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The ARRL Antenna Book -- The ultimate reference for Amateur Radio antennas, transmission lines and propagation. Fully-searchable CD-ROM included. 21st edition.

Power Supply Handbook -- Gain the knowledge and confidence you need to build and use power supplies. A must have for your bookshelf!

ARRL's Low Power Communication -- Now Shipping! -- Build and operate low-power radio gear-the QRP way! 3rd Edition.

The ARRL Handbook (2007 softcover edition) -- THE standard in applied electronics and communications.

Basic Antennas -- Now Shipping! -- An introduction to antennas--basic concepts, practical designs, and easy-to-build antennas!

January 2005 QST Feedback

In "Hands-On Radio, Experiment #21: The L-Network" [Oct 2004, p 63] the reactance-canceling inductance in the design example should be 0.11 µH, not 0.32 µH, as printed. This is the correct value for 28 MHz.--tnx KB9WMJ

"A High Quality Speaker System for the Ham Shack" [Oct 2004, p 28-34] had a couple of measurement errors. In Figure 14, the speaker cutout measurements are incorrect. The 2 inch hole for the tweeter should be 2 1/4 inches from the left side. The 3 7/8 inch hole should be 5 7/8 inches from the left side. Several readers wondered why the back was smaller than the front. The back is purposely smaller in size so that the unfinished back edges do not show against the finished sides and top.

A couple of errors crept into "A 12 V dc Boost Regulator for Battery Operation" [Nov 2004, p 37]. The schematic (Figure 2, p 38) shows a solid line drawn from the right side of R7 to ground. That is incorrect; a capacitor, C14 (220 µF, 16 V) should take its place, with the negative side connected to ground. The Web site reference schematic is correct (www.arrl.org/files/qst-binaries/boost_reg.zip). Also, the SCR in the crowbar circuit (Figure 5, p 40) is drawn backward; the anode and cathode should be reversed--the gate lead is correct.

In "A 10/17 Meter Hanging Loop Antenna" [Oct 2004, p 42], the materials table (Table 1) should show the 14 gauge wire quantity as 100 feet, not 65 feet. You'll need at least 91 feet of wire to build the antenna.

A cautionary note if you're trying to run the Microsoft software development tools referenced in "Programming for the Pocket PC" [Dec 2004, p 38]. Various operating systems, including Windows XP, require you to be logged on as an "Administrator" to run the tools successfully.--tnx K1EHW

Clarification: 2005 ARRL Handbook Editor Dana Reed, W1LC, was quoted in "ARRL in Action" [Nov 2004, p 13] as saying, "Every chapter was updated...[from the 2004 edition]." In fact, many chapters were updated, and nearly all were revised in compiling the new Handbook.



Page last modified: 03:08 PM, 13 Dec 2004 ET
Page author: qst@arrl.org
Copyright © 2004, American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved.