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Old February 8th 04, 02:42 PM
George R. Gonzalez
 
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Default USS Pueblo equipment, pls identify

There's a whole load of snapshots of boatanchor equipment that was carried
(and still is) on the USS Pueblo.

URL:

http://users.erols.com/eengineer/pueblomain.html

I can identify some R390A's, a Model 28 TTY, a few HP signal generators, but
that's about it.


Can anybody identify some of the other stuff in the racks?



Thanks,

George



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Old February 8th 04, 07:26 PM
Mike Andrews
 
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George R. Gonzalez wrote:
There's a whole load of snapshots of boatanchor equipment that was carried
(and still is) on the USS Pueblo.


URL:


http://users.erols.com/eengineer/pueblomain.html


I can identify some R390A's, a Model 28 TTY, a few HP signal generators, but
that's about it.


Can anybody identify some of the other stuff in the racks?


Pic 6: the top left and bottom right gear is a pair of R-1051
receivers, exact model uncertain.

Pic 7: bottom gear is another pair of R-1051 receivers.

Pic 15: 6 of the eight items in the middle two rows are R-1051s.

Pic 19: three of the items in the left-hand rack appear to be some
flavor of crypto gear.

--
"They could fill the sky with lusers if it didn't have
to stay filled for very long." -- Alan J Rosenthal
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Old February 13th 04, 04:37 PM
Mike Andrews
 
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Mike Andrews wrote:
George R. Gonzalez wrote:
There's a whole load of snapshots of boatanchor equipment that was carried
(and still is) on the USS Pueblo.


URL:


http://users.erols.com/eengineer/pueblomain.html


I can identify some R390A's, a Model 28 TTY, a few HP signal generators, but
that's about it.


Can anybody identify some of the other stuff in the racks?


Pic 6: the top left and bottom right gear is a pair of R-1051
receivers, exact model uncertain.


Pic 7: bottom gear is another pair of R-1051 receivers.


Pic 15: 6 of the eight items in the middle two rows are R-1051s.


Pic 19: three of the items in the left-hand rack appear to be some
flavor of crypto gear.


More info on Pic 19 (http://users.erols.com/eengineer/096f_17.jpg):
the three identical items stacked together on the left
side appear to be KG-14 cryptodevices, from the picture of a KG-14 at
http://webhome.idirect.com/~jproc/crypto/kg14.html.

The arrangement of the thumbscrews that hold the box in its case
is pretty distinctive, and the fuseholders just below that box
sticking out of the front panel do, I think, pretty much cinch the
identification.

--
Mike Andrews

Tired old sysadmin
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Old February 15th 04, 09:55 PM
George R. Gonzalez
 
Posts: n/a
Default


More info on Pic 19 (http://users.erols.com/eengineer/096f_17.jpg):
the three identical items stacked together on the left
side appear to be KG-14 cryptodevices, from the picture of a KG-14 at
http://webhome.idirect.com/~jproc/crypto/kg14.html.

The arrangement of the thumbscrews that hold the box in its case
is pretty distinctive, and the fuseholders just below that box
sticking out of the front panel do, I think, pretty much cinch the
identification.

--
Mike Andrews

Tired old sysadmin




The crypto gear still has the key modules in place? Weird.



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Old February 16th 04, 02:39 AM
Ed Price
 
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"George R. Gonzalez" wrote in
message news:xVRXb.40407$yE5.149775@attbi_s54...

More info on Pic 19 (http://users.erols.com/eengineer/096f_17.jpg):
the three identical items stacked together on the left
side appear to be KG-14 cryptodevices, from the picture of a KG-14 at
http://webhome.idirect.com/~jproc/crypto/kg14.html.

The arrangement of the thumbscrews that hold the box in its case
is pretty distinctive, and the fuseholders just below that box
sticking out of the front panel do, I think, pretty much cinch the
identification.

--
Mike Andrews

Tired old sysadmin




The crypto gear still has the key modules in place? Weird.


Maybe the crew had time to dump them; if so, the Koreans bought spares on
eBay.

Ed



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Old February 16th 04, 03:07 AM
Michael Black
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Ed Price" ) writes:
"George R. Gonzalez" wrote in
message news:xVRXb.40407$yE5.149775@attbi_s54...

