If you have a computer you might want to consider and Ella craft W-2. What we really need is a simple battery-operated SWR meter that has both a tone available that changes pitch with the power output and move forward and reflective power readings. In the early 60s, I had a little oscillator with the speaker that we are running on one AA battery it used about a 1 foot wire that was wrapped around the kulaks cable and when it saw RF it would also wait the more RF it saw the lower the tone was and I could to my Viking to that way as well as my Gonch at communicator. Wow Siri messed this one up a little but the other radio I was talking about was made by "GO and S ET. It was a communicator one, it was a crystal controlled a.m. to meter portable building in the very early 50s. One of these days soon, I'll get a keyboard.
Sent from my iPhone this time
> On Oct 12, 2015, at 8:10 PM, Tom Fowle <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> Actually there have been audible meter readers of various types since the
> 1920s.
>
> If the watt meter has a computer interface then a microcontroller can be
> programmed to read that.
>
> Actual speech synthesizers are still too expensive for such a project,
> however systems like the Arduino boards can do digitized words in
> applications like this where the number of words required is smallish.
>
> Tom Fowle WA6IVG
>
>> On Mon, Oct 12, 2015 at 06:06:04AM -0500, howard kaufman wrote:
>> Not boring, but I disagree.
>> The VCO across the meter of a SWR meeter, has given that information since
>> the 60's. The lower the pitch on reflected power, the lower the reflected
>> power.
>> Can you get a didgital output off of a didgital watt meter, that can drive a
>> synthesizer, or a screen reader?
>> If accureate PEP readings were available, that would be great!
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: For blind ham radio operators [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
>> On Behalf Of Tom Fowle
>> Sent: Sunday, October 11, 2015 10:14 PM
>> To: [log in to unmask]
>> Subject: Re: TW-1
>>
>> Well Ron took care of asking LDG for help. actually most small business
>> people, and big ones too, are pretty paranoid about their products even
>> those they never plan to make again. Darned Lawyers!
>>
>> However, I shouldn't think it very difficult to reproduce a similar unit, it
>> mostly depends on who has what connections with what kind of manufacturing
>> setups.
>>
>> Should those of us with some experience in trying this task get together,
>> perhaps in a seperate list, and see what we can thrash out?
>>
>> As long as nobody has proprietary feelings about sharing work, we might be
>> able to put together various ideas and maybe even, <gasp!> get something
>> done?
>>
>> Here's my thinking on what is actually needed. Skip rest if you're bored!
>>
>> We don't really need a talking watt meter unless running legal limit and
>> need to be sure not going overboard.
>>
>> What is really basically needed is an audible accessible vSWR meter. All you
>> really need to know is that the rig is seeing an swr that makes it happy.
>> Even with a manual tuner, that's all you need.
>>
>>
>> so a simple audio VCO design based on a cheap swr meter with an indication
>> of 2/1 or less VSWR will do for most purposes.
>>
>> Look back at April 2013 QST for Bill Gerrey's article showing how to add
>> such a simple circuit to an MFJ meter.
>>
>> It's simple, easy to reproduce, cheap in common parts and does the job.
>>
>> You'll hate it of course, cause everything just has to talk! <GRIN>
>>
>> Have I stirred up a hornets nest? Or bored you to delete?
>> BTW, I believe Rob Santello of Hampods is working on a talking watt meter.
>>
>>
>> tom Fowle
>> WA6IVG
>>
>>> On Sun, Oct 11, 2015 at 08:24:58PM -0500, Dr. Ronald E. Milliman wrote:
>>> Brian, I have one of the TW-1 talking SWR/power meters, and have tried
>>> to obtain the schematic from LDG, and they will not provide it to
>>> anyone. We have reverse engineered it and are still working on this
>>> project. We are investigating several different circuits and options.
>>> The most expensive component is the voice module or chip, which can be
>>> pretty expensive, depending upon your objectives.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Ron, K8HSY
>>>
>>> President, Millitronics, Inc.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>
>>> From: For blind ham radio operators
>>> [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
>>> On Behalf Of kd8ase
>>>
>>> Sent: Sunday, October 11, 2015 6:06 PM
>>>
>>> To: [log in to unmask]
>>>
>>> Subject: TW-1
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Hello, all, This question is for anyone who owns the tw-1. I am
>>> looking for= a schematic/partslist for this device.
>>>
>>> I am talking to a couple engineer/technician friends and we are going
>>> to tr= y reproducing this device.
>>>
>>> TNX, Brian McFadden, KD8ASE
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ---
>>>
>>> This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
>>>
>>> https://www.avast.com/antivirus
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Dr. Ronald E. Milliman
>>>
>>> Retired Professor of Marketing
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> President: Millitronics, Inc. (millitronics.biz)
>>>
>>> President: A3 Business Solutions (a3businesssolutions.com)
>>>
>>> President: M&M Properties
>>>
>>> President: South Central Kentucky Council of the Blind (SCKCB.ORG)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
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