[Hallicrafters] Questions for OLD-timers (Hams)
Hunter Ellington
hunter.ellington at gorrellgiles.com
Mon Apr 28 10:25:02 EDT 2008
As of April 1, 2008, Hunter Ellington is no longer with our firm.
You may contact him via his new email of hellington at lindquist.com.
If you need further assistance, please contact me by email
christina.meisel at gorrellgiles.com or telephone (303) 996-6595.
Thanks,
Christina M. Meisel
Legal Assistant/Accounting Manager
(303) 996-6595 Direct
Gorrell Giles PC
-----Original Message-----
From: hallicrafters-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:hallicrafters-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of w7fe
Sent: Thursday, April 24, 2008 9:02 PM
To: kgordon2006 at verizon.net; Troglodite at aol.com
Cc: Hallicrafters at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Hallicrafters] Questions for OLD-timers (Hams)
[Rant generator enabled]
I hereby apologize in advance to the group for the following "hairball"
(I
read in some techie post that an unnecessarily long message or one with
pages of history attached is so designated) but I'm having a new roof
put on
the house this week. Therefore, all of my wire antennas, appurtenant
support
poles, tripods, guy ropes, "window" line, co-ax, screweyes, and other
junk
on or hanging over the roof had to be removed, so I can't get on the air
to
rant in person (no tower/beam, either). Bear with me...hopefully I'll
get
some wire back up in the air this weekend and return to "lurk" mode
(more
cool techie jargon) on the e-mail lists when I'm again able to induce
some
HF RF into the ether.
I worked a guy a few weeks ago who said that he always purposely tunes
his
latest-and-greatest, multi-kilobuck
IC/FT/TS/DSP/SMT//RIT/XIT/ATU/TCXO/L.S.M.F.T ricebox to an uneven
frequency
(like 7.177324 or whatever) when calling CQ, just hoping to elicit such
comments from the "Moderns" (nice characterization, Ken!). He then
questions
them at length about their observation that he is "off frequency" and
tries
to convince them that, except for 60M, Fred's Candy Company hasn't
forced us
into "channelization" on the HF bands (gee, maybe that's why we call
them
"bands")...yet.
Also, I had my EFJ Pacemaker and 2-B cooking on 40M a while back, and
joined
a QSO where I heard a buddy in conversation with a couple of Moderns.
Even
though I apologized for likely not matching their frequency down to the
last
cycle because the rig was 50 years old and 10 KC on the dial was about
1/8
inch, one of the guys mentioned that my audio had a "low pitch to it"
and
another (in an effort to help me "fix" my "problem"), asked what the
"number
readout" was showing on my Pacemaker....sigh. (The Moderns wondered
about
that "low-pitched hum" on my signal as well, but that's another subject.
Think I'll try some ten-turn pots in the carrier balance circuit next
time I
have the beast on the bench).
Yeah, I know, it's handy for nets to keep everyone on the same
frequency,
but if everyone zero beats (what's that?) the NCS, who cares what exact
frequency they are on?
W8DBF and K5LYN always seem to hear us if we're not dead zero-beat with
their transmit frequency (which is likely not "even" anyway), don't
they?
And, while the generally observed convention of 3 KC spacing between
QSO's
is fine, dang it, does it have to be "exactly" 3 KC? Even the newest
transceivers have RIT to tune a couple of hundred cycles, don't they, if
an
operator can't bear the thought of straying from his "even" frequency?
Perhaps it's the result of decades of VHF/UHF FM operation, or (worse
yet),
leftover CB "knowledge" (shoot, most of them is usin' them there
"sliders"
nowadays, ain't they?) that has trained the Moderns to always choose
XXXXX.00000 frequencies on which to operate? We reap what we have sown,
I
guess.
[The above condescending tone is deliberate (though certainly uncalled
for),
as are my continual "KC" and "cycles" references and capitalization of
"Moderns"].
Heck, I'm really pleased when I can tune my 100V to within 100 cycles of
an
"even" frequency and observe that it won't move but a few cycles
(according
to my [gasp] TS-440) for an hour or more. That's after only about a
10-minute warm-up..the darn thing's amazing.
But I digress. Actually, I suppose that the most often cited reason to
choose even frequencies is to assure that the transmitting station
operator's vocal timbre, resonance, articulation, and subtle denture
clicks
are faithfully reproduced at the receiving station and vice versa.
Swell.
That's what that delightful plate modulated AM is for, no?
Anyway, purposely (or necessarily) using "uneven" (notice that I didn't
say
"odd", owing to the inevitable personal reference) frequencies can be
fun!
Let's do more of it!!
[Rant generator disabled].
73 de Stu, W7FE
"Not-a-Modern" (is that equivalent to "Geezer", then?)
Phoenix
----- Original Message -----
From: "Kenneth G. Gordon" <kgordon2006 at verizon.net>
To: <Troglodite at aol.com>
Cc: <Hallicrafters at mailman.qth.net>
Sent: Thursday, April 24, 2008 1:42 PM
Subject: Re: [Hallicrafters] Questions for OLD-timers (Hams)
> Speaking of frequency calibration, remember that "accurate
> frequency calibration" was considered in those days to be 1Khz or
> better.
>
> I have been called to task by some moderns for being off
> frequency by "as much as" 12 Hz.
>
> Sheesh!
>
> Ken Gordon W7EKB
> ______________________________________________________________
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