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BFTD December 29th 05 12:59 AM

ot WW2 walkie talkie freq?
 
Does anyone know what freq. the U.S. walkie talkies transmitted and
received? Thanks.

Ralf Ballis - DL2MRB December 29th 05 05:14 PM

ot WW2 walkie talkie freq?
 
BFTD wrote:

Does anyone know what freq. the U.S. walkie talkies transmitted and
received? Thanks.


The classic BC-611 (talking banana) works on frequency from 4035 kHz to 5500
kHz. Provided by 12 changeable crystals and coils.

Regards,

Ralf
--
Vy 73 es 55 de Ralf, DL2MRB
E-Mail:
www.hamradioboard.de

[email protected] December 30th 05 04:06 PM

ot WW2 walkie talkie freq?
 

I have two (2) of those radios. Marked " RADIO RECEIVER AND TRANSMITTER
C-611-F"
Made by Galvin Mfg. Corporation. They are crystal controlled and
operate on 3.885 kc.





[email protected] December 30th 05 04:43 PM

ot WW2 walkie talkie freq?
 
Side note:
Galvin Mfg. Corporation later changed their name to Motorola to reflect
the mobility of their product line: vehicle audio products and two-way
radios. The Galvin family remained at the top of Motorola for decades.


[email protected] December 30th 05 05:07 PM

ot WW2 walkie talkie freq?
 
www.devilfinder.com Brian's Military Jeeps Radios

Brian French is a good guy.He owns a great website pertaining to World
War Two Jeeps,(I own a made in the Springtime of 1942 Willys World War
Two Jeep) lives in Lake Forest,California (not far from San Diego) and
he also collects Art Glass.
cuhulin


dxAce December 30th 05 05:21 PM

ot WW2 walkie talkie freq?
 


BFTD wrote:

Does anyone know what freq. the U.S. walkie talkies transmitted and
received? Thanks.


The 'original' WWII walkie-talkie, the SCR-536 operated between 3.5 and 6 mc
(that's 3.5 and 6.0 MHz).

See:

http://www.olive-drab.com/od_electronics_scr536.php

dxAce
Michigan
US of A



[email protected] December 30th 05 05:52 PM

ot WW2 walkie talkie freq?
 
www.devilfinder.com Military Specificatins U.S.Military Hand Held
Two Way Radios

I like it when I mispell (accidently on purpose,of course) a word at
devilfinder.com
cuhulin


David December 30th 05 06:51 PM

ot WW2 walkie talkie freq?
 
On Fri, 30 Dec 2005 12:21:35 -0500, dxAce
wrote:



BFTD wrote:

Does anyone know what freq. the U.S. walkie talkies transmitted and
received? Thanks.


The 'original' WWII walkie-talkie, the SCR-536 operated between 3.5 and 6 mc
(that's 3.5 and 6.0 MHz).

See:

http://www.olive-drab.com/od_electronics_scr536.php

dxAce
Michigan
US of A


More correctly ''Megacycles per second'' was changed to Hertz, not
just Megacycles.


dxAce December 30th 05 06:55 PM

ot WW2 walkie talkie freq?
 


David wrote:

On Fri, 30 Dec 2005 12:21:35 -0500, dxAce
wrote:



BFTD wrote:

Does anyone know what freq. the U.S. walkie talkies transmitted and
received? Thanks.


The 'original' WWII walkie-talkie, the SCR-536 operated between 3.5 and 6 mc
(that's 3.5 and 6.0 MHz).

See:

http://www.olive-drab.com/od_electronics_scr536.php

dxAce
Michigan
US of A


More correctly ''Megacycles per second'' was changed to Hertz, not
just Megacycles.


Nothing incorrect in what I posted you snot nosed dum**** shortwave poseur.

Now run along and tote it, boy.

dxAce
Michigan
USA



David December 30th 05 09:26 PM

ot WW2 walkie talkie freq?
 
On Fri, 30 Dec 2005 13:55:03 -0500, dxAce
wrote:



David wrote:

On Fri, 30 Dec 2005 12:21:35 -0500, dxAce
wrote:



BFTD wrote:

Does anyone know what freq. the U.S. walkie talkies transmitted and
received? Thanks.

The 'original' WWII walkie-talkie, the SCR-536 operated between 3.5 and 6 mc
(that's 3.5 and 6.0 MHz).

See:

http://www.olive-drab.com/od_electronics_scr536.php

dxAce
Michigan
US of A


More correctly ''Megacycles per second'' was changed to Hertz, not
just Megacycles.


Nothing incorrect in what I posted you snot nosed dum**** shortwave poseur.

Now run along and tote it, boy.

dxAce
Michigan
USA

I didn't say it was ''incorrect''. I just pointed out what is ''more
correct''.

''-cycle is also an indication of frequency of periodicity, usually
associated with an additional modifier indicating the time unit.
Typically used in units such as xxx kilocycles (thousand cycles) per
second, xxx megacycles (million cycles) per second, etc., where xxx is
some number. The cycles per second is often implicit such as in "this
station broadcasts at 680 kilocycles" - this is taken to mean "680
kilocycles per second" or 680,000 cycles per second.

The "cycles per second" is now usually expressed with the unit
"hertz", named in honor of the pioneering physicist Heinrich Rudolf
Hertz and defined as "cycles per second". Thus 88 megacycles, or
correctly, 88 megacycles per second, is now expressed as 88
megahertz.''

http://www.answers.com/topic/cycle-7

Sorry if I wounded your delicate ego...






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