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Cool - look what I found...
http://tinyurl.com/qb7cs3
And as it happens, I know somebody who wants to get rid of a Hammerlund HQ-180A. Hmmmmm.... |
Cool - look what I found...
On Sep 12, 8:38*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote: http://tinyurl.com/qb7cs3 And as it happens, I know somebody who wants to get rid of a Hammerlund HQ-180A. Hmmmmm.... I bet you could heat a room with it! I remember my grandpa used to listen to short wave quite a bit, and he had an old tube Hallicrafter. I remember that the tube glow made the wall look like it was on fire. I dont' remember much about it but it sat on a small table facing a wall, and it had a couple of large knobs and three or four small knobs on the front and a couple of meters and a large sign on the back of his chair that said "STAY AWAY!!" But one thing I thought was odd was his antenna, which was a bare copper wire strung from their house to the summer kitchen in the back yard. I thought that was weird but I understand it now. |
Cool - look what I found...
On Sep 12, 9:33*pm, Tim wrote:
On Sep 12, 8:38*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: http://tinyurl.com/qb7cs3 And as it happens, I know somebody who wants to get rid of a Hammerlund HQ-180A. Hmmmmm.... I bet you could heat a room with it! I remember my grandpa used to listen to short wave quite a bit, and he had an old tube Hallicrafter. *I *remember that the tube glow made the wall look like it was on fire. I dont' remember much about it but it sat on a small table facing a wall, and it had a couple of large knobs and three or four small knobs on the front and a couple of meters and a large sign on the back of his chair that said "STAY AWAY!!" But one thing I thought was odd was his antenna, which was a bare copper wire strung from their house to the summer kitchen in the back yard. I thought that was weird but I understand it now. I looked around, and there it is, just like my grandpa's. A Halicrafters S-85 http://www.wkinsler.com/radios/hallicrafters_s-85.html |
Cool - look what I found...
On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 19:33:14 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: On Sep 12, 8:38*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: http://tinyurl.com/qb7cs3 And as it happens, I know somebody who wants to get rid of a Hammerlund HQ-180A. Hmmmmm.... I bet you could heat a room with it! I remember my grandpa used to listen to short wave quite a bit, and he had an old tube Hallicrafter. I remember that the tube glow made the wall look like it was on fire. I dont' remember much about it but it sat on a small table facing a wall, and it had a couple of large knobs and three or four small knobs on the front and a couple of meters and a large sign on the back of his chair that said "STAY AWAY!!" But one thing I thought was odd was his antenna, which was a bare copper wire strung from their house to the summer kitchen in the back yard. I thought that was weird but I understand it now. Heh - I know what you mean. My maternal Grandfather had a collection of early Grundig radios he had shipped in from Germany. Being a German immigrant right after WWI, he loved to listen to music and radio "from the old country". He had a wire antenna system that rivals my own in some ways. It's funny when I think about it - he was a "ward healer" in Milwaukee politics, but when WWII broke out and we entered the European theatre, he had to turn in his shortwave radios because of the hysteria about German spies - he eventually got them back and went right back to listening to shortwave broadcasts from Germany. A little oddity with that was that he was the Foreman/Supervisor for the GM engine plant that made the blocks for Sherman tanks. What's even odder is my Mom was a USCG CPO (Waves) radio operator and was the Chief Operator on Cape Cod during WWII and all my uncles were either in the Marine Corps or Navy. :) I remember Hallicrafters - one of the best names in radio. Had an S-120 that I modified for SSB by adding a BFO. Still have it in fact. Hammerlund, National, Galaxy, Heath, TR Drake, Lafayette, Allied (Knight), E.F. Johnson, Gonset, Collins - all gone. Those were the days man - those were the days. Ever build a crystal set? I actually used to DX with crystal sets - on the AM band of all things. I just looked at my "DX" log when I was eight or nine - some real catches with four or five stations west of the Mississippi. Back in those days, you'd send a letter addressed to "Chief Engineer, WWL, New Orleans, LA" detailing the time, date and program you listend to and a week or two later, back would come a letter on station letter head thanking you for the reception report, confirming the information and a thanks for listening. Try that now. :) I still smile when I think about my very first "DX" when I got my General ticket in '64. I was working for the local TV repair shop - actually a gofer, but the owner used to let me work in the shop on radios and TVs. I had built a Heathkit "lunch box" - 10 meter AM transciever which were popular at the time. I had it with me on a TV pickup because I wanted to use the shop scope to tweak the transmitter and just for yucks hooked it up to the CD whip on the old Volkswagen bus we used for pickup and delivery. Put out a CQ and back came DL6RE - German clear as a bell. Gave me a great signal report and we held that QSO for five minutes until the band crapped out. Man that was so cool. Mrs. Wave used to get really ****ed when we would park out at the light house after a dance or movie and I'd turn on the radio and sweep the bands for something interesting. :) She got used to it though. Good times - good times. :) |
Cool - look what I found...
