home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Date: Mon, 7 Mar 94 03:12:31 PST
- From: Info-Hams Mailing List and Newsgroup <info-hams@ucsd.edu>
- Errors-To: Info-Hams-Errors@UCSD.Edu
- Reply-To: Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu
- Precedence: Bulk
- Subject: Info-Hams Digest V94 #256
- To: Info-Hams
-
-
- Info-Hams Digest Mon, 7 Mar 94 Volume 94 : Issue 256
-
- Today's Topics:
- Dentron GLA1000B Manual needed (2 msgs)
- Further criminalization of scanning
- International Callsign servers?
- IRS 501(c) tax-exempt status for our club - How?
- NEC 3D MultiSync
- QSL Route, help.
- QST review of Dual-Bander HTs
- Reply to: Info-Hams Digest V94 #235
- Repost:ACN5-3/4.4:Letters to The Editor Ham Radio, CBI
- SB316 Semantics 6/7 The ACS.
- Travelling to Egypt
- Travel to Egypt
-
- Send Replies or notes for publication to: <Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu>
- Send subscription requests to: <Info-Hams-REQUEST@UCSD.Edu>
- Problems you can't solve otherwise to brian@ucsd.edu.
-
- Archives of past issues of the Info-Hams Digest are available
- (by FTP only) from UCSD.Edu in directory "mailarchives/info-hams".
-
- We trust that readers are intelligent enough to realize that all text
- herein consists of personal comments and does not represent the official
- policies or positions of any party. Your mileage may vary. So there.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 7 Mar 1994 03:35:44 GMT
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!library.ucla.edu!csulb.edu!csus.edu!netcom.com!piper@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Dentron GLA1000B Manual needed
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- --
- Mike Betz
- piper@netcom.com
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 7 Mar 1994 04:07:40 GMT
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!library.ucla.edu!csulb.edu!csus.edu!netcom.com!piper@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Dentron GLA1000B Manual needed
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Last post didn't make it. I am in search of a manual for the Dentron GLA
- 1000 B. I will pay postage, copying costs and a few bucks for your
- time. Most of all, I'll be very grateful. Please Email Replies to:
-
- piper@netcom.com
-
- Thanks.
-
- Mike KM4QN
-
-
- --
- Mike Betz
- piper@netcom.com
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 6 Mar 1994 20:24:37 -0800
- From: nntp.crl.com!crl.crl.com!not-for-mail@decwrl.dec.com
- Subject: Further criminalization of scanning
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- gilbaronw0mn@delphi.com (Gilbert Baron) writes:
-
- >>
- >>In article <1994Mar2.175938.12119@alw.nih.gov>, weisen@alw.nih.gov (Neil
- >Weisenfeld) writes...
- >>>What I think we should do is write to our congresspeople and tell them why
- >>>we feel the cellular and cordless privacy laws are so misguided. Even if
- [...stuff deleted...]
- >>your home, as long as you didn't act on or disclose what you heard. You are
- >>now a criminal if you choose to *tune in* to these particular band
- >segments,
- [...stuff deleted...]
- >>regardless of what you do with what you hear. More such laws will follow,
- >>since government and regulations never shrink in size.
- >>-Tom R. N1OOQ randolph@est.enet.dec.com
- >>
- >Sad, very sad. And it does not really protect anyone. In fact it gives too
- >many people a false sense of security. Digital technology with encryption
- >will protect people and that is what we should have. Of course the
- >government is trying to get its dirty summy rotten hands intot hat too. Can
- >you say Clipper. They will pry my key out of my cokld dead hands and no
- >other way.
- >Get PGP and be safe.
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- > Gil Baron, El Baron Rojo, W0MN Rochester,MN
- > "Bailar es Vivir"
- > PGP2.3 key at key servers or upon request
-
- Getting PGP will not solve the problem. I feel our government intends to:
-
- 1. provide a somewhat viable encryption standard with a govt backdoor.
-
- 2. pass laws which make it illegal to use non-govt sanctioned encryption.
- (after all, if you are innocent, what do you have to hide?)
-
- The problem cannot be resolved by getting a backing for PGP (or your favorite
- encryption algorithm), but by supporting the idea that (real) encryption
- should not be an illegal activity.
- The government has the ability to get virtually every piece of private info
- you have (via wiretap, access to financial data, warrants, lock picking
- abilities, etc.) but with the advent of cheap processing, anyone can now
- lock information and the Government can't pick the lock.
-
- The standard argument has always been '...in the national interest...'
