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SB-220 stabilization

Subject: SB-220 stabilization
From: W8JITom@aol.com (W8JITom@aol.com)
Date: Mon Apr 8 11:05:20 1996
In a message dated 96-04-08 05:03:54 EDT, you write:

<< 
Th Parasitic Suppressor Kit for the SB-220 put out by Harbach Electronics
(407-723-7145),  replaces the 1mh grid chokes with  27ohm 1/2w carbon film
resistors and adds 820pf ceramic bypass caps (in parallel with original mica
caps)  to each grid terminal. The single capacitor from the RF input to one
side of the filament is removed and replaced by two .01uf ceramic capacitors
and in series with them are 10ohm 2w metal oxide film resistors - the
resistors connect to each side of the #12ga filament wires for a "balanced
feed".  The kit also includes plate parasitic coils/resistors.

Any comments on this approach??

 >>
Hi Bill,
I've never seen the kit, so my comments are limited. A few general statements
are true for all amps. John W0UN has a very good insight into amps, so
hopefully he can add something to this or correct anything I overlook. I like
what John said. It was something to the effect of "Build the amp like you're
going to run it at VHF, and stability problems go away". That should be on
page one, line one, of every construction article. 

Amps develop parasitics because at some frequency the output is coupled back
into the input. The path must have low enough loss, less loss than the gain
of the stage, to make an oscillator. HF tube amplifiers CAN'T become
oscillators without unwanted feedback. It's much better to reduce unwanted
feedback than to reduce the gain. 

In a grounded grid amp, the length and size of the grid(s) and grid leads are
the major players in stability. Better RF grid grounding means more isolation
between the output and input, and more stability.

Adding ANY small thin reactive path from the grid to the chassis is a
mistake. A series capacitor in the grid **always** reduces isolation from the
output to the input at lower frequencies.

Heath made an even more fatal mistake, the put a choke in parallel with the
caps in the grid. That forms a VLF parallel tuned circuit, and the amp, under
the correct load and driver conditions, can oscillate BELOW the AM broadcast
band! The long series path through the grid caps also lowered the self
neutralizing frequency and made stabilizing the amp for VHF oscillation
(generally around the FM band) more difficult. SB-220's on occasion were
prone to **V L F** parasitics, but were stable at VHF. The only problem was
by the time the anode suppressors got big enough to work at VHF, they got hot
on ten meters.

The 220 behaves best with the grids connected to ground with a lug placed
right at each grid pin. Doing this improves stability greatly. Nearly half of
the turns can be removed from the stock parasitic chokes and the amp remains
perfectly stable.

I've never added resistors to the filament RF path, and I see little reason
to do that. I don't know what they do in the anode,  so I can't comment about
that mod. The grids need to be grounded directly, that's an absolute
certainty.

73 Tom

>From Tony Brock-Fisher <fisher@hp-and2.an.hp.com>  Mon Apr  8 15:13:08 1996
From: Tony Brock-Fisher <fisher@hp-and2.an.hp.com> (Tony Brock-Fisher)
Subject: antenna heights
Message-ID: <9604081413.AA21047@hp-and2.an.hp.com>

>Here is the best single tower/simple tower antenna setup that can be
>errrrected:
>HyGain or other 70ft crank up (second choice, 70 ft guyed).
>.....


I just can't resist the temptation to jump on this one! In an issue
as subjective and difficult to compare as antennas, how can 
anyone claim that a certain combination is 'best'???

K4VUD came really close, tho. Here is what is 'better' than his
'best'  ;-))


70 feet of guyed rohn 45 with:

    KT-34XA's (2) at 70/40 feet (stackable)
    40-2CD at 80 feet (NOT 82 feet)
    PAIR of phased delta loops for 75 (+3 db gain over K4VUD sloper!)
                                      (+15 db F/B over sloper!)
    Quarter-wave sloper for 160.

Now I'm sure someone else will come along with something 'better'
than my 'better', hi!