On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 20:14:52 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: On Sep 12, 9:33*pm, Tim wrote: On Sep 12, 8:38*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: http://tinyurl.com/qb7cs3 And as it happens, I know somebody who wants to get rid of a Hammerlund HQ-180A. Hmmmmm.... I bet you could heat a room with it! I remember my grandpa used to listen to short wave quite a bit, and he had an old tube Hallicrafter. *I *remember that the tube glow made the wall look like it was on fire. I dont' remember much about it but it sat on a small table facing a wall, and it had a couple of large knobs and three or four small knobs on the front and a couple of meters and a large sign on the back of his chair that said "STAY AWAY!!" But one thing I thought was odd was his antenna, which was a bare copper wire strung from their house to the summer kitchen in the back yard. I thought that was weird but I understand it now. I looked around, and there it is, just like my grandpa's. A Halicrafters S-85 http://www.wkinsler.com/radios/hallicrafters_s-85.html Oh yeah - great radios. Nothing like tubes dude - nothing like tubes. |
Cool - look what I found...
On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 19:33:14 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: On Sep 12, 8:38*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: http://tinyurl.com/qb7cs3 And as it happens, I know somebody who wants to get rid of a Hammerlund HQ-180A. Hmmmmm.... I bet you could heat a room with it! I remember my grandpa used to listen to short wave quite a bit, and he had an old tube Hallicrafter. I remember that the tube glow made the wall look like it was on fire. I dont' remember much about it but it sat on a small table facing a wall, and it had a couple of large knobs and three or four small knobs on the front and a couple of meters and a large sign on the back of his chair that said "STAY AWAY!!" But one thing I thought was odd was his antenna, which was a bare copper wire strung from their house to the summer kitchen in the back yard. I thought that was weird but I understand it now. I used to have one of these guys: http://www.antiqueradio.org/art/hallisx42.jpg http://www.antiqueradio.org/halli07.htm It was a serious piece of iron that my father bought in 1947 right after WWII. It was top of the line for its day, surpassed only by the Collins receivers which were ham bands only. The SX-42 was continuous tuning all the way from the bottom of the broadcast band at .54 MHz all the way to the top of the FM band at 108 MHz. Sensitivity on the VHF frequencies left a little to be desired but I made a few contacts on 6 meters with it back in the late 50s. |
Cool - look what I found...
On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 23:20:42 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote: On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 19:33:14 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Sep 12, 8:38*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: http://tinyurl.com/qb7cs3 And as it happens, I know somebody who wants to get rid of a Hammerlund HQ-180A. Hmmmmm.... I bet you could heat a room with it! I remember my grandpa used to listen to short wave quite a bit, and he had an old tube Hallicrafter. I remember that the tube glow made the wall look like it was on fire. I dont' remember much about it but it sat on a small table facing a wall, and it had a couple of large knobs and three or four small knobs on the front and a couple of meters and a large sign on the back of his chair that said "STAY AWAY!!" But one thing I thought was odd was his antenna, which was a bare copper wire strung from their house to the summer kitchen in the back yard. I thought that was weird but I understand it now. I used to have one of these guys: http://www.antiqueradio.org/art/hallisx42.jpg http://www.antiqueradio.org/halli07.htm It was a serious piece of iron that my father bought in 1947 right after WWII. It was top of the line for its day, surpassed only by the Collins receivers which were ham bands only. The SX-42 was continuous tuning all the way from the bottom of the broadcast band at .54 MHz all the way to the top of the FM band at 108 MHz. Sensitivity on the VHF frequencies left a little to be desired but I made a few contacts on 6 meters with it back in the late 50s. Talk about a boat anchor!! Made some great radios back in the day didn't they? |
Cool - look what I found...
