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Old June 9th 04, 02:44 AM
Keyboard In The Noise
 
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Default Old Callsign was W10XEG ???

Had an inquiry that sed his Dad's call was W10XEG

Before 1946 -- I think there were just call areas one thru nine.

Sometime around 1946, the 10th call area was established -- the zero
district, but was this ever the W10 area ??

Also the X in the suffix -- I thought was for experimental stations ???

Any old timers recall ??

Thanks

Post any answers here please

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Old June 9th 04, 03:47 AM
JJ
 
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Keyboard In The Noise wrote:
Had an inquiry that sed his Dad's call was W10XEG

Before 1946 -- I think there were just call areas one thru nine.

Sometime around 1946, the 10th call area was established -- the zero
district, but was this ever the W10 area ??


No.

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Old June 9th 04, 04:16 AM
COLIN LAMB
 
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Old June 9th 04, 03:08 PM
COLIN LAMB
 
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Bill Orr had a column in either Ham Radio or CQ with a W10 card. They are
rare, but were issued for some special purpose. I think it may have been
pre war. My memory is fuzzy, but it may have been for shipboard use.

X calls were often issued for experimental stations.

73, Colin K7FM




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Old June 10th 04, 01:57 AM
Michael Black
 
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"COLIN LAMB" ) writes:
Bill Orr had a column in either Ham Radio or CQ with a W10 card. They are
rare, but were issued for some special purpose. I think it may have been
pre war. My memory is fuzzy, but it may have been for shipboard use.

X calls were often issued for experimental stations.

73, Colin K7FM

I wondered if it was a WWII call for some reason. Obviously there was
no ham radio, but wasn't there some CD or emergency service that was
active during WWII, on the VHF bands? I can't say I've ever seen mention
of a W10 callsign, but perhaps it was during that period?

Michael VE2BVW



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Old June 10th 04, 03:22 AM
K3HVG
 
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In the wartime QSTs, they talk about the WERS (War Emergency Radio
Service ?)radio service. It appears that hams in Civil Defense were
involved. They had callsigns akin to what you've related.

Keyboard In The Noise wrote:
Had an inquiry that sed his Dad's call was W10XEG

Before 1946 -- I think there were just call areas one thru nine.

Sometime around 1946, the 10th call area was established -- the zero
district, but was this ever the W10 area ??

Also the X in the suffix -- I thought was for experimental stations ???

Any old timers recall ??

Thanks

Post any answers here please

--
Keyboard In The Noise




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Old June 10th 04, 03:27 AM
Keyboard In The Noise
 
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The history of the WWII -- War Emergency Radio Service (WERS) can be found
at URL:
http://ac6v.com/history.htm

Search for WERS, but no mention of the calls used

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Keyboard In The Noise

Opinions are the cheapest commodities in the world. Author unknown but
"right on"
"K3HVG" wrote in message
...
In the wartime QSTs, they talk about the WERS (War Emergency Radio
Service ?)radio service. It appears that hams in Civil Defense were
involved. They had callsigns akin to what you've related.

Keyboard In The Noise wrote:
Had an inquiry that sed his Dad's call was W10XEG

Before 1946 -- I think there were just call areas one thru nine.

Sometime around 1946, the 10th call area was established -- the zero
district, but was this ever the W10 area ??

Also the X in the suffix -- I thought was for experimental stations ???

Any old timers recall ??

Thanks

Post any answers here please

--
Keyboard In The Noise






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Old June 10th 04, 03:50 AM
Dbowey
 
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Michael posted:

"COLIN LAMB" ) writes:
Bill Orr had a column in either Ham Radio or CQ with a W10 card. They are
rare, but were issued for some special purpose. I think it may have been
pre war. My memory is fuzzy, but it may have been for shipboard use.

X calls were often issued for experimental stations.

73, Colin K7FM

I wondered if it was a WWII call for some reason. Obviously there was
no ham radio, but wasn't there some CD or emergency service that was
active during WWII, on the VHF bands? I can't say I've ever seen mention
of a W10 callsign, but perhaps it was during that period?


It appears to me to be a non-ham station license. It could be for a commercial
base station or repeater, or almost any experimenal purpose.

Don

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Old June 10th 04, 12:26 PM
K3HVG
 
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A further search of some 40's QSTs reveals that WERS NCS stations appear
to have 4-letter calls, such as WJUY and subordinates would be WJUY-1,
2, 10, 11, ad infinitum. These calls don't look like the one originally
posted, however.... Dunno?

Dbowey wrote:
Michael posted:

"COLIN LAMB" ) writes:

Bill Orr had a column in either Ham Radio or CQ with a W10 card. They are
rare, but were issued for some special purpose. I think it may have been
pre war. My memory is fuzzy, but it may have been for shipboard use.

X calls were often issued for experimental stations.

73, Colin K7FM


I wondered if it was a WWII call for some reason. Obviously there was
no ham radio, but wasn't there some CD or emergency service that was
active during WWII, on the VHF bands? I can't say I've ever seen mention
of a W10 callsign, but perhaps it was during that period?


It appears to me to be a non-ham station license. It could be for a commercial
base station or repeater, or almost any experimenal purpose.

Don


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Old June 10th 04, 04:09 PM
Keyboard In The Noise
 
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The originator of the W10XEG question supplies the following new info:
Actually, the W10 call is most likely a commercial call. There were several
'repeaters' that were used very early in the establishment of the radio, and
then commercial television networks - it may be one of those. The X is for
experimental, no doubt. My Dad was very active with RCA very early on. The
first experimental TV signals in NYC were on 21 MHz, broadcast from the
Empire State Bldg - my Dad was chief engineer for the transmitter. One of
the many experimental transmitters he put on the air was W10XEG - I just
have no data about it at all.


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