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How old are you?
On Wed, 01 Feb 2006 04:42:35 GMT, " Ron in Radio Heaven"
wrote: Harold, you're repeating yourself.... Ron Shhhh. It goes with the age. |
How old are you?
Just turned 60. Still can't believe it. Got my ticket in 1959 or 1960. My first rig was an S38 receiver and the transmitter was a home brew 6AG7 and 807 built from scrounged TV parts. When I got my general I cathode modulated it with the power amp of an old Broadcast radio. Next was an ARC5 on 40 meters. I got a Knight T50 somewhere in that time period too. I put the ARC5 on DSB and got hooked on side band. Then I built a phasing type SSB exciter and various amps. Still in high school and no money. The S38 I had didn't come with an RF gain control so trying to copy CW on it was next to impossible as it would overload. Added a pot in the IF cathode for IF gain. Made a new receiver out of it. Later added an old beacon receiver tuned to the IF for a Q5R. Then added an ARC5 vfo to use as the master oscillator. Then I had a very stable and selective SSB receiver. I called it my "S line receiver". As a kid that's all I could afford. My first commercial side band transmitter was a Central electronics 10B then a 20A. I built a converter for a BC453 and had a better SSB receiver then. I still have a 20A that I put on once in awhile but it is not the original one. I have owned several over the years and have traded them for something. I still have the BC453 and have revised the converter several times. The rig now has avc and product detector. I drag it out every few years and make a few improvements on it then put it back on the shelf. I didn't get my first "real" Collins S line until around 1976. I think I still have that too. I do have modern gear but still collect and like the old stuff. 73 Gary K4FMX |
How old are you?
Phil Witt wrote:
On Wed, 01 Feb 2006 04:42:35 GMT, " Ron in Radio Heaven" wrote: Harold, you're repeating yourself.... Ron Shhhh. It goes with the age. Could you repeat that? I can't remember if I didn't hear it or forgot it. -Bill |
How old are you?
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How old are you?
wrote in message oups.com... Just a question that has been rattling around in the gourd. What age group are B/A enthusiast-type folks here on the Net? I know we have the folks from when they (the B/A's) were the most active (and I'm talking SX11 here), but I wonder if there's a large following of Boomers that picked up on it too. I only say this because I don't see as many 30's-40's-50's people at the Hamfests and other gatherings as I see my elders (Gentlemen, all). So the question bubbles up outta the tar? How old are the folks on rec.radio.amateur.boatanchor? rgds, Mark S. will be 66 next month - continuously licensed since 1957 as KN0MBK. Orv W6LMP |
Possible BA Collector Winner (Was How old are you?)
Age has nuttin to do wid it
It's haw many boatanchors ya got Take a look at this -- the possible winner - URL: http://members.cox.net/wa6mhz/ Not Me but I do have my first radios - Hallicrafters S-40A and S-38 Ham since 1977 I'm 75 as well as I can remember -- CL -- I doubt, therefore I might be ! wrote in message oups.com... Just a question that has been rattling around in the gourd. What age group are B/A enthusiast-type folks here on the Net? I know we have the folks from when they (the B/A's) were the most active (and I'm talking SX11 here), but I wonder if there's a large following of Boomers that picked up on it too. I only say this because I don't see as many 30's-40's-50's people at the Hamfests and other gatherings as I see my elders (Gentlemen, all). So the question bubbles up outta the tar? How old are the folks on rec.radio.amateur.boatanchor? rgds, Mark S. |
How old are you?
Litzendraht wrote:
Fred, I was a General at 11, a couple of weeks before my 12th birthday. John 75 Learning to fix radios at 11. Carrer in electronics. Ham ticket 1959. John K3OPC |
How old are you?