...Or maybe:

    36 inch leather strip, 1.25" wide, with two-piece attachment
    point. Perforated in 1 inch spacing for elevation angle
    adjustment. Add dual loops 8 inches offsett from attachment point
    for hanging the 'shack'...


-Tony, K1KP, fisher@hp-and2.an.hp.com

>From Jimmy R. Floyd" <floydjr@Interpath.com  Mon Apr  8 13:18:49 1996
From: Jimmy R. Floyd" <floydjr@Interpath.com (Jimmy R. Floyd)
Subject: CQ WPX Contest 96 Breakdown III
Message-ID: <199604081428.KAA10435@mail-hub.interpath.net>

CQ WPX 96 Contest
BREAKDOWN of SCORES

Compiled by
WA4ZXA
Email: floydjr@interpath.com



CALL       160      80      40       20        15      10     SCORES
________________________________________________________________________

QRP
KV8S       5/ 5    9/  8    9/  8  126/113   48/ 36   3/ 1     77,121 
VE7CQK     O/ O   28/ 18   26/ 16  125/ 94   21/ 15   0/ 0     75,504 

SO/HP/AB
OT6T     107/62  481/240  379/ 86 1716/446  117/ 67   0/ 0  7,347,655 
F6FGZ    107/64  248/134  751/241  644/242   44/ 33   0/ 0  3,764,922
ZL6CC      0/ 0    6/  2   39/ 17  308/177 1027/295   0/ 0  2,008,190 

WR6R/WH7   8/ 0  264/ 24  541/ 81 1313/318 1609/367 149/25 11,267,375
KQ2M       0/ 0  484/283  134/ 33 1497/452   87/ 50   0/ 0  5,400,000
KM9P       0/ 0  305/129  212/ 84 1714/552  114/ 53  57/19  5,027,022
K3ZO       0/ 0  402/207  219/ 42 1476/511   53/ 28  23/ 7  4,974,315 
K5ZD      42/32  203/112  125/ 59 1135/423   69/ 40  18/ 2  3,340,620
K7RI       0/ 0  139/ 50  220/ 71 1350/560  114/ 34   1/ 1  2,983,572
WZ4F       0/ 0  147/ 79   73/ 34 1567/596   52/ 18  22/10  2,928,101
VE7IN      0/ 0   60/ 11  379/171  825/349   31/ 25   0/ 0  2,324,080
K4VVD     10/ 7   89/ 47   86/ 65 1228/454   34/ 22   5/ 2  1,779,657

SO/LP/AB
DL0IU     50/28  255/159  246/ 71  354/185   76/45    0/ 0    949,160

K1HTV     59/42   53/ 46   71/ 33  650/371  123/ 55  29/ 7  1,319,744 
WS1A      28/20   74/ 45  109/ 56  502/310   67/ 37   2/ 1  1,045,657
NY5B       0/ 0   64/ 38   69/ 41  689/340    0/  0  18/ 3    674,422 
WA4ZXA     7/ 5  141/ 92   63/ 40  342/250   71/ 43  45/17    671,841
KJ6HO      2/ 1   46/ 24   47/ 27  447/286  113/ 52  24/ 6    483,912
KS4XG      0/ 0   10/  8   26/ 13  153/126   53/ 37   0/ 0    113,528
N3BDA      1/ 1   10/ 10   29/ 17  104/ 81   38/ 29  29/15     94,864  


SO/HP/A
OT6T     107/62  481/240  379/ 86 1716/446  117/ 67   0/ 0  7,347,655

WA0PUJ    55/37  112/ 56   93/ 44 1030/542   76/ 28   0/ 0  2,108,981
WB4VIM     0/ 0    0/  0    1/  0  168/147   21/ 15  16/11     86,846


