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From: Michael A. Terrell on Apr 18, 8:00 pm
wrote: when I had the full copy." I was awarded 26T20 as a civilian acquired skill that was a three year school at Ft. Monmoth. I worked in CATV, CARS, installed a nice PA system for the General's conference room at Ft Rucker, and did a little RADAR before I was sent to Alaska to the AFRTS radio & TV station to work as one of the engineers. I made E4 in 18 months and received a letter of commendation from the commanding general of the three Army bases in Alaska. Great! But Fort Monmouth changed considerably from when I was there in '52 to when you were there 20 years later. :-) A prime example was that there was NO CATV or any TV courses available nor the curricula for same. I'm not even sure where the AFRS (later AFRTS) guys went to get electronics training for their broadcast stations. AFRS was quite separate from regular Army communications. Also, in an odd quirk at the time, ALL rank promotions were frozen while IN any school. Once one got out (no "graduation ceremonies"), they started counting time-in-grade. :-) Just before I got out of the Army the FCC stopped allowing veterans to convert the 26T20 rating to a First phone without taking the test again. I was bored with broadcast anyway so I did commercial sound and industrial electronics. Later I did early personal computer and monitor repair. Sigh. I didn't know the Army had gotten so generous with conversions of skills to civilian licenses. :-) I lucked out on assignments after Signal School, even though it was overseas. Couldn't have asked for a better assignment except maybe in Europe as part of ACAN. We had basic models that were customized to the customer's needs. I also did a lot of preliminary testing of new components, boards, and modules before they were released to production so I had a lot of data books and marked drawings on my bench. ISO 9001, as they set it up did not let the techs keep any notes or write anything on any drawing for future reference. I was no longer allowed to maintain test software I wrote for an automated test fixture and I didn't want a pencil pushing outsider in my way while I was working. I had a 350 MHz four channel scope on my bench, but if a test procedure specified a 20 Mhz scope the idiots insisted that you couldn't use the 20 Mhz filter in a better scope. Even worse, they sent someone new for every audit so we had to go through the same mess each time. One would insist a process was wrong. We would change it to suit him or her. The next one wanted it changed back. Heh heh heh...sounds all too familiar. While we may not have been in the same place, we got T-shirts in the same style! :-) BTW I worked on almost every board or module for a special broadband telemetry receiver we built for the International Space Station. These days I work on old ham receivers and test equipment when I feel well enough to spend a couple hours at the bench. Outstanding that you are still active! My old office cubicle buddy from RCA days (only a month younger than myself) suffers from Parkinson's disease (kept down from deleterious effects, thank God), yet he had enough soup left that he fixed me up with an HP 608 and HP 606 generator when I got married (again). He's on 20 meters every Saturday after fixing up his old tube clunker transceiver. I'm still bopping around with only minor problems, none worth mentioning. But, I come from a family of long livers (oh...about three feet or so, some would say). :-) |
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