I checked the archives and noticed there was scant mention of these units. For
the money, these seem like a dream come true. From what I understand, once set
up in the test mode, they have most all of the function of the HP-8920 series
minus the following:
No Edacs,LTR or any signaling formats
> Kevin Custer wrote:
> Not likely... A manual with schematic is not offered by
> Hall. If you need it repaired, try shotgunning the IC's
> or send it back to them for repair.
> > Nicholas Cerreto wrote:
> > Hello!
> > Does anyone have a service manual for the Doug Hall
> > Voter 4RV Voter?
Did I miss this in an earlier thread, or is this a surprise?
Paul, AE4KR
Honeywell Wins Contract to Build 449 MHz Wind Profiler
PHOENIX, March 29, 2010 -- Honeywell (NYSE: HON) today announced that it has
been awarded a $49 million contract
>
> When you're pricing out 440 feet of coax, the pennies add up
> to quite a
> few dollars.
Depends on how you look at it. The difference becomes insignificant when
you look at the big picture. The price of 440 feet of line is a small
fraction of the total project cost once you add in connec
Hi
well i wonder if someone here in the group have ever connected an Zetron
30 over the back panel with screews of the Master 2 ?
if you done it,would you have some pictures?
and where the cable,on wich screews it is connectedé
thanks for your help
73/s
gervais ve2ckn
On Tue, 30 Mar 2010, Jeff DePolo wrote:
> Aluminum-shielded cable isn't anything new. It's pretty much the
> standard in CATV, and was quite common in two-way back in the day as
> well. Andrew, Prodelin, Phelps-Dodge, et al made different flavors of
> it, both corrugated and smooth-wall, jacke
Nicholas Cerreto wrote:
Hello!
Does anyone have a service manual for the Doug Hall Voter 4RV Voter?
Not likely...A manual with schematic is not offered by Hall.
If you need it repaired, try shotgunning the IC's or send it back to
them for repair.
Kevin Custer
RFS also has aluminum-shield versions of their standard LCF line too - the
part numbers all end in "L" for "Lite" (such as LCF78-50JL).
Aluminum-shielded cable isn't anything new. It's pretty much the standard
in CATV, and was quite common in two-way back in the day as well. Andrew,
Prodelin, P
It's what Andrew calls Heliax 2.0 AVA, Andrew Virtual Air and AVAL Andrew
Virtual Air Aluminum. They are using a new lower density foam and thinner
copper to get slightly improved attenuation. Stay away from the aluminum stuff,
the corrugated shield is too thin and brittle. It's hard to install
Hello!
Does anyone have a service manual for the Doug Hall Voter 4RV Voter?
Thanks
Nick
I need a maintenance service manual for a Motorola R2008C service monitor. Any
help would be appreciated. I bought one of these monitors, and the power supply
went out. Will pay reasonable price. Thanks.
Realizing that this is off topic and will end soon. . .
1969 was my first year on the air (19 years old) (BTW: I'm 60 today, March
30), and had to get a First Class Phone Ticket. It expired in the files
during my career at Motorola because we didn't post them on the wall.
Feeling bad, I r
I got the "First Phone" about the same time, and about the same age. I was a
budding DJ, and there were AM stations with complex directional arrays which
would only hire night DJs with the First, because they'd be working alone in
the building and were required to have a First at the control poi
You're right Ralph.
We needed 1st Class years ago because the FCC required it and it was valued
because people really had know something about electronics and had to work on
transmitters. Today - know where the on/off switch is? PTT? Here's your
GROL...you're good to go.
Hmmm, kind of like
Hi Ralph
In 1961 took the !st Class Phone. did not pass it first time,but did on the 2nd
try.It helped me to get 3 Great Jobs, also as an Chief Engineer Of an AM Radio
Station. It had Value then,& I feel it still does to some extent,although being
76 years old & retired. Will never use it again
It was not worth much around 1971 or 72 when I passed the first class. I was
about 21 at the time. I had never seen a TV transmitter and only got to look
into a 1000 watt AM station control room and could see the tubes through a
glass window. Passed it the first time.
I only wanted the secon
If you're job hunting in the wireless/RF job sector a GROL can be
helpful on your resume. It adds another "hit" on your resume if someone
happens to pick that phrase to search for. Some jobs that were
established years ago still contain the phrase GROL in their job
description or requirements
The Andrew connectors came with a small tube of grease, presumably
silicon, that was to be used only on the O rings. Some of the newer
connectors seem to come with no grease. I don't remember having a
hardline connector seize up, except if it had serious water
contamination. In that case, th
I grandfathered in when then junked the 1st Class license. :-(
After searching the FCC site I noticed that they have my date totally screwed
up. Anyone know if their database got trashed at some time?
GROL today is a simple, 'we give you the questions, we give you the answers...
just remember
Come to think of it, when I worked for the contractor at the Air Force Base,
they did require it, along with security checks.
--- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, "Doug Bade" wrote:
>
> I have also seen some Federal Govt repair Service Contracts that require
> GROL or Equivalent Commercial L
I have also seen some Federal Govt repair Service Contracts that require
GROL or Equivalent Commercial License in order to perform on premises.
Doug
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of wd8chl
Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 2010 8:39 AM
To: R
On 3/29/2010 9:16 PM, Joe wrote:
> I don't think I would use any kind of compound on RF connectors. I went
> to the RFS aluminum CELLFLEX®Lite training and no compound was
> recommended. Now, I'm not a fan of aluminum cable, but if it's going to
> be used I would use only manufacturer recommended
On 3/30/2010 7:24 AM, wb6dgn wrote:
>
>
> Used to have to have it for land mobile but not any more. Still need
> it for avionics and marine.
>
> --- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, "WD7F - John in
> Tucson" wrote:
>>
>> I was able to use my full name in a search and it came up, however,
>> I
Used to have to have it for land mobile but not any more. Still need it for
avionics and marine.
--- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, "WD7F - John in Tucson"
wrote:
>
> I was able to use my full name in a search and it came up, however, I had a
> ship's radar endorsement that's not show
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