M/S
ZX0F       0/ 0  111/ 15 1409/274 1324/362 3273/412  16/ 4 24,096,061
IR4T      47/25  391/129  746/295 2121/460  242/ 88   2/ 2 10,234,755
TM1C      59/ 8  438/155  866/291 2192/453  116/ 39   0/ 0 10,085,306 

VE6SV     44/12  243/ 47  323/112 2050/629   48/ 21   0/ 0  6,033,529
VC3SK     36/ 7  345/129  421/202 1526/449   44/ 18   0/ 0  5,970,685
KI1G      13/ 7  390/205  293/ 97 1402/498  132/ 66  37/ 8  5,866,665
WE9V       7/ 2  535/183  187/ 76 1599/633  100/ 28   0/ 0  5,401,076
CH6FI     11/ 2  187/ 48  494/138 1364/445   48/ 16   0/ 0  3,886,212
KT8X       8/ 2  489/169  158/ 69 1250/545   99/ 29  20/ 4  3,881,241
VS6WO      0/ 0   14/  1  345/ 41  946/321 1433/295   3/ 0  3,740,730
W5KFT      0/ 0   98/ 36  419/115 1830/576  155/ 53  47/14  3,661,928
YM3DL      8/ 2  225/128  138/ 61 1589/233  105/ 69   1/ 0  3,539,740 
KC7V       0/ 0   43/ 25  248/ 56 1448/573  109/ 44  52/13  2,629,989
NC0P      16/ 8  235/102  143/ 92  985/437   77/ 29   0/ 0  2,065,000
KQ4HC      2/ 2  283/152  160/ 74  813/366  106/ 50  36/11  2,049,495 
WA3WJD    57/38   93/ 66   49/ 26  375/244   52/ 31  30/ 9    660,744
DF0RG      0/ 0  148/290  140/304  189/298   10/ 22   0/ 0    277,856


M/M
KP4XS    125/31  541/101 1039/225 2644/464 1638/215 181/48 19,611,728 

WM2C       4/ 0  663/101  603/ 88 1694/565  789/187 108/18  8,958,978
VD6JY     95/ 7  400/ 77  751/218 1764/519  139/ 38   0/ 0  7,919,121
VD5RI     50/13  169/ 36  372/119 1790/451   30/ 12   0/ 0  3,816,919   


ROOKIE
OI6KZP     1/ 1  103/ 78   71/ 34  560/276   37/ 24   0/ 0    526,162

TS
S59A       0/ 0  385/239  352/103 1183/402  216/101   0/ 0  4,597,645

KG6LF      0/ 0   49/ 20   11/  7  976/483  257/ 80  45/10  1,002,600
N1CC       0/ 0    0/  0   24/  8  563/353   58/ 39   0/ 0    624,400
WA6KUI     3/ 3   51/ 37   70/ 39  308/242   77/ 32  22/ 8    501,790
KF9YH      1/ 1   38/ 29   44/ 30  200/160   25/ 11   0/ 0    190,575


^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

73 Jim
           ********************************************************** 
           * Jimmy R. Floyd  (Jim)   Thomasville, NC                *
           *                                                        *
           * Amateur Call:              >> WA4ZXA <<                *
           * Packet Node:               >> N4ZC <<                  *
           * Internet Address: **NEW**  >> floydjr@interpath.com << *
           **********************************************************


>From Jimmy R. Floyd" <floydjr@Interpath.com  Mon Apr  8 13:18:54 1996
From: Jimmy R. Floyd" <floydjr@Interpath.com (Jimmy R. Floyd)
Subject: CQ WPX Contest 96 V
Message-ID: <199604081428.KAA10445@mail-hub.interpath.net>

CQ WPX CONTEST 96
RAW SCORES

Complied by
WA4ZXA
Email: floydjr@interpath.com

Date Posted: 04/08/96


CALL               HRS           SCORE      QSO'S      PTS     PREFIXES
__________________________________________________________________________

QRP

N1AFC                          369,664       416                 304
KA1CZF                         135,000       215                 196
KV8S                            77,121       200       451       171
VE7CQK                          75,504       200       528       143


