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Date: | Mon, 3 Dec 2007 09:56:10 -0700 |
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Speaking of old radios, What about the r390a receivers? I never did run
one with the solid State product detector mod but it did wonders on the
one I did use at a fellow ham's home. I used mine as a shack warmer at
times as well. I had a 3 foot cube rack cabinet I put the radio in
which I had put ball casters on and could move it with ease when needed.
The top had a hinged lid so I could slip the top chassis cover off if
needed and access the top of the radio. This was rarely needed as this
thing was stable and rock steady.
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BRETT WINCHESTER
[log in to unmask]
208-639-8386
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-----Original Message-----
From: For blind ham radio operators
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Steve
Sent: Monday, December 03, 2007 9:04 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Old Heath Gear
I figured I had to chime in on this subject. When I was studying for my
Novice back in 1964, I had a Heath GR-91 which I think was a
regenerative receiver.
When I got my ticket, a local elmer lent me a DX-35, which ran 60 watts.
Later that year, as a matter of fact, I remember the date exactly as
November 13, 1964, my parents bought me an NC-300 receiver. That was a
nice box, but I really didn't appreciate all it could do until ten years
later, when a local ham tweaked it up. I think my folks bought it used,
and it really wasn't tuned properly; it did play much better after that.
When I got my Conditional/General privileges, I upgraded to a
Johnson-Viking Invader. So, I remember the days where you had to spot
your signal very well.
Steve, K8SP
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