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On Mar 6, 12:56Â am, Dave Heil wrote:
wrote: On Mar 5, 3:09�pm, Dave Heil wrote: wrote: On Mar 3, 8:23pm, Dave Heil wrote: A few years ago, a small company began manufacturing a reduction knob for the 75A-4, machined out of solid brass. Functional and attractive. I noted them when I saw the ads in Electric Radio.  The price was very dear. $125 IIRC. How did it provide PBT? I'm going to have to dig out the paperwork on the Universal Service unit (which I got copies of just a year or two back) and let you know. Will be good to know. The CW filter I have is the 800 Hz unit.  One of these days I may replace it with an Inrad unit.  I'll have to juggle things a bit to match the modern Collins mechanical filter to the radio. I think the same company that made the reduction knob made exact plug- in filters. Dunno if they made a CW one. At the University ham shack we had two 75S-3s. One had the 200 Hz filter, aka "the ringmaster". But boy could they hear! IIRC the 1-A predated the S-line and KWM-2. I think you'll find that all of them hit the market in '57. The KWM-2 came after the original S-line (75S-1/32S-1) Check your old QSTs, you'll see the 1-A advertised well before the KWM-2. It was a revolutionary design; small, light and compact at a time when even inexpensive receivers were big and heavy. Note the tiny, taller-than-it-is-wide front panel and the very deep chassis. Unfortunately it was built as an SSB-only receiver.  There were no provisions for a narrow filter for CW or a wider one for AM.  In fact, the BFO could not be turned off at all.  I sold a number of rig s after coming back stateside and the Drake 1-A was one of them. 1-A was Drake's entry into the ham receiver market; previously they had only made things like lowpass filters. Their idea was to cut the cost of SSB to the bone by making a receiver specific to the mode and leaving out anything not needed for SSB. Hence no diode detector, no BFO-off, no narrow filter, etc. But it had PBT, which also gave sideband selection, an S-meter and AGC that worked on SSB, and was very stable. That mode-specific thing inspired many of the Southgate receivers. The 2-A and 2-B are excellent receivers for their price and complexity, and are prized today. But they were a dead end in one way: there was no matching transmitter that could transceive with them. In the time when they were introduced, many folks were still using separates.  I've kept my 2-B because it really is a classic and performs well today.  The matching 2-BQ adds a lot to the receiver. About 15 years ago I walked away from a hamfest table that had a 2-B/2-BQ combo for $75. "To think about it". Oh fer dumb..... What the KWM-2 and S-line did was to make "transceiving" popular. Well, they made it popular for those with lots of money. Not just those folks. The idea got wide publicity and led to lots more rigs at a lot lower prices. If I recall correctly, there were identical-looking models with two different power output levels. Cosmophone 35 and Cosmophone 1000. Indeed, a homebrew 40 meter *CW* transceiver built around a surplus BC-453 was described in a 1954 QST, probably the first published use of the idea in amateur radio. It even had full QSK. But it was ahead of its time. You've aroused my curiosity.  I'll have to dig through the back issues and check it out.  There's a '453 lying about here somewhere. IIRC the author's last name was Deane. I do not know of any earlier HF amateur transceiver being described in QST or any other publication. The KWM-2 and S-line took transceiving to another level. Not only were they smaller and lighter than their predecessors, they had relatively few controls. They made SSB more popular with hams by reducing the cost and size and eliminating the job of zerobeating the transmitter. Tune an SSB station correctly and the transmitter was automatically on the right frequency. I have to disagree with the reduction of cost.  When the KWM-2 was introduced, my dad made a little less than $6,000 per year gross pay as a Miami Herald reporter.  That transceiver would have cost about a quarter of a year's pay. And $6000/yr gross income was solid middle class. A family of four could live very well on $6K, 50 years ago. What I meant was that a KWM-2 and power supply/speaker cost less than top-of-the-line separates like a 75A-4 and HT-32B. Or compare the price of an S-line and a KWM-2. To get an idea of the influence of the KWM-2, google "LWM-3"...  Fast forward a bit.  When I bought a Ten-Tec Omni VI, the new cost was a small fraction of a year's pay and that rig offered features only dreamed about at the time of the introduction of the Collins rig.  The KWM-2 was smaller and lighter but an HT- 32B and an HQ-170 would have been cheaper by hundreds of dollars. Agreed. But the KWM-2 put the idea of the one-box station out there in a big way. A lot of less-expensive transceivers with minimal controls followed. People saw the success of the KWM-2 and designed less-expensive alternatives based on the idea. Add to this the grounded-grid linear amplifier and things really changed. High power 'phone became not only less expensive but a lot smaller and lighter. Transceivers and matched-pair separates became the new paradigm in HF ham gear; AM wasn't part of that. There are a couple of "duh" factors buried in there for us to mull over. It would have been possible for radio amateurs to have built and used grounded-grid linear amps for use with AM rigs much earlier.  A rig such as the Johnson Ranger would have driven one to a KW AM input with ease. Some hams did that but the big problem was the low efficiency of AM linear without the use of special circuits like the Doherty, which isn't the fastest QSY circuit. With AM linear you only get 30-35% carrier efficiency. Which means 300-350 watts carrier at the old 1 kW legal limit. Plus your final tubes have to be able to dissipate 650-700 watts! The same results could be had from a 450-watt class plate-modulated AM rig - say, a pair of 812As modulated by a pair of 811As. AM also required power supplies that could stand the 100% duty cycle of the mode. The low duty cycle of early unprocessed SSB rigs meant a lot of liberty could be taken in PSU design. The end result was rigs like the NCX-3 and the SB-100, which cost as much as a good receiver but were complete 100-watt SSB stations that you could indeed set up on a card table. When Heath introduced the SB-200 in 1954, it cost $200. Legal limit on CW, 1200 watts PEP on SSB (input). That was a lot cheaper than the equivalent AM, and would fit on the card table. IOW, high power AM cost a lot of dough and a lot of space/weight. The SSB transceiver/GG linear paradigm drastically reduced those requirements. Fun fact: AFAIK only two 1 kW-input-legal-limit plate-modulated AM rigs were ever made for the amateur market: the Collins KW-1 and the Johnson Desk Kilowatt. Total production was very limited - maybe 2000 units combined. I can't begin to recall the number of models of legal-limit GG amplifiers made. EFJ Thunderbolt, SB-220, Heath KL-1... More to come... 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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