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Re: [TowerTalk] PL259 Cobbectors Part 2 - Murray W9EHQ

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] PL259 Cobbectors Part 2 - Murray W9EHQ
From: jimlux <jimlux@earthlink.net>
Date: Fri, 13 May 2016 13:38:09 -0700
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
On 5/13/16 11:11 AM, Jerry Gardner wrote:
On Fri, May 13, 2016 at 1:10 AM, JOHN POWELL <john.powell@kinect.co.nz>
 wrote:


I have accessed Murray's You Tube production by using Google Search
facilities, entering "PL-259 connector installation W9ehq". Bingo
straight to the You Tube item. Very interesting and informative.


And complete overkill. How many tools did he use in that video? Soldering
iron, razor blade, air compressor, Dremel tool, file, pliers, dikes. I
especially like how he cuts through the tinned braid and dielectric by free
handing a Dremel tool with a cut-off wheel--I'll bet your average ham would
have no problems with that move. ;-)

I'm perplexed, but not really surprised, that hams still insist on using
this kind of backwoods engineering when a better way has been available for
decades. I guess old habits die hard.


If you've been doing it for decades, it's the "easy way" for YOU. The question is whether it's appropriate for this to be promulgated as the preferred approach for new people starting.

It's like using any tool which requires significant skill and learning: once you know, you prefer using it, because it's fast and easy.

If someone were given the task of playing, say, Beethoven's Fuer Elise by the end of the month, a lot would depend on whether you have experience with piano playing. If you're already a reasonably skilled piano player, you'd sit down with the sheet music, and in a reasonably short time, you'd be knocking off this instructional favorite. If you knew NOTHING about playing piano, then getting a computer and programming a MIDI sequence might be a more effective strategy: you could learn enough about how to read music and get the notes into the file in a few days, and after that, it's just the tedium of transcribing using keyboard and mouse. No "musician" would contemplate such a thing, but, then, most musicians are familiar with a piano keyboard and would probably take an intermediate approach of using the keyboard as a data entry device, and then fix up the timing and note errors later.



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