Marriage is under fire!!

nina.p20@gmail.com (Nina) wrote in news:992361df.0409180355.582965c7
@posting.google.com:

Smear some Jam on your speekers and tune in to their frequency. Then pump
up the volume. Get real fat and stand in frount of the speekers, that's
your broad band. Or somthing.

DaveC
 
On 18 Sep 2004 07:41:24 -0700, nina.p20@gmail.com (Nina) wrote:

I'd like to clarify something that I've missed:
I'm ready to pay for your help if needed.
---
I believe that soliciting for illegal services is, in itself, illegal.

--
John Fields
 
On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 12:31:40 -0400, Me
<no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 12:07:02 -0400, "Meat-->Plow"
Meat@petitmorte.net> wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 10:57:11 -0400, Me
no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On 18 Sep 2004 07:41:24 -0700, nina.p20@gmail.com (Nina) wrote:

I'd like to clarify something that I've missed:
I'm ready to pay for your help if needed.
TIA
Nina
nina.p20@gmail.com

I see no reason to try and jam the entire band. Just put together a
simple FM transmitter and as someone earlier suggested, transmit a
squeal or something equally irritating over whatever station they're
listening to. As M->P suggested, that will be far easier to accomplish
technically. If you need schematics for a simple FM transmitter that's
very easy to build, yet very effective I can help you there. I've
built and used several on this design. In fact, there's a drag strip
in GA using a transmitter I built off of this schematic using it to
transmit race stats so people can listen in their cars and with head
sets so they can hear over the loud car exhaust. Also got the board
foil design and component layout making it super simple to build if
you want to go the professional route.

I thought the person already had a transmitter

Oops... didn't read all the way down, now did I. :)
The person said the PO was 5 watts. That sounds like a home
brew unit. I used to own a 50 watt exciter. It was
responsible for generating the FM frequency, modulating it,
and amplifying it to 50 watts where it was originally
designed to feed a 5000 watt commercial transmitter. It made
a pretty decent little pirate radio station. I built a
J-pole antenna out of some wire and PVC tubing and I got
about a 5 mile radius with full quieting. Called the station
WEED, muhahwahahahah.
 
Captain posted:
<< But, as a matter of interest, why worry about RF interference on your cables
anyway? You can't hear it, the speaker won'r react to it.and the impedance
of the cable at RF is so far removed from the speaker impedance that
coupling is extremely inefficient.
Yes, under some conditions, you will hear it. The amplifier will envelope
detect the RF signal and output it on the speaker leads.

Don
 
In article <l6dpk0hss91n0mnod0mn4s0516qn6jrovp@4ax.com>,
John Fields <jfields@austininstruments.com> wrote:
First time around you knew it was illegal, this time around you still
know it, but you don't want to hear about it _and_ you want someone to
help you even though you've said you know it's illegal?
If I said anything to you that I should be sorry for, I'm glad.

You're not the sharpest knife in the drawer, huh, Nina?
You're only purpose in life is to serve as a warning to others against the
dangers of self-lobotomy surgery.
 
On 18 Sep 2004 12:22:02 -0700, nina.p20@gmail.com (Nina) wrote:

OK guys,
Thanx meantime for your responses.
Not getting much help...:(
I know it's illegal, I know it's dangerous, and I know that I can build a
huge wall between our houses....
But, I'm still interested to build this device, for reasons that I cannot
mention here...
If anyone wants to help me, please do, but I don't like conferences about my
skills, or legal advices etc.
TIA to anyone who actually tries to help :)
NINA
---
First time around it was to jam a neighbor's loud radio, this time
around you can't say what it _really_ is.

First time around you knew it was illegal, this time around you still
know it, but you don't want to hear about it _and_ you want someone to
help you even though you've said you know it's illegal?

You're not the sharpest knife in the drawer, huh, Nina?

--
John Fields
 
On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 22:27:09 GMT, Lady Chatterly <jfields@dev.null>
wrote:

In article <l6dpk0hss91n0mnod0mn4s0516qn6jrovp@4ax.com>,
John Fields <jfields@austininstruments.com> wrote:

First time around you knew it was illegal, this time around you still
know it, but you don't want to hear about it _and_ you want someone to
help you even though you've said you know it's illegal?

If I said anything to you that I should be sorry for, I'm glad.
---
You should be sorry you opened your stupid fucking mouth, but as
starved as you must be for attention, even being shit on would make
you happy, no?
---

You're not the sharpest knife in the drawer, huh, Nina?

