K6JEB on Cooking Turkeys (Funny!)
Jack K6JEB posted this on the FT-857 yahoo group. I thought it was a very creative piece! The original thread was, toung-and-cheek, "how to cook a turky with an FT-857D".
So, with Jack's permission, here is his writing for your enjoyment too!
I see no reason to NOT just use *T-Match* and watch your output on a *BIRD* WATT Meter as you load-up the Turkey with RF, my suggestion would be to start on 3840 since that's where a lot of turkeys hang-out. But in some locales, you may find the turkeys gathering on an area repeater.
I've read pieces insisting on coax to feed their turkey but I think you'd best start with some simple grains and maybe let them run around the antenna farm a bit to fatten them up for the low bands ('Tis the Season).
Propagation with turkeys has been shown to be both a light and dark matter, which works best with copious amounts of gravy and stuffing.
Loading up a turkey and Chicken Band are NOT the same thing. Is that clear, good buddy?
Lastly, once you DO manage to load-up a turkey, instead of "CQ" use "TQ" which is when the DX starts flying-in.
Unfortunately most turkey-driven stations rarely finish QSOs since the tryptophan haze in the station often causes the operator to fall asleep and dream he's working CQ WW DX as TC4X.
:)
73 and HI HI
Jack, K6JEB
www.k6jeb.com/
I see no reason to NOT just use *T-Match* and watch your output on a *BIRD* WATT Meter as you load-up the Turkey with RF, my suggestion would be to start on 3840 since that's where a lot of turkeys hang-out. But in some locales, you may find the turkeys gathering on an area repeater.
I've read pieces insisting on coax to feed their turkey but I think you'd best start with some simple grains and maybe let them run around the antenna farm a bit to fatten them up for the low bands ('Tis the Season).
Propagation with turkeys has been shown to be both a light and dark matter, which works best with copious amounts of gravy and stuffing.
Loading up a turkey and Chicken Band are NOT the same thing. Is that clear, good buddy?
Lastly, once you DO manage to load-up a turkey, instead of "CQ" use "TQ" which is when the DX starts flying-in.
Unfortunately most turkey-driven stations rarely finish QSOs since the tryptophan haze in the station often causes the operator to fall asleep and dream he's working CQ WW DX as TC4X.
:)
73 and HI HI
Jack, K6JEB
www.k6jeb.com/
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