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Patience Grasshopper...
"Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... I've been working on the Halman trailer for the past couple of days and while doing so, have been working out how I can single hand the mast and what materials I would use to build the gin pole and A-frame. I went to a local metal shop this morning and checked different types of steel, but to make what I want would be too heavy for me to handle by myself. So, I came home and spent some time in the wood shop working with different lengths of PT fir and such along with some left over PVC tubing from a drainage project - not enough strength. As I walked around the back of the barn, I found my solution - a 24' length aluminum sailboat mast from a project that was abandoned years ago. I got it form a local place that some of you may have heard of over the years - Metal Mast Marine. I bought it as scrap and when the project went south, I just put the mast in back of the barn and forgot about it. Thus, solution found - it's just engineering from here. Sounds like you might have the parts for a complete boat behind that garage, if you just clear the weeds. |
Patience Grasshopper...
Damn, you've got me beat by a country mile. I used to be able to hide
a lot of, errr, "stuff" in the woods behind our old house but nothing like your collection. Sounds like you could easily build a 1/4 wave vert for "top band" if you really put your mind to it. |
Patience Grasshopper...
On Thu, 06 Oct 2005 21:39:36 +0000, Shortwave Sportfishing wrote:
for the Beverage antenna I have running through my woods, I had to look that one up. I had never even heard of one. I have a question for you. A couple of months back, there was talk of dropping the requirement for Morse Code capability to get a General license. I haven't heard anything since. Was it approved? What's the time frame? I know there was some controversy about the issue with already licensed hams. Just curious, your thoughts? Personally, I was thinking it would be a good time to get licensed. |
Patience Grasshopper...
On Fri, 07 Oct 2005 01:25:38 +0000, Shortwave Sportfishing wrote:
The real issue is removing the gate from the system that used to keep the riff raff out. Not that you or others are automatically riff raff - there are plenty of competent ops who learned the code, got their licenses and never used the code again - I don't have issue with that. Actually, I think I can understand your feelings. Ham has always seemed like a pretty tight knit, more than a little geeky, community. Pretty interesting hobby. I've never gotten the bug, but I think I can understand the attraction. But here's where I'm coming from, it's my understanding that to have a SSB on a boat, legally, I would need a general license. Correct me if I'm wrong. I'm not really interested in ham as a hobby, but as a tool. It's an important safety issue. I would expect to be listening, not talking, and with off the shelf equipment. From my perspective, CW and electronic knowledge is extraneous. I just want to be legal. What say you? |
Patience Grasshopper...
There is no ham license requirement for having a **marine** SSB
onboard, only if you want to use it on the ham bands in a non-emergency situation. In a true emergency, anything goes. A marine SSB does require a license but it is a paper work formality requiring no technical skills. PS, a Beverage antenna has nothing to do with liquid refreshment :-) |
Patience Grasshopper...
"Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Thu, 06 Oct 2005 19:37:39 GMT, "Doug Kanter" wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message . .. I've been working on the Halman trailer for the past couple of days and while doing so, have been working out how I can single hand the mast and what materials I would use to build the gin pole and A-frame. I went to a local metal shop this morning and checked different types of steel, but to make what I want would be too heavy for me to handle by myself. So, I came home and spent some time in the wood shop working with different lengths of PT fir and such along with some left over PVC tubing from a drainage project - not enough strength. As I walked around the back of the barn, I found my solution - a 24' length aluminum sailboat mast from a project that was abandoned years ago. I got it form a local place that some of you may have heard of over the years - Metal Mast Marine. I bought it as scrap and when the project went south, I just put the mast in back of the barn and forgot about it. Thus, solution found - it's just engineering from here. Sounds like you might have the parts for a complete boat behind that garage, if you just clear the weeds. I've got about 200 feet of Rohn 25 radio tower back there, some 3 inch aluminum rotator mast, several supports for Rhombic antennas, the lead in for the Beverage antenna I have running through my woods, 100 or so feet of PVC drain pipe, several hundred feet of tower guy wire, stuff like that. Oh, and four different vertical antennas for 10, 20, 30 and 40 meters. So YOU'RE the guy who interfered with my CB and (might not be legal) linear amplifier as I drove back & forth on route 90 many years ago! |
Patience Grasshopper...
wrote in message ups.com... Just curious Wayne ... are guys underway again or are you waiting for the tropical weather to clear? Eisboch |
Patience Grasshopper...
wrote in message ups.com... Also - do you plan to use much of the ICW? The last I heard it had some shallow spots. My interest is due to a still undecided debate in my head on taking the Navigator south this year. If I do, it will be later this month or early November. Eisboch |
Patience Grasshopper...
Shortwave Sportfishing wrote in message ... On Fri, 07 Oct 2005 09:53:00 GMT, "Eisboch" wrote: wrote in message oups.com... Also - do you plan to use much of the ICW? The last I heard it had some shallow spots. My interest is due to a still undecided debate in my head on taking the Navigator south this year. If I do, it will be later this month or early November. Need a highly over qualified deck hand? No, but I wouldn't mind having qualified help, like yourself, that can run the boat and navigate some of the time. Last trip I did it all and didn't get much of a chance to relax and enjoy the view. There's one other NG participant (and good friend) who expressed interest at one time of doing at least part of the trip. He's a mechanic as well, so he would be a welcome crewmember. I don't know yet - if I go it will be towards the end of October or early November. (can't be south of NJ until after Nov. 1 and be legally insured). I'll give you a yell if I decide to book it out of here. Also, be advised, I have no interest in setting any records in terms of how soon we get to Jupiter. Probably will be about a 10-12 day trip. Eisboch |
Patience Grasshopper...
Harry Krause wrote in message ... Twelve days to Jupiter? That's a lot better than NASA does! It's those turbocharged Volvos. LOL That *is* funny. Only you ..... Eisboch |
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