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1994-11-13
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29KB
Date: Sun, 9 Oct 94 12:51:59 PDT
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: List
Subject: Info-Hams Digest V94 #1108
To: Info-Hams
Info-Hams Digest Sun, 9 Oct 94 Volume 94 : Issue 1108
Today's Topics:
(none) (2 msgs)
Amateur Radio Newsline #895 07 Oct 94
CABLE TV LEAKAGE
DX Stamp Service?
Expose - Wouff-Hong
FM subcarrier
How far with QRP SSB....
Isoloop vs R5/7
Radio Shack Violation
subscribe rec.radio.amateur.misc (2 msgs)
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: 9 Oct 94 11:01:33 GMT
From: masikane@freenet.HUt.FI (mauri sikanen)
Subject: (none)
SUBSCRIBE INFO-HAMS MAURI SIKANEN OH4RH
------------------------------
Date: 9 Oct 94 18:56:07 GMT
From: garyk9gs@solaria.sol.NET (Gary T. Schwartz)
Subject: (none)
subscribe
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 09 Oct 1994 10:32:58 -0400
From: bigsteve@dorsai.dorsai.org (Steve_Coletti)
Subject: Amateur Radio Newsline #895 07 Oct 94
The electronic publication of the Amateur Radio Newsline is distributed
with the permission of Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, President and Editor of
Newsline. The text version is edited from the original scripts and
transcribed from the audio reports by Dale Cary, WD0AKO, and is first
published in The Radio & Electronics Round Table on the Genie Online
System.
If you have any comment, suggestion, or news item you would like to submit,
send them via E-Mail to 3241437@mcimail.com or B.PASTERNAK@genie.geis.com.
You can contact Newsline at +1 805-296-7180. It is a combination answering
and FAX machine, if you have a FAX to send, wait for the voice prompt and
press your fax-send button.
All other information and disclaimers are in the text header below.
- - - - -
NEWSLINE RADIO - CBBS EDITION #895 - POSTED 10/07/94
(***************************************************************)
(* *)
(* * * ***** * * **** * ***** * * ***** *)
(* ** * * * * * * * ** * * *)
(* * * * *** * ** * *** * * * * * *** *)
(* * ** * * ** * * * * * ** * *)
(* * * ***** * * **** ***** ***** * * ***** *)
(* *)
(* **** * **** ***** *** *)
(* * * * * * * * * * *)
(* **** ***** * * * * * *)
(* * * * * * * * * * *)
(* * * * * **** ***** *** *)
(* *)
(***************************************************************)
The following is late news about Amateur Radio for Radio
Amateurs as prepared from NEWSLINE RADIO scripts by the staff of
the AMATEUR RADIO NEWSLINE, INC. -- formerly the WESTLINK RADIO
NETWORK. For current information updates, please call
Audio Version of Newsline
=========================
Los Angeles............................ (213) 462-0008
Los Angeles (Instant Update Line)...... (805) 296-2407
Seattle................................ (206) 368-3969
Seattle................................ (206) 281-8455
Tacoma................................. (206) 927-7373
Louisville............................. (502) 894-8559
Dayton................................. (513) 275-9991
Chicago................................ (708) 289-0423
New York City.......................... (718) 353-2801
Melbourne, FL.......................... (407) 259-4479
Electronic Hardcopy Version of Newsline
=======================================
GEnie (RTC Bulletin Board)............. m345;1
GEnie (File Library)................... m345;3
Dallas Remote Imaging BBS (DRIG)....... (214) 492-7573
In bulletin number 36
The Midwest Connection BBS............. (701) 239-2440
In bulletin number 6 of the ham radio conference
Delphi.................................
In the ham radio conference
Internet...............................
In the rec.radio.info newsgroup
FTP: oak.oakland.edu, archive: pub/hamradio/docs/newsline
Fidonet, RIME, Intellec, I-Link........
In the Ham Radio conferences on those networks
CompuServe/HamNet...................... Coming Soon!
America Online/Ham Radio Club..........
Software Exchange/Ham Radio General Files
For questions or comments about the text version, contact me at
D.CARY@GENIE.GEIS.COM on the Internet.
