We can morph the thread into just how bad was the old stuff.
I just got through resurrecting a Heathkit AR-3. On that one, the entire 80M
band is about 3/4" of dial with tic marks every 100 kc. I actually used this
thing on the air the other night although I have to admit even with a lot of
TLC it's still a pathetic excuse for a radio, essentially an AA5 with a power
transformer and band switching and a clever but kludgy BFO design right out of
old regen receivers -- same triode section acting as AF driver and 455 kc BFO
oscillator.
Old Ten-Tec gear is a real favorite among the vintage SSB crowd. Unfortunately,
the cutoff is 1980. My Corsair is too new. It's considering lying about its age.
Jon
PS: Old Drake gear. Wonderful. I hope you still have it.
On Feb 23, 2014, at 12:12 PM, Carter wrote:
> On 2/23/2014 1:36 PM, k6jek wrote:
>> I certainly got everyone riled up with this one, didn't I?
>>
>> Just to be clear, these guys were not giving me grief but I still don't like
>> being the guy who is off frequency all the time even though I often run old,
>> old gear. The Corsair (I) is not a candidate as a National Bureau of
>> Standards reference.
>>
>
> I can't help but view this thread with a bit of humor, and dare I say, irony.
>
> Got my Novice ticket in 1959 and remember that with the first 3 or 4
> receivers I had, I was lucky to be within 50 kHz. Even when I got the Drake
> 4B line (wonderful radios!) in 1969, they were calibrated to 1 kHz.
>
> So pardon me for smiling when I see people quibbling about 30 cycles.
>
> My, how times change! :-)
>
> 73,
> Carter K8VT
> _______________________________________________
> TenTec mailing list
> TenTec@contesting.com
> http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/tentec
_______________________________________________
TenTec mailing list
TenTec@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/tentec
|