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"HankG" ) writes: "Tom Sevart" wrote in message ... "Richard Larson" wrote in message ... I've been watching Hogan's Heroes reruns and in the beginning they show Kinch operating some sort of radio. He's shown turning a crank looks like. What sort of radio could that be? A Baygen? :-) As Cinch turns the crank, there is a 'slider' moving inside of coil (probably a primitive crystal set for receive only). You would expect that being in a concentration camp, their radio would be make-shift at best. HankG First, they weren't in a concentration camp. Those were for people who the nazis didn't like. They were in a prisoner of war camp, which at least had the benefit of being run under the rules of the Geneva convention. Since it was an exaggeration of the situation, there is no limit on what would be in the radio. It's been years since I saw the show, but I remember no indication that they were working with primitive equipment. In reality, POW camps were not restricted to crystal radios. I gather that even before the war began, the British started preparing officers for capture, and the Red Cross packages were designed to help them escape. Luxury items were chosen to bribe the guards, that scene in The Great Escape has truth to it, and items were sent in the package that could be remade into other things. Plus, useful items for radios were outright smuggled into the camps in the packages. Yes, most had nothing more than a crystal radio. But some camps had full blown receivers. And one POW camp had a complete transmitter, which was never used but ready in case it. Given that the camp in Hogan's Heroes was practically a spy ring, I would expect that arrangement would have been made to bring them a proper radio and other supplies. Michael |
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