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| subject: | Re: Resurrected |
05-15-14 16:06 Roy Witt wrote to Ed Vance about Resurrected
RW> {at}MSGID:
RW> Greetings Ed!
Hi! Roy,
EV>>> I'm thinking the Finals in that TX were 810's in push-pull.
EV>>> Can't remember what tubes they were Modulated with.
RW>>> 12AX5s?
EV>> No, more like 833's in the Plate Modulator section on the rack.
RW>> The tube I mentioned would have come after the 833s.
EV> When I first saw "12AX5s?" I was thinking about a tube such as a
EV> 12AX7 which is a 9 pin minature tube.
RW> Did I say 12ax5? There's no such tube listed in my 1977 Radio
RW> Amateur's Handbook, but there is a 12AX7A listed. It is a dual
RW> triode used as a class B amplifier tube.
Yes, see above after my first paragraph.
Tom found a Link but the site didn't have any details about that tube,
only the $1.00 US price per tube.
That's why I started wondering if you were talking about a tube used to
Plate Modulate a CB rig, 2.5Watts, not the 500Watts needed for the 1KW
TX used at the High School.
EV> The 12AX5 wasn't in my 1976 A.R.R.L. Handbook, so I tried Searching
EV> to see what kind of tube it was.
RW> 8^)
EV> I gave up when none of the Results for the searches I did said
EV> anything for the 12AX5, all they were for were the 12AX7 tube.
RW> Which is what I had mentioned, if I called it right. Otherwise
RW> that is what I meant.
See what You wrote after my First Paragraph above.
-snip-
RW> I remember having some tube-type Motorola VHF mobile radios
RW> that I thought were too large to put in a car. They were run by
RW> remote control with 99% of the radio mounted in the trunk and
RW> you only had a control head and mic under the dash...
You're talking about those Two Way Radios used in Police Cars, Fire
Trucks, City Works, Taxi Cabs, etc...
RW> The Motorolas I mentioned above had two sets of crystals in
RW> them. One that received the base station and one that
RW> transmitted on another frequency, presumably the base station's
RW> receiver, aka duplex. They had a couple of channels setup like
RW> that and about 4 channels with simplex frequencies in their rx
RW> and tx. That was late 50s or early 60s.
A and B Channels? and they're not Duplex, they are Simplex Push To Talk
Radios.
Unless you got something from Motorola fancier than the usual Mobile
Radio the Services above used in the 1960's when I was a Dispatcher
for City Works.
IIRC those Radios came in 30Watt, 60Watt and sometime in 1965 the City
bought some General Electric 100Watt Mobile Radios.
-snip-
EV> If the USS Enterprise video You saw showed 'Radio One' You probably
EV> saw one of those Patch Panels. What was nice about them was the Male
EV> N?? Connectors had a collar that was pulled back to connect to the
EV> Female Connector on the Panel. A lot easier than twisting the collar
EV> on a PL-259 on to a SO-239. -snip-
RW> To me, the male N connector is more complicated to connect to a
RW> female N connector than a 259 does with the 239 female
RW> connector. At least it is straight forward to me as to who gets
RW> what.
Outside of the Ships I were on I have never seen a N Connector
manufactured as I described above - with a Collar that was Pulled Back,
Push the Connector On the Female N Connector on the panel, and Release
the Collar and the built in spring pushed the Collar forward, and it
moved forward it pushed some Ball Bearings into the Recess on the
Female Connector to Lock it in place.
To Remove the Patch Cable from one place to another, Pull Back the
Collar and Pull the Cable Off the Female Connector.
The N Connectors I've seen in Civilian Life had Screw Threads just like
the PL-259/SO-239 Connectors that most equipment I've seen have on 'em.
-anip-
EV> But it is on Amateur Radio Frequencies, and those 'Electronic
EV> Hobbyist' that used Yesau Tranceivers, and probably still do on our
EV> Ham Bands fit the Description above.
RW> Well, I don't have a Yesau xceivr, but I do have a Kenwood
RW> TS-520 which is in the same ballpark as say, a Yasau 101?. I
RW> never did see any advantage to building something I can buy off
RW> the shelf. That would be like building a Model K Ford when
RW> there are much better models offered for sale.
I met someone who like his Yesau FT-??? because he could run 100W AM
on 11 Meters, the guy really bragged about his rig.
During that time frame I noticed the FT-xxx XCVRS still had a position
on their Band Switch for the Old 11 Meter Ham Band, and the TS-xxx rigs
didn't have that selection on the Band Switch on the front panel.
I knew someone with a TS-520 and learned it was a read good rig, so in
the 1970's I got a TS-520S and added the DS-1A DC To DC Convertor, and
bought a Cinch-Jones Connector - Wired it to the Physical Connections
on the C-J Connector, not the Pin Numbers from the Kenwood Schematic
for their Connector manufactured for them in Japan, and went Mobile
with my rig.
-snip-
EV>> ... Why don't sheep shrink when it rains?
RW>> They're pre-shrunk. Sheep used to be the size of a camel.
EV> Hey!, that's nice, I like that.
RW> Just don't take up smoking sheep's wool...it smells just as
RW> bad.
Nine Months after I started Smoking, I Quit to save $25.00 US to send
off for a Heath-kit VX-1 Electronic Voice Control (VOX) to use with my
DX-40.
I didn't like the way the Relay dropped out and back in as I was
talking, so I used it for awhile as a Transmit On/Off switch by turning
the knob on it.
... Genuine Exploding Tagline. Acme Tagline Inc.
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