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On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 13:18:06 -0500, Dave Hall
wrote: On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 13:46:34 GMT, "Eisboch" wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 07:31:30 -0500, Harry Krause wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On 19 Nov 2004 01:39:52 GMT, (Gould 0738) wrote: Our regional boating magazine is about to observe its 40th year of publication, so I'm digging through issues from each of the first few decades to choose material for an article to lauch the anniversay year. ~~ snippage ~~ T&G Electronics was advertising some VHF radios. (Remember, these are 1965 prices...) The 75-watt, six channel model was available for $299. A 110-watt model, also six channel, was priced at $399. The top of the line, very deluxe 150-watt unit with *8* Channels (!) was a mere $549. (A lot of middle-class jobs only paid about $500/month back then. Imagine taking out an 18-month installment loan to buy a VHF) And those were crystal controlled with flibberdejibbet tune controls. I have one in my collection of antique radios - I'll take a picture today and post it. Gosh...from the days when Radio Shack was a real electronics hobbyist store. First store ever - right across from BU on Commonwealth Avenue in Boston. I had a Radio Shack short wave receiver from that my Uncle sent me one Christmas. I was living in WI at the time (before we moved east) and heard the BBC for the first time when I was around ten sitting in my room with wire strung all over the place hooked up to the little transistor "Shortwave" receiver. Sparked my interest in electronics actually. Remember Lafayette Electronics? My first FM receiver was a Lafayette - I'll never forget putting that kit together - took me almost a month working after homework was finished late into the night. Got it together and had to tune it and bought my first piece of test equipment - a signal generator - which was also a kit. :) I remember my father saying "FM - it will never catch on - all they play is classical music". WTMG in Milwaukee in fact had the only FM transmitter in the mid-west at the time. WGN in Chicago was a couple of years behind them. Heathkit was also high on my list of stuff every Christmas when they were still around. At one time I had a ton of Heath amateur radio and test equipment. My Dad's first color TV was a Heath. That was fun. Oh - gosh - how could I forget Allied Electronics on Michigan Avenue in Milwaukee. I used to beg my Dad to take me to work with him at the Milwaukee Sentinel on vacations so I could hang at the Allied store in the afternoon and just look at "stuff". Ah yes - the gud ole' daze... Later, Tom I certainly do remember Lafayette and Heathkit. We had a wonderful Radio Shack in downtown New Haven. It had some displays of "manufactured" goodies, but most of the store consisted of aisles and aisles of red plastic and painted wood parts bins, with every electronic piece and part known to mankind, or, at least, all that a kid could imagine. I think the store was that good because it was in walking distance of Yale's engineering college. I remember in the 7th grade finding a brand-new Model A Ford spark coil there, if not OEM, then one built to Model A specs. Well, I really needed one badly, because my Science Project for that year was to build a cloud chamber. Which I did...and the damned thing worked. I still remember exactly how I built it, too...after all these years. -- Man, talk about flashbacks ... Back in the late 50's or very early 60's when "HiFi" was the rage my father and a group of his friends got into building speaker cabinets for their "systems". They all met 1 or 2 times a week after work at one of the friend's garage because he had a well equipped wood working shop. I still remember the cabinet design - V shaped with a tunable slot along the rear for bass reinforcement. They took me along to the Radio Shack in Boston to get the speakers and crossover components and I can still remember the building and the original Radio Shack sign. A few years later when we moved to CT, there was a Lafayette Electronics store at a strip mall on the Merritt Parkway. I saved all my lawn mowing money one summer because I just *had* to have a Lafayette audio amplifier kit. I built it and it was the center of my music system for years. I think the kit was $18.95 and my mother, who drove me to the store when I finally had the money, just couldn't understand why a box of tubes, resistors and capacitors meant so much to me. Little did she know, it was the beginning of what ultimately led to a career and still remains as an enjoyable hobby. WARNING! Flashback alert! Hide the beanbags and the lava lamps..... My engineering career was sparked by those "100-in-1" electronic project kits that Radio Shack used to sell. This led to an interest in radio, which I cultivated with CB and then Ham radio. I used to practically live in Radio Shack and Lafayette. It distresses me to see what Radio Shack has "evolved" into. The have few parts anymore and are little more than a small time consumer electronics/toy store. It saddens me to see it that way, but I understand the market pressures which brought it on. There aren't many "experimenters" out there anymore who actually use discrete parts. Most new techies, are into software driven circuits. Another reason to long for the good old days..... I had a long discussion many years ago with Wayne Green, W2NSD, who in his day, was firmly convinced that technical educations came from learning how to build, break and trouble shoot "stuff". Looking back on his career, I'd have to say he was right. My kids were all experimenters and when they broke something, my approach was to have them fix it and only when they were stuck could they come to me for help. Later, Tom |