For the latest breaking info call the Instant Update Line listed
above. To provide information please call (805) 296-7180. This
line answers automatically and will accept up to 30 minutes of
material.
Check with your local amateur radio club to see if NEWSLINE
can be heard weekly on the air in your area.
Articles may be reproduced if printed in their entirety and
credit is given to AMATEUR RADIO NEWSLINE as being the source.
For further information about the AMATEUR RADIO NEWSLINE,
please write to us with an SASE at P.O. Box 463, Pasadena, CA
91102.
Thank You
NEWSLINE
(****************************************************************
Some of the hams of NEWSLINE RADIO...
WA6ITF WB6MQV WB6FDF K6DUE W6RCL N6AHU N6AWE N6TCQ K6PGX N6PNY
KU8R N8DTN W9JUV KC9RP K9XI KB5KCH KC5UD KC0HF G8AUU WD0AKO DJ0QN
and many others in the United States and around the globe!!!
(****************************************************************
[895]
(* * * * C L O S E D C I R C U I T A D V I S O R Y * * * *
(* *
(* The following advisory is not necessarily for trans- *
(* mission over amateur radio. This is just a reminder that *
(* the address for the Newsline Support Fund is Newsline, in *
(* care of Randy Hammock, KC6HUR, Post Office Box 463, Pasadena *
(* California 91102. Again, and as always, we thank you. That *
(* ends the closed circuit with Newsline report number 895 for *
(* release on Friday, October 7, 1994 to follow. *
(* *
(* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
The following is a QST
More information comes to light on the penalty phase of the
California license fraud probe, the ARRL files on the upcoming
World Radio Communications Conferences and a famous sports figure
versus Marconi? All this and more on Newsline report number 895
coming your way right now!
(*****
CAL VE BUST
More information on the California license testing fraud case
comes light and more hams may soon face punishment.
As reported last week, three hams have had their licenses
suspended pending revocation. Fifty one others have been
downgraded in the wake of discoveries of alleged cheating in the
all-volunteer testing program.
This first wave of enforcement deals with exams conducted at
test sessions in the southern half of the state. These tests were
coordinated by the ARRL VEC. A subsequent investigation by the
commission in cooperation with several VEC's led the FCC to
declare that irregularities on exam papers indicated provable
fraud had been committed by as many as ninety candidates statewide
over a two year period.
Next up look for the grand finale with hard-line action
against the more serious offenders. This includes those with
multiple upgrades and most important, the Volunteer Examiners who
are alleged to have cooked up this licenses for sale scheme.
The FCC itself is limited as to what direct action it can take
against those it believes committed licensing fraud. The agency
can assess fines, it can issue show cause orders suspending or
revoking the licenses of those involved, or both. But most
important, it can also refer the matter to the Department of
Justice and request criminal prosecution against the most
egregious offenders in the case.
Don't be surprised if more license revocations and downgrades
are announced.
(*****
TECH TICKETS
If you hold a Technician class ham license issued prior to
March 16, 1991 then you are automatically a Technician Plus
licensee. The only problem is that the FCC's computer may not
have taken note of this since June.
The FCC now admits that in some instances since last June the
8th, it has processed a license renewals and modification for some
Technician Plus licensees and has mistakenly issued them entry
level no-code Technician tickets.
Tech Plus licensees who sent in a renewal or modification
after June 8th can immediately tell if they have an incorrect
license simply by looking at it. If it was issued after that
date it will be marked Technician Plus. If it isn't, then you are
going to have to contact the FCC and get it corrected. Here's
how.
You start by writing a letter to the FCC. Explain the
situation. Include information on your current license status and
its effective date. If you have your license at hand, make a
photocopy and include it with your letter. Then mail everything
to the FCC's license processing facility at 1270 Fairfield Road,
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania 17325-7245. Or, if you have access to a
facsimile machine you can fax the material to area code (717)
337-1541.
And then be patient. The commission says that it will take
from four to six weeks to verify your claim and to have a
corrected license mailed out.
But there is some good news with all this. The FCC says that
you can continue to exercise your Technician Plus privileges until
your corrected license arrives.