- The question becomes:
- "Do we really want to give up the last sanction of privacy left to us?"
-
- This is where I believe the real issue lies.
-
- Mick
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 1 Mar 1994 18:06:07 GMT
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!newsserver.jvnc.net!raffles.technet.sg!ntuix!ntuvax.ntu.ac.sg!asirene@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: International Callsign servers?
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Hi,
-
- Are there any callsign servers out there which hold references
- for non-US/Canadian (eg. for japan) callsigns?
-
- 73 de 9V Daniel
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 06 Mar 94 19:17:03 GMT
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!swrinde!emory!rsiatl!jgd@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: IRS 501(c) tax-exempt status for our club - How?
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Scott W. Binder <swbinder@delphi.com> writes:
-
- >Hello - I was wondering if anyone was a member of a club that has Federal
- >501(c) tax-exempt status? We would like to know how to do so ourselves.
- >
- >We are Humboldt Amateur Radio Club, Inc., and are a state non-profit
- >organization. We have three chapters, each independantly governed
- >and maintaining their own identity. We have been working with a local
- >attorney who took our three page Constitution and By-Laws and turned it
- >into twelve pages of legalese and left out many important parts, such as
- >the identification of our chapters.
- >
- >There has to be a relatively pain-free way to do this. Does anyone
- >have any advice on how to proceed from here?
-
- No, there is no easy way. My father is a CPA. I've had him set up
- 3 tax exempt club charters now, one a ham club. The filings to do it
- properly are volumnous and the penalties of doing it wrong are severe,
- assuming you actually use your tax exempt status to raise money. What
- you need to do is to find someone in your club who is a CPA or a
- tax attorney and get him to do it. Maybe even pay him something.
-
- If you do this, your club should also incorporate. That is, unless each
- member wants to be exposed individually to delinquent tax liability
- in the event the club missteps.
-
- John
-
- --
- John De Armond, WD4OQC, Marietta, GA jgd@dixie.com
- Performance Engineering Magazine. Email to me published at my sole discretion
-
- Tonight, suppose Washington were nuked to atoms. Ask yourself, would you
- be better or worse off. This graphically frames the role of the federal
- government in destroying the American way of life.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 6 Mar 94 17:30:29 GMT
- From: envoy!equinox.unr.edu!destree@uunet.uu.net
- Subject: NEC 3D MultiSync
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- I have a NEC MultiSync 3D monitor from a few years back. Several
- months ago it lost video. I took it to a local tech who "played" with
- it, and was able to get video back part way. It is extremely distorted in
- the horizontal direction, and the front panel controls don't work now. I
- sent the monitor to NEC. They could fix it, but I feel their $270 flat
- rate is unfair, and not viable for a several year old monitor. After
- all, new ones are available for near that price.
-
- So, I had a few ideas I thought I'd try. If there is a tech who
- is familiar with the NEC 3D or has encountered and sucessfully repaired
- this problem before, I would be intrested in having it fixed. I would be
- willing to pay a fair price, but not the outrageous $270 NEC wants. Or
- if someone has a 3D that is dead for reasons other than what I have
- described, I would consider buying it to scavenge. Lastly, if someone
- would be interested in buying my monitor for parts or a project, I am
- open to offers.
-
- This monitor was (and really still is) a very good unit. I hate
- to throw it away, but in these disposable times we live in I may have no
- other cost effective choice.
-
- Thanks!
- Louis
- --
- Louis A. Destree University of Nevada, Reno
- destree@unr.edu <> destree@equinox.bitnet Electrical Engineering
- Amateur Radio: N7XNX (General Class) Bike: 1980 Honda CB750C
- "Of all the things I've lost in life, I miss my mind the most!"
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 1 Mar 1994 17:55:17 GMT
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!newsserver.jvnc.net!raffles.technet.sg!ntuix!ntuvax.ntu.ac.sg!asirene@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: QSL Route, help.
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Hi,
-
- I need help with QSL route for the following:-
-
- JA7KDC, BV200, 4F2IR, BV6ER, 9V1WR, JR6HI, 4S7OF, K5WOT
-
- Tks.
-
- 73 de 9V1 Daniel
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 2 Mar 94 16:41:36 GMT
- From: sdd.hp.com!apollo.hp.com!lf.hp.com!devlin@hplabs.hp.com
- Subject: QST review of Dual-Bander HTs
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Allen Wallace (allen@dtint.dtint.com) wrote:
-
- : For example, I've heard a rumor that the TH-78A can transmit AM down in
- : the aircraft band. I don't believe it, nor would I ever want to transmit
- : down there!
