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Old January 27th 04, 03:31 AM
Digital Rich
 
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Default I finally have my new shortwave radio up and running

"Nathan" wrote in message
...
I finally have my Hallicraters SX-28 ( circa 1944 ) up and running.



Congrats, I hope to have my S38 running someday.

Rich S.




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Old January 27th 04, 05:03 AM
Frank Dresser
 
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"Nathan" wrote in message
...
I finally have my Hallicraters SX-28 ( circa 1944 ) up and running. It
took me quite a while to find a PM-43 speaker for it. It receives very
well on a short ( 25 foot ) long wire. Can't wait to get a better
antenna hooked up. It pulls in many stations I would have thought
impossible for an old tube warhorse. It;s actually fun to hunt and
tune in stations using the two tuning dials. The sound is great
comming from the 8 inch jensen speaker. If you have not tried these
old tube shortwave radios from the 30's and 40's, you don't know what
you are missing. You also get to teep a bit of radio history in the
house as well. The SX-28 weighs about 70 pounds. I will post some
radio logs after I get a better antenna.


Phil Nelson has restored many radios, including a SX-28. Check out:

http://antiqueradio.org/halli12.htm

Frank Dresser


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Old January 27th 04, 05:07 AM
Frank Dresser
 
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"Digital Rich" wrote in message
...
"Nathan" wrote in message
...
I finally have my Hallicraters SX-28 ( circa 1944 ) up and running.



Congrats, I hope to have my S38 running someday.

Rich S.





Phil Nelson has also restored his S-38:

http://antiqueradio.org/halli12.htm

So have I, but I don't have a webpage to show for it. It's about as
easy a restoration as a tube SW radio will get. If you want any tips,
feel free to send me an e-mail.

Frank Dresser


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Old January 27th 04, 05:30 AM
WShoots1
 
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Ah yes... Real tuned RF stages in the front ends of those. That's where the
real selectivity begins.

Congrats!

Now, does the BFO in that SX-28 have enough oomph to copy SSB well?

Bill, K5BY
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Old January 27th 04, 07:42 AM
starman
 
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Nathan wrote:

I finally have my Hallicraters SX-28 ( circa 1944 ) up and running. It
took me quite a while to find a PM-43 speaker for it. It receives very
well on a short ( 25 foot ) long wire. Can't wait to get a better
antenna hooked up. It pulls in many stations I would have thought
impossible for an old tube warhorse. It;s actually fun to hunt and
tune in stations using the two tuning dials. The sound is great
comming from the 8 inch jensen speaker. If you have not tried these
old tube shortwave radios from the 30's and 40's, you don't know what
you are missing. You also get to teep a bit of radio history in the
house as well. The SX-28 weighs about 70 pounds. I will post some
radio logs after I get a better antenna.


I have a few Halli's and I really enjoy them. The SX-122 is my favorite.
I'd be interested to know how well your SX-28 works on the higher bands,
above 15-Mhz. The early Halli's weren't known for being particularly
sensitive on the higher frequencies. Try listening on the 16-m
(17500-17900) and 13-m (21450-21850) international bands. The best time
for these bands is early morning to early afternoon if you're on the
east coast. Also try to hear CB'ers on/about 27.195 Mhz which is
channel-19. Have fun.


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Old January 27th 04, 08:41 AM
Dxluver
 
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I finally have my Hallicraters SX-28 ( circa 1944 ) up and running. It
took me quite a while to find a PM-43 speaker for it. It receives very
well on a short ( 25 foot ) long wire. Can't wait to get a better
antenna hooked up. It pulls in many stations I would have thought
impossible for an old tube

************rest of great post snipped********

Yep Rich,
I'm the proud owner of two Hammarlund HQ's and a RCA Victor and a Zenith 'Wave
Magnet.'

I have plenty of digitals, but there is not one of them that can pick up what
my 129X with the Q Multiplier or for that fact, the 140X either can.

They love LOTS and LOTS of wire. Literally almost no chance of overloading
these boatanchors. Case in point, I can flip a switch and the 129X is hooked
to over 600ft. of wire. They are treasures for sure, and you have a piece of
it. :-)

The sound from a tube radio CANNOT be reproduced from anything else. The
closest I've heard is my GE P-780 I got from Brenda Ann, that audio is close,
but that's it, just close.

Enjoy it, if you get the chance, hook a digital freq counter to it unless you
have a digital radio nearby so you 'truly' know for sure what freq you're on.

If you don't want to run lots of wire, run you a nice sloper from Alpha Delta
(that's one of them I have.) You can't go wrong.

Enjoy your massive toy!!!!.
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Old January 28th 04, 04:16 AM
WShoots1
 
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The sound from a tube radio CANNOT be reproduced from anything else.

That's why serious audiophiles use tube amps.

Real radios glow in the dark.

G I always enjoyed the smell of warm dust on hot tubes.

...they are more fun too.

My late wife, N5GIN, always preferred real radios instead of the appliances.
She always thought a real ham station should have at least one six-foot rack of
gear, even if it was in the living room. G

Ahh... I still miss Ruby (it's been nearly three years now). She was a jewel.

Bill, K5BY
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Old January 28th 04, 06:55 AM
Dxluver
 
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Ahh... I still miss Ruby (it's been nearly three years now). She was a jewel.

That was a very nice and telling post of Ruby and your love for her. Thanks
for sharing, made me smile.
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