded-cathode operation instead of 
grounded grid. But such a mod would be extensive, requiring neutralization and 
other 
changes.

 I
 
 never tried testing the lower end with that mod. Though.
 
 Bottom line is:  if an SB-200 had the reduced drive mod, could a QRP K2 at
 10 to 15 watts with an amp key interface safely/adequately drive an SB-200
 to say, 50 to 60 watts out?
 

Since the SB-200 is a linear amplifier, I don't see why not. Of course it's 
using a sledgehammer to drive a 3d finishing nail 

The problem is, how do you tune up the SB-200 with such low drive power?

---

I'm curious to know what is changed by the low drive mod for the SB-200.

Thanks

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Time to Move On

2007-09-13 Thread n2ey

-Original Message-
From: Darwin, Keith [EMAIL PROTECTED]


My K2 was a kit.  I spent a month or so building it.  I've spent the
last 18 months operating it.  Beauty of operation pays dividends long
after the joy of building has ended.



Like I say, I'm having a hard time wrapping my brain around this one.


I think it has to do with how much of oneself goes into the process.

At one end of the spectrum would be a kit that was a box of parts, a 
schematic,
and maybe a layout drawing or two. Lots of soldering, coil-winding, 
etc. Maybe even require you to drill some holes.


On the other end would be a kit that involves mounting a couple of 
components and nothing else.


From what I can see, the K3 requires a bit more assembly than building 
a PC. No soldering - same as a PC. And for the same reasons.


It would have been great if the K3 could have been built with all 
through-hole components on conventional boards that we could 
stuff'n'solder, just like the K2. I think if that were practical, it 
would have been done.


--

None of this is really new, though. Heathkit's famous SB line used 
prepackaged crystal filters, prepackaged LMOs in a do not open box, 
and a preadjusted first-IF bandpass transformer. And that was over 40 
years ago.


Even earlier, the Heath RX-1 Mohawk receiver came with a 
preassembled, prealigned front-end module that you just bolted onto the 
chassis and hooked up. Tuning cap  coils, bandswitch, several tubes, 
etc., all done for you.


73 de Jim, N2EY

(didn't we have this discussion before?)

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Re: [Elecraft] manuels

2007-09-11 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/11/07 12:09:37 AM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 Take a look at the ORION 2 manuel.  Perhaps the best I have ever seen.  
 Makes the JA books really look sick.
 

Does it include assembly instructions?

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] K3 manual

2007-09-11 Thread n2ey


-Original Message-
From: Brett gazdzinski [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Looking at the manual, it looks like building the K3 is going
to be really fun!


Just like every other Elecraft product.


I think you get the really fun part of building, without the endless
soldering in of .01 caps and so on


Hey! I like soldering!


I always liked the winding and mounting of toroids, mounting
of the chips and transistors and other parts, only the (seemingly) 

endless

installation of caps and resistors got old after an hour or two...


I always found it relaxing. But then I like to line up all the color 
codes and capacitor labels up the same way, too



The only thing that bugs me is it looks from the pictures like
the K3 uses the same (no fidelity) speaker as the K2.


Simple fix: External speaker.


Wonderful, like old heathkits, that you can take the entire radio
apart to fix a problem easy, any problem, and have instructions on
how to do so.


Just like every other Elecraft product.

And you'll be able to get factory-direct parts and technical support.


It looks like there is a lot of extra room inside the K3, unlike
any of the other brand rigs.


None of that is extra room. It's all there for a reason.

You watch - there will be some neat stuff for that space. The folks at 
Elecraft probably haven't even thought some of it up yet.


73 de Jim, N2EY

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Re: [Elecraft] Balanced AT

2007-09-10 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/10/07 1:10:42 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 If I had a doublet I would seriously consider feeding it like the W5DXP 
 which uses switched ladder line for matching .  Looks cheap, low loss and 
 easy 
 to do: any residual mismatch should be compensated by the K2/K3 auto-matching 
 system.
 

Cecil's linear tuner setup works - I've heard it on the air. He's used it 
for a number of years. 

The problem is that it's a bit of a mechanical nightmare, with all the 
switches and different lengths of window line.  Remember that the window line 
has to 
be separated from other conductors by a couple of line-spacings. 

You also don't have a lot of flexibility on how much line there is from the 
antenna to the first switch. 

If you don't QSY a lot, it's certainly doable.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Big Rigs?

2007-09-09 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/9/07 1:41:29 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  
  Many good companies have been damaged or even destroyed by trying 
 

(to grow too fast)


 There are also problems associated with growth at any rate. The biggest 
 of these is that it generally forces you either to become a B2B 
 (business to business) company or a mass market company, neither of 
 which are compatible with supporting niche consumer products.  It also 
 tends to result in extreme industrialisation of the support process, 
 i.e. the use of low skilled staff working from scripts.
 

The trick is to stay just big enough to do the job. 
  
  There's also the fact that the existing Elecraft product line isn't going 
  away, and needs to be supported all through this time. 
 
 However, if the company becomes too big, the venture capitalists' 
 management consultants will almost certainly insist that support for it 
 is dropped, as it is incompatible with the high volume, mass market 
 organisation that you need to be big.  (That will also happen if the 
 company gets taken over.)
 

Which means keeping the company just big enough to do the job.

Also, most small companies that succeed were founded by folks who have the 
right mix of business and product/design smarts. Too often, if a company grows 
too fast, the founders wind up leaving the product/design stuff to others 
because of the business demands. 

 Although the analogy isn't perfect, consider Apple, which was built on 
 the basis of Steve Wozniak's ability to play tricks with minimal 
 hardware, but he dropped out in favour of Steve Jobs when it got big, 
 and what one now has is essentially a fashion, rather than engineering, 
 based company.
 