-
- Actually, there are quite a few hams with pilot's licenses that would
- *love* to have a radio that can do that. A typical aviation handheld
- costs around $500 and they are becoming a very popular accessory as a
- backup radio.
-
- If anyone can confirm or deny this rumor please do so.
-
- --
- Lee Devlin N3IWP | HP Little Falls Site | phone: (302) 633-8697
- Piper Colt N4986Z | 2850 Centerville Rd. | email:
- 'Spirit of rec.aviation'| Wilmington, DE 19808 | devlin@lf.hp.com
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 7 Mar 94 00:59:26 GMT
- From: news-mail-gateway@ucsd.edu
- Subject: Reply to: Info-Hams Digest V94 #235
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- From: Steve Egert:FDC300
- Date: ## 03/06/94 20:59 ##
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 6 Mar 1994 22:21:49 -0500
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!swrinde!gatech!newsxfer.itd.umich.edu!montego!not-for-mail@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Repost:ACN5-3/4.4:Letters to The Editor Ham Radio, CBI
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Article 4:
- Letters To The Editor
-
- From: Larry Kollar
- E-mail: larryk@computone.com
-
- Pretty good newsletter this issue! (vol 5 no 1/2 -ed.) It was
- particularly interesting since I was just trying to remember when
- the child labor/factory hours laws were passed (I was thinking
- 1820s, not late 1840s).
- One piece, however, jumped out as being not quite right:
-
- "In the tradition of Amateur Radio and Citizen's Band Radio,
- Usenet News is the product of the users' ideas and will.
- Unlike Amateur Radio and CB, however, Usenet is owned and
- controlled solely by the participants."
-
- I made that connection as well a few years ago, thinking that
- computer networks might be this generation's amateur radio. But
- I'm not sure that one can say that Usenet is "owned and
- controlled solely by the participants," while amateur radio and
- CB are not. In the sense that government and international bodies
- determine what portions of the radio spectrum the medium of
- communication are allocated to the two services, that's true.
- However, the Usenet participants that own the computers, modems,
- disk drives, and so on do not own the medium of communication
- (leased lines and telephone networks) either.
- In both radio and computer networks, one need only buy the
- equipment needed to connect. In the case of amateur radio,
- however, one must also pass a series of exams designed to test
- the participant's knowledge of theory and regulations. In return
- for passing these exams, the amateur radio operator (or "ham")
- may:
-
- - Use higher power levels (up to 1000 watts) if needed for
- reliable communications.
-
- - Operate in modes unavailable to CB (or many commercial)
- users. For example, the amateur packet radio network uses TCP/IP
- and is available worldwide; there are several e-mail gateways
- between ampr.org (the packet network) and the "normal" Internet.
- Some segments of the packet radio network use Internet
- "wormholes" and amateur radio satellites (or OSCARs) to move
- traffic around the world.
-
- - Use a wider range of frequencies for local or international
- communications. Some amateurs are experimenting with high-speed
- data links (as fast as T-1, or 1.5 million bits per second!) on
- the microwave frequencies, for example.
-
- - Build and operate equipment that is not FCC type-accepted.
- The same homebrewing spirit extolled in ACN remains strong in the
- amateur radio population.
-
- Amateur packet radio is a godsend for me. I live outside the
- Atlanta direct-dial area, and accessing BBSs from home means
- running up long-distance phone charges. Using packet radio, I
- bypass the traditional "landline" BBSs and connect directly to a
- packet BBS over the air. (I get on Internet at work.)
- As amateurs are expressly forbidden to use their frequencies
- for commercial traffic, the packet radio network is even more
- grass-roots than Internet! As the equipment becomes available to
- more users, the packet visionaries are talking about many of the
- same things as the Internet visionaries, such as digital voice
- (and video) links. The two networks will continue to develop in
- parallel for some time but if commercial interests kill further
- Internet development (unlikely IMHO), the amateur packet network
- will continue forward.
- The person you mentioned in ACN who is sending e-mail to the
- MIR space station is using amateur radio; most of MIR's
- cosmonauts are hams and occasionally make voice contacts with
- people on the ground in addition to running the packet mailbox
- almost constantly. The USA's Space Shuttle often flies a mission,
- called SAREX for Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment, that connects
- Shuttle astronauts to school children (among others) via voice
- and packet radio links. MIR and Shuttle missions have both used
- their amateur gear for reliable backup communications when normal
- mission communications channels went down temporarily. CB, on the
- other hand, provides the security of millions of users. Any
- commercial interest trying to take over the CB frequencies would
- be jammed to death. :-) Amateur radio's highest frequencies are
- used only lightly (so far) and there is a good bit of commercial
- pressure to reallocate those bands. It has already happened in
- one case, but that's another story.
