2002-05-23

This is not a German site at all.  The author R.V.Shenoy VU2VAS is
definitely not German.  If it was a German website, the .com (dot com) would
be .de instead.  Under the heading 40 metre loop antenna, note the
following:

 For antenna wire 16 or 14 SWG wire can be used. Use 75 Ohms co-axial cable
for the transmission line. The antenna should be kept at a hight of about 6
feet from the ground level.

SWG is the same as AWG, American Wire Gauge.  It was formerly know as Brown
& Sharpe, and the "S" stands for Sharpe.  Also, you are instructed to keep
the antenna 6 feet off the ground.  Neither AWG/SWG, nor feet are known in
Germany.

The only reason they are using metres, is because metres is what is used by
ham operators to denote frequency.  instead of measuring the number of
oscillations of a sine wave in hertz, they measure the wavelength in metres.
It has always been that way.  Never has feet or any other FFU unit been used
to denote frequency.

Frequency in hertz equals the speed of light divided by the wavelength in
metres.


You must be confused because the mention of the German quad antenna.   It
looks like someone converted original dimensions from metric and came up
with the feet in the diagram, yet the text says the lengths are metres.
This is the mess that occurs when FFU gets involved.

John






----- Original Message -----
From: "James Wentworth" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, 2002-05-23 08:29
Subject: [USMA:20169] New symbol for the meter on a German web site!


> I just found a new symbol for the meter on a German web site (the text is
in
> English): http://members.tripod.com/e_friend/circuit/antenna.html
>
> The author used a ' to denote meters (see the "German Quad Antenna" and
"40
> Meter Loop Antenna" near the bottom of the page).  This is an interesting
> example of "stealing" an FFU shorthand symbol, as a ' is often used to
> denote feet ("I am 6' tall," for example).  Is this a common practice in
> informal German writing?  If so, is a " used to informally denote
> centimeters or millimeters in such writing?
>
> If this practice is widespread, perhaps we can co-opt these informal FFU
> symbols for our use.  --  Jason
>

Reply via email to