>
>John/Rich, et al:
>
>Maybe we can get one of the biomedical companies to form a joint
>venture with Alpha Power. Imagine the Alpha 87D (defib). In addition
>to performing the usual features such as grid trip, warm-up timing,
>and auto band switching - the 87D would monitor the patients heart
>vitals via EKG. In the event of cardiac arrest or arrhythmia, the 87D
>would automatically take the station off-line and deliver the
>appropriate defibrillation pulse to the operator's heart. The
>microprocessor would also simultaneously autodial 911 via modem
>and upload operator vitals via PCS to the enroute paramedics.
? Not bad, not bad. However, most of the defibs I have heard about use
more voltage than the 3CX800A7 can handle. A 3cx1200Z7 should solve this
problem quite nicely. With an 8349 amp., turning out some handy x-rays
should be a piece of cake, although the 20kV anode supply would have to
be divided by c. 4 for the defib unit.
>
>With the average age of the amateur population on the rise, this
>might be a potential growth market for Alpha and their lucky biomed
>partner.
>
>Mike, W4EF................
>
>P.S. If the defibrillation were unsuccessful, the 87D could autodial
>the FCC secure database with disposition instructions for the expired
>operators callsign, thus facilitating reintroduction of highly prized
>callsigns into the vanity pool.
E-mailing the county coroner would be pretty cool. How about a new
column in QST named: "Almost Silent Keys" for ops whose autodefib amps
got their hearts going? How about a "Defib Worked All States" award?. A
Defib Rag Chewers' Club certificate could be awarded to anyone who
successfully completes a one hour QSO made possible by an autodefib amp.
.
- Cheers, Mike.
Rich...
R. L. Measures, 805-386-3734, AG6K, www.vcnet.com/measures
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