You're only purpose in life is to serve as a warning to others against the
dangers of self-lobotomy surgery.
---
You might as well try to learn to punctuate, you ignorant cunt,
because if that last sentence is any indication of your capacity for
wit you'll sure as hell never learn to flame.

Care to try again?

--
John Fields
 
On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 17:56:47 -0500, John Fields
<jfields@austininstruments.com>,wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 22:27:09 GMT, Lady Chatterly <jfields@dev.null
wrote:

In article <l6dpk0hss91n0mnod0mn4s0516qn6jrovp@4ax.com>,
John Fields <jfields@austininstruments.com> wrote:

First time around you knew it was illegal, this time around you still
know it, but you don't want to hear about it _and_ you want someone to
help you even though you've said you know it's illegal?

If I said anything to you that I should be sorry for, I'm glad.

---
You should be sorry you opened your stupid fucking mouth, but as
starved as you must be for attention, even being shit on would make
you happy, no?
---

You're not the sharpest knife in the drawer, huh, Nina?

You're only purpose in life is to serve as a warning to others against the
dangers of self-lobotomy surgery.

---
You might as well try to learn to punctuate, you ignorant cunt,
because if that last sentence is any indication of your capacity for
wit you'll sure as hell never learn to flame.

Care to try again?
PSSST you are arguing with a bot. As in software generated
posts.
 
If you need schematics for a simple FM transmitter that's
very easy to build, yet very effective I can help you there. I've
built and used several on this design. In fact, there's a drag strip
in GA using a transmitter I built off of this schematic using it to
transmit race stats so people can listen in their cars and with head
sets so they can hear over the loud car exhaust. Also got the board
foil design and component layout making it super simple to build if
you want to go the professional route.

How or where do i obtain the schematic and cb layout ??
dnw
dnelsonone@yahoo.com

--
---
don ward <dward7@earthlink.net>
 
On Sun, 19 Sep 2004 00:23:04 GMT, dward7@earthlink.net (don ward)
wrote:

If you need schematics for a simple FM transmitter that's
very easy to build, yet very effective I can help you there. I've
built and used several on this design. In fact, there's a drag strip
in GA using a transmitter I built off of this schematic using it to
transmit race stats so people can listen in their cars and with head
sets so they can hear over the loud car exhaust. Also got the board
foil design and component layout making it super simple to build if
you want to go the professional route.

How or where do i obtain the schematic and cb layout ??
dnw
dnelsonone@yahoo.com

Let me run to my office (where it happens to be), grab it and scan it
then I'll stick it on one of my web servers and post a URL.
 
On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 21:18:04 -0400, Me
<no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On Sun, 19 Sep 2004 00:23:04 GMT, dward7@earthlink.net (don ward)
wrote:

If you need schematics for a simple FM transmitter that's
very easy to build, yet very effective I can help you there. I've
built and used several on this design. In fact, there's a drag strip
in GA using a transmitter I built off of this schematic using it to
transmit race stats so people can listen in their cars and with head
sets so they can hear over the loud car exhaust. Also got the board
foil design and component layout making it super simple to build if
you want to go the professional route.

How or where do i obtain the schematic and cb layout ??
dnw
dnelsonone@yahoo.com


Let me run to my office (where it happens to be), grab it and scan it
then I'll stick it on one of my web servers and post a URL.

What's the power input to the final and what final amp ?
 
On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 22:18:06 -0400, Me
<no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 21:29:26 -0400, "Meat-->Plow"
Meat@petitmorte.net> wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 21:18:04 -0400, Me
no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On Sun, 19 Sep 2004 00:23:04 GMT, dward7@earthlink.net (don ward)
wrote:

If you need schematics for a simple FM transmitter that's
very easy to build, yet very effective I can help you there. I've
built and used several on this design. In fact, there's a drag strip
in GA using a transmitter I built off of this schematic using it to
transmit race stats so people can listen in their cars and with head
sets so they can hear over the loud car exhaust. Also got the board
foil design and component layout making it super simple to build if
you want to go the professional route.

How or where do i obtain the schematic and cb layout ??
dnw
dnelsonone@yahoo.com


Let me run to my office (where it happens to be), grab it and scan it
then I'll stick it on one of my web servers and post a URL.


