On Mon,2/15/2016 3:07 PM, Stuart Rohre wrote:
Granted that Radio Shack's parts supply is meager at best, is there
someone who has taken on the supplier role Amidon used to offer for hams?
Amidon has always been a rip-off source, selling stuff at 5x their cost,
using invented part numbers to conceal that fact. They're still there
and still doing it, along with several others. Not recommended. Like I
said in my previous post, there are part numbers and recommended vendors
in Appendix One of my tutorial. They are standard industrial sources,
and like all such sources, we need to buy in quantity to get good prices.
There's no reason not to buy in quantity -- in today's world, you can
easily use a dozen or more in a short time once you've identified the
noise sources. And we can organize a quantity purchase with local ham
clubs to build more quantity.
73, Jim K9YC
Most hams won't have a real electronics wholesale company nearby any
more, even before the Shack went away from components to mostly phones.
One of the staples for general sniffing here is a one inch diameter
coil on a form with both ends brought to a coax with scope end
connector. The coil wound with 2 inches of enameled wire, which is
enough to pick up near a cable and let you see on a scope if a
shielded cable leaks signals that cause problems.
This came out of a bulletin put out for years by Perfection Mica Corp.
maker of Mu Metal cans and boxes and different foil shielding materials.
Their shielding tape allowed us to create a shielded attache case for
transporting recorded digital VHS tapes used in a proprietary
recording system for ocean acoustics noise. The case inside was lined
with the stick on tape as a mu metal shield.
-Stuart
K5KVH
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