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On Mar 18, 9:24*pm, Robert casey wrote:
The design used plug-in coils for the osc and rf stages, and *they were double conversion designs, with a first IF of *1600 kc and a second IF of either 100 kc or 85 kc (when *using surplus ARC-5 IFTs.) *The 1800 mc xtal you bought *your dad was used for the second coversion osc. to convert *the 1600 kc IF down to 100 kc. *Many hams deviated from *the exact original IF frequencies (i.e. strong local BC *station on 1600 kc) which might explain why the xtal was chosen for 1800 kc instead of 1500 or 1700. We have a local mid power station at 1600KHz, WWRL, at my parents' house, so my father might have wanted to avoid problems with it. His radio had a bandswitch instead of plug in coils, and he'd receive various broadcast SW stations. *He wasn't a ham at the time just yet. * I had a friend who was a retired engineer with GE turned TV tech who built one with a band switch and he later modified it to be more of a general purpose SW receiver. His name was Olin Griggs. Jimmie. |
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