Simple but Fundamental Antenna Question

Ian Bell wrote:
I know junior year is a USA expression but as a Brit I am not sure which
year of a degree course it refers to.
Hi, Ian --

Since you're a Brit, I feel comfortable in telling you that it's the
penultimate year (don't get to use that word much in everyday
conversation :). The last year is the senior year.

--
John Miller
Email address: domain, n4vu.com; username, jsm

Hotels are tired of getting ripped off. I checked into a hotel and they
had towels from my house.
-Mark Guido
 
Virulent anti-gay people are sometimes repressed gays themselves;
therefore, legal gay marriage would threaten their idea of the family, since
they think, unconsciously, that they themselves would have married someone
of their own gender, if it was approved by society.
Amateur fruedian analyis, I know.
 
oops, wrong article to reply to.

In article <DljOc.56044$eM2.2525@attbi_s51>, TAKE-OUTdobrien25@comcast.net
says...
Virulent anti-gay people are sometimes repressed gays themselves;
therefore, legal gay marriage would threaten their idea of the family, since
they think, unconsciously, that they themselves would have married someone
of their own gender, if it was approved by society.
Amateur fruedian analyis, I know.
 
Bob Myers wrote:

"Ian Bell" <ruffrecords@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:2mt7ahFquntgU1@uni-berlin.de...
I know junior year is a USA expression but as a Brit I am not sure which
year of a degree course it refers to. In the UK most degrees run for
three
years. The first year of all engineering degrees is very general with
only
a few modules on electronics for an EE course. Maxwell's equations and
all
that is derived therefrom is not introduced until the second year.

In the U.S., the "junior" year is most commonly the third year
of a four-year program, the years being (in order) freshman,
sophomore, junior, senior. I first ran up against Maxwell's
equations in a physics course in my sophomore year (this was,
of course, back in the days when we were studying EM
transmission by candlelight...:)), then had my first "transmission
lines and wave basics" in the EE course of study as a junior,
followed by a course which concentrated primarily on antenna
theory and design as a senior.

Bob M.
Thanks for that Bob. You are never to old to learn.

Ian
 

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