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On Feb 26, 6:11�pm, wrote:
wrote: ... * *Oh, my, JS, you've been listening to CB traffic on I-5 again, * *ain'tcha? *:-) * *Got two old, ancient CBs but no "leen-yar," the old mobile * *whips (two) are in the garage. *Got no farther in "truckin" * *since 1954 and a military vehicle "license" to drive a 3/4-ton * *and 2 1/2-ton truck. *:-) * *But, there's truckin' and then there's "truckin." *When the * *Johnson Viking was in my '53 Austin-Healey sports car, * *THAT was "truckin." *Once in a while I turned the radio on, * *too... *:-) * *Catch ya on the flipflop, * *Threes, LA Len: Mercy sakes alive, get the Austin-Healey back and fired up with the Johnson Viking and a 8 ft. whip, I'll stick a an old Gonset 11m tube rig on my Harley with a 4 ft. helical wound fiberglass antenna and it looks like we'll have ourselves a convoy! Don't worry about the leen-yar, if I drive on yer bumper there'll be no problem ... but do have a couple of 300 watt motorola 2-30mhz xistor amps here ... I don't think the alternator on the harley will run the amp though, I'll probably have to ride yer bumper. *evil grin No joy, JS. The Austin-Healey got traded in on the unwise demands of a lady who got very attached to me back in '61. It DID work surprisingly well with a base-loaded shorty whip. The A-H had an all-aluminum body with great conductivity in body panel seams. Mobile-wise, a 20-mile shoot was clear and distinct with the puny 3 W of AMed RF, even with some QRM. The single-conversion receiver (direct to 455 KHz, not good) didn't like close-in signals like on the 101 and would cross-modulate anyone within 10 car lengths on the freeway. Threes, LA |