[sdiy] HAM temperature XTO
Larry
ltroth at socal.rr.com
Wed Nov 14 07:17:59 CET 2001
Actually, BASIC is an acronym! Developed at Dartmouth University in the
late 60's/early 70's it stands for:
Beginners All purpose Symbolic Instruction Code. It was designed to be a
very easy language to teach to new computer science students, and to
non-computer science students in order to introduce basic programming
techniques. The ideas was that students would then go on to more difficult
languages like FORTRAN, COBOL, SNOBAL, ALGOL, LISP, and assembly
Larry
At 06:50 AM 11/13/01 -0800, John L Marshall wrote:
>I heard of hams putting oscillators into vacuum bottles (Thermos) then
>burying them in the ground. Should be pretty stable then. An odd lot those
>hams.
>
>HAM probably isn't an acronym unless you want to create a bacronym.
>BASIC isn't an acronym either.
>
>John, WA7BSR
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: Czech Martin <Martin.Czech at Micronas.com>
>To: Sdiy (E-Mail) <synth-diy at dropmix.xs4all.nl>
>Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 3:55 AM
>Subject: [sdiy] HAM temperature XTO
>
>
> > HAM freaks are interested in absolute frequency adjustment, because of
> > heterodyning.
> >
> > I just saw an article (1970), where a rod of aluminium (5x5 cm^2) was
>carved
> > so that all oscillator stuff could be placed within. In other words:
> > massive housing with 10mm walls.
> >
> > The author claimed that temperature will rise, too, but very isotropic.
> > He also recommended isolating the outside to keep external heat out,
> > as much as possible. It was also claimed that the temperature stability
>was
> > within 5 Hz during a session, even if the transciever was dropped
> > 3cm on a hard surface.
> >
> > The oscillator design was temperature compensated, but of course: linear.
> >
> > btw.: what does HAM really stand for
> >
> > Home Amateur radio
> > Home Amplitude Modulation
> > Hungry Apes Massacre?
> > Home Amateur Man?
> >
> > ??
> >
> > m.c.
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