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Old January 29th 04, 03:08 AM
tommyknocker
 
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Jim Douglas wrote:

Interesting I thought Packard-Bell was a newer company. I have only seen
their computers. I don't recall ever seeing anything else from that company,
anyone else?


In the 30s and 40s Packard-Bell was a consumer electronics company,
making radios and TVs. Over time, the company ceased to exist and
"Packard Bell" became just a name, like most of the rest of the
electronics companies of the Golden Age of Radio. About 15 years ago a
former Israeli Army officer (chew on THAT, Artaud!) bought the Packard
Bell name and started making computers, mostly in Sacramento, CA in an
old US Army supply depot. Quality was bad from the start. Eventually
Packard Bell 2 went bankrupt and was purchased by NEC. The REST of the
story...

"WShoots1" wrote in message
...
While rummaging through an "antique" store, my local daughter found, and

got
for me, a Packard-Bell Shortwave Log and Tuning Guide. Published in 1939,

the
thin little booklet cost a princely (then) sum of fifty cents --

equivalent to
about $10 now.

Anyhow, it was published primarily for owners of P-B radios that had
push-button settings. It also discussed how to use the tuning eye on

models so
equipped as well as the usual "how to" in tuning in shortwave stations.

It lists all the active SW stations in the world (not many then) and their
frequencies and schedules, as well as US AM BC stations running 50 kW or

more
(some current 50 kW stations aren't listed) and Western US AM BC stations.

She said there were also some radio magazines from the 1920s, 1930s, and

1940s.
I told, not asked, her to go back and get them for me. G

73,
Bill, K5BY