Thread: Radio Question
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Robert Swinney
 
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Could have been an "electric fence" also.

Bob Swinney
"Peter T. Keillor III" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 5 Apr 2005 13:12:27 -0500, "Robert Swinney"
wrote:

Jim,
Likely what you saw up the canyon was what telephone guys call "parallel".
Parallel was just that; two conductors laying side by side, about 22 gauge
or so (I'm sure a Telco guy can correct us here). The conductors were
very
hard drawn copper, or an alloy, to give strength against wind and ice
loading. If one didn't know better, it looked like a single wire.

Single wire, ground for the other side, telephone circuits are not
possible
today because of all the AC currents they would share the ground with.
Maybe one would work only over a very short distance, say one span or
less.
Dunno. I talked on one of the "ancients" about 40 years ago, in rural
Kansas, and it was so noisy as to be almost unusable.

Bob Swinney


What I saw in west Texas may have been out of service, glass
insulators with what appeared to be a single wire. On the other hand,
there was nothing near that road but more road, brush, and miles and
miles of not much else. There were no power lines in sight along the
road, IIRC.

Pete Keillor

"Gunner" wrote in message
. ..
On 5 Apr 2005 06:56:26 -0700, jim rozen
wrote:

In article , Gunner says...

out of an RV in an RV park. The park rules are such that they really
frown on antennas other than TV.

Are you allowed to have a clothesline?

Sounds crazy, but it has been known to work!

Jim

Hummm interesting. Ill check

Gunner

Rule #35
"That which does not kill you,
has made a huge tactical error"