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#1
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William wrote:
Yep, 35 years later they've got Collins. Keepin' up with the times. That's right, "William", I've got a modified 75A-3 which is about 51 years old, a 51S-1 which was produced in the late seventies and a KWM-2A which was built about the same time as Len's Icom R-70 receiver. I have an Orion which was produced last year. I also have other functional ham gear from the twenties, thirties, forties, fifties, sixties, seventies, eighties and nineties. I'm keeping up with the times--ALL of 'em. Dave K8MN |
#2
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Dave Heil wrote in message ...
William wrote: Yep, 35 years later they've got Collins. Keepin' up with the times. That's right, "William", I've got a modified 75A-3 which is about 51 years old, a 51S-1 which was produced in the late seventies and a KWM-2A which was built about the same time as Len's Icom R-70 receiver. I have an Orion which was produced last year. How do you like using the Orion? I stopped by Ten-Tec last year and looked at it, didn't buy it. I also have other functional ham gear from the twenties, thirties, forties, fifties, sixties, seventies, eighties and nineties. I'm keeping up with the times--ALL of 'em. Dave K8MN Nothing earlier? |
#3
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William wrote:
Dave Heil wrote in message ... William wrote: Yep, 35 years later they've got Collins. Keepin' up with the times. That's right, "William", I've got a modified 75A-3 which is about 51 years old, a 51S-1 which was produced in the late seventies and a KWM-2A which was built about the same time as Len's Icom R-70 receiver. I have an Orion which was produced last year. How do you like using the Orion? No rig is perfect. The Orion is very, very close. I stopped by Ten-Tec last year and looked at it, didn't buy it. They still make 'em. I also have other functional ham gear from the twenties, thirties, forties, fifties, sixties, seventies, eighties and nineties. I'm keeping up with the times--ALL of 'em. Nothing earlier? To have anything earlier, I'd have to find something earlier. All I have is a piece of something earlier. My late friend W4JBP first became a ham in 1912 on the family farm near Indianapolis. John gave me the spark coil from an old Reo truck. It was the basis for his very first rig. It is coated in pitch and mounted in a small dovetailed wooden box. Dave K8MN |
#4
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Dave Heil wrote in message ...
William wrote: Dave Heil wrote in message ... William wrote: Yep, 35 years later they've got Collins. Keepin' up with the times. That's right, "William", I've got a modified 75A-3 which is about 51 years old, a 51S-1 which was produced in the late seventies and a KWM-2A which was built about the same time as Len's Icom R-70 receiver. I have an Orion which was produced last year. How do you like using the Orion? No rig is perfect. The Orion is very, very close. I stopped by Ten-Tec last year and looked at it, didn't buy it. They still make 'em. I know. And the last QST had a nice ad for it. To be honest, I don't know what I want in my next rig. That's why I keep looking. I also have other functional ham gear from the twenties, thirties, forties, fifties, sixties, seventies, eighties and nineties. I'm keeping up with the times--ALL of 'em. Nothing earlier? To have anything earlier, I'd have to find something earlier. I've only seen photos. All I have is a piece of something earlier. My late friend W4JBP first became a ham in 1912 on the family farm near Indianapolis. John gave me the spark coil from an old Reo truck. It was the basis for his very first rig. It is coated in pitch and mounted in a small dovetailed wooden box. Dave K8MN If you build it, you'll be tempted to use it. |
#5
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![]() William wrote: Dave Heil wrote in message ... William wrote: Dave Heil wrote in message ... William wrote: Yep, 35 years later they've got Collins. Keepin' up with the times. That's right, "William", I've got a modified 75A-3 which is about 51 years old, a 51S-1 which was produced in the late seventies and a KWM-2A which was built about the same time as Len's Icom R-70 receiver. I have an Orion which was produced last year. How do you like using the Orion? No rig is perfect. The Orion is very, very close. I stopped by Ten-Tec last year and looked at it, didn't buy it. They still make 'em. I know. And the last QST had a nice ad for it. To be honest, I don't know what I want in my next rig. That's why I keep looking. I also have other functional ham gear from the twenties, thirties, forties, fifties, sixties, seventies, eighties and nineties. I'm keeping up with the times--ALL of 'em. Nothing earlier? To have anything earlier, I'd have to find something earlier. I've only seen photos. All I have is a piece of something earlier. My late friend W4JBP first became a ham in 1912 on the family farm near Indianapolis. John gave me the spark coil from an old Reo truck. It was the basis for his very first rig. It is coated in pitch and mounted in a small dovetailed wooden box. If you build it, you'll be tempted to use it. You vastly underestimate my self-restraint. Using a spark rig is something to which I aspire. I have a couple of TNT self-controlled type replica transmitters. If the antenna swung in the breeze, they'd be all over the band. I've resisted the temptation to put them on the air for about a decade. Dave K8MN |
#6
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Dave Heil wrote in message ...