More info on Pic 19 (http://users.erols.com/eengineer/096f_17.jpg):
the three identical items stacked together on the left
side appear to be KG-14 cryptodevices, from the picture of a KG-14 at
http://webhome.idirect.com/~jproc/crypto/kg14.html.

The arrangement of the thumbscrews that hold the box in its case
is pretty distinctive, and the fuseholders just below that box
sticking out of the front panel do, I think, pretty much cinch the
identification.

--
Mike Andrews

Tired old sysadmin




The crypto gear still has the key modules in place? Weird.


Maybe the crew had time to dump them; if so, the Koreans bought spares on
eBay.

Ed

But when was the picture taken?

There was an article in QST in the early seventies by a crew member of
the Pueblo, who happened to be a ham. He mentioned taking a fire axe
the the R-390s. Someone with a better organized collection could look
up the article (it must have in the first few months of 1971 or earlier,
since I did not read the article when it first came out, and I
started reading QST in April of 1971). So I thought the equipment
was indeed damaged, though maybe they did not have enough time to
do enough damage.

Michael VE2BVW


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Old March 3rd 04, 03:41 AM
chababa
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In article , says...
Mike Andrews wrote:
George R. Gonzalez wrote:
There's a whole load of snapshots of boatanchor equipment that was carried
(and still is) on the USS Pueblo.


URL:


http://users.erols.com/eengineer/pueblomain.html

I can identify some R390A's, a Model 28 TTY, a few HP signal generators, but
that's about it.


Can anybody identify some of the other stuff in the racks?


Pic 6: the top left and bottom right gear is a pair of R-1051
receivers, exact model uncertain.


Pic 7: bottom gear is another pair of R-1051 receivers.


Pic 15: 6 of the eight items in the middle two rows are R-1051s.


Pic 19: three of the items in the left-hand rack appear to be some
flavor of crypto gear.


More info on Pic 19 (http://users.erols.com/eengineer/096f_17.jpg):
the three identical items stacked together on the left
side appear to be KG-14 cryptodevices, from the picture of a KG-14 at
http://webhome.idirect.com/~jproc/crypto/kg14.html.

The arrangement of the thumbscrews that hold the box in its case
is pretty distinctive, and the fuseholders just below that box
sticking out of the front panel do, I think, pretty much cinch the
identification.



at the bottom.
.... It's a 36 (or 37?)(it's been a while)
linked with the 14s for fleet broadcasts...
.... and other things. The DeMux gear is in one
of the photos.

The display is "staged". Many of these things
don't belong together.


There's some basic CT(R) stuff about in the pics.

the 1051s would link ship/ship ship/shore
PIC5
http://users.erols.com/eengineer/096f_2.jpg

above the beast-390 is the best receiver
that I ever worked with... all space,
all time. Something like an FRR 57(59..
whatever). I tuned and used...
Properly tuned with all the filters intact
it was the absolute best receiver for
signal discrimination.


PIC8

Is one of the saddest things of all time.
The Navy screwed Bucher. Big time.
Bucher was the best of the best.
A great sailor and a fine commander.
He died about a month ago.
Fair seas and following winds.

http://www.usspueblo.us

....and not a bad artiist. RIP.

n
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Old February 9th 04, 07:16 AM
no one
 
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Default

George R. Gonzalez wrote:
There's a whole load of snapshots of boatanchor equipment that was carried
(and still is) on the USS Pueblo.

URL:

http://users.erols.com/eengineer/pueblomain.html

I can identify some R390A's, a Model 28 TTY, a few HP signal generators, but
that's about it.


Can anybody identify some of the other stuff in the racks?



Thanks,

George



pic9 is of two an/urc-32 collins tranceivers.
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Old February 9th 04, 10:53 PM
Brian Hill
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Hi. What about the strange SP-600 type radio with no meter. Its only
partially visible at the bottom of the pic. Do yo know what it is? Heres the
pic:

http://users.erols.com/eengineer/Pic00003.jpg


Brian

Brian's Radio Universe
http://webpages.charter.net/brianehill/


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Old February 9th 04, 11:06 PM
BOEING377
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Message-id:

Hi. What about the strange SP-600 type radio with no meter. Its only
partially visible at the bottom of the pic. Do yo know what it is? Heres the
pic:

Wonder if it is that SP 600 variant that was used to record big chunks of HF
spectrum on videotapes for later analysis? Fair Radio used to sell them.



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