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On Wed, 7 Sep 2005 01:32:44 UTC, Chuck Harris
wrote: kh wrote: Speaking of Gaithersburg, if you google for "R-9xx Collins", you'll get a page that discusses the fabled R-390A that had a factory built LED digital display in place of the Veeder-Root mechanical counter. About 30 years ago I saw one of these for sale at Gaithersburg. It wasn't a homebrew job, the vendor had the manual for it, I recall that he fanned it and showed folks the circuit diagrams. That's diagrams, plural. So you Collins types, a piece of trivia, the "R-9xx" is real. I was "this close" to it. I wonder where it is today. I bet that an R-9xx would make an SX-88 or KW-1 look cheap. One of the ways I make a living is designing prototype equipment for the US Army. I have in the past modified items that were in the usual military supply stream to add features that were desired by my customer. The unit you saw could very well be a modification that was done by some nameless vendor, like myself. Collins, or any of the other R390 manufacturers likely had nothing to do with it. Yes. Or not. Who knows? Did you check out the R-390 website? They speculate as to the existance of the R-9xx, a fabled variant of the R-390A that came with an LED digital readout. I'm verifying that such a beast exists. I . saw . it. There is an R-9xx, an R-390 variation with an LED display in place of the Veeder-Root counter. How did it come about? Who built it? Donno. I can say that it did *not* look home brew, nor did it appear to be an engineering prototype in the sense of a "proof of concept". It had a metal bezel that was well finished and the vendor had a thick technical manual for it. He fanned the pages and showed the schematic diagrams. I didn't say that Collins made it. I said that it is documented on a site dedicated to the R-390 and you can find it by searching for "Collins" and "R-390" or go to http://R-390A.NET Obviously there were not hundreds of these things made. It is also unlikely that there was only ONE, a one-off built in a lab. I'm *guessing* that there were several, perhaps as many as a few dozen built, probably for NSA, but that is *guessing*. If the customer was NSA, that would explain why few have "escaped" to the wild. I saw it at the Gaithersburg Hamfest in the mid-1970's. I only saw one so that is all I can testify to. There are other legendary receivers, some may be fables such as the Signal/One CR-1500 which was pictured in ads but has not been seen since. Others, such as the Central Electronics 100R receiver designed by Joe Batchelor, exist as production prototype models. This is documented in the ARRL book on boatanchors. de ah6gi/4 |