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On 03/24/2014 09:15 AM, D. Peter Maus wrote:
On 3/21/14 18:35 , Michael Black wrote: My first was a Hallicrafters S-53A. And a not so long random wire. That was shortly followed up with a Hammarlund Super Pro (Mil designation BC-794.) It was my grandfather's amateur radio receiver. Still have it. And a not so recently acquired S-53. What's the S-53? Actually it's an S-53A. 550khz-54Mhz, 8 tube, fixed BFO, Noise limiter (such that it was), electrical bandspread, sliderule dial. Much more than an S-38. A bit wide, but nice audio. Phono input. There was something about hearing a Cardinals' game that was unique. Much more fun than listening on a transistor. It dated from 1950-58. Typical Halli construction. About the same size as S-38. The differences between S-53 and S53A were the power transformer and the IF cans. "A" was a 120v transformer, and minature cans. Non-"A" models had universal power transformer, and full sized cans. It takes either a random wire against a ground, or a ladder line with a ground. Like the Hammarlund, it's got more sensitivity than can actually be used, and a decent, if not exemplary noise floor, so during the 60's and 70s, with the lower ambient noise and plethora of booming signals, there was LOT to listen to with a simple wire. Today, with a random wire on an Un-Un, or a shielded loop, it's decent. But the lack of signals make things a lot less fun. Noise limiters in 1950 were clipper diodes, same exact principle today. Just like 1n914s on the output of your STL to keep the Overmodulation lamp from going off. |
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