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Author Topic: USB or LSB on CW?  (Read 8119 times)
AK7V
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« Reply #30 on: August 15, 2011, 08:54:41 AM »

Hmm..

When I was in college, all I could afford was to build my own rig.  So that's what I did.

I'm an engineer and I have the skills to build more rigs.  Not as fancy as my IC-756proIII, but serviceable.

Now I'm in my 30s with a full time job and other responsibilities.  I use my Icom.  It works better than anything I can homebrew and requires less effort to get on the air.  I also have a Yaesu handheld for 2m/440, and another Yaesu mobile in the car.  Both better and more convenient than anything I can build.

I still build my own antennas and baluns.  Still use my home built signal generator and antenna analyzer.  But I suppose I'm just an appliance operator who deserves derision...?
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PA0BLAH
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« Reply #31 on: August 15, 2011, 09:09:55 AM »

As an engineer with a M.Sc or PhD. in Electrical Engineering you are eligible to answer your own question.
Please re-read my definition of Appliance Operator (reading is an art, I read elsewhere).

For your convenience I copy it right here

Quote
Ad hoc definition: An appliance operator is a licensed ham, that uses only commercial available equipment and is not interested in electronics and other techniques at all, even the very first start of home brewing: assembling a kit with predrilled painted cabinet and printed circuit boards with a heathkit alike manual,  failure virtual impossible, does not interest him at all.


It is important that youngsters start with building their own equipment because it develops their skills, and stimulate them to want to know "everything" in the field. They will enroll in engineering courses, and the USA will not loose (or lose?)  any creative minds which will boost economy and independence as nation in the far future.

The development right now is in the direction of services and consuming, and will end in the role interchange of China and the USA in the coming century.

Just my 2 cents
Bob

(born 1929, primary school 1935-1941, licensed 1946 as what  is now known to be an Extra, with  Morse code tested (actually able to copy 20 wpm at that time, with NO courses NO tape recorders and NO computers only a BCL box without BFO) 73
« Last Edit: August 15, 2011, 09:42:39 AM by PA0BLAH » Logged
WV4I
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« Reply #32 on: October 23, 2011, 05:53:12 PM »

Geez, I've been doing CW for 30 years and have never read a discussion like this.

I too have the TS-590S and IC-7000. The manuals are fairly clear as to how CW is generated.

I suppose the simplest way to know what any radio is really doing is with a scope, but I don't own one.

I do however use DX spots, and whether it's a CW or SSB spot, I simply go to the listed freq, on the correct mode, and it works. I just don't make it any harder than need be. My radio must display frequency similar to everybody else's? Same with Yaesu and Icom.

Re the TS-590S, if on USB and change to CW, display freq goes up 800 hz. LSB to CW goes down 800 hz. SSB displays suppressed carrier freq, USB or LSB. Can debate the merits but that's how it works. Auto USB to CW defaults to USB, LSB to CW to LSB. The default USB/LSB cutover is 10 mhz.

You might get away with minimal technical knowledge on V/U FM, but that won't work out very well on HF, especially CW, for very long. Equipment damage and/or injury could result, especially if you use an amplifier.

I'm one of the many hams that's never had a day of tech school, am either self taught or thru the patience of others, clubs, forums, know what I know, etc.. Wanna cut us true amateurs some slack? I mean this is amateur radio for goodness sakes.

Thanks, Link, WV4I
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