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![]() "Frank" ) writes: Steve Reinhardt wrote in message news ![]() Frank wrote: Steve Reinhardt wrote in message ... I just repaired my TR-3, and put it on the air. I'd forgotten what a nice rig it is. Now, I've started to think about how much better it could be. What if one was to rip out the entire frequency control section (VFO, xtal osc, mixer, etc) and replace it with a DDS synthesizer. It turns out that the display would fit in the opening of the tuning dial. There would be excellent frequency stability, no backwards tuning on 20M, 2-3 less tubes to save heat and power. It just wouldn't be a Drake anymore... And don't get me started on a lightweight switching supply to replace the AC-3. I might do that anyway, since I wouldn't be destroying any hardware. ARC-5 Command Set receiver modification instructions for conversion to a single band SSB transceiver. Step 1. Remove all components except the variable capacitor... Been there, done that. Well, not SSB, but my first rig (1969) was an ARC-5 conversion. I actually got to keep quite a bit of the guts and still make a few QSOs. It was paired with a Hammarlund HQ-120X... Steve AB1EN They were fun... About twenty years ago I started a collection of ARC-5 stuff with the intentions of writing an ariticle for, perhaps, QST. I actually have a copy (in pristine condition) of a publication (first edition, first printing, April 1961) by Western Radio Amateur Magazine for conversion of a BC-453 to a complete 40 meter transceiver. It was a design by Ed Marriner, W6BLZ and Ernie Mason, W6IQY. Too bad not many Command Sets are left---few remain after all the conversions and parting out. I had a trailer full of the equipments that I eventually donated to a War Bird restoration outfit. Perhaps your TR-3 (my first real SSB rig) would be better off restored to like-new condition---there were considerably less TR-3's manufactured than Command Sets. But once again, equipment is meant to be used, not kept in a museum. People converted all that old surplus stuff because it was cheap, plentiful, and often didn't do what they wanted. Same reason people added things to their commercial rigs; the additions made them better to the owner. It's only years later that people are grumbling, because they want pristine equipment for the sake of collections. Of course, one irony is that some of the impact of the equipment today wouldn't mean anything if there hadn't been culling from routine use over the past decades. If I could still go into a local surplus store and buy a Command Set transmitter for $9.95, as I did about 1972, then there'd be plenty of them and little interest. It's only because of the culling that they have become valuable. Look at comic books. 35 years ago, I bought them to read. I didn't buy them to collect them, I didn't buy them for the art. And when I was finished with them, I got rid of them. They are valuable now because they were used back then, and so they are now relatively rare. And of course, some of those who want them so badly are the people who made the mistake of getting rid of them decades ago. I include myself, though I don't desire them enough to pay money for them. But in recent years, comic books have become more about "collecting". Buy them, try to figure out titles that will be valuable, and keep them "mint" in plastic bags from the start. If you want to read them, then buy two copies. That will ensure there will be a big supply decades from now, but it also means there will be no appeal to them. People could have decided decades ago to buy equipment for the future, ie buy them keep them in the box and never use them. That would be the best situation for the future collector. But then the equipment would have never been used for its intended use, and not only would there be an ample suply now, but if nobody had used the stuff back then, the appeal of reliving the past would be less. Michael VE2BVW |
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