(*****
LEAGUE REPLIES TO WRC-95 PREPARATORY COMMENTS
The ARRL has commented on an FCC Notice of Inquiry in
preparation for the next International Telecommunication Union
World Radio Conference, scheduled for November 1995. In its
filing on Docket 94-31, the ARRL urges that any consideration of
realignment of the 7 MHz band be held in abeyance until the World
Radiocommunications Conference scheduled for 2001. This, to give
fixed and mobile services time to relocate to higher frequencies.
The ARRL had earlier suggested that the issue be considered in
1999 but has now moved that back two years.
In the matter of the 2300 MHz band, the League notes that the
1994 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act carries a rider that
protects amateurs. The league says this means that an
international allocation for the Mobile Satellite Service at 2300
to 2310 or 2390 to 2420 MHz should not be considered.
Finally, the League again argues for a future agenda item in
the form of an International Amateur Radio Permit. They say that
such an automatic reciprocal permit is already available among the
countries of the European Conference of Postal and
Telecommunications Administrations and the International Amateur
Radio Union has been promoting such an agreement among its members
in ITU Region 2.
(*****
NEW ITU RADIOCOMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR
The International Telecommunications Union, the ITU has elected
Robert W. Jones, VE3CTM, to replace retiring Richard C. Kirby,
W0LCT, as Director of its Radiocommunication Bureau. The
announcement was made at the ITU Plenipotentiary Conference in
Kyoto, Japan, on September 30th.
Jones is from of Ottawa and is currently the Director General
of Canada's Radio Regulatory Branch which regulates amateur and
other radio services. His work with the ITU began in 1975 in
preparation for the 1977 and 1979 World Administrative Radio
Conferences. From 1981 to 1983 he was director of a project to
automate ITU frequency records. He has since served and headed
Canadian delegations to numerous ITU conferences and working
groups.
VE3CTM holds Master of Applied Science and Master of Business
Administration degrees, and attributes his professional interest
in radiocommunication to having become a licensed radio amateur as
a teenager back in 1959.
(*****
MARCONI vs JORDAN
Two well known names you probably never expected to hear
together are Guglielmo Marconi, recognized as the father of radio
telegraphy and sports superstar Michael Jordan. Would you believe
both men are in the middle of a dispute? It's true and it has to
do with baseball.
If you ever wind up just a few blocks east of Birmingham's
downtown business district, you may pass by a small city park
named in honor of Guglielmo Marconi. Marconi Park is only about a
block in size it contains a baseball field inner-city children and
others use. The park was named after Marconi because he once
visited Birmingham. Another visitor has been bringing plenty of
notoriety to the city, and much more recently. Michael Jordan
spent the summer here, playing minor league baseball with the
Birmingham Barons. Now, the Barons want to name the park in honor
of James Jordan, Michael Jordan's deceased father. The Barons
promise to renovate the field if the new name is approved, but
the idea is striking out with community activists. They say
Michael Jordan did not do enough work to help the community while
he was playing baseball in Birmingham. The Barons say Jordan
received so many requests to participate in various projects that
granting them all was impossible. While Marconi spent time in
Birmingham, name change opponents say James Jordan had no ties
to the city at all. One community leader sez turning Marconi Park
into James Jordan Park would mean nothing to the inner-city youth.
As we go to air, the controversy over the park continues.
(*****
HPM CELEBRATION A SUCCESS
Definitely not controversial is word that the recent 10-day
Hiram Percy Maxim 125th Birthday Memorial Celebration appears to
have been an overwhelming success. Despite incredibly bad HF
propagation the ARRL reports that pileups on /125 stations were
heavy on both voice and CW. Perhaps most surprising was that few
people asked what /125 meant.
The highest contact total reported so far is 5125. During a
special operation the first weekend, a number of ARRL Headquarters
staff members and visitors cranked out about 3,000 contacts from
W1AW/125.
(*****
BOGUS BULLETINS
Remember our story last week about an election held at ARRL
Headquarters where the staff voted down a union? Well the story
was accurate, but it was also ten years old.