On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 23:46:47 -0400, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote: On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 23:20:42 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 19:33:14 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Sep 12, 8:38*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: http://tinyurl.com/qb7cs3 And as it happens, I know somebody who wants to get rid of a Hammerlund HQ-180A. Hmmmmm.... I bet you could heat a room with it! I remember my grandpa used to listen to short wave quite a bit, and he had an old tube Hallicrafter. I remember that the tube glow made the wall look like it was on fire. I dont' remember much about it but it sat on a small table facing a wall, and it had a couple of large knobs and three or four small knobs on the front and a couple of meters and a large sign on the back of his chair that said "STAY AWAY!!" But one thing I thought was odd was his antenna, which was a bare copper wire strung from their house to the summer kitchen in the back yard. I thought that was weird but I understand it now. I used to have one of these guys: http://www.antiqueradio.org/art/hallisx42.jpg http://www.antiqueradio.org/halli07.htm It was a serious piece of iron that my father bought in 1947 right after WWII. It was top of the line for its day, surpassed only by the Collins receivers which were ham bands only. The SX-42 was continuous tuning all the way from the bottom of the broadcast band at .54 MHz all the way to the top of the FM band at 108 MHz. Sensitivity on the VHF frequencies left a little to be desired but I made a few contacts on 6 meters with it back in the late 50s. Talk about a boat anchor!! Made some great radios back in the day didn't they? It was a marvel of mechanical complexity and rigidity, sort of like old machine tools. The band switch had over a dozen wafers on it, each one loaded with components, just about impossible to work on. It would all be done with a few ICs these days but not nearly as much fun to look at. |
Cool - look what I found...
On Sep 12, 10:18*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote: On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 19:33:14 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Sep 12, 8:38*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: http://tinyurl.com/qb7cs3 And as it happens, I know somebody who wants to get rid of a Hammerlund HQ-180A. Hmmmmm.... I bet you could heat a room with it! I remember my grandpa used to listen to short wave quite a bit, and he had an old tube Hallicrafter. *I *remember that the tube glow made the wall look like it was on fire. I dont' remember much about it but it sat on a small table facing a wall, and it had a couple of large knobs and three or four small knobs on the front and a couple of meters and a large sign on the back of his chair that said "STAY AWAY!!" But one thing I thought was odd was his antenna, which was a bare copper wire strung from their house to the summer kitchen in the back yard. I thought that was weird but I understand it now. Heh - I know what you mean. *My maternal Grandfather had a collection of early Grundig radios he had shipped in from Germany. *Being a German immigrant right after WWI, he loved to listen to music and radio "from the old country". *He had a wire antenna system that rivals my own in some ways. It's funny when I think about it - he was a "ward healer" in Milwaukee politics, but when WWII broke out and we entered the European theatre, he had to turn in his shortwave radios because of the hysteria about German spies - he eventually got them back and went right back to listening to shortwave broadcasts from Germany. *A little oddity with that was that he was the Foreman/Supervisor for the GM engine plant that made the blocks for Sherman tanks. *What's even odder is my Mom was a USCG CPO (Waves) radio operator and was the Chief Operator on Cape Cod during WWII and all my uncles were either in the Marine Corps or Navy. *:) I remember Hallicrafters - one of the best names in radio. Had an S-120 that I modified for SSB by adding a BFO. *Still have it in fact. Hammerlund, National, Galaxy, Heath, TR Drake, Lafayette, Allied (Knight), E.F. Johnson, Gonset, Collins - all gone. The "Kennedy" name brand rings a bell to. |
Cool - look what I found...
On Sep 12, 9:38*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote: http://tinyurl.com/qb7cs3 And as it happens, I know somebody who wants to get rid of a Hammerlund HQ-180A. Hmmmmm.... Looks like it needs work, Tom. Keeps blowing a fuse?????? |
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