Navigating the K2AV.com Website:
If you are a first time visitor looking for information on the FCP, start with an end-to-end read of the opening page and then branch out to items in the green index button list.
This site is broken into two major parts.
1) Material concerning the FCP, the Isolation Transformer, Inverted L, and Loss Issues is listed in the green button index to the left.Button indexed sections may contain buttons embedded in text linking to other sections and subsections in the web site. Most of these are duplicates of buttons in the button index.
Sections and subsections will have
<== you are here
in the upper left corner or down in the page indicating the starting location in text selected by the index button.
Some green button items are dividers only. Hovering over the text in these buttons will retain the mouse arrow pointer. Hovering over the text in buttons to actual content will change the mouse pointer to a pointer finger. This is true for both the green button index on the left and for green buttons embedded in page text.
Using "Mobile" or Smartphone Browsers:
Using smartphone browsers sometimes results in random pointer and position behavior. While it goes to the correct page, the browser may leave the pointer and viewer anywhere on that page. To mention only one of several related issues, operating system and browser handling differences for hash tags in addresses seem to defy a single solution. Large commercial web sites with paid staffs often have three, four or more separate sites under the covers to handle all the differences.
We have spent fruitless days searching the web and coding various reported schemes for a common solution that works the same everywhere. Thus far commercial grade separate sites appear the only proven successful approach. Alas, separate coding for separate smartphone browsers is far beyond our non-paid abilities at this time. We apologize for any inconvenience.
Using a smartphone display, the green index buttons often display a smaller type relative to text than on desktop and laptop displays. This is done in the browser code, there is no such command in our html text. The browsers apparently do this for "mobile" viewers to allow more space for viewing content. Unsqueeze the display for a better view of the buttons, or...
On some smartphone browsers, a quick double-tap over the index area will expand the buttons, and another double-tap will reduce it. The behavior of the buttons in this expansion is sometimes erratic. If we discover a secret tap sequence we will report that here.
If you're an html/web guru and know the fix for that, issues above, or other issues you spy on these pages, please get in touch. We will be happy to hear from you.