Sure.

But consider what has happened to PC hardware, particularly processors and 
RAM. The price has imploded while the performance has exploded. The need for 
machines that can do a lot with limited hardware is limited to special 
applications now.  


 Big companies can't compete with Elecraft because they are big companies!
 
 

Exactly

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Optimized mic ?

2007-09-08 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/6/07 1:32:40 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 Jim N2EY wrote:
 
 Ancient Ones is a term of respect.
 
 Understood. In this part of the UK this usually refers to those who lived 
 here some thousands of years ago, whereas Elders are still living.


I did not know that! TNX

In amateur radio usage, mostly among glowbug types, it has come to mean those 
who did things back when and are no longer with us to explain *why* they 
were done.

 
 Consider the age of anyone who actually operated an amateur station 75+ 
 years ago
 
 Indeed.
 
 
 A lot depends on how the comparison is made.
 
 There is no doubt in my mind that the availability of plug and play rigs 
 and the growth of the ham population has increased interference levels from 
 what they were in 1946.
 

Perhaps. 

But OTOH, the quality of affordable rigs available to most hams today is far 
above what it was then. 

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: [Elecraft] Big Rigs?

2007-09-08 Thread N2EY
. 

There's an old saying in engineering:

Quick, cheap, good: Pick any two.

If you mean you want the products to be larger, note the factors I mentioned 
above. How much more are you willing to pay for a K4? Would you pay twice as 
much as a K3 costs? 1.5 times as much? 

I have thought about taking a K2 and fabricating a new, larger front panel 
with bigger knobs and buttons, and putting the K2 insides in a bigger cabinet. 
There's no reason I can see that it couldn't be done. But it's a lot of work, 
mostly mechanical, and would take a considerable investment of time and 
resources.

I hope they will expand and bring out more products faster, while reducing 
the individual workload so they don’t burn out.

I do too. But the rigs do not design or fabricate themselves. And as the 
complexity grows, the design/fabrication workload grows exponentially. 

I know you like the big old rigs of yesteryear, particularly their user 
interface. But remember how much they cost in their time, even though things 
like 
labor and space were much less expensive. An R-390 may not seem 
miniaturized, but for an early-1950s design it was very small for what it 
did. Look at 
what one cost new, too! 

There's also the fact that the existing Elecraft product line isn't going 
away, and needs to be supported all through this time. 

It should also be remembered that the other Elecraft rigs did not come out 
all at once.First the basic rig hit the market, and then the accessories came 
along one or two at a time. That spread out the development work and cost.

But the K3 is being offered with almost all the features at the same time, 
and most of them built-in. That's a much bigger project.

If Collins Radio, at the height of their success and with all their 
experiences and resources, had such problems with the introduction of the KWM-2 
as 
described in that article, it's not surprising that the K3 has taken a bit 
longer 
than originally projected.

Quick, cheap, good: Pick any two.

73 de Jim, N2EY 


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Re: [Elecraft] Optimized mic ?

2007-09-08 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/6/07 8:56:36 AM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:

 On Thu, 6 Sep 2007 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  All of the improvements in our
  methods, rigs and antenna systems since then have been the direct results 
 of radio
  competition of various kinds.
 
 All of the improvements are direct result of competition? 

Competition *of various kinds*.

 So none of them were 
 
 made simply to satisfy the creator, or give him/her what he/she wanted that 
 was 
 not driven by competition?
 

When one wants something better than what already exists, and works to get 
it, that's a form of competition. 

 There are most likely a small number of folks who go about life meeting or 
 exceding their own standards, and don't gague their happiness or suceess on 
 the 
 basis of beating someone else.
 

Meetin or exceeding one's own standards is a form of competition, even if it 
is competing with oneself.

I've been a distance runner since 1981. I've never been very fast, yet I 
entered many races simply to see how well I could do. Often I ran the same race 
several years in a row, in competition with myself, trying to set a PR 
(personal record). 

I've also designed and built many ham rigs, from my first 1 tube transmitter 
of 40 years ago to the rig currently on my webpage. All were an attempt to do 
better than I'd done before, and I learned an enormous amount from each of 
them. That's another form of competition. (One of the tests of whether New Rig 
is 
an improvement over Old Rig is how many points I could make with it in 
contests like Sweepstakes).

73 de Jim, N2EY



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Re: [Elecraft] New Elecraft rigs...

2007-09-07 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/6/07 2:30:46 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


   don't know if people want it smaller, or they push 
 smaller stuff to the people, or if it's a young thing, or what.
 

1) Smaller is usually less expensive to make, to pack, and to ship. (Smaller 
usually also means lighter, too).

2) A small thing can be used in more places than a large one. Like mobile.

3) As homes tend not to have basements and usable attics, people have less 
space. Yet they also tend to have/want more stuff. If the stuff is smaller, 
they 
can have more of it.

4) The size of old things was often determined by the size of the parts 
inside, and how much heat they gave off. Look at an ARC-5 receiver or 
transmitter - 
it can't get much smaller. As parts have shrunk, so have front panels.

5) If people buy the smaller stuff, the mfrs. make it.

This isn't a new thing. Back in the 1960s, W9BRD's How's DX column carried 
a story about how the author was trying out a new rig loaned by a friend. Nice 
little modern transceiver (NCX-3?) but the shack Siamese cat, Madame Mu, 
didn't like it because she could not comfortably rest atop it. 

73 de Jim, N2EY 


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Re: [Elecraft] Balanced AT

2007-09-07 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 9/7/07 2:08:49 AM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 I use an SG237 

The SG-237 is an unbalanced tuner. 




73 de Jim, N2EY


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