[UK-CONTEST] CQ WW CW GM0F SOAB HP
Cooper Stewart
coopers at odl.co.uk
Wed Nov 27 04:17:12 EST 2002
Hi Ian,
I will look around at some chairs. Thanks for the advice. What I had to read
twice was the sentence:
>and it spins round to become the operating seat.
I thought, how do you normally sit on it? Until I realised what you meant!
Stewart
-----Original Message-----
From: Ian White, G3SEK [mailto:G3SEK at ifwtech.co.uk]
Sent: 26 November 2002 23:28
To: uk-contest at contesting.com
Subject: Re: [UK-CONTEST] CQ WW CW GM0F SOAB HP
Stewart Wrote:
>This year, the big thing to 'sort' is a decent chair.
>This year, the big thing to 'sort' is a decent chair.
The Office World high-back chair with arms is a good buy at about £47.
Seat height, backrest height and backrest angle are all adjustable.
I've worked comfortably in one all day long for several years, and it
spins round to become the operating seat.
Another big problems for operating is the keyboard position. If the
table is the right height (relative to the chair seat) for comfortable
radio/key operating, then it's way too high for a keyboard. Having to
sit bolt upright to peck at the keyboard will really kill your back. A
laptop keyboard is even worse - old laptops are even higher off the
table, and modern ones make you reach even further to get at the keys.
Also laptop keyboards are flat, but they really need to be tilted -
especially when you're reaching for the F-keys so often.
Some kind of lower-level keyboard shelf in front of the operating table
is a must for long sessions. Alternatively the keyboard can be hung over
the edge of the table at a fairly steep angle. (I use the former for
work, the latter for radio, and both are OK for me.)
It's also good to have the screen somewhere fairly low in your natural
relaxed line of sight, in other words down on the table and not stacked
on a shelf that makes you crick your neck back. If you're not a
touch-typist and need to look at both the screen and the keyboard,
that's even more important.
However, other people's comfort zone may vary!
[Too shy to report my contest results...]
--
73 from Ian G3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB)
Editor, 'The VHF/UHF DX Book'
http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek
_______________________________________________
UK-Contest mailing list
UK-Contest at contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/uk-contest
More information about the UK-Contest
mailing list