) writes:
Just a question that has been rattling around in the gourd. What age Almost 65. Been listening to "short wave" since the early 50's (my Dad was licensed in 1933) but I didn't get my ticket till 1983. Advanced in '84. Have always liked BA stuff (all I could afford in the early years) expecially ex-military. Still have some of it but don't get on the air much. Have to do something about that. .... Martin VE3OAT |
How old are you?
wrote in message oups.com... Just a question that has been rattling around in the gourd. What age group are B/A enthusiast-type folks here on the Net? Occasional browser here at B/A. Was 11 when W.W.II ended. Got interested in 'electricity' at 12, while living in an all-gas house in NW United Kingdom. My Elmer was an uncle who gave me war surplus stuff, some of which I still have. Built first radio at age 13, completed after dropping a glass 6K7 that cost me several weeks pocket money! :-( Then got interested in war surplus 'Command Rxs', admiring, as I still do, their practical and neat construction. Learnt a lot, then spent 40 years in telecommunications industry in Uk and Canada. Retired from that in 1992 and spent 12 years in the catering business. Finally retired in 2004 again tinkering with electronics. Took 'transistor' course at local college of technology in 2005 scoring 80%+, so grey cells in this gourd still active; I think! Age 72 in a few week. Warm regards to all who post. Terry |
How old are you?
59. Novice in 1959 (12), general 1960 (13), FCC first with CW endorsement 1961.
Grew up in NJ, with monthly trips down to NYC's "Radio Row" on Cortlandt Street, and the many surplus electronics stores along US 1 in northern NJ. Hauled many a BC-348 and BC-454 home on the train, to my Dad's dismay. (Although he did even help me put up a 50-foot telescoping steel mast in our back yard. 8;) ) Worked through high schools repairing tv's in a local shop, and operating mostly from the local high school station (WA2GVV, with a DX-160 and HQ-170A), YMCA (K2YNT), and local Civil Defense office. Drafted out of college in 1966, so went down and emlisted as an MOS 05 radio operator, but wound up in OCS instead of Ft. Monmouth. Gave up operating around 1992, when I figured new call sign policies, incentive licensing and USEnet had killed ham radio, but still keep my cw skills up by listening on a 2C and an R-8500. -- Larry (ex WA2QCM) |
How old are you?
pltrgyst wrote:
general 1960 (13), FCC first with CW endorsement 1961. Larry, that's quite an accomplishment. Exams in those days were taken in person at an FCC field office. No answers were published. You were strickly on your own. And the First Class ticket was really something to be proud of. John |
I'm 53 in 3 weeks. Is there a pattern here??
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How old are you?
On 4 Feb 2006 18:57:22 -0800, "Litzendraht" wrote:
pltrgyst wrote: general 1960 (13), FCC first with CW endorsement 1961. Larry, that's quite an accomplishment. Exams in those days were taken in person at an FCC field office. No answers were published. You were strickly on your own. And the First Class ticket was really something to be proud of. Thanks, but it didn't seem like a big deal. Several of my friends did the same thing -- we had the two very active local clubs I mentioned, and the FCC testing office in NYC was only 45 minutes away by train on our frequent shopping expeditions. The first did come in handy years later when I was working for RCA and they had their big strike, and hundreds of us non-radio/tv station employees filled in. 8;) Other than that, I never used it for employment. I don't miss the redundancy of short QSOs, but I did love cw. -- Larry |
How old are you?
pltrgyst wrote: On 4 Feb 2006 18:57:22 -0800, "Litzendraht" wrote: pltrgyst wrote: general 1960 (13), FCC first with CW endorsement 1961. Larry, that's quite an accomplishment. Exams in those days were taken in person at an FCC field office. No answers were published. You were strickly on your own. And the First Class ticket was really something to be proud of. Thanks, but it didn't seem like a big deal. Several of my friends did the same thing -- we had the two very active local clubs I mentioned, and the FCC testing office in NYC was only 45 minutes away by train on our frequent shopping expeditions. Other than that, I never used it for employment. I really wasn't referring to the 1st class ticket as an aid to employment (although it was a viaible credit in those days). I'm just saying that you should have been as proud as a peacock when you left the FCC office. And I'm sure you were! I can't even relate my elation at passing the General in 1956 when I was still 11. And the examiner even complimented me on my code ability. "Son, where did you learn the code?." "Well, I've been a Novice almost a year now and I've had plenty of practice." John |
How old are you?