SO/HP/AB

S50A                         8,211,376      2950      8984       914
OT6T  (RA3AUU)               7,347,655      2800      8155       901
S58AB                        4,501,896      2070      5908       762
F6FGZ                        3,764,922      1794      5273       714
OH6KIT                       2,751,320      1882                 715
ZL6CC                        2,008,190      1380      4090       491
HB9HFN                         210,936       367       799       264

WR6R/WH7                    11,267,375      3884     13825       815
VD3EJ                        9,640,752      3151                 912
KQ2M  (@KY3N)                5,400,000      2202                 818
KC1XX  (AA1ND)               5,180,000      2301                 820
KM9P                         5,027,022      2402                 837
K3ZO                         4,974,315      2173      6257       795
VO1MP                        3,408,480      1682                 648
K5ZD                21       3,340,620      1592      4986       670
CG3CRC                       3,273,452      1683                 644
KW8N                         3,200,000      1736                 738
KI4HN  (@AA4NC)              3,000,000      1673                 732
K7RI  (AA7FT)                2,983,572      1824      4167       716
WZ4F                         2,928,101      1861                 737
VE7IN               30       2,324,080      1295      4180       556
KA4RRU                       2,331,146      1595      3359       694
K4VVD               26       1,779,657      1452      2981       597    


SO/LP/AB

DL0IU  (DL2OBF)                949,160       981      1945       488
S50U                           172,200       377       700       246
XE2AC                            9,540        48       212        45 

K1HTV               31       1,325,184       985      2436       544
WS1A                         1,046,657       782                 479
NY5B                           674,422       931      1438       469
WA4ZXA              36         671,841       669      1503       447
KJ6HO               18         483,912       679      1222       396
NZ5O                           477,500       655                 382
AE6Y                           341,376       675                 381
VD6EL                          167,686       278                 196
KS4XG               16         113,528       242       617       184
N3BDA               13          94,864       211                 154
VC3JFF                          34,866       140                 117
AL7PT/NK8                       20,374       140       167       122


SO/UNLIMITED

S59AA                        1,248,628      1023      2308       541
S56A                           572,544       620      1491       384

WA0PUJ                       2,108,981      1366                 707
KF8UM                        1,548,976      1047                 572
K3SW/4              18         642,470       617                 410
K3IXD                          291,264       407                 296
WB4VIM                          86,846       206       502       173


SINGLE BAND

160M
AC4NJ               11          32,606       184       238       137

80M
DH4JQ                           10,206        81       162        63

VC3MG                          871,320       767                 318
VE2JTX                          84,480       227                 132

40M
ZY2HT  HP           15         801,000       470                 315
OI3MFP              22         100,036       254                 178

VD7NTT                       4,400,000      1660                 546
KK6XN  (@K6NA)               1,014,024       757      3036       334

W3GH                           775,390       765      2014       385
WM2V                20         286,896       452      1112       258
KW4T                           108,000       191                 164
WA5JWU              12           8,320        42       208        40

20M
OK1RI                        4,710,882      2297                 822 
OI3NXW AS           19         750,000       972                 466
OH3NLP LP           18         152,904       347                 276

K5UA HP             30       1,281,540      1315      2015       636
VE7NKI                       1,280,000      1110                 525
N4MO  LP                       637,000       638                 406
NI8L  HP             8         614,880       670      1464       420
N4YGY  LP                      572,390       611      1295       442

15M
S50D                           220,980       404       870       254
OI3LQK              15          32,725       157                 119
S59D  QRP                       26,319       108       283        93

N6MU  (@N6NB)                  266,760       554                 342
N4BP                21         156,123       409       627       249
WA7BNM  LP          19         134,096       479       493       272
W5ASP               15          98,800       303                 190
VE1RAA                          76,867       205                 139
KY2P/4                          48,000       209                 147

