{"ai_pass_count":4,"analysis_step_count":13,"confidence":0.9136129848193377,"created_at":"2026-07-03T15:47:39.579423+00:00","id":139159,"node_number":"683210","processing_time":2.2295584678649902,"recent_steps":["net.store_session","net.llm_structured_analysis","net.rules_detect","net.context_window","net.store_session"],"recording_id":140440,"text":"and then 6-H. Well, I don't have a lot of experience with loop and there's also different types of loops. You know, here, Tom is talking about a horizontal loop, you know, something for like 160 meters and 80. I mean, that's a lot of wire. The loops that I'm familiar with, maybe they come out to loops. They're for like 40 through years. It's about a 5, I want to say, maybe a 5 foot diameter vertical loop. It has a tuning capacitor. It's very high Q, which means that, you know, if you move around on a band, you have to readjust it. And I mean, it is resident. Of course, you know, it's using an LC circuit to actually make it electrically resident. I have not, I have played with that a little bit. I have not tested the transmit versus receive side of things. But,"}