Grew up in NJ, with monthly trips down to NYC's "Radio Row" on Cortlandt Street
Ah, the memories! I grew up in Florida and went to college in the midwest, but worked one summer for the Holmdel Bell Labs in New Jersey, and I still remember my one trip to NYC's Radio Row! (FWIW, I turned 65 last week.) -- --Myron A. Calhoun. Five boxes preserve our freedoms: soap, ballot, witness, jury, and cartridge PhD EE (retired). "Barbershop" tenor. CDL(PTXS). W0PBV. (785) 539-4448 NRA Life Member and Certified Instructor (Home Firearm Safety, Rifle, Pistol) |
How old are you?
I am 59, but I was 39 when I got my first BA , an R-390A . And an SWL
from about age 9. Come to think of it, I did pick up an R1155 at age 19 which served me for many years. Now, with 30-40 BA's, I think there are a couple of parameters that tends to bracket the age group (with notable exceptions): You gotta have some spare money (kids moved out?) , you gotta have some room (do.) , but also you gotta be able to do the heavy lifting. Maybe there is also the YL/XYL factor, when did we last hear about someone scoring on the strength of their BA-collection? "Won't you come up and see my boatanchors?" Best, Clemens S.Ostergaard Aarhus Denmark |
How old are you?
Interest may have been started at the age of 3 when I bit into an extension cord. Life altering event. Long story for another day about how I got into ham radio, getting my ticket in 67. was an SWL for about 4 years and when I began to experiment with AC convinced a local kid to hold different combinations of power cords until I could see how he got "shocked" so I would not repeat his actions. When he did get a shock he jumped so fast I was unable to note how he was holding the wires. Spent next 4 hours in my room alone per my mother Woke my parents up at 6 AM one Sunday morning in 65 to tell them of my invention of AM stereo. Dreams of fame, $$$$, appearance on "What's My Line" and my picture on cover of PE, Boys Life and Look magazine filled my head. Later learned that stereo and 2 speakers in parallel are different concepts. 53 here too and still dreaming of fame, $$$$, appearance on "What's My Line" and my picture on cover of PE, Boys Life and Look magazine . -- Carl WA1KPD Visit My Boatanchor Collection at http://home.comcast.net/~chnord/wa1kpd.html "clemenso" wrote in message oups.com... I am 59, but I was 39 when I got my first BA , an R-390A . And an SWL from about age 9. Come to think of it, I did pick up an R1155 at age 19 which served me for many years. Now, with 30-40 BA's, I think there are a couple of parameters that tends to bracket the age group (with notable exceptions): You gotta have some spare money (kids moved out?) , you gotta have some room (do.) , but also you gotta be able to do the heavy lifting. Maybe there is also the YL/XYL factor, when did we last hear about someone scoring on the strength of their BA-collection? "Won't you come up and see my boatanchors?" Best, Clemens S.Ostergaard Aarhus Denmark |
How old are you?
I'm 56, and got my Novice in '64, General in '65, Advanced in '69, and
Extra in'78 (or somewhere around there). I was interested in electronics since I was about 10, maybe before that. Like others have said, I used to pick up old TV's and radios that were being thrown out, either to strip out the parts or to fix up and use. I don't have a whole lot of boatanchors, but I do have the Heath SB-301/401 line that I use for my main operating equipment, and I also have a DX-40, HG-10 VFO, and an NC-300 that I recently fixed up and aligned. Also a Swan 250 that I use on six meters once in a while. When I get tired of a piece of equipment, I buy a better one to replace it, then usually sell the old one since I have a limited amount of space in the shack. Al, WA2AS |
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