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#1
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![]() "Eisboch" wrote in message ... Here's the one I used to play with: http://www.geocities.com/technician4/ronw1.jpg Eisboch The one in the link (above) is an old AN/FRT-40 used by the Navy primarily at shore based naval transmitter sites from late 40's. They were phased out by the mid 70's. The "40" was a 50kw version of this, an An/FRT-39. It was used both at shore stations and aboard ship. The left side rack contained the modulation mode select (CW, FSK, Voice, and the output mode .... carrier or SSB. It had an "exciter" capable of 1000 watts used to drive the right hand side, 10kw power amp. The exciter could also be used by itself, hooked to an antenna in emergencies. We used to have a lot of fun screwing around with that. http://jproc.ca/rrp/coverdale_gpt10k.gif A FRT-40 added an additional power output section to raise the output to 50KW I can't remember anymore. Is it "peak the grid, dip the plate" or the other way around? Eisboch Here's one I used at the Marine MARS station on Okinawa fro RTTY traffic.. http://www.collinsradio.org/html/kw-1.html We also had several Collins original *S* Line setups. We had a 600' per leg rhombic pointed at Southern California, Camp Pendleton. They were are main outlet for RTTY traffic. BTW, don't peak the plate, you'll be replacing finals. 8) |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 6 Nov 2008 18:24:24 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote:
"Eisboch" wrote in message ... Here's the one I used to play with: http://www.geocities.com/technician4/ronw1.jpg Eisboch The one in the link (above) is an old AN/FRT-40 used by the Navy primarily at shore based naval transmitter sites from late 40's. They were phased out by the mid 70's. The "40" was a 50kw version of this, an An/FRT-39. It was used both at shore stations and aboard ship. The left side rack contained the modulation mode select (CW, FSK, Voice, and the output mode .... carrier or SSB. It had an "exciter" capable of 1000 watts used to drive the right hand side, 10kw power amp. The exciter could also be used by itself, hooked to an antenna in emergencies. We used to have a lot of fun screwing around with that. http://jproc.ca/rrp/coverdale_gpt10k.gif A FRT-40 added an additional power output section to raise the output to 50KW I can't remember anymore. Is it "peak the grid, dip the plate" or the other way around? Here's one I used at the Marine MARS station on Okinawa fro RTTY traffic.. http://www.collinsradio.org/html/kw-1.html That was a sweet rig back in the day. Never really got into RTTY for some reason - when I was still up on code, I could "read" 60 Baudot RTTY by ear - could catch enough to parse the word pretty well. Then again, my CW speed was up around 65 wpm with 100% copy. I was just listening to the high speed cw net on 75 - I can still copy 40 wpm pretty well, but I've lost my 50+ speed ear - have to keep listening for a few days to get it back. A lot of that is machine code now done by computer - not a lot of us left who enjoy high speed full breakin code using a Vibrolplex bug. I use my Dad's presentation bug - he was given it by the radio guys on his DE during WWII. Love that thing. We also had several Collins original *S* Line setups. We had a 600' per leg rhombic pointed at Southern California, Camp Pendleton. They were are main outlet for RTTY traffic. My Dad's S-line is a great system - looks great too. Nothing like tubes. BTW, don't peak the plate, you'll be replacing finals. 8) Been there, done that. Much to my Dad's displeasure. :) |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in message ... On Thu, 6 Nov 2008 18:24:24 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote: "Eisboch" wrote in message ... Here's the one I used to play with: http://www.geocities.com/technician4/ronw1.jpg Eisboch The one in the link (above) is an old AN/FRT-40 used by the Navy primarily at shore based naval transmitter sites from late 40's. They were phased out by the mid 70's. The "40" was a 50kw version of this, an An/FRT-39. It was used both at shore stations and aboard ship. The left side rack contained the modulation mode select (CW, FSK, Voice, and the output mode .... carrier or SSB. It had an "exciter" capable of 1000 watts used to drive the right hand side, 10kw power amp. The exciter could also be used by itself, hooked to an antenna in emergencies. We used to have a lot of fun screwing around with that. http://jproc.ca/rrp/coverdale_gpt10k.gif A FRT-40 added an additional power output section to raise the output to 50KW I can't remember anymore. Is it "peak the grid, dip the plate" or the other way around? Here's one I used at the Marine MARS station on Okinawa fro RTTY traffic.. http://www.collinsradio.org/html/kw-1.html That was a sweet rig back in the day. Never really got into RTTY for some reason - when I was still up on code, I could "read" 60 Baudot RTTY by ear - could catch enough to parse the word pretty well. Then again, my CW speed was up around 65 wpm with 100% copy. I was just listening to the high speed cw net on 75 - I can still copy 40 wpm pretty well, but I've lost my 50+ speed ear - have to keep listening for a few days to get it back. A lot of that is machine code now done by computer - not a lot of us left who enjoy high speed full breakin code using a Vibrolplex bug. I use my Dad's presentation bug - he was given it by the radio guys on his DE during WWII. Love that thing. We also had several Collins original *S* Line setups. We had a 600' per leg rhombic pointed at Southern California, Camp Pendleton. They were are main outlet for RTTY traffic. My Dad's S-line is a great system - looks great too. Nothing like tubes. BTW, don't peak the plate, you'll be replacing finals. 8) Been there, done that. Much to my Dad's displeasure. :) While searching for a picture of the KW-1 I came across this site. Quite a collection. http://www.isquare.com/personal_pages/ras-hardware.htm |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 6 Nov 2008 20:09:20 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote:
