Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message ... Noon-Air wrote: They can probably still be found and prosecuted I tried to get them to do it, but they have given up. I was a mechanical engineer... we got to play with things that had moving parts :-) I tested out of three years at Ft. Monmoth New Jersey's electronics school and was awarded my MOS as a civilian acquired skill while I was in basic training at Ft. Knox, Kentucky. That was the main reason I didn't re-enlist. I caught a lot of flak from people who didn't like that I was only in the service a couple months before I was doing the same work they were, without going to the military school. They got really ****ed that I could take a quick look at defective equipment and fix it before they could dig out the manuals and their notebooks. I even repaired RADAR equipment for a couple weeks while they were short handed. The RADAR techs were highly ****ed when I told them that I had read the manuals for a WWII surplus aircraft RADAR system while I was in high school, and that it wasn't that different from a TV set. Anyone remember the 15E RF tube and the 15R rectifier? Electronics has always been easy to me. Someday I will have to write a book about all of the things we did....and even some of the stuff we *didn't* get caught doing. LOL The engineers at Ft Greely insisted that we didn't need any air conditioning at the TV station, then claimed that we didn't have enough power for the 208/240 single phase through the wall AC we had bought out of our budget. It was six feet from a 100 amp three phase breaker box that was used to power the control room and transmitters. I popped off the cover to find that some genius had only used one phase, leaving me 100 amps at 208 VAC available to run a 30 amp unit. They still refused to hook it up, so I called one of the enlisted men who worked in that section. He rummaged around a few abandoned buildings and brought me what I needed to hook it up myself. We cooled the TV studio by opening the back door in the winter time. the -40 degree air did a nice job cooling the set, till a bear tried to get in one night. ![]() Enlisted men are extremely sly and cunning, and bear considerable watching. -Army Officers Manual 1836 I worked in the "Weathervision" section at Ft Rucker Alabama, which included CATV, Educational TV, CARS Microwave and other assorted equipment. Our mission was to provide weather data to the control towers, flight ready rooms and classrooms where they taught the helicopter pilots to fly. We also maintained the entertainment CATV systems on the base, in parts of the on base housing areas. Some idiot cut the cable feeding our day room and pulled it to his room in the barracks. I reported it to the civilian contractor, but three days later it was still out, so I borrowed one of our bucket trucks from my section and repaired it at lunch time. I was just finishing up when the guy showed up. He was rather upset, till he found out that i had not only repaired it, but I moved the drop to where the moron couldn't reach it where it ran from the pole to the roof of the three story brick building. Then he told me that he was the only tech that serviced the base, and that I could put a drop into my one man room on the second floor, as long as I hid it for inspections. He offered me the supplies, but I had enough used stuff in the truck to do the job. The following Monday afternoon I got back from my duty section to find that the wire had been pulled loose from the hook outside my window, and run into the CQ room of the other company. I told them that it was MY drop that they had stolen. I received an obscene gesture and a threat, so i smiled and left. A couple hours later when they turned their TV on, I got a really good grip on the wire from my second floor window and pulled, really hard. I heard a loud crash, and a lot of cursing. Then they were pounding on my door, demanding that I give it back, and pay to replace their TV. It never happened, and I had cable TV till the day I left for Alaska. ;-) When I was stationed on west coast WHECs, I tapped into the ships cable system so I had cable at my rack, and had a little 4 inch TV and little stereo tucked up in a trap door I cut in the the false overhead over my rack... it worked great :-) On the same ship, we had 12 engineers that were licensed HAMs and the CO cot a bit miffed when he found out that the engineers could copy CW better than his radiomen could... it was pretty funny. LOL The sig file is there to be in the face of a moron who has been stalking me on line for some time, and a couple idiots who don't think much of the US military, and veterans in general. I bet he never served.... probably a draft dodger that ran to Canade from the Peoples Repubic of Berkeley. He's a mental welfare case. Neither our military, or Canada would have him. Maybe they should use him for target practice?? When I got my draft notice, I was on USCGC Glacier in the Bearing Sea. BTW, the quarterly memorial for Veterans who have died in marion County Florida in the past quarter is this morning, but I'm not well enough to attend. Hopefully next time you will be able to attend. In any case, I salute you. Thank you, and you as well. My mission to help local disabled Veterans is to repair and give away used computers to those who want, but can't afford a computer a used system that will let them do email and browse the web. The VA recently upgraded the computers that handle prescriptions, and those of us under the VA's care can refill their prescriptions online. http://www.myhealthevet.va.gov/ -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Need info from old Mini-Circuits (MCL) Catalog | Homebrew | |||
FS Collins Amateur Radio Equipment Catalog #33 1967 | Boatanchors | |||
Rare Books on Electronics and Radio and Commmunications | Equipment | |||
Rare Books on Electronics and Radio and Commmunications | Equipment | |||
Rare Books on Radio and Electronics | Shortwave |