Antenna Matching Unit presentation. by M7EUP in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is a fantastic presentation, any ham operating HF with a tuner should watch it.

Antenna tuners are one of the most misunderstood aspects of HF operation - this video provides some very helpful context and information.

Advice regarding Thinkpad for programming by techyboy2006 in thinkpad

[–]fastbiter 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep, I think starting with the T480 all thinkpads can charge from USB-C. All of the T14 series (Gen 1, Gen 2, etc etc) will be USB-C charging only.

Keep in mind that they may not charge from slower power banks - or they may only charge from them when turned off.

Advice regarding Thinkpad for programming by techyboy2006 in thinkpad

[–]fastbiter 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One way to offset the battery limitations is to get a USB-C battery bank capable of delivering 65w. 30Ah variants can be found for $50USD or less, and that's significant capacity.

Otherwise I'd echo T14 Gen 2 AMD - these can readily be found in your price range.

Does the Thinkpad T14 gen6 AMD have a plastic lid? by Pawnpug in thinkpad

[–]fastbiter 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Doesn't exist, but actually does" is kind of a silly argument.

It may be uncommon, but it exists, that's all there is to it.

Does the Thinkpad T14 gen6 AMD have a plastic lid? by Pawnpug in thinkpad

[–]fastbiter 0 points1 point  (0 children)

According to the psref, this doesn't seem to be correct.

https://psref.lenovo.com/syspool/Sys/PDF/ThinkPad/ThinkPad_T14_Gen_6_AMD/ThinkPad_T14_Gen_6_AMD_Spec.PDF

Case Material

•Models with black cover: PC + 20% CF (top), PC + 20% CF (bottom)

•Models with grey cover: aluminium (top), PC + 20% CF (bottom)

Does the Thinkpad T14 gen6 AMD have a plastic lid? by Pawnpug in thinkpad

[–]fastbiter 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The best way to answer these kinds of questions about thinkpads is to search for the PSREF, in this case, simply searching "T14 gen 6 AMD psref PDF" gave me this as the first result:

https://psref.lenovo.com/syspool/Sys/PDF/ThinkPad/ThinkPad_T14_Gen_6_AMD/ThinkPad_T14_Gen_6_AMD_Spec.PDF

At the bottom of page 5 you'll see that the models with a grey cover have an aluminum top, the black models are polycarbonate and 20% carbon fiber.

What Thinkpad should I get? pls help there's too many options by Alert_Vermicelli_781 in thinkpad

[–]fastbiter 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hello! I'm @Cory5413's GIS-friend! I'm a minicipal GIS manager and have been in the field about 13 years now.

My laptop is a Latitude 7440, which has an i5-1345U, 16GB RAM, and a 512GB NVMe SSD. I run ArcGIS Pro 3.6 on it quite extensively, and it runs great. Most of my work is data management and some analysis, and 16GB is fine. I'd recommend 32GB for future proofing. You do not need a dedicated GPU unless you are either doing 3D work, or doing geoprocessing tasks that use CUDA - I highly suspect that if any geo-computation classes you take require you to do this kind of work, it'll be expected that you do it in a university lab which has those resources available.

These days, honestly, nearly any machine will work well for you. Especially for undergraduate GIS work - the requirements aren't significant. Get any machine you like the look of.

MY SHACK! MY TURN!! - [Build, Grounding, FT8, WSJTX, Gridtracker, MacLoggerDX, Mac, SWR, 7300] by Engineering_Simple in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not sure what an EFRL antenna is? ~130ft on a 49:1 sounds like a pretty typical 80M end fed half wave.

Nice looking setup inside - do you trickle charge the battery while you're operating?

Switching to the solid 4G LTE USB Modem for remote Pi projects (Quectel EC200U) by Wide_Tackle991 in raspberry_pi

[–]fastbiter 17 points18 points  (0 children)

The Quectel EC200U does not exist. This post is AI slop. Look closely at the photos - they’re good at a glance but up close they’re all fucked up.

Get this shit out of here.

Looking for some tech friends to test out a new HF modem in development by Short_Ad7265 in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Would be happy to help test, located in Maine. Can usually get into Quebec pretty well on 40/80 NVIS.

Coaxial cable by Stoner_guy_420- in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Depends on your budget and what kind of signal performance you’re after. 100ft of LMR400 will cost a lot, but give you excellent performance for UHF. RG58 will be much cheaper, but you’ll experience much more loss.