10M
ZW2WAL  QRP         21          66,232       225                 136

WB4HFL              20           6,580        65       188        35
K2YJL/M                            152         9                   8


MULTI/SINGLE

ZX0F                        24,096,061      6133     22583      1067
IR4T                        10,234,755      3549     10245       999 
TM1C                        10,085,306      3671                 946
XR8S                         7,675,670      2675      9418       815
GX0WPX                       4,434,324      
YM3DL                        3,539,740      2066      7180       493
DF0RG                          277,856       487       914       304

VE6SV                        6,033,529      2708      7349       821
VC3SK                        5,970,685      2372      7417       805
KI1G  (@K1NG)                5,800,000      2316                 890
WE9V  (@KS9K)                5,401,076      2428      5858       922
CY2A  (@VE2ZP)               5,125,335      2124                 761
VD9WH                        4,322,880      2012                 711
VE3RM                        4,283,300      1901      5908       725
CH6FI                        3,886,212      2104      5988       649
KT8X                         3,881,241      2024                 819
VS6WO                        3,740,730      2741      5685       658
NE8T  (@K8CC)                3,733,248      1932                 768
W5KFT                        3,661,928      2554      4612       794
K1KP                         3,175,000      1695                 735
WU7Q                         3,100,902      1766                 714
II2K                         2,823,156      1692      3954       714
KC7V                         2,629,989      1900      3699       711
KF9PL                        2,100,000      1510                 680
NC0P                         2,065,000      1456                 688
KQ4HC                        2,049,495      1400                 655
KZ6X                         2,040,108      1801      3192       652
K3MD                         1,843,776      1102      3168       582
VE6AO                        1,679,842      1330                 481
KI7WX                        1,536,842      1380                 614
K5XI                         1,500,000      1308                 609
WA3WJD                         660,744       656      1596       414
7J7ABC                         543,312       685                 343
AC5CT                          401,080
KC4ZV               18         340,032       521                 336
W8PZS                3             550        27        22        25



MULTI/MULTI

KP4XS                       19,611,728      6168                1084

WZ1R  (@KY1H)               11,200,000      3911                1062
WT1S  (@K1MNS)              10,680,000      3640                1033
WM2C  (@N6RO)                8,958,978      3861      9342       959
VD6JY                        7,919,121      3089      9219       859 
VD5RI                        3,816,919      2411                 631
NE9U  (@W0AIH)               2,700,000      1850                 740


ROOKIE

OI6KZP  (OH6KZP)    27         526,162       772                 413
8P6CV                          124,387       245       719       173

KG8PE               28         312,600       415                 300


TS

S59A                         4,597,645      2137      5441       845
OH3MMH              31         672,243       821                 429

N5OKR               30       1,386,185       931                 537
KG6LF               23       1,002,600      1338      1671       600 
N1CC                14         624,400       645      1561       400
WA6KUI              36         501,790       531                 361
KF9YH               16         190,575       308       825       231


BR

__________________________________________________________________________

OP LIST

MULTI SINGLE
KI7WX      KI7WX,N5CT,K6XO @K6XO
WA3WJD     WA3WJD,AA3HA
7J7ABC     7J7ABC (AB7IT), 7J7ABV (NB9T)
KQ4HC      KO4EW,KQ4HC
AC5CT      AC5CT,N3BUO
NE8T       NE8T,N8CXX,N8BTU,AA8UG,AA8UH,K8CC
VE3RM      VE3WRL,VE3WIB,VE3RM
VC3SK      VA3SK,VA3WTO
CH6FI      VE6AQ,VE6LB,VE6PY,VE6NA
II2K       ISKHM,I2UPG,IK2ZJJ,IK2SGF,I2GXS
VE6SV      VE6SV,VE6WQ,VO1CV
WE9V       WE9V,KS9K,N0BSH,WX9E
KT8X       KT8X,AA8AV,K8MJZ,KF8QE,KF8DF,KG8CO,NU8Z,AA8FE,KB8ECG,AA8U
F6CTT      F6ARC,F5MZM,F6FVY,G0JFX
GX0WPX     G30ZF,G4DQW,G4JVG,G0SWG,S50K,5B4WN
KZ6X       KZ6X,N6KI,KM6SN,KF6BL,WB6NBU,N6UZH,KM6XA
WU7Q       W6REC
NC0P       NC0P,WA0ETC,WD0GVY,WA0FLS,WO0V
XR8S       XQ8ABF,CE8SFG
DF0RG      DG2ABP,DG6OBX,DL4OCL,DL6OBX,KF4HQI,KF4HQJ
YM3DL      DL3FDU,DL4VBP,DL8OBC
IR4T       I4UFH,I4JMY,I4YSS,IK4IEE,IK2QEI,IK2SGC
ZX0F       PY5GA,PY5EG,N5FA,PY5CC,PY0FF,PY5GU,PU5OMS
VS6WO      9V1YC,VS6WO,VR2GO


MULTI MULTI
WT1S       WT1S,NX1H,K1FWE
WZ1R       WZ1R,NE1V,KM1P,AA1AA,KE6BER,KY1H,NJ1F,WM1K,WR2I,WA1ZAM
VD5RI      VE5FD,VE5FF,VE5FN,VE5WI,VE6BBP,VE6BDP,VE6EZ,VE6SYM,VE7AV
NE9U       NE9U,N9ISN,W0AIH,K0TG,N0AXL
WM2C       WM2C,N6RO,K3EST,N4TQO,N6IP
VD6JY      VE6JY,VE6FR,VE6SLV,VE6EX,VE6LDX,VE6DGG,VE6LCB,VE6BF,VE6NWG,
           VE6JAG,VE5MX
KP4XS      KP4XS,KF3P,S55OO,AA6KX,K3JT,ND3F,WD8ISK

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

THESE SCORES ARE NOT OFFICIAL!!!   I CANNOT ACCEPT ANY LOGS!!!!!
PLEASE SEND ALL YOUR LOGS TO THE ADDRESS IN CQ MAGAZINE!!

PLEASE READ THIS!! I cannot get your scores if you send them as an 
attached file to your mail. It takes me over 5 minutes just to do one 
score that way. If you do not have the time to type your score into the
text your email, I do not have the time to post it. I have stated this
every contest for over a year and people keep doing it. Also scores that
are sent in without being added up will not be posted. It is a lot easier
for you to add one score up than for me to do a 100. 

The address for the 3830 reflector is 3830@akorn.net!! Maybe someone can
post on here how to subscibe to it. I am not sure and do not want to put
out any bad information.

Also as I stated in my post before the contest, I cannot do attached 
files. You need to send it in the form of email. Also please state your
full class on it, not just Single OP. If you do you go into the unlimited
class. 

Before everyone starts flaming me about where there scores are, I would 
like to explain. I received a list off 3830 from WZ1R. It only gave me 
classes for people as SO. I know some should be unlimited. If you would
just drop me a note I will be glad to move them.

73's Jim
 
           ********************************************************** 
           * Jimmy R. Floyd  (Jim)   Thomasville, NC                *
           *                                                        *
           * Amateur Call:              >> WA4ZXA <<                *
           * Packet Node:               >> N4ZC <<                  *
           * Internet Address: **NEW**  >> floydjr@interpath.com << *
           **********************************************************


>From Tony Brock-Fisher <fisher@hp-and2.an.hp.com>  Mon Apr  8 15:24:38 1996
From: Tony Brock-Fisher <fisher@hp-and2.an.hp.com> (Tony Brock-Fisher)
Subject: measuring coax cable loss
Message-ID: <9604081424.AA21076@hp-and2.an.hp.com>


Dave, K6LL, posted a note about measuring cable losses with the
antenna connected, using the SWR method.

I'm not sure this method is accurate enough for a contest station.

