[Boatanchors] Dead speech meter
Steve Uhrig
[email protected]
Thu, 11 Mar 2004 21:15:34 -0500
On 11 Mar 2004 at 4:03, "Fred Neff" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I don't know how long ago your meter was built, but by law, there has
> to be a supply of spare parts kept aside for repairs, and it's
> probably for longer than you think.
This ONLY is true for manufacturers supplying the federal government.
I am one.
And it's not enforced. What are they going to do if the manufacturer
doesn't have parts? Fine him? Most likely, the manufacturer has gone
out of business.
ICOM has federal contracts. We were ICOM GSA dealers for 14 years,
selling almost exclusively to governments and I can assure you ICOM
didn't keep parts for equipment they sold to the federal government
for 10 years. Sometimes not 10 months. Nothing says the parts have to
be at reasonable prices either.
> Check it out. If the problem with the board you were sent was that it
> is too large, it may be easier to adapt what is left of your meter and
> the new board to another case that will fit it.
That may be true, but without our seeing it and having interface
info, we can't comment. Duane feels the new board is not compatible
and he's the one who owns it.
> If the spare part just plain doesn't work, see the above suggestion.
> They have a legal responsibility.
'They' have no responsibility. I sign the contracts with the
government, and I know precisely what responsibility I have. If the
government want 10 years' worth of logistics, I recommend they buy 10
years' worth of supplies along with the initial product and put them
into their supply system.
> I have a feeling that the Americans with Disabilities Act may give you
> some added leverage.
Not really. I also am handicapped, and all ADA does is gives you some
ammunition if YOU wish to spend YOUR time and money fighting it. Few
of us can. Tonight my wife and I got back from a local hospital where
we both go every week for treatment (we both are handicapped) and
every one of the handicapped parking slots was filled with police
cars or doctors. Since it's private property, no one other than the
local security guard wannabee 007s have jurisdiction, and they're not
going to put a ticket with no teeth on a police car or doctor's car.
If I was driving, which I don't anymore, I'd pull up and park on
their fancy manicured lawn, and God help anyone who touched our van.
And if I was alone, I'd key every police car and doctor's car parked
in handicapped slots. I keep meaning to take a camera, but forget.
Some day I may just wait for the drivers to come out and I'll teach
them the error of their ways. I may be handicapped but I'm not by any
means helpless.
ADA is a joke unless you're a member of some minority group with the
ACLU and a blank check to fight your battles for you.
Unfortunately Duane and me and some others live in a world where we
get shoved around with our handicaps. I've learned to live with it
except when I'm incensed like now from privileged rectums parking
wherever they please, and the devil with the guy who can't walk the
extra few hundred feet across the parking lot.
And then these doctors and cops get in their cars in the handicapped
spots and drive to their club to work out.
All these 'rights' are NOT to help people who are at some sort of
disadvantage. They are done to give the places a warm wet feeling for
implementing them. Any peripheral benefit to the poor disabled clown
is inconsequential.
Steve WA3SWS
And by God yes, I am pissed.
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Steve Uhrig, SWS Security, Maryland (USA)
Mfrs of electronic surveillance equip
mailto:[email protected] website http://www.swssec.com
tel +1+410-879-4035, fax +1+410-836-1190
"In God we trust, all others we monitor"
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