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Keith Martin, W7KGV used a rig that was a wonder to watch. Whole garage
floor covered with used automobile batteries, charger working 24/7 for a few days, then the fun began! BC-375 (from B-17's and B-24's) ran off 28vdc. Motor generator turned out 1000vdc for the rig. Basically an MOPA (remember????) with a VT-4C oscillator and another for PA. (now the VT-4C's around are for audiophile's output tubes... some now referred to as 211's) The MOPA transmitter worked on all bands, with proper tuning unit, up through 20 meters. Best output was on lower bands, 40 meters was Keith's favorite, as his "off-center fed extended Zepp" antenna fit on his lot, with just a little over on the neighbor's lot. Keith could contact "ZL's" in the evening, with reports ranging from 336 to 589C. (Honest operators always included the "C"in the signal report, as the BC-375 had a distinctive "yooup di dit dit" which the "C" designated as a chirp, but was closer to a Yooup) It got really distinctive when the batteries ran low, and the filaments dimmed and the motor generator almost stalled on long CW dashes. Keith eventually mastered a "bug" and increased his operating speed so more than one contact could be made before the batteries went dead again. Receiver was the venerable BC-312, which had a handy crank on the tuning knob to follow the "state of the art" signals as they drifted around the band. Some, who disliked drifting around on the bands, invested in a pile of FT-243 surplus crystals for other rigs, that didn't eliminate the friendly and reasuring "chirp", but didn't make drifting so much of an issue. Old Chief Lynn, W7LTQ |
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