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On Tue, 14 Jan 2025 20:39:51 -0700, % <pursent100@gmail.com> wrote inwhere i live what you described is a dipole ,
<e4ydnfbaOouasxr6nZ2dnZfqn_ednZ2d@giganews.com>:
vallor wrote:'twasn't a dipole, 'twas a long wire, and I gave theOn Tue, 14 Jan 2025 18:23:32 -0700, % <pursent100@gmail.com> wrote inok well you didn't mention that and it sounded like a great dipole
<mpadnRRAVuzVkxr6nZ2dnZfqnPEAAAAA@giganews.com>:
>vallor wrote:>On 15 Jan 2025 00:39:16 GMT, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote inwhy didn't you try transmitting
<luoedkF6gdtU1@mid.individual.net>:
>On 14 Jan 2025 22:34:47 GMT, vallor wrote:>
>Sidenote: Do they still teach electronics with discrete components>
in High School? I hope so...I learned it growing up, but having a
structured course with theory helped with my "STEM" career (which
wasn't called that back then...).
My high school didn't have an electronics course. Had they, given
the lag between high school courses and the rest of the world, the
discretes would have been 6AU6s pentode and six dot mica capacitors.
>
https://www.radioremembered.org/capcode.htm
>
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/RYYAAOSwxT5nV79L/s-l1600.webp
>
If you don't know what the image is your education was limited. I
had an advantage. My uncle owned a radio and TV store where the
'store' part was small compared to the back room with units waiting
repair. 'In those days when the TV repairman, who made house calls,
pronounced 'it has to go back to the shop' it was like your doctor
telling you that you should get your affairs in order.
>
He was old enough that in the course of his life radios and then TVs
were cutting edge technology.
I remember watching our old black & white console while it blew a
cap.
>
It was an extended affair, lasting maybe a minute -- the tv was
making a keening noise as the picture bent inward on one side. Then
"pop!" and the picture went away.
>
We never had tv repairmen -- Dad always fixed it. He also fixed my
Hallicrafters S-38 at his shop while I watched, getting rid of the
60Hz hum and adding a standard headphone jack.
>
https://antiqueradio.org/halli08.htm
>
As an avid SWL, the HF propagation experience helped a lot with my
Radioman rating in the CG.
>
Could also hear quite a bit about what was going on in the world,
thanks to having a very, very long longwire antenna. Building that
was how Dad taught me to differentiate between physical connections
and electrical connections. Made from zip-cord, it went out the
window, up a tree, then out to a pole at one corner of the yard, then
across to another pole at the other end of the yard. Great for DX
listening.
>
Who says I didn't? But not on HF -- unless you count 27.125 MHz.
>
I did get my tech ham license while in the CG, which was handy because
we started doing MARS on the ship, and I ended up as chief operator.
Sometimes after the phone patches were done, I'd talk to the shoreside
ham volunteer in whose debt we all were, who had questions about our
gear.
We had some pretty swizzy mini-loop antennas that they wanted to know
about.
>
radio a really good ground.
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