<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">No problem. THe differences are in the receivers, not the crystals. Just be sure you know if your reeiver is low or high band, then just buy the crystal a channel that the receiver will work with.</font>
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<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">--Lance</font>
<br><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"> </font><font size=2 face="Comic Sans MS">Forgive my ignorance.... My local hobby store sells receivers, PPM, and separately sells crystals for them. Might be channel 6..or 60. Could this be a problem?</font>
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<br><font size=2 face="Comic Sans MS">Harry..</font>
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<br><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"> ----- Original Message ----- </font>
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<br><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"><b>From:</b> s.vannostrand@kodak.com </font>
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<br><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"><b>To:</b> discussion@nsrca.org </font>
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<br><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"><b>Sent:</b> Thursday, December 12, 2002 1:59 PM</font>
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<br><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"><b>Subject:</b> Re: Crystals</font>
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<br><font size=2 face="sans">Tony S can give you the tech detail, but receivers are tuned circuits. The crystal is key to creating the reference frequency used to filter the signal picked up on the antenna. The crystal sets up the basic reference frequency and the circuitry around it can only be used for a narrow range, or band, of frequencies. The futaba receivers come in two types that have components that tune each to a different band. You can put a low freq crystal in a high band receiver, but you'll have a detuned system, reduced range, and possible signal lock loss. I wouldn't do it.</font><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"> </font>
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<br><font size=2 face="sans">--Lance</font><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"> </font>