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Old March 17th 04, 09:27 AM
Frank Dresser
 
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"WShoots1" wrote in message
...
Frank D.: Other radios are more practical, but few are so cool.

My late wife, Ruby, N5GIN, was more interested in ham radio when the

radios
looked like real radios instead of kitchen appliances. She would have
appreciated that say, "Real radios glow in the dark."


Alot of Hallicrafters radios just looked impressive. The SX 99 isn't a
great radio, but it has two big semi-circular dials, sort of like a mid
50s Chevrolet, and thirteen knobs and switches on the front panel and
everyone of them does something. And behind the facade, it seems like
each of these radios has at least one example of "ten cent engineering".
I'm not using the term "ten cent engineering" in a disparaging way.
There's another saying:

"A good engineer can do for a dime what any damn fool can do for a
dollar"


I always wanted a JRC shipboard station. It was neat. It was clean

looking yet
it looked business like. And it had everything. Retuning the HF

transmitter for
the ham bands would have been no problem.

The European made 400 watt ssb stations were really super. Those were

nice
little packages.

I know that people like Fair Radio would come along and buy a complete
inventory of surplus stuff at pennies a pound. I guess that was more

efficient
for the Government.

73,
Bill, K5BY


Yeah, the government auctions off it's surplus, so I suppose we all had
the same chance to get a pallet of weatherbeaten radios. I have no idea
what percentage of the radios were salvageable. It's a good thing for
everybody there's somebody like Fair to take the chance. Besides, I
like dealing with Fair, even though I've never bought a big ticket item
from them.

It looks like the government now has a contractor to handle some
auctions on the internet:

http://www.govliquidation.com/

There's some trucks, like a few Kaiser Jeeps and a Studebaker Packard:

http://www.govliquidation.com/list/e1020?tid=GLSPPR0175

Frank Dresser