It seems that there is some prankster out there in radio land
who is re-issuing decade old ARRL Official Bulletins with new
dates and new bulletin ID's. And, whomever is providing this
service is picking and choosing his topics very wisely. This to
make it seem that the story is timely and apropos.
We have learned that these re-issued bulletins are showing up
on packet radio, on private bulletin boards and even some of the
major public data services. That's where we got bit. And once
they enter the Internet they travel very quickly, worldwide.
The bottom line on this? If you come across an ARRL Official
bulletin that you think you have read before, it not deja vous.
You may have read it before, a decade ago.
(*****
SET - 94
Amateur Radio's 1994 Simulated Emergency Test, or SET is
slated for next weekend, October 15 and 16. Set is an ARRL
sponsored operating event designed to let hams practice emergency
message handling under near to life field conditions. For more
information or if you want to take part, please contact the ARRL
Field Services department at league headquarters. Or you can call
your ARRL Director or local Section Manager. Their names can be
found on page 8 of any issue of QST Magazine.
(*****
REPEATER WAIT
From across the Atlantic comes word that several new repeaters
are coming on the air in the United Kingdom. That is, they will
eventually be on the air.
The Radio Society of Great Britain reports that the latest
batch of repeater applications have been forwarded to the United
Kingdom's Radiocommunications Agency for processing. Included are
three new Packet Radio repeaters, a 24 cm ATV repeater a two meter
repeater and a change of frequency for another 24 cm ATV system.
That's the good part. Now heres the bad. The RSGB says that
it anticipates the minimum time for clearance of the UHF repeaters
will be at least six months or longer.
And you thought waiting for one of the United States volunteer
frequency coordinators was bad. How lucky we are.
(*****
SHACK EXPANSION
Tandy Radio Shack is planning a substantial expansion of its
retail outlets. According to Wall Street Business News reports,
the company expects to open 500 new stores by the end of the
century. That will give Radio Shack a total of seven-thousand
franchised and company-owned stores. It's also planning to open
24 new Computer City outlets in 1995.
Not in the press release but widely rumored is a major
expansion in Radio Shack's highly successful line of ham radio
gear early next year.
(*****
DX
In DX, word that WD8E, will be in Taiwan the last part of
October. As usual, this is a business trip and time for ham radio
will be limited but he will sign BV/WD8E whenever time permits.
QSL to his callbook address or via the bureau. All cards from his
last two Taiwan operations have already been answered.
(*****
ARMY EVENT
Paul Wipperman, K1MTM, and a group of his friends in the North
Atlantic Radio Club are currently operating a special events
station near Boston to commemorate the work of the United States
Army and the Signal Corps during World War 2. Whipperman says
that some of the gear being used makes the operation unique.
"Much of the equipment that is here was used during World War
II to protect the Atlantic coast line here. It is somewhat of a
unique station. We probably believe it is the only one of its
type in North America. Paul Wipperman, K1MTM.
You can find K1MTM on all of the high frequency band with
special emphasis for operating on 7255 KHz upper sideband on
weekends. QSL this special commemorative operation with an
SASE to K1MTM in care of the North Atlantic Radio Club at Post
Office Box 81, Elmwood, Massachusetts, 02337.
(*****
And for this week, that's all from the Amateur Radio Newsline.
You can write to us at:
AMATEUR RADIO NEWSLINE
Post Office Box 463
Pasadena, California
91102
(* * * Newsline Copyright 1994 all rights are reserved. * * *
--
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 9 Oct 1994 13:54:46 GMT
From: jjmartin@world.std.com (James J Martin)
Subject: CABLE TV LEAKAGE
Darren Leno (Darren.Leno@f747.n115.z1.nwugate.fidonet.org) wrote:
: I had a problem with bad cable leakage all over the 2 meter band.
: I wrote a letter to the FCC describing the interference, listing the
: frequencies, and inquiring as to whether or it not it might be from the
: local Cable TV company.
[snip]
: One simple letter to the FCC from a friendly ham sent a major cable company
: scrambling to clean up its act. (he he he.)
