Comments are moderated before they will appear on the website, this is a manual process and may take some time. Please be patient.
Author Name is a required field.
Email Address is optional, but without one I won't be able to contact you back. It is never shown or linked on the website. You can always just email me if you'd rather not post a public comment. I generally reply in-line with a comment rather than email you back, unless I want to discuss something in private or off topic. Please check back to see when I reply.
Website URL is optional, if supplied the Author Name will be hyperlinked to this URL.
You may use wikitext in the body, preview may be handy here. Don't worry if you can't figure them out, just give me a hint what you want linked to what and I'll do it during moderation. Wikitext is not BBcode!
Spammers: Please don't bother wasting your time scripting up posts to this form. Everything is moderated, your post will never be seen on the web even transiently, there is no way to even view it by its internal ID, it will never be indexed. I will simply delete your post in the moderation interface. If I'm your target audience you're really on the wrong track; I'll never click on a URL in your garbage. The post content is not emailed to me (and I don't use a Win32 mail client anyway), I view the posts in plain text in the moderation interface so no clever tricks of any kind will make anything you type be interpreted by anything other than me, a human. Just give up and go elsewhere please!
30th June 2011 18:56
Best Alan Yates,
I wonderded how the original Il Pigmeo article looked. I was wondering if you could post here or email the original Italian article. I am just wondering how that base quenched system worked and how the parts were double used. It would be fun to reconstruct it with a carbon mike(wich I have) and the double pole switch. Of course try to soup up the power a little with a modern transistor ;-). Thanks in advance!
Greets from Europe and keep up the good work!
Thomas
30th January 2010 21:57
Ardhra,
Yes it works, especially the receiver side. The TX side could be better, more output power would be desirable. You can see the individual modules working in the videos of the original article.
As far as using it for a school project... Well that depends on what you will be marked on.
Regards,
Alan
29th January 2010 14:51
yaar,does this really work?coz im thinkin about doin this in my third year engg project.i showed my teacher a lot of projects but he turned all of them down.if possible then reply.
bye take care
3rd July 2011 20:55
Alan Yates wrote...