William wrote: Dave Heil wrote in message ... William wrote: Yep, 35 years later they've got Collins. Keepin' up with the times. That's right, "William", I've got a modified 75A-3 which is about 51 years old, a 51S-1 which was produced in the late seventies and a KWM-2A NICE collection! which was built about the same time as Len's Icom R-70 receiver. I have an Orion which was produced last year. How do you like using the Orion? No rig is perfect. The Orion is very, very close. I stopped by Ten-Tec last year and looked at it, didn't buy it. They still make 'em. But David they don't come with antennas and somebody who knows how to install antennas so that's the end of Silly Willy Beeper's Ten-tec dream machine. I also have other functional ham gear from the twenties, thirties, forties, fifties, sixties, seventies, eighties and nineties. I'm keeping up with the times--ALL of 'em. Nothing earlier? To have anything earlier, I'd have to find something earlier. All I have is a piece of something earlier. My late friend W4JBP first became a ham in 1912 on the family farm near Indianapolis. John gave me the spark coil from an old Reo truck. It was the basis for his very first rig. It is coated in pitch and mounted in a small dovetailed wooden box. Yeeee-haw! One of those was my very first "transmitter"! In seventh or eighth grade I found a big thick dusty 1920s compilation of DIY projects which had appeared earlier in Popular Mechanics in the jr. high library. What there was of it. 1950 timeframe. Lotta radio projects and I built a couple crystal sets from the articles. None of this 1N34 nonsense, go find a chunk of Galena then go find a hot spot on it with a home-brewed cat whisker . . worked. There was an article on building a spark TX based on a Model T Ford spark coil which is obviously the same critter Reo used. I went spark coil hunting and bought mine from J.C. Whitney which stocked heaps of Model T parts and diddled with it. My Lionel train transformer did a good job as it's "power supply". I wrapped a dozen or so turns of wire around the wooden box to serve as the "secondary" of the spark coil and grounded one end of it to a copper water pipe in the rafters. Then I strung up some wire from the "output" end of the secondary fom my cellar "laboratory" to an apple tree out back. Connected a J-38 between the Lionel xfmr output and the spark coil primary and was set to hit the airwaves. I needed somebody to listen for me and after several days of getting patted on my noggin and being written off as a nutcase I managed to finally recruit George Barnum who lived a block and a half away to listen for me. His older brother had a radio and TV repair shop so George sorta understood what I was up to. He heard me *good* when I fired the thing up on sked. The problem was that I really screwed up by arranging the sked when every houswife in town was listening to the Don McNeil Breakfast Club Hour while they were doing their ironing. I completely obliterated the AM b'cast band for blocks around, the phone rang off the hook and Mom not only terminated my Grand Experiment but almost terminated me too. Again. .. . . growing up is such a bitch . . Dave K8MN w3rv |
#7
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#9
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(Brian Kelly) wrote in message . com...
(William) wrote in message . com... (Brian Kelly) wrote in message . com... Kelly, I never have had an HF radio that came with an antenna. Perhaps your do. Yet I managed to build my own cubical quad on HF, dipoles, off-center fed dipoles, and EDZ's for 10 and 6, a hustler vertical for 40, etc, etc, etc. But in this particular location, I have very precise requirements and your one size fits all suggestion just wasn't what I wanted. You could have come out with this years ago but no, it just wouldn't have been "you". You weren't listening "years" ago. Thank you for your suggestion, but don't force it on me. Reminds me of the time you told me to bend over. Thanks, but No thanks. Some kind of weird elmering going on where you're from. Depends 100% on the elmeree. In your case . . . Again, no thanks. . . . George Barnum who lived a block and a half away to listen for me. His older brother had a radio and TV repair shop so George sorta understood what I was up to. He heard me *good* when I fired the thing up on sked. What was you callsign then? "CBK". Charles Brian Kelly? Or were you bootlegging as you've previously reported? Cite the post(s) please. So you can have your bootleg career expunged from the Google record? The problem was that I really screwed up by arranging the sked when every houswife in town was listening to the Don McNeil Breakfast Club Hour while they were doing their ironing. Actually, you're biggest screwup was operating w/o a license. I had no idea what an FCC was, kids do goofy stuff like that and I did more than my share. I suppose. But I did get on the air under my own steam with nothing more than guidance from an article in an old book and with no help from anybody. Not bad. A Riley of those days woulda enjoyed it then he woulda "explained a few things". But Mom got there before he did and she didn't "explain" NOTHIN' . . . Mom's are like that. Except the 90's mom's. They want to be your friend. |
#10
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Steve, the truth is in this message. Best of Luck.