While searching for a picture of the KW-1 I came across this site. Quite a collection. http://www.isquare.com/personal_pages/ras-hardware.htm He's got me beat. When I was contesting regularly, I had three towers, two at 100' were phased for 40 meters topped by monobanders for 15 and ten plus the 2, 220 and 440 monobanders. The main tower was 120' topped by a TH-11 and a 20 meter ten element monobander at 90' on a ring. Plus various wires hug off the towers, slopers, the Beverage and one of the strangest looking loop for 75 meters ever built. Or so I was told. :) |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in message ... On Thu, 6 Nov 2008 18:24:24 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote: "Eisboch" wrote in message ... Here's the one I used to play with: http://www.geocities.com/technician4/ronw1.jpg Eisboch The one in the link (above) is an old AN/FRT-40 used by the Navy primarily at shore based naval transmitter sites from late 40's. They were phased out by the mid 70's. The "40" was a 50kw version of this, an An/FRT-39. It was used both at shore stations and aboard ship. The left side rack contained the modulation mode select (CW, FSK, Voice, and the output mode .... carrier or SSB. It had an "exciter" capable of 1000 watts used to drive the right hand side, 10kw power amp. The exciter could also be used by itself, hooked to an antenna in emergencies. We used to have a lot of fun screwing around with that. http://jproc.ca/rrp/coverdale_gpt10k.gif A FRT-40 added an additional power output section to raise the output to 50KW I can't remember anymore. Is it "peak the grid, dip the plate" or the other way around? Here's one I used at the Marine MARS station on Okinawa fro RTTY traffic.. http://www.collinsradio.org/html/kw-1.html That was a sweet rig back in the day. Never really got into RTTY for some reason - when I was still up on code, I could "read" 60 Baudot RTTY by ear - could catch enough to parse the word pretty well. Then again, my CW speed was up around 65 wpm with 100% copy. I was just listening to the high speed cw net on 75 - I can still copy 40 wpm pretty well, but I've lost my 50+ speed ear - have to keep listening for a few days to get it back. A lot of that is machine code now done by computer - not a lot of us left who enjoy high speed full breakin code using a Vibrolplex bug. I use my Dad's presentation bug - he was given it by the radio guys on his DE during WWII. Love that thing. We also had several Collins original *S* Line setups. We had a 600' per leg rhombic pointed at Southern California, Camp Pendleton. They were are main outlet for RTTY traffic. My Dad's S-line is a great system - looks great too. Nothing like tubes. BTW, don't peak the plate, you'll be replacing finals. 8) Been there, done that. Much to my Dad's displeasure. :) Never could get into the code. I just looked at the wheels and figured out the dots and dashes on the navigation systems I worked on. Tacan, Loran, ILS beacons. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 6 Nov 2008 18:24:24 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote:
"Eisboch" wrote in message ... Here's the one I used to play with: http://www.geocities.com/technician4/ronw1.jpg Eisboch The one in the link (above) is an old AN/FRT-40 used by the Navy primarily at shore based naval transmitter sites from late 40's. They were phased out by the mid 70's. The "40" was a 50kw version of this, an An/FRT-39. It was used both at shore stations and aboard ship. The left side rack contained the modulation mode select (CW, FSK, Voice, and the output mode .... carrier or SSB. It had an "exciter" capable of 1000 watts used to drive the right hand side, 10kw power amp. The exciter could also be used by itself, hooked to an antenna in emergencies. We used to have a lot of fun screwing around with that. http://jproc.ca/rrp/coverdale_gpt10k.gif A FRT-40 added an additional power output section to raise the output to 50KW I can't remember anymore. Is it "peak the grid, dip the plate" or the other way around? Eisboch Here's one I used at the Marine MARS station on Okinawa fro RTTY traffic.. http://www.collinsradio.org/html/kw-1.html We also had several Collins original *S* Line setups. We had a 600' per leg rhombic pointed at Southern California, Camp Pendleton. They were are main outlet for RTTY traffic. BTW, don't peak the plate, you'll be replacing finals. 8) You MARS guys were life-savers during the Vietnam days. Thanks for what you did! -- A Harry Krause truism: "It's not a *baby* kicking, beautiful bride, it's just a fetus!" |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 6 Nov 2008 18:24:24 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote:
We also had several Collins original *S* Line setups. We had a 600' per leg rhombic pointed at Southern California, Camp Pendleton. They were are main outlet for RTTY traffic. One of the hams here in town has a rhombic of similar size. The largest/longest antenna for me was a bi-directional sloped Beverage that ran NE/SW for a little over a mile through the woods. The ends were terminated at six foot high on both ends and the mid-slope was at 12 feet. I used it during my contesting days as a spotting antenna, but I could switch it to transmit quickly. That antenna was freakin' loud man. |
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