I _often_ wished that I'd have had the bread to buy that receiver while
making do with the S-85. Given what that receiver would do for me at 1:30 in
the morning back in the late fifties, I could only imagine what the S-108
could have done!
----- Original Message -----
From: "Louis Kim Kline" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, April 25, 2006 10:25 PM
Subject: Re: let me know when it is over
Hi.
Well, probably part of the reason why I didn't mind those days was because
I had a lot of vision then, so it really didn't require any special
adaptation for me to get on the air. I think, though, that I miss my old
Halicrafters receivers most of all, and I have to force myself to walk away
from them when I see them at hamfests.
I still think my old Hallicrafters S108 had some of the best sound audio of
any general coverage receiver that I've ever owned. The fact that I did a
lot of hard work in the August sun to earn that radio makes it even sweeter.
73, de Lou K2LKK
At 01:29 PM 4/25/2006 -0400, you wrote:
>John -
>
>No, you really don't want to try some of that old stuff. It's fun to
>reminisce about, no way around that, but it wasn't always fun to use on a
>daily basis at the time. It's like folks who reminisced about the model
>T--they tended to forget the broken arms from a backfiring engine while it
>was being cranked, the easily-shredded tires, the total absence of any kind
>of weather protection, etc., etc. The only "older" gear that I sort of wish
>I could have seen, if not owned, was the Viking (I think) KW station--it
>was
>actually built into an operating desk, so that when you bought it, you got
>a
>piece of furniture with a transmitter included. I think you used the
>desktop
>for a matching receiver. I've often wondered just how physically accessible
>the gear was for those times you had to replace a tube.
>
>The Drake C line is another that I wish I could've worked with. The fact is
>that for blind hams, today's equipment is much easier to work with. That's
>not to say, obviously, that blind hams weren't active in the hobby almost
>since its beginnings, but a lot of what everybody takes for granted today
>required a lot of cooperation from sighted hams fifty years ago. Nowadays,
>about the only thing a blind ham might need sighted help with are tower
>erection and some types of antenna maintenance/service, but that sure
>wasn't
>the case in earlier years. I think that the audio capabilities that chips
>like the VS-1 provided were, without any question, the greatest boon to
>blind hams ever. Coupled with the superior stability of modern rigs, it
>sure
>cut down on those pink slips from Uncle that used to indicate that you'd
>strayed outside your assigned frequencies.
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