Am getting ready to build a new house and am looking for ideas to include in the ham shack. The proposed hamshack room is 13X12, with a large walk in closet. An outside door, no windows on the West w
The best "purpose-built" ham shack I have ever seen is that of Bill Tynan, W3XO. Bill may not be well known to HF contesters, but his call will ring a bell among VHF folks as the holder of 6-meter DX
I did good with 115 and 220V in our new house but forgot to put in access for grounding and cabling. Don't forget the holes/access plates for rotor cabling, coax and ground wire/straps. I'm going to
Put The Ten Foot table on BIG coasters (wheels) -- CQ-Contest on WWW: http://www.contesting.com/_cq-contest/ Administrative requests: cq-contest-REQUEST@contesting.com
I would think carefully about putting big heavy objects, amps and such, on shelves above other equipment. Of course I live in earthquake country. -- .--. / A lot of what appears to be progress \ / is
For the if we only knew when category.... Imagine this.... IF the wall about to constructed for your shack is like those here in South Florida (concrete block) AND IF you have the foresight to plan a
On Tue, 3 Mar 1998 21:09:31 -0500, "Jim White, K4OJ" <k4oj@ij.net> wrote: <snip> <snip> _______________________________________________________________ Or, rather than go to all that trouble and expe
I think the ham is going to move the equipment more than Mother Nature will. have the heavy stuff (e.g., amps, power supplies, etc.) at desktop level and lighter stuff above and below. Years ago, I h