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#11
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KE5MBX wrote:
Where the heck do you get a 3cm transmitter, though? ha. http://www.downeastmicrowave.com/ And you can easily do 200KM on 200 mW, or 1000 KM per watt with a Dish Network (or equivalent) antenna on 10G SSB forward scatter. tom K0TAR |
#12
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On Feb 12, 8:47 pm, Tom Ring wrote:
KE5MBX wrote: Where the heck do you get a 3cm transmitter, though? ha. http://www.downeastmicrowave.com/ And you can easily do 200KM on 200 mW, or 1000 KM per watt with a Dish Network (or equivalent) antenna on 10G SSB forward scatter. tom K0TAR so you don't go out and buy a "3cm transceiver" as you would for 2m, 10m, 40m, etc.? |
#13
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![]() "KE5MBX" wrote in message ups.com... On Feb 12, 8:47 pm, Tom Ring wrote: KE5MBX wrote: Where the heck do you get a 3cm transmitter, though? ha. http://www.downeastmicrowave.com/ And you can easily do 200KM on 200 mW, or 1000 KM per watt with a Dish Network (or equivalent) antenna on 10G SSB forward scatter. tom K0TAR so you don't go out and buy a "3cm transceiver" as you would for 2m, 10m, 40m, etc.? :-)) |
#14
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KE5MBX wrote:
On Feb 12, 8:47 pm, Tom Ring wrote: KE5MBX wrote: Where the heck do you get a 3cm transmitter, though? ha. http://www.downeastmicrowave.com/ And you can easily do 200KM on 200 mW, or 1000 KM per watt with a Dish Network (or equivalent) antenna on 10G SSB forward scatter. tom K0TAR so you don't go out and buy a "3cm transceiver" as you would for 2m, 10m, 40m, etc.? You could, http://www.advancedreceiver.com/page32.html - Galen, W8LNA |
#15
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KE5MBX wrote:
On Feb 12, 8:47 pm, Tom Ring wrote: KE5MBX wrote: Where the heck do you get a 3cm transmitter, though? ha. http://www.downeastmicrowave.com/ And you can easily do 200KM on 200 mW, or 1000 KM per watt with a Dish Network (or equivalent) antenna on 10G SSB forward scatter. tom K0TAR so you don't go out and buy a "3cm transceiver" as you would for 2m, 10m, 40m, etc.? Yes you can. Check the back of QST for a complete 3cm station. Cost is about $500 or so. Dave WD9BDZ |
#16
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On Feb 12, 10:44 pm, "Stefan Wolfe" wrote:
"KE5MBX" wrote in message ups.com... On Feb 12, 8:47 pm, Tom Ring wrote: KE5MBX wrote: Where the heck do you get a 3cm transmitter, though? ha. http://www.downeastmicrowave.com/ And you can easily do 200KM on 200 mW, or 1000 KM per watt with a Dish Network (or equivalent) antenna on 10G SSB forward scatter. tom K0TAR so you don't go out and buy a "3cm transceiver" as you would for 2m, 10m, 40m, etc.? :-)) "Yes you can. Check the back of QST for a complete 3cm station. Cost is about $500 or so. " :-)) :-)) |
#17
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Think you meant "X" Band (10 GHz). I don't think many of us are using
x-rays for communications... Scott N0EDV Stefan Wolfe wrote: "KE5MBX" wrote in message ups.com... Hi, What's all this business I hear people talking about blasting people's car stereos or killing cars altogether with high-power RF? I run 2m, 10m, and 11m in my jeep and I'd like to sort out the fact from the legend and find out what kind of power I can use without risking damage to my jeep or cars around me. At what power level is front-end overload to a nearby radio likely? At what power level is damage likely, and to what componets? I am currently using only 50 watts on a 5/8 wave (2m), 25w on a 1/4 wave (10m), legal 4w on a 1/4 wave (11m) Thanks, Nelson KE5MBX I think over 100W you may have problems with HF and VHF. It can be a problem. One thing that works real well is to transmit near the x-ray radar band where you have privileges. The traffic may slow down a bit as you set off the radar detectors :-) |
#18
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I've heard that as well with Japanese cars. I think the computer gets
RFI'd out and shuts down the ignition system. Maybe something for the Mythbusters TV show to check out... Scott Cecil Moore wrote: Stefan Wolfe wrote: One thing that works real well is to transmit near the x-ray radar band where you have privileges. The traffic may slow down a bit as you set off the radar detectors :-) A number of years ago (I forget exactly what year) a ham friend of mine discovered that he could cause a new Cadillac to stall simply by keying his transmitter as the Cadillac was passing his camper. That design problem was probably fixed rather quickly. |
#19
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Oh, that's an easy one...(Gunnplexers come to mind for a simple CW 3cm
transmitter) http://www.downeastmicrowave.com or http://www.shfmicro.com and there are probably a few others... Scott N0EDV KE5MBX wrote: On Feb 12, 5:50 pm, "Stefan Wolfe" wrote: "KE5MBX" wrote in message roups.com... Hi, What's all this business I hear people talking about blasting people's car stereos or killing cars altogether with high-power RF? I run 2m, 10m, and 11m in my jeep and I'd like to sort out the fact from the legend and find out what kind of power I can use without risking damage to my jeep or cars around me. At what power level is front-end overload to a nearby radio likely? At what power level is damage likely, and to what componets? I am currently using only 50 watts on a 5/8 wave (2m), 25w on a 1/4 wave (10m), legal 4w on a 1/4 wave (11m) Thanks, Nelson KE5MBX I think over 100W you may have problems with HF and VHF. It can be a problem. One thing that works real well is to transmit near the x-ray radar band where you have privileges. The traffic may slow down a bit as you set off the radar detectors :-) Where the heck do you get a 3cm transmitter, though? ha. |
#20
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Uh, not quite. While the X Band police radars are at 10.525 GHz, the
ham band is only from 10.000 to 10.500 GHz. Plus, pulse modulation is not allowed on the 3cm band. We CAN use MCW, phone, image, RTTY, data, SS, and test modulations. Hmmm, I wonder about plain old vanilla CW??? I don't see it mentioned...maybe "data" covers that nowadays (and with a bandwidth limit of 100 KHz, we could smoke along at a LOT of WPM!!). Scott N0EDV wrote: 10.525 GHz is an amateur band, and is the same band used by the X-band radars, and transmitters are readily available for $100. Gunnplexers are one example, but people also use modified "microwave door openers" to experiment in X band. |
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