Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#21
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 5 Feb 2004 04:15:29 UTC, - - Bill - -
wrote: Brian Hill wrote: "N2EY" wrote in message Not a typo - five thousand one hundred dollars. WOW! is all I can say Did he build it or does he just have a $5000 box of old parts sitting in the shack for looks? -BM Nah, certainly someone who paid that much understands the "investment value". Do a websearch for "catalin radio" for shocking valuations. Also see those "Antique Roadshows", where hideous junque goes for ten times that and more. I caught one last weekend, they had an "1800's American Indian carrying pack for babies". It was made of a couple horse blankets and had yarn woven into a diamond pattern, $50,000 or more. It looked like a couple old horse blankets that someone had trimmed with coarse yarn. Ugly. There was also a painting of an old house. Looked amateurish but supposedly done by a "famous artist". Gag me with a J-38. I turned it off. It was too much to take. That AT-1 is *cheap* at $5,100. 1) It is a early relic of a technological age that will never, ever come again. The homebuilt tube radio era when kids saved their milk-money to buy magical communications devices. 2) It is a Heathkit. The Heath line was an anomaly in the ham world. A few genius engineers put technological marvels in "everyman's" hands. I remember the awe of putting my DX-60 together in 1963 as a 16 year old. 3) It is an "unbuilt" kit. As others have said, there are lots of built kits available but the "unbuilts" are the rarest of the rare. I started restoring boatanchors a couple years ago when a hand surgery went bad. Scared my doc, he could see the liability suit. I have no (ZERO) interest in sueing someone for drawing bad cards, luck of the draw. He told me to work my fingers as I had never worked them before to regain manual dexterity (this is after we were sure I wasn't going to lose the hand.) Turns out that refurbing boatanchors is fun, almost as much fun as building the DX-60 or that incident with "Trixie-Lee" when I was 18. I've updated my boatanchor site, start at www.kiyoinc.com/heathstuff.html and follow the eZine/BLOG. |