Paul,
What to speak of its history ??
Anything............
A lesson of love for amateur radio
Congratulations
73, Franco
PY1EPU - GG87kd
PY4EPU - GG88p0
Member:
CWSP - LABRE RJ - ARRL - SKCC - SIDESWIPER (
SSN )
FISTS CW Club - The International Morse Preservation Society
Collins Collectors Association - Drake Collectors Association.
North American QRP CW Club (NAQCC) - New England QRP Club ( NEQRP)
Vibroplex Collectors Association - Essex CW Amateur Radio Club
(ECWARC)
Amateur Radio Moonbounce Communications - 144 Mhz (Earth - Moon - Earth)
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-----Mensagem original-----
De: Topband [mailto:topband-bounces@contesting.com] Em nome de john
Enviada em: quarta-feira, 20 de janeiro de 2016 09:49
Para: topband@contesting.com
Assunto: Re: Topband: 79th Anniversary of my 1st Ham License
congrats Paul, one of the true pioneers of ham radio,,geeezzz I was
not even born till 1941.
Many years to come :-) 73 john w8wej
On 1/20/2016 6:35 AM, Paul Elliott wrote:
> My first ham license was dated January 19, 1937. I was 14 years old, a
> sophomore in high school in Kingsville, Texas. Parts from defunct
> Atwater Kent AM receivers (all radios in those days were AM-no FM yet)
> to build a two tube (types 57 and 56) regenerative receiver and a TNT
> (type 45 tube) transmitter-all 40 meters. Key was a broken off piece
> of hacksaw blade mounted on a piece of 1x4 pine board. The Brandes
> earphones had external connectors with the full plate voltage (about
> 100 vdc) of the receiver on them. Antenna was a piece of wire going
> out the window to a tree-highest point about 15 feet. The ratio of
> QSOs to stations called was not very great-but it was not zero.
>
> My first ever DX contact was in August 1937 with VK2SS on 40m CW. A
> WAG is that I probably was running about 5 watts-was using a dial lamp
> to measure
> (?) input current. His QSL is in its own special frame hanging on my
wall.
>
> QTH for the past 25 years has been a 120x120 foot lot, electrically
> quite noisy, in Hobbs NM. Two wire transmitting antennas.. An
> inverted L, about
> 3/8 wavelength on 160m, fed against what radials I could put down.
> Feedline is 100 feet or so of 1" hardline. Using a homebrew tuner in
> the shack this antenna is used on all 9 HF bands. The other is a 60
> foot slanted dipole, with open wire feedline and its own tuner. It is
used on 40m thru 10m.
> Receiving antennas are two Ewes and a 100 foot wire two feet off the
> ground next to a concrete block fence. This piece of wire is a
> surprisingly good receiving antenna sometimes.
>
> About 20 years ago I started working on a WAS on 160 m. After that I
> started chasing DX. Most of my operation is on CW but will use phone
> when necessary.
>
> Presently have 186 countries confirmed on 160 m, have 325 on160m thru 10m.
>
> Time and life have taken their toll. It used to be CW at 35-40wpm.
> Declining finger dexterity limits me to about 25 wpm while transmitting.
> Time constants in the brain limit receiving to about the same range as
> sending. At higher speeds I can still hear letters clearly-but they
> don't melt together to make words. Really simple, though-a man goes
> with what he has.
>
> My thanks to those on this forum who have been very kind to me over
> the years. Your kindness and expertise are not forgotten.
>
> 73 Paul W5DM
ves - http://www.contesting.com/_topband
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