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Old January 4th 04, 01:56 AM
N2EY
 
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In article k.net,
"Dan/W4NTI" w4nti@get rid of this mindspring.com writes:

W1AW is a bulletin station. Been there, on or
about for 90 years.


Actually about 66 years (1938). In all that time there have been only three
main rigs - the original rackpanel jobs, the 1960s ones installed about the
time the "new" Hq building went up, and the Harris setup from the mid-90s
renovations. Something like 25-30 years of service per setup.

Trivia Quiz:

There was an ARRL HQ station before W1AW. What was its callsign?

There's a second callsign for the ARRL lab. What is/was it?

73 de Jim, N2EY
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Old January 4th 04, 02:49 AM
Dave Heil
 
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N2EY wrote:

Trivia Quiz:

There was an ARRL HQ station before W1AW. What was its callsign?


W1MK, I think located near Brainard Field, Hartford.

There's a second callsign for the ARRL lab. What is/was it?


Memory fails...

Dave K8MN
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Old January 4th 04, 09:57 PM
N2EY
 
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In article , Dave Heil
writes:

N2EY wrote:

Trivia Quiz:

There was an ARRL HQ station before W1AW. What was its callsign?


W1MK, I think located near Brainard Field, Hartford.


You are correct, sir! Heavily damaged in the flood of '36, as I recall.

There's a second callsign for the ARRL lab. What is/was it?


Memory fails...

W1INF

73 de Jim, N2EY

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Old January 4th 04, 04:51 AM
KØHB
 
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"N2EY" wrote

There was an ARRL HQ station before W1AW. What was its callsign?


----- W1MK


There's a second callsign for the ARRL lab. What is/was it?


----- W1INF


More trivia: There is an IARU HQ call sign. What is it? While it may
have a certain familiarity about it, especially the suffix, what is the
significance of the prefix?

73, de Hans, K0HB




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Old January 4th 04, 05:45 AM
Carl R. Stevenson
 
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"KØHB" wrote in message
hlink.net...

"N2EY" wrote

There was an ARRL HQ station before W1AW. What was its callsign?


----- W1MK


There's a second callsign for the ARRL lab. What is/was it?


----- W1INF


More trivia: There is an IARU HQ call sign. What is it? While it may
have a certain familiarity about it, especially the suffix, what is the
significance of the prefix?

73, de Hans, K0HB


4U1ITU is the station of the International Amateur Radio Club at ITU
HQ in Geneva ... I've operated the station. The significance of the
prefix is that 4U's are UN callsigns.

73,
Carl - wk3c



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Old January 4th 04, 06:06 AM
KØHB
 
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"Carl R. Stevenson" wrote

4U1ITU is the station of the International Amateur Radio Club at ITU
HQ in Geneva ... I've operated the station. The significance of the
prefix is that 4U's are UN callsigns.


I'm not speaking of the ITU but the IARU (not the same thing at all). The
IARU HQ station is not associated with the UN (nor the ITU) so does not have
a "4U" prefix.

73, de Hans, K0HB





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Old January 4th 04, 03:11 PM
Carl R. Stevenson
 
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"KØHB" wrote in message
news

"Carl R. Stevenson" wrote

4U1ITU is the station of the International Amateur Radio Club at ITU
HQ in Geneva ... I've operated the station. The significance of the
prefix is that 4U's are UN callsigns.


I'm not speaking of the ITU but the IARU (not the same thing at all). The
IARU HQ station is not associated with the UN (nor the ITU) so does not

have
a "4U" prefix.

73, de Hans, K0HB


Sorry Hans. I misread your query.

73,
Carl - wk3c

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Old January 4th 04, 12:29 PM
N2EY
 
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In article k.net, "KØHB"
writes:

"N2EY" wrote

There was an ARRL HQ station before W1AW. What was its callsign?


----- W1MK


You are correct, sir! And before that, it was 1MK

There's a second callsign for the ARRL lab. What is/was it?


----- W1INF

"It's Never Finished" - again correct.

More trivia: There is an IARU HQ call sign. What is it?


That's easy: NU1AW

While it may
have a certain familiarity about it, especially the suffix, what is the
significance of the prefix?


The original system for licensed amateur calls was a number and two or three
letters. Maxim held 1AW, for example. This worked fine until amateur began
working internationally and there was no way to tell what country a ham was
in. When the first shortwave QSO was made by in November of 1925, the stations
involved were 1QP, 1MO and 8AB - the last one being in France.

So amateurs invented the idea of unofficial prefixes. "NU" meant "North
america, United states". So while Maxim's call was shown on the license as 1AW,
on the air he would use NU1AW to indicate where he was. Other countries had
different prefixes, all according to the unoffficial system

To emphasize that the prefixes were unofficial, they were usually written lower
case: nu1AW

The situation was finally sorted out at one of the radio conferences of the
'20s (1927, I think) and the USA decided that American ham calls would all
start with W (in CONUS) and K (outside CONUS).

73 de Jim, N2EY
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Old January 8th 04, 08:10 AM
Brian Kelly
 
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(N2EY) wrote in message ...
In article k.net, "KØHB"
writes:

"N2EY" wrote

There was an ARRL HQ station before W1AW. What was its callsign?


----- W1MK


You are correct, sir! And before that, it was 1MK

There's a second callsign for the ARRL lab. What is/was it?


----- W1INF

"It's Never Finished" - again correct.

More trivia: There is an IARU HQ call sign. What is it?


That's easy: NU1AW

While it may
have a certain familiarity about it, especially the suffix, what is the
significance of the prefix?


The original system for licensed amateur calls was a number and two or three
letters. Maxim held 1AW, for example. This worked fine until amateur began
working internationally and there was no way to tell what country a ham was
in. When the first shortwave QSO was made by in November of 1925, the stations
involved were 1QP, 1MO and 8AB - the last one being in France.

So amateurs invented the idea of unofficial prefixes. "NU" meant "North
america, United states". So while Maxim's call was shown on the license as 1AW,
on the air he would use NU1AW to indicate where he was. Other countries had
different prefixes, all according to the unoffficial system

To emphasize that the prefixes were unofficial, they were usually written lower
case: nu1AW


They had a shift key on their paddles or what??


The situation was finally sorted out at one of the radio conferences of the
'20s (1927, I think) and the USA decided that American ham calls would all
start with W (in CONUS) and K (outside CONUS).

73 de Jim, N2EY


w3rv
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