Chuck Lewis wrote: My agent will tell me whether it's in my best interest to submit or not. Yours might, too. I don't see a downside in asking -- you can always just decline to submit if it looks lik
Don Havlicek wrote: Randy wrote: <snip> FWIW that was Tower Hill Insurance. Randy KZ4RV ex-N4MBL .. OMG .... I raise rabbits .. and my Rabbitry is : Tower Hill Rabbitry! I'll NOT insure it with those
Bob: FWIW: I don't know either of you, and, so, don't mean to intrude... "but".... I read Eric's post, and did not see it, from my perspective, as anything bad directed towards you. The written word
Yep. The ARRL Handbook used to show a dummy load, made up of a roll of lossy, unterminated coax immersed in a bucket of water. I suppose you *could* terminate it, with something, anything, or short i
I forget even what country it was in, but I've seen footage on TV of lightning striking a soccer field; there was a tiny puff of dirt or grass where, presumably, the lightning bolt actually hit the g
As it mentions on that site, even a cave-in up to your diaphragm/belly-button area can be lethal. If you can't move your diaphragm, you can't inhale..... 73 Randy KZ4RV ______________________________
Hi TowerTalkians: I'm going to build a 3el 5-band quad, 20-10M, and I'm looking for suggestions re: what wire to use, and where to get it. www.thewireman.com has: "Silky' 16 AWG, 19 strand, tinned, 4
Hi TT'ers. What is the most economical and/or preferred method of disconnecting rotor wires, remote coax switch wires, etc., when not in use? Cinch-Jones plugs? And who has the best deals on such con
And, it doesn't even have to get up to your chest; if your diaphragm can't move, you can't breathe. Randy KZ4RV _______________________________________________ _______________________________________
Not yet Mike, just waiting for my buddies with their tractors and a trailer axle to get around to helping me move it, it's 1800 lbs... But I've got the concrete in the hole! 8.5 yards of 3500 PSI...$
Some of the "Track Hoes" I've seen have only a small blade on the front, rather than a bucket like a traditional backhoe, which could be a problem if soil needed to be moved away from the excavation,
Some day, science will give us a plastic owl, mounted on roller bearings, with an internal magnet aligned with its beak, so the *owl* will point true north. 73, Randy KZ4RV __________________________
True, but it should be a simple matter to look up Deviation for any given locale.. 73, Randy KZ4RV _______________________________________________ _______________________________________________ Towe
I once read somewhere that it wasn't so much intended to detect the missile, per se', but rather the missile's ionized plume passing through the ionosphere. Your point is still just as valid, though.
AFAIK, it is *crucial* to do it as specified with regard to "undisturbed soil". In other words, they do not want you to dig a hole, form it up, backfill behind it and pour. They want a plain ol' hole
You have to bear in mind that, insulated wire inside other people's houses has a slightly different velocity factor than bare copper well above ground, so, you have to cut it to lengths that differ f
Well, sure, that would WORK, but, what kind of rude neighbors do you have, that would want you to go to that bother and expense? They can't be bothered to go to Wal-Mart and cough up a few bucks for
If you've seen construction crews assembling hundreds of feet of black or yellow pipe above ground, then forcibly pulling the whole length through the ground, from one excavation to the next, that's
You are right, Roger, Thunderbird is an excellent email program, and I have several separate mailboxes for various purposes, and it *is* easy to filter based on any number of things. You can send a p