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#11
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You win John (;-)
73 CL "John S." wrote in message ups.com... Well, that was my point. It is all but impossible to tie phrases like Boatanchor back to the who it originated with. Sure we can find a magazine where the phrase appeared, but who knows where the author heard the phrase. The most we can say right now is that 1956 is that is the earliest date we have found the phrase Boatanchor in print. It is not in any way synonymous with the origin of the phrase. Caveat Lector wrote: Well it is documented as 1956 Do you have a previous documented date ?? Many things are uttered thruout the ages but origins are typically sited from a documented source 73 CL "John S." wrote in message ups.com... Caveat Lector wrote: Whether legend, myth, or fact, here is the best guess of the origin of BA THREE VERSIONS -- Opinions From The Internet. Version I -- During World War II, Military Radio Techs used the term BoatAnchor as they struggled with the huge, heavy, electronic equipments of the day -- full of transformers, tubes etc. Also the US Navy frequently marked electronic gear with an anchor. After the war -- tons of the equipment appeared on the surplus market and was dubbed BoatAnchors due to the reasons above - one or both. Version II -- After WWII a national magazine editor answered a query "As what to do with an outdated heavy, large, surplus electronic instrument?" and answered "Tie a line to it and use it as a BoatAnchor" Version III A letter to the editor appeared on page 16 of the October 1956 issue of CQ and was as follows: Gentlemen: I recently acquired a "Signal Corps Wireless Set. No. 19 MK II Transceiver." Are there schematics or conversion data for this rig? Any info will be appreciated. The editor replied: The only conversion we seem to have on the files here at CQ calls for 100 feet of 1" Manila line, one end of which is to be tied securely around the MK II Transceiver. This then converts the unit into a fine anchor for a small boat. If any readers have better conversions we will be glad to hear about them. Ed. Happy New Year -- CL I'm sure that II and III could be verified as having been written after reading microfillm copies of old magazines. I doubt that anyone could come up with the origin of the term Boatanchor however. Who was the first guy in supply to have uttered that or more coloful descriptives as they hoisted them onto 6x6 trucks some place in the pacific. |
#12
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Hi,
The followup to the CQ letter was in the February 1957 issue, p.82, a series of three photos showing the conversion in action. Alan |
#13
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And the question you were looking for an answer to was....?????
Caveat Lector wrote: You win John (;-) 73 CL "John S." wrote in message ups.com... Well, that was my point. It is all but impossible to tie phrases like Boatanchor back to the who it originated with. Sure we can find a magazine where the phrase appeared, but who knows where the author heard the phrase. The most we can say right now is that 1956 is that is the earliest date we have found the phrase Boatanchor in print. It is not in any way synonymous with the origin of the phrase. Caveat Lector wrote: Well it is documented as 1956 Do you have a previous documented date ?? Many things are uttered thruout the ages but origins are typically sited from a documented source 73 CL "John S." wrote in message ups.com... Caveat Lector wrote: Whether legend, myth, or fact, here is the best guess of the origin of BA THREE VERSIONS -- Opinions From The Internet. Version I -- During World War II, Military Radio Techs used the term BoatAnchor as they struggled with the huge, heavy, electronic equipments of the day -- full of transformers, tubes etc. Also the US Navy frequently marked electronic gear with an anchor. After the war -- tons of the equipment appeared on the surplus market and was dubbed BoatAnchors due to the reasons above - one or both. Version II -- After WWII a national magazine editor answered a query "As what to do with an outdated heavy, large, surplus electronic instrument?" and answered "Tie a line to it and use it as a BoatAnchor" Version III A letter to the editor appeared on page 16 of the October 1956 issue of CQ and was as follows: Gentlemen: I recently acquired a "Signal Corps Wireless Set. No. 19 MK II Transceiver." Are there schematics or conversion data for this rig? Any info will be appreciated. The editor replied: The only conversion we seem to have on the files here at CQ calls for 100 feet of 1" Manila line, one end of which is to be tied securely around the MK II Transceiver. This then converts the unit into a fine anchor for a small boat. If any readers have better conversions we will be glad to hear about them. Ed. Happy New Year -- CL I'm sure that II and III could be verified as having been written after reading microfillm copies of old magazines. I doubt that anyone could come up with the origin of the term Boatanchor however. Who was the first guy in supply to have uttered that or more coloful descriptives as they hoisted them onto 6x6 trucks some place in the pacific. |
#14
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On 8 Jan 2007 11:32:47 -0800, "John S." wrote:
Caveat Lector wrote: Whether legend, myth, or fact, here is the best guess of the origin of BA THREE VERSIONS -- Opinions From The Internet. Version I -- During World War II, Military Radio Techs used the term BoatAnchor as they struggled with the huge, heavy, electronic equipments of the day -- full of transformers, tubes etc. Also the US Navy frequently marked electronic gear with an anchor. After the war -- tons of the equipment appeared on the surplus market and was dubbed BoatAnchors due to the reasons above - one or both. Version II -- After WWII a national magazine editor answered a query "As what to do with an outdated heavy, large, surplus electronic instrument?" and answered "Tie a line to it and use it as a BoatAnchor" Version III A letter to the editor appeared on page 16 of the October 1956 issue of CQ and was as follows: Gentlemen: I recently acquired a "Signal Corps Wireless Set. No. 19 MK II Transceiver." Are there schematics or conversion data for this rig? Any info will be appreciated. The editor replied: The only conversion we seem to have on the files here at CQ calls for 100 feet of 1" Manila line, one end of which is to be tied securely around the MK II Transceiver. This then converts the unit into a fine anchor for a small boat. If any readers have better conversions we will be glad to hear about them. Ed. Happy New Year -- CL I'm sure that II and III could