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The Gypsis Radio on Andy Griffith.
Greetings! Now that we have retired all the castaways back to Gilligan's
Island; how about the shortwave radio on one of the Andy Griffith shows. Remember the one with the Gypsies who were listening to shortwave to make long term forcasts on the weather? I can't remember if it was a Hallicrafters or a Hamerland . I believe it was a Hallicrafters. It is always fun to look at the radios they had in the office as well. I seem to remember old Colins stuff. Just some more useless food for fodder. Have a great weekend! Jon. |
Jon Lippert wrote: Greetings! Now that we have retired all the castaways back to Gilligan's Island; how about the shortwave radio on one of the Andy Griffith shows. Remember the one with the Gypsies who were listening to shortwave to make long term forcasts on the weather? I can't remember if it was a Hallicrafters or a Hamerland . I believe it was a Hallicrafters. It is always fun to look at the radios they had in the office as well. I seem to remember old Colins stuff. Just some more useless food for fodder. Have a great weekend! Jon. In the office (jail), I believe there was an Eico transmitter on the desk. dxAce Michigan USA |
It looked like a Hallicrafter SX-110.
"Jon Lippert" wrote in message ... Greetings! Now that we have retired all the castaways back to Gilligan's Island; how about the shortwave radio on one of the Andy Griffith shows. Remember the one with the Gypsies who were listening to shortwave to make long term forcasts on the weather? I can't remember if it was a Hallicrafters or a Hamerland . I believe it was a Hallicrafters. It is always fun to look at the radios they had in the office as well. I seem to remember old Colins stuff. Just some more useless food for fodder. Have a great weekend! Jon. |
Alright, who can answer this one: what was the radio that Herman Munster was
using during the episode where he became a Ham? (Don't expect me to answer this because I'm not sure!) --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.796 / Virus Database: 540 - Release Date: 11/13/04 |
pulse wrote: Alright, who can answer this one: what was the radio that Herman Munster was using during the episode where he became a Ham? (Don't expect me to answer this because I'm not sure!) According to this apparently it was homebrew. The site also gives his callsign, and shows a copy of his QSL card. http://www.uslink.net/~hepcats/w6xrl4.html dxAce Michigan USA |
"Jon Lippert" wrote in message ... Greetings! Now that we have retired all the castaways back to Gilligan's Island; how about the shortwave radio on one of the Andy Griffith shows. Remember the one with the Gypsies who were listening to shortwave to make long term forcasts on the weather? I can't remember if it was a Hallicrafters or a Hamerland . I believe it was a Hallicrafters. It is always fun to look at the radios they had in the office as well. I seem to remember old Colins stuff. Just some more useless food for fodder. Have a great weekend! Jon. Either an SX-110 or SX-111 Neither was battery operable as the show portrayed it to be.. The jail transmitter was an Eico 720 ( CW only) that had a mic plugged into the key jack. Sitting atop the 720 was an Eico CB transceiver. Prior to that there was a Motorola rig in the jail. Dale W4OP |
Greetings! Now that we have retired all the castaways back to Gilligan's
Island; how about the shortwave radio on one of the A "Reality" and "Gilligan's Island" in the same sentence. how about the shortwave radio on one of the Andy Griffith shows. The ham radio on "The Munsters" was definitely shortwave as Herman was talking to people in other countries on it, including someone from Australia, halfway around the world. |
Stereophile22 wrote: The thing is their was kids walkie talkies transmitting on the same frequency as the ham radio in this episode. Was this a goof in the erpisode, or did some kids walkie talkies actually use certain ham radio frequencies back in the 60's (although at much lower power, of course). The oldest kids walkie talkies that I remember used 49 MHz. Comedy television aside, there is an off possibility that Herman's ham equipment could have communicated with kid's walkie talkies. If he had old ham gear, it may have had the 11m ham band (part of which became the 11m Citizens Band) Kid's walkie talkies of that era operated mostly on 27.125 MHz (CB channel 14). There were some fancier ones (and much higher cost) that had up to three channels. These almost always ended up being channels 9, 11, & 14. Some Japanese talkies came stock with channel 9 crystals.. and kids used to catch some hell in the early 70's because channel 9 is an emergency traffic channel. |
Brenda Ann Dyer wrote: Stereophile22 wrote: The thing is their was kids walkie talkies transmitting on the same frequency as the ham radio in this episode. Was this a goof in the erpisode, or did some kids walkie talkies actually use certain ham radio frequencies back in the 60's (although at much lower power, of course). The oldest kids walkie talkies that I remember used 49 MHz. Comedy television aside, there is an off possibility that Herman's ham equipment could have communicated with kid's walkie talkies. If he had old ham gear, it may have had the 11m ham band (part of which became the 11m Citizens Band) Kid's walkie talkies of that era operated mostly on 27.125 MHz (CB channel 14). There were some fancier ones (and much higher cost) that had up to three channels. These almost always ended up being channels 9, 11, & 14. Some Japanese talkies came stock with channel 9 crystals.. and kids used to catch some hell in the early 70's because channel 9 is an emergency traffic channel. Remember... it was a TV show... it doesn't have to have a basis in reality. Repeat that 20 times and you'll be OK. dxAce Michigan USA |
"dxAce" wrote in message ... Brenda Ann Dyer wrote: Stereophile22 wrote: The thing is their was kids walkie talkies transmitting on the same frequency as the ham radio in this episode. Was this a goof in the erpisode, or did some kids walkie talkies actually use certain ham radio frequencies back in the 60's (although at much lower power, of course). The oldest kids walkie talkies that I remember used 49 MHz. Comedy television aside, there is an off possibility that Herman's ham equipment could have communicated with kid's walkie talkies. If he had old ham gear, it may have had the 11m ham band (part of which became the 11m Citizens Band) Kid's walkie talkies of that era operated mostly on 27.125 MHz (CB channel 14). There were some fancier ones (and much higher cost) that had up to three channels. These almost always ended up being channels 9, 11, & 14. Some Japanese talkies came stock with channel 9 crystals.. and kids used to catch some hell in the early 70's because channel 9 is an emergency traffic channel. Remember... it was a TV show... it doesn't have to have a basis in reality. Repeat that 20 times and you'll be OK. Take note, Steve, of the first three words in my above paragraph. I made the comment that in spite of the fact that it was purely an entertainment show, and not based on fact, that a ham rig made previous to the time the Munsters was running could indeed have communicated with a kid's walkie talkie. I used to have such a rig. |
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