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In article . net,
"Doug" wrote: I have no recall of SEA being in the ACSSB push, but know for a fact IIMorrow was, and ran employment ads every few months in the Portland "Oregonian" for ACSSB engineers and technicians until shortly after UPS acquired them. I know, as I submitted my resume in the late 80s. Perhaps Bruce can address SEA involvement. I seem to recall IIMorrow was a petitioner to the FCC for the 220 MHz frequency allocation which claimed it was an unused amateur band in the Oregon area. In their area, back in the 50s and possibly even early 60s, 220 MHZ was unuseable due to military preemptive use for the old old Nike missile system used to defend metropolitan areas. The long since closed Camp Adair SAGE site and Mt Hebo radar site were part of that system in the area. 73 Doug, K7ABX SEA was one of the two ASSB OEM's that via'd for the 220Mhz band. Dick Stephens spent the better part of his final days trying to make ASSB actually work without DSP support. He never got it into Prime Time.Once DSP Chipsets were available, it became much easier to do and SEA built and marketed a complete line of ASSB HT's, Mobiles, and Repeaters for the 220Mhz band. It never really took off, and ultimatly sunk the company. The Marine Division always made money, but the money and resources that the ASSB Division sucked out of the bottom line was more than the company could stand and they went bust. SEA is just now coming back with a limited production of 325's and 157's and a Service Dept, under Phil Manard. I talked to him last fall and he was hopefull that they could continue on. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
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