be verified as having been written after reading microfillm copies of old magazines. I doubt that anyone could come up with the origin of the term Boatanchor however. Who was the first guy in supply to have uttered that or more coloful descriptives as they hoisted them onto 6x6 trucks some place in the pacific. I remember reading Version III when it came out (I was a newly licensed kid of 14.) I think that was during the era when Wayne Green W2NSD (later founder of "73" magazine) was the CQ editor and it is indicative of his humor. I remember that he had also done a couple of photos in this or a subsequent issue on the actual conversion process outlined in the article. As to whether this is the actual origin of the term, I would have no idea and like the origin of the word "ham" to describe radio afficionados of the licensed variety, the origin is probably unprovable. Version III was at least the first time I heard the term. During my government career which had a lot to do with radio and radios, I remember cribbing this definition when I was asked what to do with a bunch of excess radio equipment. I was in Guantanamo and we had replaced a bunch of obsolete equipment. The fellows at the facility I was upgrading asked what they should do with the old equipment (a bunch of demodulators.) The regulations stated that they were to box the stuff up and send it to a Navy depot. I wanted to avoid that at all cost since every time I wanted to upgrade Navy facilities with state of the art demods, I would get messages from the "Big" Navy that they wouldn't fund the upgrades because they had over 200 of these old beasts in depots. While the "old beast" would sorta do the job, it wasn't really a demod, but rather a tunable low frequency voltmeter of 1940's vintage (this was in the early 80's) and one was required for each channel, so a 24 channel system required about 8 tall racks for installation vice a single small box for the modern equivalent. I told the Commanding Officer I could suggest two solutions...one was the "boatanchor", quite literally for the sailing club to use a mooring anchors. I then asked the CO when was the last time he had an emergency destruction drill. He could not recall ever having one, so we took these old kluges out to the gunnery range, stacked them up and put Thermite charges on the top of each stack and reduced them to molten metal and glass. In our report to the "Big Navy" we simply notated that the units were transferred to "a training function" and would not be returned to depot. W3JT |
#15
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![]() "Jon Teske" wrote in message ... On 8 Jan 2007 11:32:47 -0800, "John S." wrote: Caveat Lector wrote: Whether legend, myth, or fact, here is the best guess of the origin of BA THREE VERSIONS -- Opinions From The Internet. Version I -- During World War II, Military Radio Techs used the term BoatAnchor as they struggled with the huge, heavy, electronic equipments of the day -- full of transformers, tubes etc. Also the US Navy frequently marked electronic gear with an anchor. After the war -- tons of the equipment appeared on the surplus market and was dubbed BoatAnchors due to the reasons above - one or both. Version II -- After WWII a national magazine editor answered a query "As what to do with an outdated heavy, large, surplus electronic instrument?" and answered "Tie a line to it and use it as a BoatAnchor" Version III A letter to the editor appeared on page 16 of the October 1956 issue of CQ and was as follows: Gentlemen: I recently acquired a "Signal Corps Wireless Set. No. 19 MK II Transceiver." Are there schematics or conversion data for this rig? Any info will be appreciated. The editor replied: The only conversion we seem to have on the files here at CQ calls for 100 feet of 1" Manila line, one end of which is to be tied securely around the MK II Transceiver. This then converts the unit into a fine anchor for a small boat. If any readers have better conversions we will be glad to hear about them. Ed. Happy New Year -- CL I'm sure that II and III could be verified as having been written after reading microfillm copies of old magazines. I doubt that anyone could come up with the origin of the term Boatanchor however. Who was the first guy in supply to have uttered that or more coloful descriptives as they hoisted them onto 6x6 trucks some place in the pacific. I remember reading Version III when it came out (I was a newly licensed kid of 14.) I think that was during the era when Wayne Green W2NSD (later founder of "73" magazine) was the CQ editor and it is indicative of his humor. I remember that he had also done a couple of photos in this or a subsequent issue on the actual conversion process outlined in the article. As to whether this is the actual origin of the term, I would have no idea and like the origin of the word "ham" to describe radio afficionados of the licensed variety, the origin is probably unprovable. Version III was at least the first time I heard the term. During my government career which had a lot to do with radio and radios, I remember cribbing this definition when I was asked what to do with a bunch of excess radio equipment. I was in Guantanamo and we had replaced a bunch of obsolete equipment. The fellows at the facility I was upgrading asked what they should do with the old equipment (a bunch of demodulators.) The regulations stated that they were to box the stuff up and send it to a Navy depot. I wanted to avoid that at all cost since every time I wanted to upgrade Navy facilities with state of the art demods, I would get messages from the "Big" Navy that they wouldn't fund the upgrades because they had over 200 of these old beasts in depots. While the "old beast" would sorta do the job, it wasn't really a demod, but rather a tunable low frequency voltmeter of 1940's vintage (this was in the early 80's) and one was required for each channel, so a 24 channel system required about 8 tall racks for installation vice a single small box for the modern equivalent. I told the Commanding Officer I could suggest two solutions...one was the "boatanchor", quite literally for the sailing club to use a mooring anchors. I then asked the CO when was the last time he had an emergency destruction drill. He could not recall ever having one, so we took these old kluges out to the gunnery range, stacked them up and put Thermite charges on the top of each stack and reduced them to molten metal and glass. In our report to the "Big Navy" we simply notated that the units were transferred to "a training function" and would not be returned to depot. W3JT Oh wow great story "training function" no less Thanks for adding to the lore. CL |
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