#16
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Blaspemy ! Heresy ! (grin) But yeah, virtually none of the old Tooob Battlewagons had very good stability...At least, not until you had 'em on for a long time, they'd kinda settle down after EVERYTHING in 'em got warm...
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Benevolent Despot |
#17
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I found that after a few hours they would settle down but then would start a gradual drift that never seemed to end.
I listen to the old AM nets and even on 75 meters the guys are drifting around. My friend has an old Knight T-60 transmitter and I offered to convert a Heath sweep generator into a VFO for it. I have to make sure there is enough drift though; I wouldn't want him to be the laughing stock of the group. When I checked in, I apologized for using a rice box. |
#18
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Back when I first got on six meters, if I had to chase the other station in a QSO up the dial, I couldn't resist asking, "how well do you like your Swan rig?" Of course, I'd do that before they would say what rig they had. Kinda scared them. Especially when I did the same thing on HF!
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Reception Reports for Channel 37 TVDX Can Not Only Get You a QSL Card, but a One-Way Trip to the Planet Davanna is a Real Possibility... |
#19
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Swans drift as much as any rig, and more than most. I built a rig when I first got licensed and it didn't drift much at all. I made a VFO at 160 meters and multiplied it up to 10 meters.
Another job in which I have pride is stabilizing the VFO in my Johnson Valiant. When I finished with it, it was as solid as a Collins, maybe 1 kHz drift on 10m but probably a lot less. |
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