It is based on the assumption that the antenna looks like a short
or open at some frequency. While this may be a Damn Good Assumption (DGQ)
it may not be an Assumption Good Enough For Contesting (AGEFC).

Consider Dave's example of SWR 7:1, which translates to 1.25 dB loss.

If we send 100 watts down the line, this translates to 25 watts lost
somewhere. Even if the antenna is high SWR at this frequency, It still
seems likely to me that it could radiate 25 watts.

On the other hand, if we're talking long runs of crappy (RG-58) cable,
this loss is reasonable for the cable. But if we're talking 50 feet of
hardline, this loss is unnacceptible. As Dave points out, you need
to consider the expected losses of non-deteriorated feedline. In a contest
station, the expected losses of non-deteriorated feedline is so low that
the antenna's radiation, however low, may be the dominating loss.

-Tony, K1KP, fisher@hp-and2.an.hp.com

>From k5na@bga.com (Richard L. King)  Mon Apr  8 15:57:04 1996
From: k5na@bga.com (Richard L. King) (Richard L. King)
Subject: Contest exchanges, why we send them.
Message-ID: <199604081457.JAA11963@zoom.bga.com>

>At 06:55 PM 4/5/96 -0700, you wrote:
>>The contest exchange tries to provide you the contester with what is needed
>>to operate the event. In most stateside events the exchange gives you the
>>data to determine if a new mult has just been worked (section, state).
>>
>>The signal report is not necessary for point accumulation. In fact, the
>>signal report seems to be a bad habit we are all used to. Lets break the
>>habit and throw in something that the operator MUST copy to get credit for
>>the Q.
>
>The none data signal report does serve a purpose. It is an "announcer" that
>means something like "here's the data that your going to copy". When you
>hear "59 Texas" the 59 tells you the information is next.

In the computer hardware business, they call those the "sync characters".
Another example might be the sending of "nr" before you send the number in
Sweepstakes.
Both are something that are not needed, but can be helpful under some
conditions.

73, Richard - K5NA
K5NA@BGA.COM


>From dj7aa@wegaop.Boerde.DE (dj7aa)  Mon Apr  8 17:52:00 1996
From: dj7aa@wegaop.Boerde.DE (dj7aa) (dj7aa)
Subject: Scores of the All Asia 1995 ??
Message-ID: <m0u6JEe-0007UXC@wegaop.Boerde.DE>

Hello eveybody, does anybody have scores from the 1995 All Asia CW-Contest?
I look specialy for the 20m Single Band/Single OP category.
If yes, please send a short E-Mail to my adress
Wil DJ7AA

>From AA7BG--Matt <AA7BG@worldnet.att.net>  Mon Apr  8 16:49:03 1996
From: AA7BG--Matt <AA7BG@worldnet.att.net> (AA7BG--Matt)
Subject: TS930 ON/OFF switch
Message-ID: <199604081549.PAA06631@mailhost.worldnet.att.net>

Well I'll be jiggered. Yesterday, I switched on the 930 (my main contest
rig) and the blame thing wouldn't stay on. It seems the on/off switch broke.
It goes in when pushed and the rig comes to life, but when I take my finger
off it, the rig goes off.  Anyone else experience this? Suggestions for
replacement switch vendor? Also, where's a good place to get those little
S-meter lamps?

Thanks, Matt

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AA7BG@worldnet.att.net                  Matt                    Power, Montana  



>From Ward Silver <hwardsil@wolfenet.com>  Mon Apr  8 17:09:20 1996
From: Ward Silver <hwardsil@wolfenet.com> (Ward Silver)
Subject: Breakdown Contests
Message-ID: <Pine.OSF.3.91.960408090752.877B-100000@gonzo.wolfenet.com>


No, that's not a directive ("Crush All Boxes")...I forgot to note for 
which contests to send breakdown files.  Any of the "big" DX contests 
this season; CQ WW, ARRL DX, WPX SSB.

Thanks!

73, Ward N0AX

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