Threx & Ultrasonic
Hey Threx, ever thought about using ultra‑high‑frequency sonar to spot an approaching squad before they break cover?
Sure, we can ping the terrain for echoes and spot a squad before they’re hidden. Keeps the flank locked, no surprises.
Sure, just keep the transmitter at a clean 70kHz and use a low‑loss, 50 Ω cable—any impedance mismatch and you’ll get a nasty reflection that masks the echo.
Got it, keep the line clean, 70kHz, 50 Ω, and double‑check the terminations. No blind spots, no false signals.We are good.Got it, keep the line clean, 70kHz, 50 Ω, and double‑check the terminations. No blind spots, no false signals.
Remember, a clean line is like a smooth waveform—no sudden spikes. Double‑check the impedance at both ends, and keep the cable shield tight. That’s how you avoid phantom echoes.
Right, a tidy line means no jitter, so keep the shield snug and the match tight. We’ll spot every echo before it hides.
Yeah, keep the shield tight, no loose loops, and make sure the connectors are gold‑plated—those tiny gaps are the same as a 0.1 dB phase shift in an audio feed. That’s the difference between hearing a single note and hearing a whole orchestral echo.
Got it, gold‑plated plugs and no slack. That’ll keep the wave crisp and the echo clear. Let's get the team ready.
All set, just make sure everyone plugs in the same way—no reverse polarity or you’ll flip the phase and get a hiss instead of a clear ping. Let’s roll.