It looks to me that when someone starts questioning someones education, and
whom they worked for is in reality grasping at straws, or in the last throws of
a sinking ship. Honestly, it's NOYB, and the others on here, most all I think
(except any new ones) know what my experience is. My guess is, and I'd say
several on here may agree, that me experience in designing, building, and
repairing amplifiers is at the top of the heap. Not only that, I've probably
helped most everyone on the mailer at one time or another. So question my
credentials all you want, the folks on here is the judge and jury on whos
making a total a## out of themselves.
Secondly, I never once said the fuse was a bad idea, you did and are trying to
put words in my mouth. I'd like to ask everyone else on here, did any of you
read anywhere, on any post I made, say that those grid fuses were a bad idea?
You know what's awful funny here. When Rich had some words with the Admin of
this list a while back, within 1-2 days you magically poped up? This a guy who
hasn't posted one lick on this list for years. Then, at every post Rich makes,
you try to dis-prove him or discredit him at his every turn. I also had a few
complaints that same day with the Admin, and now your pouncing on every post I
make, and have tried time and time again to mis-quote me, and put words in my
mouth I never said. I save every post I've made for 3 months back, and can pull
one up lightning fast. The rest are saved in the archives for this mailer. Just
to let you know.
73,
Will
*********** REPLY SEPARATOR ***********
On 7/26/06 at 6:14 AM Tom W8JI wrote:
>>anode or other elemets when heated. According again to
>>Terman, the gas is generally dealt quickly with, in the
>>small arc, and it will work fine afterwards. Were talking
>>about little >arcs similar to (maybe a little larger) what
>>a megger or Hipot may cause if ran way above the specified
>>anode voltage.
>
>Will,
>
>I'm trying to get some idea what your experience is Will,
>since it certainly disarees with what I have seen and other
>people on this reflector with design experience has seen.
>I'm trying to get some idea of why the big diffference if
>you have commercial or manufacturing experience with new
>product.
>
>Do you have any books besides the first edition of Terman?
>His first edition was greatly improved on in later edtions,
>and Terman isn't exactly a good tube-specific reference
>becuase he sort of skims through tubes very and tube
>circuits quickly. What books did you use at work?
>
>What is your experience with amps? Who did you work for?
>What type of amps were they? How often do you use amps on
>the air? What is your callsign? (QRZ shows nothing)? Did
>your company do its own service? Millitary or commercial or
>amateur?
>
>> These hardly make a sound. As Rich says, they make a
>> "Tink" if I remember. That's what I've heard also as
>> there's not enough gas in the tube to carry on like one
>> that's lost its >evacuation. If it's a big loud crack,
>> something else is up. That's my opinion on the subject,
>> and what I've been trying to get across.
>
>You're welcome to an opinion, just like everyone else, but a
>while ago you agreed the grid fuse does no good. What's all
>this "tink" stuff? Do you really think Eimac and everyone
>else is wrong?
>
>73 Tom
>
>
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