This is probably what I should have done when I was in Alamogordo, New
Mexico. I called the cable company after driving all over town with my
two meter handheld tuned to 145.52 and received signals all over town
each time I passed a distribution point. All this with the antenna
removed from the HT.
I got the "How do you know it exceeds... blah blah blah..." I told him to
bring his spectrum analyzer out to my house and he'd see what I was
talking about. It's where I started before I went all over town.
"Okay, we'll be over on Monday." WRONG! Never came. I moved a few
weeks later to a house about 3/4 of a mile up the street and never
followed up after that. Wish I had. So much for 20/40 hindsight.
One comment on illegal splices...a good friend had all kinds of signals
he was receiving in the 2 meter ham band...about two miles from where I
first lived there. He sniffed out the problem and found someone had done
the old twist the center conductors together and same with the shield up
in the attic and taped it with electrician's tape. Yup, leaky, leaky.
Solved his problem when he suggested to the guy that he get the correct
tools and use connectors to splice the cable or he'd be hearing from the
cable company.
Just me $.02 worth.
73 de WK1V / Jim
Lowell, Massachusetts
------------------------------
Date: 9 Oct 1994 14:27:56 GMT
From: gbrown@unlinfo.unl.edu (gregory brown)
Subject: DX Stamp Service?
Bruce Tindall (tindall@mercury.interpath.net) wrote:
: Can someone please give me the address of the DX Stamp Service
: or some other similar service in the U.S.A. that can sell me current
: mint postage stamps for foreign countries (especially Japan and China)
: for use in lieu of IRC's? Thanks.
: 73 de N4JIU
: --
: P. O. Box 447, Morrisville NC 27560 USA.
One is:
William J. Plum
12 Glenn Road
Flemington, NJ 08822
Write for a price list of available country's postage.
Gregory Brown WB0RTK
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 8 Oct 1994 13:54:57 GMT
From: glsmith@koess1.delcoelect.com
Subject: Expose - Wouff-Hong
In article <1994Oct4.143619.31809@arrl.org> ehare@arrl.org (Ed Hare (KA1CV)) writes:
>Kenneth Grimm (grimm@alison.sbc.edu) wrote:
>
>: Sworn to secrecy, as I recall, the best that I can do is suggest that you
>: simply observe the physical shape of the Wouff-Hong and let your wildest
>: imagination conjure up possible ways in which this awful device might be
>: used to..... Ohhhh, it's just too awful to think about! Figure it out
>: yourself.
>
>Well, I must confess that over the years the exact method of its application
>has become lost to us. Many visitors have offered suggestions: using it as a
>club, cracking of the knuckles between the two halves and, well, a few
>suggestions a bit more colorful.
> (stuff deleted)....
>
>--
>Ed Hare, KA1CV, ARRL Laboratory, 225 Main, Newington, CT 06111
>203-666-1541 ehare@arrl.org
Perhaps this would be a good time to ask (plead, beg, grovel, etc.) for someone
at ARRL HQ to post a picture of the the real Wouff-Hong. It would probably make
a great wallpaper for my windows background. How about it ARRL?
disclaimer: i have no idea what i'm doing....(can't you tell?)
my employer is not responsible for my being here.
WA9SLU GL650 Silverwing
------------------------------
Date: 9 Oct 1994 11:54:18 -0400
From: tysona@mcmail.cis.mcmaster.ca (Albert Tyson)
Subject: FM subcarrier
How can a normal FM radio be used to receive subcarrier FM?
------------------------------
Date: 9 Oct 94 15:15:13 EST
From: white_hae@ccsua.ctstateu.edu
Subject: How far with QRP SSB....
For QRP operation, I run a TenTec Argonaut 509, which puts out 5W CW or
2W SSB. For 20M ops, I use a 20M dipole or if mobile, a 20M hamstick. The
power source is a 7 amp-hour gel-cell.
I really dig QRP SSB operation, and though it is very susceptible to QRM,
SSB QSOs can be had quite easily. This summer I made 2-watt SSB contacts
with OM3THR (Slovak Rep.) receiving a 56; ON6KZ (Belgium) 55; CT3GU (Madeira
Is., Portugal) 43; and KL7AM in Kodiak, Alaska (51), among quite a few others.