bb ------------- (William) wrote in message . com... (Brian Kelly) wrote in message . com... Dave Heil wrote in message ... William wrote: Dave Heil wrote in message ... William wrote: Yep, 35 years later they've got Collins. Keepin' up with the times. That's right, "William", I've got a modified 75A-3 which is about 51 years old, a 51S-1 which was produced in the late seventies and a KWM-2A NICE collection! which was built about the same time as Len's Icom R-70 receiver. I have an Orion which was produced last year. How do you like using the Orion? No rig is perfect. The Orion is very, very close. I stopped by Ten-Tec last year and looked at it, didn't buy it. They still make 'em. But David they don't come with antennas and somebody who knows how to install antennas so that's the end of Silly Willy Beeper's Ten-tec dream machine. Kelly, I never have had an HF radio that came with an antenna. Perhaps your do. Yet I managed to build my own cubical quad on HF, dipoles, off-center fed dipoles, and EDZ's for 10 and 6, a hustler vertical for 40, etc, etc, etc. But in this particular location, I have very precise requirements and your one size fits all suggestion just wasn't what I wanted. Thank you for your suggestion, but don't force it on me. Reminds me of the time you told me to bend over. Thanks, but No thanks. Some kind of weird elmering going on where you're from. I also have other functional ham gear from the twenties, thirties, forties, fifties, sixties, seventies, eighties and nineties. I'm keeping up with the times--ALL of 'em. Nothing earlier? To have anything earlier, I'd have to find something earlier. All I have is a piece of something earlier. My late friend W4JBP first became a ham in 1912 on the family farm near Indianapolis. John gave me the spark coil from an old Reo truck. It was the basis for his very first rig. It is coated in pitch and mounted in a small dovetailed wooden box. Yeeee-haw! One of those was my very first "transmitter"! In seventh or eighth grade I found a big thick dusty 1920s compilation of DIY projects which had appeared earlier in Popular Mechanics in the jr. high library. What there was of it. 1950 timeframe. Lotta radio projects and I built a couple crystal sets from the articles. None of this 1N34 nonsense, go find a chunk of Galena then go find a hot spot on it with a home-brewed cat whisker . . worked. There was an article on building a spark TX based on a Model T Ford spark coil which is obviously the same critter Reo used. I went spark coil hunting and bought mine from J.C. Whitney which stocked heaps of Model T parts and diddled with it. My Lionel train transformer did a good job as it's "power supply". I wrapped a dozen or so turns of wire around the wooden box to serve as the "secondary" of the spark coil and grounded one end of it to a copper water pipe in the rafters. Then I strung up some wire from the "output" end of the secondary fom my cellar "laboratory" to an apple tree out back. Connected a J-38 between the Lionel xfmr output and the spark coil primary and was set to hit the airwaves. I needed somebody to listen for me and after several days of getting patted on my noggin and being written off as a nutcase I managed to finally recruit George Barnum who lived a block and a half away to listen for me. His older brother had a radio and TV repair shop so George sorta understood what I was up to. He heard me *good* when I fired the thing up on sked. What was you callsign then? Or were you bootlegging as you've previously reported? The problem was that I really screwed up by arranging the sked when every houswife in town was listening to the Don McNeil Breakfast Club Hour while they were doing their ironing. Actually, you're biggest screwup was operating w/o a license. I completely obliterated the AM b'cast band for blocks around, the phone rang off the hook and Mom not only terminated my Grand Experiment but almost terminated me too. Again. . . . growing up is such a bitch . . Maybe that's why you've done so little of it over the years. Dave K8MN w3rv bb |
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