- I've rambled on long enough. Keep up the good work!
-
- Larry Kollar
- Senior Technical Writer
- Computone Inc, Roswell, GA
- Amateur Radio KC4WZK
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 6 Mar 1994 17:18:04 -0700
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!math.ohio-state.edu!cyber2.cyberstore.ca!nntp.cs.ubc.ca!alberta!ve6mgs!usenet@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: SB316 Semantics 6/7 The ACS.
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Bid: $RACESBUL.316
-
- TO: ALL ES, CD, AND PUBLIC SAFETY DIRECTORS VIA AMATEUR RADIO
- INFO: ALL RACES OPERATORS IN CALIFORNIA
- INFO: ALL AMATEUR RADIO OPERATORS
- FROM: CA STATE OFFICE OF EMERGENCY SERVICES
- (W6SIG@WA6NWE.CA) Ph: 916-262-1600
- 2800 MEADOWVIEW RD., SACRAMENTO, CA 95832
- LANDLINE BBS OPEN TO ALL 916-262-1657
- RACESBUL.316 RELEASE DATE: March 7, 1994
-
- Subject: MGT - Semantics, 6 of 7. The ACS.
-
- AUXILIARY COMMUNICATIONS SERVICE: The name adopted by those
- jurisdictions who have chosen to use a wide spectrum of volunteer
- telecommunication experts and other workers in government
- service. This might include commercial radio technicians and
- engineers, the RACES, Civil Air Patrol communicators and other
- unpaid professionals. In some jurisdictions it includes public
- safety and government communications as well as liaison with any
- agency that has a bearing on emergency response.
-
- An ACS has four elements in which interested volunteers serve
- according to their skills and interests: administrative,
- clerical, operations, and technical. In our State ACS we have
- radio operators, heavy equipment operators, tower climbers,
- computer disk message writers, messengers, photographers, pilots,
- electricians, generator mechanics, computer programmers, plan
- writers, instructors, EBS specialists and radio announcers,
- personnel records management, clerical help, managers, shift
- supervisors, installers as well as communications and electronics
- technicians. Again, the RACES is but one part of the Auxiliary
- Communications Service. The ACS is a broad spectrum service to
- government supplementing all aspects of emergency response
- communications, not just operating radios in the field or at an
- EOC which has been considered by some to be the only role of the
- RACES.
-
- (This is part of a series originally titled "From My Lookout" in
- seven parts, by Stanly E. Harter. It was renamed Semantics for
- these bulletins. Continued)
-
-
- -----------------
- RACES Bulletins are archived on the Internet at ucsd.edu in hamradio/races
- and can be retrieved using FTP.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 7 Mar 94 01:41:27 -0500
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!agate!news.Brown.EDU!noc.near.net!news.delphi.com!usenet@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Travelling to Egypt
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Be careful!!!A German tourist got shot two days ago while on the Nile
- Cruiser...Tourist bus got shot uppretty bad abt two weeks ago.
- No stretching....it is arare night that an Egyptian policeman isn't
- killed.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 7 Mar 1994 07:08:13 GMT
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!geraldo.cc.utexas.edu!astro.as.utexas.edu!oo7@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Travel to Egypt
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- armond@delphi.com says:
-
- >>Be careful!!!A German tourist got shot two days ago while
- >>on the Nile Cruiser...Tourist bus got shot uppretty bad abt
- >>two weeks ago. No stretching....it is arare night that an
- >>Egyptian policeman isn't killed.
-
- That sounds no more dangerious to me than staying in the US...
-
-
- Derek Wills (AA5BT, G3NMX)
- Department of Astronomy, University of Texas,
- Austin TX 78712. (512-471-1392)
- oo7@astro.as.utexas.edu
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 6 Mar 94 17:34:14 GMT
- From: nprdc!ihnp4.ucsd.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!pipex!sunic!psinntp!psinntp!arrl.org!zlau@network.ucsd.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <1994Mar2.054202.25433@ke4zv.atl.ga.us>, <1994Mar3.153014.6322@arrl.org>, <1994Mar4.132650.9466@ke4zv.atl.ga.us>
- Subject : Re: Medium range point-to-point digital links
-
- Gary Coffman (gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us) wrote:
- : In article <1994Mar3.153014.6322@arrl.org> zlau@arrl.org (Zack Lau (KH6CP)) writes:
- : >BTW--how else does one improve a point to point link,
- : >besides using bigger antennas and more power?
