• 2023
  • May
  • 30

The Breezeshooter’s Hamfest - June 4th 2023

This is generally a smaller show, but it’s one where good deals can be had - some of the “Dayton” items show up without the “Dayton” prices! I’ve always brought home a decently priced trinket or two from this one.

This year, they return to the Butler Farm Show grounds, with a single day of show on Sunday. See you there!

Breezeshooters Hamfest

Butler Farm Show
625 Evans City Road
Butler PA 16001

Sunday, June 4th 2023
8A-2P

https://breezeshooters.org/ns/hamfest/

  • 2023
  • May
  • 24

The Dayton Hamvention 2023

We all had a good time at Dayton this year. Weather was very cooperative, with temps in the 80s and most of the rain being confined to Friday evening and early Saturday morning. (It wouldn’t be Dayton without Rain, Snow, Tornadoes, or 100F heat, now would it?)

As usual, there was a lot of good stuff to be seen and had, and I limited myself to things I thought I could immediately use - for the most part. The flea market was full, and the exhibit halls were packed as usual. So without further ado, here are my pictures of the event.

  • 2023
  • May
  • 22

The Dayton Hamvention 2023 has come and gone.

This year, I made it two days instead of just one - perhaps next year I’ll try for all three. There was plenty of stuff to be had, and I limited myself to some parts units and some odds ‘n ends. I think the total damage this year was under $200, and that included food and drinks for myself and my fellow show-goer.

I’m in the process of cleaning up the pictures I took, and will be posting those and my haul over the next few weeks. Stay tuned!

  • 2023
  • May
  • 16

Monster.com has become nothing but noise.

Some time ago, I changed my email address for job contacts to a domain-based email instead of a generic gmail account. This was mostly so I could track where all of the spam was coming from, since I tend to leave my profiles alone once I’ve found employment. I noticed something right away:

Almost all of the spam was coming from monster.com

During the boom in late 2021 and 2022, I would sometimes get 20-30 a day from offshore recruiters, multiple contacts from different people in the same company in regards to a job that wasn’t worth your time. This slowed somewhat to about 15-20 a week, but all of it was offshore recruiters that just matched a keyword and had no clue as to what they were recruiting for - or even that someone else from their company had contacted me.

I turned off the monster.com account, and… silence.

All of that junk, those $20/hr jobs in San Francisco, those 3 month contracts in North Dakota, those jobs that were completely mismatched to my skillset have all vanished. It’s both sad and interesting to see how one of the first big online career sites has fallen, but that’s their problem. They’re making money from all of these offshore recruiters pulling profiles. They’re not going to do a thing to disturb their golden goose even though it’s totally useless for the end user.

What’s worse, is that my state of residence uses monster as their backend for the unemployment system. Monster used to automagically connect the two, something it didn’t bother telling you about. I only found out this one day when someone told me they found my profile on ohiomeansjobs.com - I had never heard of the site but found that it was just monster.com with a red bird instead of a purple creature. Even better - if you’re unemployed, it used to not let you make changes to monster because you were a “protected jobseeker” due to the unwanted connection to the Ohio site. As soon as I left this status I made sure to disconnect the two by deleting and re-creating the monster account with a different email address, and filling the Ohio site with junk because it’s just monster, i.e. spam, with a different name. You can’t delete that one for years, even though it clearly used to say you could.

The moral of the story here is that things change, and what was once useful is no longer necessary. Monster is a zombie clone of itself, and by association, so is Ohio Means Jobs.

There’s nothing I can do about it except say “Sorry, it’s not me - it’s you. Bye.”

  • 2023
  • May
  • 2

Random board shot - The Textolite “T”

It’s always cool (and kind of sad) to open a piece of equipment and see the GE Textolite T on the circuit board.

textot.jpg

This was manufactured by the Coshocton, OH GE plant on South 2nd street in the 1970s. The plant opened to make laminated plastics under the trade name Textolite, and made various other things over the years including plastic parts for appliances, and raw circuit board.

It opened in 1947, and closed in 2004, a victim of declining manufacturing in the USA, and the drive for ever-increasing profits by GE. It probably would have closed at some point, as GE has sold their appliance division to Haier and there’s no reason for a Chinese company to manufacture here.

textolite.jpg

Out of all the businesses listed on that page, only Fisher remains. RIP, we hardly knew ye.

  • 2023
  • May
  • 2

The TUSCO Amateur Radio Club 2023 Show - Junk I Took Home.

I tried to limit myself to Small Things this year, and not drag home any projects. I almost succeeded!

The meters are of particular note, one was an old, old, old unit with a telephone test jack on it. I occasionally have need to test single-line analog jacks, so I offered the guy $10 for it and he took it. The other meter, an Ohio-made Triplett, was a beast of a unit costing $200 when new in 1992. It’s loaded with functions, and has internal relays to isolate and switch inputs. Quite unusual and cool.

The other items were simply parts, unusual test equipment, or books. Not pictured are some RCA tube manuals I picked up for $5 each. You’ve seen those before.

The ZM-11/U - this is an interesting piece of equipment. It’s a fairly precise bridge for checking capacitors and inductors, and uses an eye tube as an aid to the relative quality of the device under test. It’s in pretty good shape physically, a few dents and dings and one broken bail on a clip.

Electrically, the vendor said that it worked (and it all lights up,) but that the internal 1Khz source was dead. Feed it an external precision source and it’s fine. I’m planning on digging into this device at some point, it needs a cord and some minor cleanup. I’ve already removed the line cord as it was in bad shape. When I get to it, that will be it’s own post.

Next up is Dayton on the 19th of May, but until then, enjoy the pictures!

  • 2023
  • May
  • 2

The TUSCO Amateur Radio Club 2023 Show

This was the first time I’ve attended this show. I wasn’t sure what to expect, but it turned out to be pretty good for being such a small show. I spent about an hour and a half wandering the two halls, looking at thing and re-checking them to make sure they didn’t want to come home with me. I left several things behind but brought home several more.

This show was at the Tuscarawas County Fairgrounds, and occupied one of the commercial buildings. There was mention of a “trunkfest,” so I suspect that there may have been some outside stuff had it not been a rainy day. Overall, however, it was a good way to spend a Saturday morning. I’ll probably go next year, time permitting, since it’s so close.