What's the power input to the final and what final amp ?

9 vdc keeps it legal, but it'll take considerably more.
As far as the final... ugh... IIRC the final was a 2N3096, but I'm not
sure now. It's been quite a few years since I did anything with that
print. Will post when I've got it up.
Hmm that 2N3096 is just a little what, 500 mw max ?

IIRC what I had had a single stud mounted MRF 315. 4 watts
input, 40 something out on a 28 volt Vcc.
 
In article <d0aece09.0409091308.3ead74bb@posting.google.com>,
pccompr4less@3k1.com (Noel Meterparel) wrote:

http://www.excel-host.com/noel_volun_ww.htm

Wow! It's a long time since I heard anyone volunteering to do anything
free!!!

Yours with Appreciation
Leonard

--
"Everything that rises must converge"
--Flannery O'Connor
 
On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 23:19:22 -0400, "Meat-->Plow"
<Meat@petitmorte.net> wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 23:07:07 -0400, Me
no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 22:50:31 -0400, "Meat-->Plow"
Meat@petitmorte.net> wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 22:18:06 -0400, Me
no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 21:29:26 -0400, "Meat-->Plow"
Meat@petitmorte.net> wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 21:18:04 -0400, Me
no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On Sun, 19 Sep 2004 00:23:04 GMT, dward7@earthlink.net (don ward)
wrote:

If you need schematics for a simple FM transmitter that's
very easy to build, yet very effective I can help you there. I've
built and used several on this design. In fact, there's a drag strip
in GA using a transmitter I built off of this schematic using it to
transmit race stats so people can listen in their cars and with head
sets so they can hear over the loud car exhaust. Also got the board
foil design and component layout making it super simple to build if
you want to go the professional route.

How or where do i obtain the schematic and cb layout ??
dnw
dnelsonone@yahoo.com


Let me run to my office (where it happens to be), grab it and scan it
then I'll stick it on one of my web servers and post a URL.


What's the power input to the final and what final amp ?

9 vdc keeps it legal, but it'll take considerably more.
As far as the final... ugh... IIRC the final was a 2N3096, but I'm not
sure now. It's been quite a few years since I did anything with that
print. Will post when I've got it up.

Hmm that 2N3096 is just a little what, 500 mw max ?

IIRC what I had had a single stud mounted MRF 315. 4 watts
input, 40 something out on a 28 volt Vcc.

Don't recall now. Was thinking the 2N3906 would handle 1.5 W, but my
books are at the office... and that may not have been the final
anyway. I just don't remember. I do recall that heat dissipation, not
max VCEO was the limiting factor on the power output and hence input
voltage. Will post when I have it.

The nice thing about this little gadget is that it can be built on a
board the same size as the 9v battery driving it making for a very
compact unit and it'll still make a mile with a decent antenna.
Actually, I've got plans for much smaller transmitters designed for
use as "bugs" that aren't much larger than the 2032 button cells that
drive them although the range is considerably less. I've never
bothered to assemble one though. This sort of thing would be just an
experimental toy to me as I have no real use for such.

I've seen those things in -kit- form. Some with stereo
output. 9 volts keeps the power under the legal limit but
crank it up to 15 and it doubles. I set up one for a guy who
had a drive-in restaurant. He had a 50's theme and wanted to
broadcast 50's music for the drive in customers. Worked
pretty decent once I found a spot that had no other local
stations.
Ya, exactly the same thing I did for the drag strip. This wasn't a kit
though. I don't recall who did the circuit design or where I got it
from but it was just a schematic and description. I did the board foil
design for it on a computer several years ago and built a few.
 
"Robert Monsen" <rcsurname@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:6EO2d.210671$Fg5.4244@attbi_s53...
Captain wrote:
"Eric R Snow" <etpm@whidbey.com> wrote in message
news:2v7mk055cv7jk2tth7n2vr7pdvu2sglgop@4ax.com...

Greetings Folks,
I have a video camera/transmitter unit that transmits in the 900 MHz
to 1200 MHz range according to the spec sheet. It currently has a
wire for the antenna that's 3.5 inches long. For optimum transmitting
doesn't the antenna length need to be a length that divides evenly
into wavelength? I will be enclosing the camera in a small plastic
waterproof enclosure with batteries and a light. Then it will be
lowered 70 feet down a 6 inch diameter iron pipe. It will be used to
inspect the well casing and pump as well as to watch the water as it
is being pumped. I want the best signal possible and was wondering how
long to make the antenna if the present one doesn't work. Right now,
in open air, a good signal is present at 100 feet. But I don't know
how well it will work when lowered down the iron pipe.
Thank You,
Eric R Snow


1/4 wavelength is the best length. L=C/F (C=3E8) For 900 MHz this is
333
cm. Cut the antenna a bit longer and trim until you get best signal
^^ ?