----- Original Message -----
From: Wayne.B Newsgroups: rec.boats Sent: Friday, November 19, 2004 12:20 PM Subject: From some old archives........ On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 17:01:07 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Ultimately, and the stereo system I currently have, is a set of Bozak Concert Grands (from the late '70s) powered by six McInsosh 50s (with the Gold Lion 6L6s - now Svetlana 6L6s), a PAT5 preamp and some solid state Marantz stuff inbetween. I still have my Garrad Z-100 changer, but don't use it all that much. Had to build a solid state preamp for the cd changer. ========================================= Those 6L6s were some versatile tubes. My first ever novice ham rig had one as the final amp, circa 1957. There was a metal version of the 6L6 that was supposedly built to withstand the rigors of being launched in an antiaircraft shell. The function of the 6L6 was to act as a proximity fuse which would detonate the shell when the circuit detected that it was near a metalic object. What do they cost these days and where do you get them? They were, and still are. Seems like they were used in just about everything electronic at one time or another. Last winter I came across and was able to buy a used, custom built guitar amp that uses push-pull 6L6's in the output stage. The seller included several pairs of new, matched 6L6's as spares with the amp. Sounds sweet with a Gibson Les Paul. If only I could play the damn thing. For Tom - that's a very impressive system ya got there. Love to listen to it someday. I got out of the audio stuff for many years, but now am now learning all over again. Current "best" system consists of a pair of Martin-Logan SL3 electrostatics, Rel sub, B&K Components power amp and a Ascom (sp?) pre-amp. Very different sound and strictly stereo only. Sounds best with acoustical recordings and well recorded classical material. Eisboch |
On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 12:20:26 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote: On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 17:01:07 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Ultimately, and the stereo system I currently have, is a set of Bozak Concert Grands (from the late '70s) powered by six McInsosh 50s (with the Gold Lion 6L6s - now Svetlana 6L6s), a PAT5 preamp and some solid state Marantz stuff inbetween. I still have my Garrad Z-100 changer, but don't use it all that much. Had to build a solid state preamp for the cd changer. ========================================= Those 6L6s were some versatile tubes. My first ever novice ham rig had one as the final amp, circa 1957. There was a metal version of the 6L6 that was supposedly built to withstand the rigors of being launched in an antiaircraft shell. The function of the 6L6 was to act as a proximity fuse which would detonate the shell when the circuit detected that it was near a metalic object. What do they cost these days and where do you get them? About a $100 for a matched quad set of Chinese tubes - slightly more the Svetlana tubes, although those are becoming problematical. The Chinese tubes are very well made and they even make some in different shells for different sounds. Later, Tom |
On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 23:33:15 GMT, "Eisboch"
wrote: ----- Original Message ----- From: Wayne.B Newsgroups: rec.boats Sent: Friday, November 19, 2004 12:20 PM Subject: From some old archives........ On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 17:01:07 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Ultimately, and the stereo system I currently have, is a set of Bozak Concert Grands (from the late '70s) powered by six McInsosh 50s (with the Gold Lion 6L6s - now Svetlana 6L6s), a PAT5 preamp and some solid state Marantz stuff inbetween. I still have my Garrad Z-100 changer, but don't use it all that much. Had to build a solid state preamp for the cd changer. ========================================= Those 6L6s were some versatile tubes. My first ever novice ham rig had one as the final amp, circa 1957. There was a metal version of the 6L6 that was supposedly built to withstand the rigors of being launched in an antiaircraft shell. The function of the 6L6 was to act as a proximity fuse which would detonate the shell when the circuit detected that it was near a metalic object. What do they cost these days and where do you get them? They were, and still are. Seems like they were used in just about everything electronic at one time or another. Last winter I came across and was able to buy a used, custom built guitar amp that uses push-pull 6L6's in the output stage. The seller included several pairs of new, matched 6L6's as spares with the amp. Sounds sweet with a Gibson Les Paul. If only I could play the damn thing. For Tom - that's a very impressive system ya got there. Love to listen to it someday. I got out of the audio stuff for many years, but now am now learning all over again. Current "best" system consists of a pair of Martin-Logan SL3 electrostatics, Rel sub, B&K Components power amp and a Ascom (sp?) pre-amp. Very different sound and strictly stereo only. Sounds best with acoustical recordings and well recorded classical material. I would think it would. B&K - wow, another blast from the past. I've been offered big dollars for those Macs from different audiophiles. Same with the Concert Grands. Ain't gonna sell 'em - no way, no how. :) Ain't nuttin' like that transformer/tube sound. Never mind the warm glow from the tubes at night. That's why when I get the itch to do some hamming, I usually fire up my Dad's old Collins S line. Real radios with real tubes. :) Later, Tom |