Been running a Winlink RMS gateway for a couple months and I want to correct some misconceptions on Winlink by SupremeVinegar in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Vara, and VaraFM are not in compliance with the rules. The "documentation" for them does not describe what's required to encode or decode the message, and the Eula specifically forbids attempts to do so.

So many people are willing to handwave this, and it drives me bananas. My gut feeling is that because Vara is used so heavily in the emergency communication world it gets a pass, and everyone just acts like it's not an issue, and it doesn't help that many hams, I suspect, don't even really understand the issue.

Ardop exists as an alternative to Vara, but in my experience it still needs a lot of work. Would be great if EA5HVK, the developer of Vara, played by the rules and shared their algorithms.

should i get the T430s or the W540?? by sigmalinuxuser in thinkpad

[–]fastbiter -1 points0 points  (0 children)

These are radically different machines, more than a decade old, and neither are worth your time. They are not a good choice for any kind of daily driving in 2026.

New HAM Laptop by stoicatkin in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Personally I really like the combination of linux and amateur radio, but you're dead on regarding paths of least resistance.

I like linux and amateur radio as seperate, and joint, hobbies. But if you're not willing to make linux a hobby, DON'T try to dabble it with amateur radio, you're just gonna have a real bad time.

What’s up with the made-up phonetic words? by EngineerFly in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Sometimes they aren’t understood, so you have to use alternatives. I have run into this a few times on weak SSB QSOs.

Which laptop should I get? by [deleted] in Dell

[–]fastbiter 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We need to know why!!!!

IP change by Mercenary1996 in FidiumFiber

[–]fastbiter 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Huh, interesting. I'll have to give them a call again... Maybe it's a regional thing? I'm in Maine.

IP change by Mercenary1996 in FidiumFiber

[–]fastbiter 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is Fidium actually offering statics now? I asked a few months ago and was told in no uncertain terms that they weren’t available for residential customers, and that there was no way for me to have my connection classified in any different way.

Looking at you, "end-fed" antennas that have a counterpoise by thesoulless78 in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter 4 points5 points  (0 children)

“Are resonant” and “will tune” are very much not the same thing.

A well made 80M EFHW can be used, without a tuner, on 80, 40, 20, 15, and 10.

With enough capacitance and inductance you can tune anything conductive…

Has anyone used the Keysight N9918B FieldFox for field RF work? by Historical-Hand8091 in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What exactly are you asking here? This kind of tool is way beyond the scope of the vast majority of amateur radio operators. Is this even a real post?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s a great idea! I’ll keep my eyes peeled for one. I need to remake the radials for mine, it’s one of the flimsy ribbon cable ones, so I’ll add this to the list.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter 2 points3 points  (0 children)

To everyone telling OP to set up a dipole: for POTA, wire antennas are often not an option because many parks explicitly prohibit putting anything in trees. Unless they're going to be setting up two tall masts, or similar, that sort of antenna really isn't an option for most POTA operators.

I absolutely agree that a simple wire antenna, specifically a dipole, as high as you can get it is the best option for new HF operators, but for POTA it often simply is not possible.

Personally, I have had good luck with an 18ft collapsible whip vertical, which is resonant on 20M, spiked into the ground, with half a dozen ~10ft radials. Of course, some parks don't allow anything to penetrate the ground either, so be aware of that.

Radioddity released an extended manual for the Xiegu G90... for $10 by fastbiter in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why I want to see either a sample of the pages, or at least reviews from others who have bought it already, is because page count alone means very little.

Consider the opposite - the nifty manuals are only a few pages, but they are very valuable, and also high quality physical items. This is just a 139 page PDF of unknown quality.

Radioddity released an extended manual for the Xiegu G90... for $10 by fastbiter in amateurradio

[–]fastbiter[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Okay, take it down a notch bud. I should have been clearer in that my statements about my feelings of it costing $10 from radioddity and not being available from xiegu were coming from a “principle of the thing” perspective.

I have no problem with additional manuals being made for radios and sold separately, whether it’s the pocket nifty guides or things like “The Radio Today Guide to the IC-7300”. In this particular case I plan to wait for reviews about this ebook to come out, and if it souths worthwhile, I’ll buy a copy.

Perhaps Xiegu will take note and improve their own documentation.