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#1
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#2
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Man I hate spammers. One freaking post is enough.
Cheap? We did a RDF shootout a few years ago. Ray Jeff is the worse. Hold out for a Bendix. The Ray Jeff is worth $20 tops, and the bidding is at $27. Hardly cheap. cooltube wrote: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...e=STRK:MESE:IT |
#3
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... Man I hate spammers. One freaking post is enough. Cheap? We did a RDF shootout a few years ago. Ray Jeff is the worse. Hold out for a Bendix. The Ray Jeff is worth $20 tops, and the bidding is at $27. Hardly cheap. cooltube wrote: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...e=STRK:MESE:IT It says its handy for being lost at sea. Hmmm. A compass would also be good ;o) at least the batteries wouldn't go flat. Nice collectors antique though... Regards, Graham -- _._. _... ._. ._ _.. .. _ _ _ Radio is only a Hobby. Don't let it rule your life... 73's - Graham (www.open-channel.co.uk) |
#4
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Hello Magnum:
The RDF (Radio Direction Finding radio) was a blessed tool in the days before GPS in small boats. My Dad use to chase after the Albacore Tuna, in the 60's and 70's in a small 22 foot boat. Many times where several miles off the coast. And many times I would see him take bearings off his Bendix RDF to check his position, and figure fuel quantity vs range stuff. Yeah we had a compass all right but the RDF was used the most. One could take a bearing off the noise that a city like San diego or Los Angles would generate. The neat thing about taking a RDF bearing during the night is that many times we where close enough to shore to see the light reflecting off the atmosphere, or the light bending over the horizon, verifying the RFD bearing was a good. I have the old Bendix RDF today, that I use to RDF noise down from our local power company noise generating power grid system. I use to have the kid drive around in the truck and me setting on the tail gate taking RDF cuts. Usually took a few circles around the neighborhood to find the offending power pole. Jay in the Mojave The Magnum wrote: It says its handy for being lost at sea. Hmmm. A compass would also be good ;o) at least the batteries wouldn't go flat. Nice collectors antique though... Regards, Graham |
#5
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![]() "Jay in the Mojave" wrote in message ... Hello Magnum: The RDF (Radio Direction Finding radio) was a blessed tool in the days before GPS in small boats. My Dad use to chase after the Albacore Tuna, in the 60's and 70's in a small 22 foot boat. Many times where several miles off the coast. And many times I would see him take bearings off his Bendix RDF to check his position, and figure fuel quantity vs range stuff. Yeah we had a compass all right but the RDF was used the most. One could take a bearing off the noise that a city like San diego or Los Angles would generate. The neat thing about taking a RDF bearing during the night is that many times we where close enough to shore to see the light reflecting off the atmosphere, or the light bending over the horizon, verifying the RFD bearing was a good. I have the old Bendix RDF today, that I use to RDF noise down from our local power company noise generating power grid system. I use to have the kid drive around in the truck and me setting on the tail gate taking RDF cuts. Usually took a few circles around the neighborhood to find the offending power pole. Jay in the Mojave The Magnum wrote: It says its handy for being lost at sea. Hmmm. A compass would also be good ;o) at least the batteries wouldn't go flat. Nice collectors antique though... Regards, Graham Sounds like an interesting device. I can see its usefulness, as far as positioning offensive breakers I hadn't considered that but now you mention it I can. We used to play a game with the larger CB club in our area in the really early 80's called "Fritz von nastys" where a member of the opposing club would kidnap someone and then transmit for 1 min every 10 mins for us to try to track them down. We used positioning of vehicles and poundage checks with maps and two of us actually had DF loops and it was a hell of a lot of fun. I could see that device being useful for that too. Shame that it has disappeared because it bought people closer together in a friendly working atmosphere. Breakers these days just don't get involved with things like that anymore. Well that's how it is in England anyhows. Cheers Jay, Graham -- _._. _... ._. ._ _.. .. _ _ _ Radio is only a Hobby. Don't let it rule your life... 73's - Graham (www.open-channel.co.uk) |
#6
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![]() "The Magnum" wrote in message ... The Magnum wrote: Sounds like an interesting device. I can see its usefulness, as far as positioning offensive breakers I hadn't considered that but now you mention it I can. We used to play a game with the larger CB club in our area in the really early 80's called "Fritz von nastys" where a member of the opposing club would kidnap someone and then transmit for 1 min every 10 mins for us to try to track them down. We used positioning of vehicles and poundage checks with maps and two of us actually had DF loops and it was a hell of a lot of fun. I could see that device being useful for that too. Shame that it has disappeared because it bought people closer together in a friendly working atmosphere. Breakers these days just don't get involved with things like that anymore. Well that's how it is in England anyhows. Cheers Jay, Graham -- _._. _... ._. ._ _.. .. _ _ _ Radio is only a Hobby. Don't let it rule your life... 73's - Graham (www.open-channel.co.uk) We had a similar game we called CB tag.One person gets 5 mins to hide in town and the rest of us tried to locate him. I carried a 2 watt walkie talkie when I thought they were getting close.LOL |
#7
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I see those Ray Jeffs at the flea market quite often. Twenty bucks is
tops. They are not very good for DFing. There was one novelty Ray Jeff that had a tracking motor in it, not that it worked well either. The problem is the null in a Ray Jeff is really ****ty. The Magnum wrote: wrote in message ups.com... Man I hate spammers. One freaking post is enough. Cheap? We did a RDF shootout a few years ago. Ray Jeff is the worse. Hold out for a Bendix. The Ray Jeff is worth $20 tops, and the bidding is at $27. Hardly cheap. cooltube wrote: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...e=STRK:MESE:IT It says its handy for being lost at sea. Hmmm. A compass would also be good ;o) at least the batteries wouldn't go flat. Nice collectors antique though... Regards, Graham -- _._. _... ._. ._ _.. .. _ _ _ Radio is only a Hobby. Don't let it rule your life... 73's - Graham (www.open-channel.co.uk) |
#8
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From: (The*Magnum)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...e=STRK:MESE:IT It says its handy for being lost at sea. Hmmm. A compass would also be good ;o) at least the batteries wouldn't go flat. Nice collectors antique though... Regards, Graham I hear ya' on the compass. Besides, ANYONE who takes a boat to sea should be able to navigate by the stars, including recently licensed Captains. -- _._.**_...***._.**._**_..*..*_*_*_ Radio is only a Hobby. Don't let it rule your life... 73's - Graham (www.open-channel.co.uk) |
#9
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Auctions should be listed in [alt.marketplace.online.ebay]...NOT here!
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