On 2012-09-24, at 7:02 PM, Bob K6UJ wrote:
> 
> Also, I totally agree with your statement "when multiple things are changed 
> in a randomly cluttered environment it is impossible to 
> single out a single factor"    I am guilty of making multiple changes to an 
> antenna system and then making assumptions as to 
> what caused the change.  My process now is only change one thing at a time, 
> then evaluate and continue on.  :-)
Ah yes, the pursuit of the proverbial "RED X", as espoused by an American 
quality control guru...!
Don't ask me for his name, as I've forgotten it since I retired---but the ONLY 
sure-fire way to confirm the existence of the RED X is to be able to turn what 
you're attempting to "fix" either off, or on, by "activating" or 
"de-activating" it. 
So simple! Removes all of the other "noise" that could be interfering with any 
true root cause.
~73~ de Eddy VE3CUI - VE3XZ
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UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK
 
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