No, 3e8/9e8 = 1/3m. Thats the wavelength in meters.

1/4 of that is 8.33cm, or 3.28 in. Your antenna is already close to 1/4
of a wavelength.

strength. If it will fit, silver plated narrow gauge welding rod works
well.

Actually, with the transmitter down a metal pipe you could get a wave
guide
effect, in which case the signal will boom out.

Cap



Regards,
Bob Monsen
Mea culpa! I thought a foot was a bit long for the frequency!
Cap
 
On Sun, 19 Sep 2004 00:59:54 -0400, Me
<no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 23:19:22 -0400, "Meat-->Plow"
Meat@petitmorte.net> wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 23:07:07 -0400, Me
no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 22:50:31 -0400, "Meat-->Plow"
Meat@petitmorte.net> wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 22:18:06 -0400, Me
no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 21:29:26 -0400, "Meat-->Plow"
Meat@petitmorte.net> wrote:

On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 21:18:04 -0400, Me
no-address_for_spammers@no-address.com>,wrote:

On Sun, 19 Sep 2004 00:23:04 GMT, dward7@earthlink.net (don ward)
wrote:

If you need schematics for a simple FM transmitter that's
very easy to build, yet very effective I can help you there. I've
built and used several on this design. In fact, there's a drag strip
in GA using a transmitter I built off of this schematic using it to
transmit race stats so people can listen in their cars and with head
sets so they can hear over the loud car exhaust. Also got the board
foil design and component layout making it super simple to build if
you want to go the professional route.

How or where do i obtain the schematic and cb layout ??
dnw
dnelsonone@yahoo.com


Let me run to my office (where it happens to be), grab it and scan it
then I'll stick it on one of my web servers and post a URL.


What's the power input to the final and what final amp ?

9 vdc keeps it legal, but it'll take considerably more.
As far as the final... ugh... IIRC the final was a 2N3096, but I'm not
sure now. It's been quite a few years since I did anything with that
print. Will post when I've got it up.

Hmm that 2N3096 is just a little what, 500 mw max ?

IIRC what I had had a single stud mounted MRF 315. 4 watts
input, 40 something out on a 28 volt Vcc.

Don't recall now. Was thinking the 2N3906 would handle 1.5 W, but my
books are at the office... and that may not have been the final
anyway. I just don't remember. I do recall that heat dissipation, not
max VCEO was the limiting factor on the power output and hence input
voltage. Will post when I have it.

The nice thing about this little gadget is that it can be built on a
board the same size as the 9v battery driving it making for a very
compact unit and it'll still make a mile with a decent antenna.
Actually, I've got plans for much smaller transmitters designed for
use as "bugs" that aren't much larger than the 2032 button cells that
drive them although the range is considerably less. I've never
bothered to assemble one though. This sort of thing would be just an
experimental toy to me as I have no real use for such.

I've seen those things in -kit- form. Some with stereo
output. 9 volts keeps the power under the legal limit but
crank it up to 15 and it doubles. I set up one for a guy who
had a drive-in restaurant. He had a 50's theme and wanted to
broadcast 50's music for the drive in customers. Worked
pretty decent once I found a spot that had no other local
stations.

Ya, exactly the same thing I did for the drag strip. This wasn't a kit
though. I don't recall who did the circuit design or where I got it
from but it was just a schematic and description. I did the board foil
design for it on a computer several years ago and built a few.
Last board I did was a little deal that sensed which of two
assembly lines were down and then paged the right group of
Millwrights to come fix it. It was just something to sense
motion or the lack of it, then drive a two channel paging
radio and some Motorola Page Boy pagers. Oh and I
re-crystaled the pagers to match the channels on the radio.
As far as I know that system is still being used today. I
deployed it over 10 years ago.

