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Lennie,
Scroll down dipweed. wrote in message oups.com... Mike Coslo" wrote in message Dan/W4NTI wrote: "an old friend" wrote in message Dan/W4NTI wrote: That is my point Mike. Just because it is old....does not make it useless. I believe in the KISS method. And CW, in emergencies, is the easiest and simplest thing to get running. No modems, no regulated power supplies, no computers. Just the basic stuff. I was asked once by my Battalion commander while in the field in Germany. ( I was talking to the Feldburg 2m ham repeater while standing on top of the Command track). He asked how I could communicate with Frankfurt, and all of his radios could not......I said...."Well Sir, it takes two things to communicate.....an operator on both ends" He ordered me to take my H/T every time we went to the field from then on. Tsk, tsk, highly UNlikely story for the 1972 times. Unlikely you say? How is that ? Because YOU didn't see it. Because YOU have NO KNOWLEDGE ABOUT AMATEUR RADIO other than what you conjure up in your distorted mind? You'll have to be more clear on that location. "Feldburg" could be 'Feldberg' or even 'Frieberg' or 'Freiberg.' Was that in Bavaria or elsewhere? The Feldburg Amateur Radio Repeater, located in the Frankfurt area. Our normal field site was towards the Fulda Gap area. In 1980s, Feldberg-Schwarzwald was a troposcatter station from the north-central part of West Germany with relay to Italy; before that it was part of the LOS microwave multi-channel relay system. This is the place, I remember the microwave site up there in the 70s. Great place to play with my two meter Handi. I could care less about the 1980s in Germany. You know full well I was discussing the 70s time frame. Frankfurt was, may still be, USAEUR-Germany Hq and would be roughly 150 miles north of Feldberg-Schwarzwald (I don't have a good map of the FRG at the moment). Bavaria borders Austria and Switzerland as well as part of East Germany; in 1972 the German unification was still distant in time. It is HIGHLY DOUBTFUL that there would be: 1. Ham HTs good enough or inexpensive enough for a GI to get (even with NCO and overseas pay) in 1972; A Handi Talky made by Standard Communications was available, its nomenclature was SRC-146A. It ran about 2 watts output using 10 Nickle Cadium 1.35 volt cells. All this into either a telescoping whip or a rubber duckie. You could, of course, also use standard AA cell alkaline if you wanted to. It had five (5) crystal controlled channels, for a total of 10 crystals required. The German repeaters ALL operated with a "whistle up" tone access. Just whistle it up and start to talk. Of course a Amateur Radio license was required. And a German call. Mine was DA2LJ. 2. Permission to USE one IN THE FIELD, certainly on a "command track" (field Hq vehicle) that close to unfriendly territory. Not a problem at all. I showed my CO the German License, my US License, and my MARS license. And after he seen it in action, he told me to KEEP bringing it. Being close to "unfriendly territory" was not a problem at all. You NOT BEING a ham of course, would not comprehend these things. "Command tracks" (field Hq-Commo vehicles), presumably the kind with all tracks and not wheels, but the name applies I forget the nomenclature of the "Command Track" but it was basically a double decker M-113 carrier. It was big enough for lots of radios and several troops. Being the ranking NCO I was also the track commander. Giving me the "pleasure" to ride with my helmeted and usually masked head out of the hatch to guide the driver. to the fitted Bradleys of the 80s and 90s...all had lots of radios...and antennas, that making them easier for "other-side" recon units to spot. In 1972 the radios normally in such field Hq-Commo vehicles could hack up to 300 miles on NVIS cloud-burner bounce; the technique was already known then (Rommel's Afrika Corps knew about it in 1942 and that is documented). I can't believe an armor unit has been rendered as radio-SILENT as you say, not even with 1972-era radios in the U.S. Army. There it is guys, Lennie showing not his ignorance, but his stupidity. He sits there in front of his keys and decides everything based on incorrect assessments. What a world class dumbass. Do you remember the Vietnam War Lennie? The US Army in Europe was at the bottom of the list on new goodies. You can figure that out, right? Now let me address your ignorance further; USAEUR was assigned blocks of frequencies by the German government. Some not in the best spots. A local commo officer then determined which ones to use at what time and on what day/night. Normally these comm officers had no knowledge of things like "skip", NVIS, or groundwave. Not to mention broadcast QRM (Short Wave). So it was a shot in the dark if any frequency chosen would actually work for the distance, time, day/night that it was to be used. For some reason the comsec officers liked to put us in the 2 Mhz range at night, and the 7 as an alternate. 2 would work, but for the way to short whips. And no we never bother to deploy the GRA-50s.....you DO know what they are don't you? The 7mhz was eat up with broadcast QRM, so forget it. And the 2 never got out of the woods. The reality of it was this; Using 100 watts output on RTTY (RATT in Army Speak) into a 15' metal whip and sitting in the GAP you were damn lucky to make commo with your units, especially at night. Sometimes you got lucky. Not like today I am sure. The most reliable commo was usually on the 40 mhz range FM VRC-12 units. Range was extended by deploying "radio relay teams" to hilltops to act as a manual repeater. RATT Short Wave Commo was spotty to say the least. Believe it or not...I was there...you were NOT. Sorry, but use of REPEATER techniques, particularly UN- manned repeaters, was pioneered by the U.S. Army in Italy in late 1943, then used in France and Germany 1944-1945, starting with the SCR-300, the VHF FM Voice manpack called the "Walkie-Talkie." There's a specific repeater connector on the front panel of every BC-1000 ever made just for that purpose...designed-in by Signal Corps request when the contract was signed with Motorola. With REPEATERS, those can very easily operate WOTHOUT operators "operating" things (taking any active part in the repeating process of the radios). Repeaters are DESIGNED to operate unattended. None of which was available to any of the ARMY units I was with in Germany. And what you said has NOTHING to do with what I said. AMATEUR RADIO REPEATER OF FELDBURG. At least TRY to stay on topic Loser. They were as follows; 23rd Engineer Battalion, Hanau FRG (Federal Republic of Germany) 1st Squadron, 11th Armored Cavalery Regiment, Fulda, FRG. 143rd Signal Battalion, Frankfurt, FRG. 1972 was THIRTY THREE years ago. By all appearances you've done considerable "editing" of the ACTUAL FACTS surrounding your field commo adventure. MANUFACTURING the story is more likely. nah non And it is obvious to anyone that bothers to check what I say that you are the liar and not I. Dan/W4NTI Air Force Specialty Code: 29350 (Ground Radio Operator) 1964 to 1968 US Army Military Occupational Specialty: 05C40 (RATT Team Chief/CW Qualified) Secondary MOS: 31V20 (Tactical Systems Oper/Mech 1971 to 1979 |
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