Dave Heil wrote in message ...
Brian Kelly wrote:
Dunno where I got the notion it was on the Kentucky side of the crick.
You're likely thinking of the old WCKY at 1530 on the dial. It is now
WSAI which was at 1360. Confusing enough for you? WCKY was owned by
L.B. Wilson, a Kentuckian and the call stood for W Covington KentuckY.
Transmitters are on a hilltop overlooking Covington and the studios are
in downtown Cincinnati.
Probably, I do remember seeing BC towers on a hill near Covington.
Maybe that is where my confusion started. Usta run up and down 75 to
Lexington and Danville. Made Danville to the airport in two hours flat
on one occasion by golly.
Dad tried a couple of Buicks but has owned a number of Merc Grand
Marquis Limiteds over the last couple of decades.
Barge pilot huh? Pop has a USCG Master's ticket?
Went to the local Enterpise vehicle rental store a bit back, told 'em
I wanted the cheapest set of wheels they had for a week. Like the
$10/day Metro three-banger they'd been hyping. One thing led to
another, I wound up with some monster Pontiac for the price of the
three-banger. Talk about "road shock" . . I'll spare ya my thoughts
when I first squeezed the beast into a parking slot at my favorite
food emporium. Tried to. When I turned it back in a week later I still
hadn't found out what a third of the stupid bottons in the thing were
supposed to do. Maybe Ralph Nader was right after all.
I'm a small car guy.
I'm now on my third Dodge Neon, this one is bright yellow and has a
spoiler.
Yoicks . . . ! Didja install the mandatory resonator on the tailpipe
yet?
I'm big on small cars too, gots me a silly little 4 dr. '96
Chebby/Suzuki/Metro Geo w/150k miles on it. I keep telling myself I
really oughta get one for the other foot. Managed to blow a piston
last fall, $1,600 engine rebuild by my pet Benz wrench, runs like a
Swiss watch now. 'Cept my nickle-Extra N3 buddy backed his friggin'
monster Freightliner Classic into the rear end of my nice little Geo
and "reconfigured" a bit of sheet metal . . Back to the Benz shop . .
red body, green trunk deck and the rest is still in primer.
Dunno if I can trust it to make Wheeling & vicinity and back or not
but I'm seriously mulling that prospect come the warmer winds of the
days ahead. I figger if I gotta thumb it back home on the PA tpk. I
might as well do it when it's warmer.
I keep wondering how she'd "restyle" N2EY's Southgate 7 contraption .
.
I see it in a National 60's blue wrinkle cabinet with satin stainless
panel. There'd be no miniaturization with plenty of room for mods.
Yeah, great start . . I like your National Blue and the brushed SS
panel concept a bunch for openers. Needs to be expanded though.
Jim's obvious genius being that he's managed to come up with a 100W
80/40/20 CW xcvr which is spread across two whole shelves.
Breakthrough systems design concept; "widely distributed CW
transceivers".
About as counter-miniturization as it gets right? So he's already
ingeniously solved that one. As a matter of policy I submit that we
should concentrate on just the packaging problem and let him handle
the "engineering". He is, after all, the group MSEE.
I'm thinking maybe your National Blue for the front surround and the
SS panel then maybe something like a flip-top transparent blue tinted
plastic cabinet along the lines of an iMac so that everybody could
actually see how it works. Could also include a built-in soldering
station for doing the never-ending mods? And a drawer in which to
store spare eight-pin tube sockets of course.
OK, so it would be about the size of a steamer trunk and it would need
castors to be able move it about . . details, details . . don't bore
me with stupid details, "I'm a concept guy . . "
Sure do. It sits next to the S-40A. The engraved German silver dial is
super looking.
There's some trip bait . . I've always wanted to listen to one of
those '30s rcvrs but never had the oportunity.
My HRO is the mechanical marvel but for performance,
Nice old boat anchors, great dial mechanisms. I used an HRO 50 when I
took the graveyard shift on 40M in my first-ever contest, a
neighborhood club Field Day exercise. Smooooth tuning.
I'd have to say
that the RME-69 has it beat.
You got a 69 too??!
http://oak.cats.ohiou.edu/~postr/bapix/RME69.html
If we talk about the modern era, I'm
partial to the 75A-3 (modified to A-4 with the Universal Radio product
detector) for the ham bands
I'm partial to the 75A4 myself, I had one for years which had the
W2VCZ front end mods. Best 160/80/40 RX out there until rigs like that
later 940s finally came along.
and the 51S-1 for general coverage.
THAT's the one Collins rcvr I'd love to have. I have a meatball S3-B
but I'm gonna dump it. Needs a power cord. Which is a minor pain in
the butt job, need to dredge up a chassis plug.
I've noted Globe King 500-C's going for $3,000+. I was amazed to get
$775 for a 51J-4 the year before last.
NICE radio!
It fell into my "if you don't turn it on and use it" category. I found
other uses for the money. I need to reduce the size of my collection of
heavy iron and increase the number of dollars. I can use the dollars
for modern marvels.
I hear ya and I agree, I'm on the same course.
Not a bad idea. I think I may have told you that OH7XM was trying to
repair a TS-850 for a fellow in Helsinki. He found that the frequency
display unit is no longer available. That's one of the things which has
kept me away from K'wood.
Sure I remember that one. Sad. So far it seems like the 940s are still
being supported at least to some extent. Plus there are still ten
jillion of 'em out there and for absolute fact the repair shops are
hoarding junkers for parts in this country. But it ain't last forever
like the tube rigs have.
Kenwood made itself a legend in the '80s and a lotta folk still yearn
for a new competition-grade xcvr but lookit the junk they're peddling
these days. TS-2000 . . gimmee a break! There are persistent rumors
all over about Kenwood cooking some killer new xcvr in the back room
but I'm not holding my breath.
I don't support the ARRL's "gimme" for tens of thousands.
Ham radio has bigger problems than this one.
I don't know that they're bigger. They're mostly just "other".
There's enough policy-shredding fodder running today to keep RRAP
running for YEARS to come.
Now Len can't
accuse us of not discussing amateur radio policy, his favorite topic for
some obscure reason.
A Putz is a Putz is a Putz, whatta bore.
We're not dealing with ordinary here. This one was in the BIG TIME once
upon a time.
"Plop-plop, fizz, fizz . . "
Dave K8MN
w3rv