Before that I built a DTMF generator box to phreak phones
with. Copied it from a real working Black Box. Ripped off
everything I needed from Radio Shack. Board, etch pen, acid,
741 op amps, everything even the case and touch tone pad.
I ended up destroying it when my Greek buddy got popped by
the FBI. While he had the original black box, he taped his
girlfriend's back in Greece phone number on a reel to reel
tape recorder. Then to call her, he would just hold the
phone up to the speaker. Couldn't use a little portable
recorder, too much wow and flutter to reproduce a steady
enough pair of tones. The FBI never knew about what I had
built, just the tape.
 
On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 22:56:02 GMT, Rich Grise <null@example.net> wrote:

On Friday 17 September 2004 04:53 pm, Eric R Snow did deign to grace us with
the following:

On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 23:12:00 GMT, "Bob Myers"
nospamplease@address.invalid> wrote:


"Eric R Snow" <etpm@whidbey.com> wrote in message
news:fcgmk09sfjkahll408gqg7e5f5h7ggmq50@4ax.com...
If you're going to be lowering the thing down
an iron pipe, I would think you would do FAR
better simply running the signal over a cable than
you ever will with a wireless link.

That's what I'm afraid of. But it's much easier to keep the camera dry
and to maneuver it around if it's only connected by a rope. So I'm
gonna try it first.

There's a problem with the "rope" being a coaxial
cable, or at least having a mini-coax wrapped around
it?

You're going to have REAL problems with an RF link
in this case, trust me...


Bob M.

Yeah Bob, I tried the cable as rope thing and the cable wrapped around
the rope and had problems with manipulation and strength problems.

What strength problems? If the rope will hold the camera without
the cable, what makes the rope becomes weaker when there's a cable
dangling alongside it? You leave some slack at the camera end, and
let the cable support only its own weight. You could keep them at
the same length with some kind of capstan.

Good Luck!
Rich
Rich,
The video cable by itself was too weak. Wrapped arond the rope it was
a mess.
ERS
 
On Sun, 19 Sep 2004 16:39:18 GMT, shb*NO*SPAM*@comporium.net (Si
Ballenger) wrote:

On Sun, 19 Sep 2004 07:42:52 -0700, Eric R Snow
etpm@whidbey.com> wrote:

The video cable by itself was too weak. Wrapped arond the rope it was
a mess.

How much weight are you trying to drop down your well? Most cams
small enough to drop down the well casing with the pump still
installed weigh only a couple of ounces at most. Bullet types of
cams usually have a threaded fitting on the rear in which a ~1'
length piece of threaded rod can be attached. Tape the cam cable
to the threaded rod so all hangs vertically. You can see the
threaded hole on the rear of the little IR cam on the below page
(this cam is small, but the bullet cams are even thinner). The
cable with this cam probably could withstand a 50lb pull if it
got stuck. The rear of the cam would need to be tapered to the
threaded rod so the edge wouldn't catch on a casing misalignment
and such. Sounds like you are trying to put too large a cam setup
down your casing.

http://www.geocities.com/zoomkat/ezservo.htm
The camera is small. The casing with batteries and LED lights is the
big part.
ERS
 
On Sun, 19 Sep 2004 07:42:52 -0700, Eric R Snow <etpm@whidbey.com>
wrote:


The video cable by itself was too weak. Wrapped arond the rope it was
a mess.
ERS
Cable TV companies use a cable consisting of a coax and a stronger
support wire for the drops from a utility pole to a house - perhaps
you could use that... (Belden 7983A, for example)





--
Peter Bennett, VE7CEI
peterbb4 (at) interchange.ubc.ca
new newsgroup users info : http://vancouver-webpages.com/nnq
GPS and NMEA info: http://vancouver-webpages.com/peter
Vancouver Power Squadron: http://vancouver.powersquadron.ca
 
In article <cdupk0pv24pfma6nsll9b9verigu74qvl9@4ax.com>,
Meat-->Plow <Meat@petitmorte.net> wrote:
I've seen those things in -kit- form. Some with stereo
output. 9 volts keeps the power under the legal limit but
crank it up to 15 and it doubles. I set up one for a guy who
had a drive-in restaurant. He had a 50's theme and wanted to
broadcast 50's music for the drive in customers. Worked
pretty decent once I found a spot that had no other local
stations.
Legal on the FM band is about 30 nanowatts.

47 CFR 15.239 "shall not exceed 250 microvolts/meter at 3 meters".

Mark Zenier mzenier@eskimo.com Washington State resident
 

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