-
- : Ah, the DXer mentality at work. That's what those guys
- : thought too. The only problem was, that wasn't why the
- : link was flakey. The real problem was that they had
- : established the world's worst exposed terminal in their
- : single frequency network, and the link was being killed
- : by all the DXer's with 160 watt amps and beams trying to
- : make it to their hubs and capturing the link node's receiver.
- : It would be held off for minutes at a time by the continous
- : collisions.
-
- Actually, if you are forced to do it all on a single
- frequency, bigger antennas and more power *is*
- just about the only solution (to improve the link).
- The more directive antennas would reduce chance of
- collisions, while more power would reduce the effect
- of a collision. Admittedly, an *ugly* situation. But,
- politics makes it difficult to find other frequencies
- that are those compatible with radios already in use.
-
- Yes, I know you could modify all the TNCs for some sort
- of optimized slotted Aloha protocol, but I doubt this
- is really practical.
-
- Getting links on clear frequencies is where microwaves
- show their superiority. Not only is it more difficult
- to fill the wider bands with wall to wall signals, but
- highly directive antennas make frequency reuse more of a
- possibility. All that money spent on VHF bricks
- might be put to better use on microwave transverters.
-
- I'm pretty sure an analysis of the phone calls I've
- recorded would show that its not just DXers who run
- beams and amplifiers into their local BBS. I usually
- end up spending an extra few minutes explaining that
- while a beam results in stronger signals, this advantage
- is often eliminated by the extra collisions that result.
-
- I've found that an open wire fed *HF* dipole, even
- though it is cross polarized, works a lot better than
- an indoor yagi for packet work, because it hears more
- stations than the yagi.
-
- --
- Zack Lau KH6CP/1 2 way QRP WAS
- 8 States on 10 GHz
- Internet: zlau@arrl.org 10 grids on 2304 MHz
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 5 Mar 1994 10:53:07 GMT
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!sdd.hp.com!nigel.msen.com!yale.edu!newsserver.jvnc.net!raffles.technet.sg!ntuix!ntuvax.ntu.ac.sg!asirene@network.ucsd.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <1994Mar2.144907.26098@bongo.tele.com>, <CM2960.93I@ucdavis.edu>, <2l3nuj$pr@bigfoot.wustl.edu>
- Subject : Re: JARGON
-
- In article <2l3nuj$pr@bigfoot.wustl.edu>, jlw3@cec3.wustl.edu (Jesse L Wei) writes:
- > Daniel D. Todd (ez006683@chip.ucdavis.edu) wrote:
- > : Julian Macassey (julian@bongo.tele.com) wrote:
- >
- > : : Wheras real mortals will say: "Blew a fuse this morning". A
- > : : true ham will spin it out with a desciption of what equipment was
- > : : drawing current at the time, who was effected, the duration of the
- > : : outage and the total milage driven to buy a new fuse. A skilled ham
- > : : communicator can spin a simple event out so that the description of it
- > : : takes three times longer than the duration of the actual event.
- >
- > : Nah,
- > : A real Ham(tm) would have ten of the required fuses on hand but would
- > : still manage to use teh wrong value the first three times. He (or she)
- > : would then explain when and where they bought the fuse ten years ago.
- > : The worst part is that many other Real Hams(tm) will actually be
- > : interested and probably pump the first ham for more information. :-)
- >
- > Now this is my question: do hams *ever* talk about anything besides what
- > kind of rig (s)he's got, ham problems, ham equipment, etc? As a waiting
- > (as in for my ticket) prospective, I've liistened to the local repeaters,
- > and personally, the conversations seem pretty boring if that's all you
- > ever talk about. Have I missed anything? or something? Is the purpose
- > of ham radio to talk about the technicalities of it? I know that the
- > whole nature of it requires technicality, but isn't there more to
- > it than that?
- >
- > --jesse (still waiting)
-
- Its not just ANY technicalities we're talking about here, I mean
- look at the specs of the antenna, sure beats the hell out of talking abt
- what show to watch today. Of course hams talk at the wx, and clothes to
- wear (for expeditions), hotels (like in Dayton), occasionnaly about XYL
- or YLs, :)
-
- Its more than just technicalities, its the TECHNICALITIES, ahhhh..
- ham heaven...
-
- 73 de 9V1nn Daniel
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Info-Hams Digest V94 #256
- ******************************
-