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Rich W6VX July 12th 04 06:58 PM

FA: Complete Hallicrafters AM Station-Mint!
 
Take a look at this station! One of the nicest I've seen in a long time.
Excellent cosmetics and perfect working order. Complete station includes
SX101 Receiver, HT32 Transmitter and HT33B Linear amp. Original speaker
included along with all original manuals.


See:

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll... STRK:MESE:IT



Bob P July 13th 04 03:01 AM

I had an HT32 and it was SSB & CW but I don't recall if it could generate
AM. Maybe low level AM modulation ?
Bob
kb8tl

"Rich W6VX" wrote in message
k.net...
Take a look at this station! One of the nicest I've seen in a long time.
Excellent cosmetics and perfect working order. Complete station includes
SX101 Receiver, HT32 Transmitter and HT33B Linear amp. Original speaker
included along with all original manuals.


See:


http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll... STRK:MESE:IT





Flwrite July 13th 04 07:22 AM

Bob wrote...

if it could generate AM. Maybe low level AM modulation ?


I think one of those knobs were for nulling out the carrier. Since it had
tendency to transmit AM when you were trying for SSB, I assume it was
amenable to transmitting AM on purpose.

I used an HT32B for about a year, a couple decades ago. I think it was
supposed to be easier to keep its carrier nulled compared to the earlier
models (32, 32A). I remember getting good reports about carrier suppression
from some local hams, although I mostly used it on CW.

It replaced a DX-60B, so I would have considered it going backwards to put
it on AM, so I don't remember using it on AM at all. But I'll bet it had an
AM position. Yeayellow radio.

Best DX,
-Neil / ne3j-




July 13th 04 10:27 AM

In article ,
"Flwrite" wrote:

Bob wrote...

if it could generate AM. Maybe low level AM modulation ?


I think one of those knobs were for nulling out the carrier. Since it had
tendency to transmit AM when you were trying for SSB, I assume it was
amenable to transmitting AM on purpose.

I used an HT32B for about a year, a couple decades ago. I think it was
supposed to be easier to keep its carrier nulled compared to the earlier
models (32, 32A). I remember getting good reports about carrier suppression
from some local hams, although I mostly used it on CW.

It replaced a DX-60B, so I would have considered it going backwards to put
it on AM, so I don't remember using it on AM at all. But I'll bet it had an
AM position. Yeayellow radio.

Best DX,
-Neil / ne3j-


I thought the 32 was a filter rig. The HT-37 was a phasing rig.

Dale j.
--


Bob Miller July 13th 04 10:25 PM

On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 02:01:58 GMT, "Bob P" wrote:

I had an HT32 and it was SSB & CW but I don't recall if it could generate
AM. Maybe low level AM modulation ?
Bob
kb8tl


My booklet of Hallicrafters models (compiled by wd5eog) shows the
ht-32 with "144 watts pep, ssb-am-cw..." etectera, etcetera. No
details on the type of modulation. The ht-36 and ht-37 are also listed
as having am-cw-ssb. The ht-44 looks like the first Hallicrafters xmtr
that did only cw-ssb.

Bob
k5qwg



"Rich W6VX" wrote in message
nk.net...
Take a look at this station! One of the nicest I've seen in a long time.
Excellent cosmetics and perfect working order. Complete station includes
SX101 Receiver, HT32 Transmitter and HT33B Linear amp. Original speaker
included along with all original manuals.


See:


http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll... STRK:MESE:IT






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