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Old March 23rd 06, 07:20 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
COLIN LAMB
 
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Default WANTED: Museum seeks B-17G Flying Fortress radio/radar equipment

I must say that when I ship a piece of WWII gear, I feel guilty packing it.
It was designed to be shot at, go through intense cold and heat and keep
working, and then I ship it off and pack it like it was a treasure. I
really should tape an address label on it and drop it in the box. I doubt
that the post office can do what the Germans and Japanese could not do - but
I still pack the stuff with care.

But, this saving for history is a mixed bag. I have had a WERS 112 Mhz
transceiver sitting on my shelf for years. It is useless. I am tempted to
convert it into a working transceiver with really cute dials (and no cut
holes) - but I cannot do it. So, it will sit on my shelf until I die, then
be thrown out along with my 20 ARC-5s.

Colin K7FM


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Old March 23rd 06, 09:16 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
Chris Suslowicz
 
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Default WANTED: Museum seeks B-17G Flying Fortress radio/radar equipment

In article . net,
"COLIN LAMB" wrote:

I must say that when I ship a piece of WWII gear, I feel guilty packing it.
It was designed to be shot at, go through intense cold and heat and keep
working, and then I ship it off and pack it like it was a treasure. I
really should tape an address label on it and drop it in the box. I doubt
that the post office can do what the Germans and Japanese could not do


I have no doubt whatsoever. I also have a WW2 manual that includes a
section on packaging of equipment for transportation, and they don't doubt
it either:

"...It should be remembered that goods in transit receive very rough
handling, a free drop onto concrete from a height of 4' 6" is not
improbable, and packaging should as far as possible be made to meet
these conditions".

- but I still pack the stuff with care.


As you must.

Chris.
--
If being dropped out of an aircraft into ... a minefield is "moderately
rough handling", what would constitute "rough handling"?

Being shipped UPS.
-- David Richerby and Dave Brown



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Old March 24th 06, 04:00 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
Edward Zeranski
 
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Default WANTED: Museum seeks B-17G Flying Fortress radio/radar equipment



"...It should be remembered that goods in transit receive very rough
handling, a free drop onto concrete from a height of 4' 6" is not
improbable, and packaging should as far as possible be made to meet
these conditions".


UPS= Universal Package Smashers. I've had the best luck using the
postal service for BoatAnchor shipping, second was Fedex. For the really
big stuff Donzelli Transport works great.

EdZ

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