Eisboch wrote:
---------------------------------------------------- Man, talk about flashbacks ... Back in the late 50's or very early 60's when "HiFi" was the rage my father and a group of his friends got into building speaker cabinets for their "systems". They all met 1 or 2 times a week after work at one of the friend's garage because he had a well equipped wood working shop. I still remember the cabinet design - V shaped with a tunable slot along the rear for bass reinforcement. They took me along to the Radio Shack in Boston to get the speakers and crossover components and I can still remember the building and the original Radio Shack sign. ================================== Flashback is right!! I still remember buyng the plans from KLA Lab. in Detroit to build the Electro-Voice Aristicrat cabinets. I think thats what you're describing. It was called a "folded corner horn" and it was best used in the corner of a room so as to utilize the walls to expand the base notes. I used 2 EV 12" wide range speakers with a high freq. tweeter that I got from Lafayette. I built a stereo integrated amplifier that I got from Allied Radio (later to merge with Radio Shack), then scrounged around and found a Garrard turntable. My son still has the speakers and we joke that they and he are about the same age. I recall building them while my wife was pregnant with him. ===== Norm |
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On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 00:09:28 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: That's why when I get the itch to do some hamming, I usually fire up my Dad's old Collins S line. Real radios with real tubes. :) =============================================== Oh yeah, real radios for sure. They were the standard that everything else was measured against. In the pre-digital era Collins and Drake made equipment that actually performed the way it was supposed to, and that was unusual for ham gear of its day. Unfortunately the Collins expertise did not carry over into computer equipment and that was their downfall, big time. |
On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 22:36:35 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote: On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 00:09:28 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: That's why when I get the itch to do some hamming, I usually fire up my Dad's old Collins S line. Real radios with real tubes. :) =============================================== Oh yeah, real radios for sure. They were the standard that everything else was measured against. In the pre-digital era Collins and Drake made equipment that actually performed the way it was supposed to, and that was unusual for ham gear of its day. Unfortunately the Collins expertise did not carry over into computer equipment and that was their downfall, big time. Remember the NCR line of transceivers? Live long and prosper, Tom |
"Gould 0738" wrote in message .................................... What fun! I'm looking at the "conceptual drawings" for two of our prominent civic marinas, (Des Moines and Kingston) as the original construction on these two projects was about to begin. I'll bet if the current environmental laws were in place, facilities like that would *still* be in the discussion stages after 40 years. Remember the proposed Duwamish/West Seattle marina? A million dollars was appropriated to build a rock breakwater, but first, The Corps of Engineers was hired to study the feasibility of same. A year later, they came up with their conclusion.... Not certain. By the way, their bill for the study was................................. You guessed it - One million. Unc |
On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 20:43:16 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: WARNING! Flashback alert! Hide the beanbags and the lava lamps..... My engineering career was sparked by those "100-in-1" electronic project kits that Radio Shack used to sell. This led to an interest in radio, which I cultivated with CB and then Ham radio. I used to practically live in Radio Shack and Lafayette. It distresses me to see what Radio Shack has "evolved" into. The have few parts anymore and are little more than a small time consumer electronics/toy store. It saddens me to see it that way, but I understand the market pressures which brought it on. There aren't many "experimenters" out there anymore who actually use discrete parts. Most new techies, are into software driven circuits. Another reason to long for the good old days..... I had a long discussion many years ago with Wayne Green, W2NSD, who in his day, was firmly convinced that technical educations came from learning how to build, break and trouble shoot "stuff". Looking back on his career, I'd have to say he was right. My kids were all experimenters and when they broke something, my approach was to have them fix it and only when they were stuck could they come to me for help. Most of my education was of the self-taught, "school of hard knocks" method. I learned FAR more by experimenting on my own (Along with the shocks, burns, and smoke to prove it!) than by sitting in a classroom listening to an instructor talk about it. The skill of troubleshooting is an aptitude. It requires a certain analytical, logical mindset. Those who have this aptitude, pick it up without any trouble. Those who don't have the aptitude, will likely never fully grasp the concepts. It doesn't matter to me if it's a ham radio, a fuel injection system, consumer electronics, a lawn mower, or the boat, I solve the problems in the same way, by a logical process of elimination. Dave |
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