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![]() "COLIN LAMB" wrote in message ... I have always wondered if Hallicrafters was responsible for much more than we give it credit for. Originally, SX meant that it was a Hallicrafters with a crystal filter, which was the deluxe model. I think Hallicrafters became the model for manufacturers in Japan, and some of the early Japanese radio successes used X in their model number. Then, when cars came out, many had X or SX in the name. Perhaps these model numbers can be traced back to the success of the Hallicrafters line? 73, Colin K7FM Newberg, Oregon Well, Kodak also liked X in names, usually indicating an improvement. An example is the developer Microdol-X. Originally called just Microdol an anti silvering agent was added to prevent a sort of fog common in very fine grain developers and the X added to the name. RCA did rather the same thing, examples are the 77-D and 44-B microphones released in improved models with an X added. I think Hallicrafters was a master of marketing. Bill Halligan found a niche in making affordable equipment for hams and SWLs. The stuff always looked well styled. Originally he used names like Skyrider. That's what the S in the model numbers means. The SX-28 was a Super-Skyrider with crystal filter. Hallicrafters also used some advanced technology in a couple of places like the Lamb noise blanker in the SX-28. Unfortunately, it didn't work very well in that embodyment although similar noise blankers with separate noise antennas did work well in other applications, for instance the blanker supplied for the Collins KWM-2 transceiver. Hallicrafters was also one of the first companies to produce single side band equipment for the amateur. I think sometimes features got ahead of performance. I have somewhere (I wish I could find it) a WW-2 vintage military communications technical manual which has a survey of some available receivers in it. There are charts showing spurious responses of three or four receivers. Among them are the SX-28 in its military guise and the SPX-200 Super-Pro. The Super Pro chart has perhaps two spurs, namely the expected image responses while the SX-28 chart looks like a cornfield. Of course the Super-Pro cost almost twice as much as the SX-28. BTW, the X in SPX also means it had a crystal filter, which was optional although I've never seen a Super-Pro without one. BTW, I wonder if anyone out there has had experience with the Hallicrafters version of the SP-600? I am curious how its performance compares with the original. -- --- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles, CA, USA |
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