Stateside, I've worked WI, MI, FL, IL, SD, SC, ND, KY, TN, OR, AR, CO, UT,
OH, GA, AL, NY and more....all since July 1.
QRP is an extraordinary operating experience. Throw the rig, a wire antenna,
and a gel cell in a backpack and you have a worldwide-capable station that
can be deployed in minutes from virtually anywhere. And now that I have
the capability to recharge my gel-cells via a couple of small solar panels,
extended, multiday operation is now possible from a remote site (or the far
corner of the backyard :).
Anyway, I thought I would throw my $0.02 in....and if anyone is interested in
QRP SSB skeds, drop me a note.
72 es gud DX
Harry/N1QVE
Harry White * N1QVE * white_hae@csusys.ctstateu.edu * white@sleepy.ctstateu.edu
Packet: n1qve@w1nrg.ct.usa.na
------------------------------
Date: 9 Oct 94 12:54:57 GMT
From: rpmccoy@BIX.com (rpmccoy on BIX)
Subject: Isoloop vs R5/7
georgec@onramp.net (George Csahanin) writes:
>I have an Isoloop and a loop I built before the isoloop was a twinkle in their eye.
>The loop is a very good antenna for the space consumed. Works fine. The only
>problem with the AEA and MFJ units are power handling. Much over 200
>watts and they both vapor-lock. A 1-kw version would be real neat. My homebrew 40-20
>loop will take a kw.
George:
How about sharing some details on your kw loop. I built
the loop shown in May, 1994 QST. What capacitor did you
use ? other details ?
Power handling is a definite problem. I had to use a
pretty large split stator cap to get to 100 watts.
Thanks.
73s, Dick, N4UN
rpmccoy@bix.com
------------------------------
Date: 9 Oct 1994 16:03:10 GMT
From: ad779@detroit.freenet.org (John Hughes)
Subject: Radio Shack Violation
Since you seem to know the 202 well, llet me ask you a question: I'm getting a erg an
error 2 message, which is supposed to mean that something is wrong with the PLL.
Its still under 30 days. Should I exchange it or put it in for service? My inclinatCC
inclination is the former, but i don't want to over react. Thanks.
------------------------------
Date: 9 Oct 94 15:12:02 GMT
From: MrEinstein@aol.COM
Subject: subscribe rec.radio.amateur.misc
subscribe rec.radio.amateur.misc Richard McRae
------------------------------
Date: 9 Oct 1994 16:28:01 GMT
From: georgec@onramp.net (George Csahanin)
Subject: subscribe rec.radio.amateur.misc
In article <9410091112.tn186918@aol.com>, MrEinstein@aol.COM says:
>
>subscribe rec.radio.amateur.misc Richard McRae
>
Imagine if Compuserve had a "worm hole" into internet...
And coming from Mr. Einstein yet!
-G
------------------------------
Date: 9 Oct 1994 16:26:00 GMT
From: georgec@onramp.net (George Csahanin)
References<36vbb2$159@mudraker.mtholyoke.edu> <376elr$1lq@news.onramp.net>, <rpmccoy.781707297@BIX.com>
Subject: Re: Isoloop vs R5/7
I
>How about sharing some details on your kw loop. I built
>the loop shown in May, 1994 QST. What capacitor did you
>use ? other details ?
>
>Power handling is a definite problem. I had to use a
>pretty large split stator cap to get to 100 watts.
Dick-
I love talking about this antenna. It was just amazing! It is from the June '86
QST. I bought the W5QJR book (he authored the article) and also bought
the capacitor from him. It is a mongo air-spaced cap. Effective spacing is
1/2" for the plates and the capacity is 50-150 pf. I don't know if he is still making
this capoacitor. Mine fell over when I was moving and the ceramic ends smashed.
It was a good trooper. i glued it back together. Also, my stepping motor controller
chip went south. So the loop is currently not in service, but I did buy an isoloop.
Nice try, needs a bigger cap.
-George WB2DYB/5
------------------------------
End of Info-Hams Digest V94 #1108
******************************