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#31
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OK
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#32
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) writes:
And of course, people want the boatanchors because they are old Collectors rather than operators, right? they are the rig they had when they were first in the hobby Yes, but also because they found later, purportedly more modern equipment, to be harder to operate or repair, or easier to break, with replacement parts and labor costing more than the rig itself? they lusted after the rig decades ago but couldn't afford it. And still can't, in the case of Collins for example. I suspect that is the major reason, rather than because they are tube-based. Really? I think it takes a different mentality to operate a tube rig than a semiconductor or digital rig. I really think the casual tube rigs were easier for children and adolescents to operate on HF. I had the worst time trying to understand an ICOM during my 20's, for example. Take away that familiarity, and the interested number will also drop. But what if I kept the familiarity of operation rather than the familiarity of brand name? Would it drop drastically? Thirty to forty years ago, hams abandoned those old boatanchors. They wanted the solid state, they wanted the features. The rigs could barely be given away. Circa 1972 a lot of boatanchor equipment went through my hands, because people were giving it away, or they would sell at the radio club auction for five or ten dollars. I let it go just as easily, because I could trade it for something more interesting or just to sample what were new things to me. It's only in recent years that people became really interested in that old gear. Nostalgia. And the demand raises the prices of those once useless rigs. If simplicity is the issue as you think, then through the decades there would always be basic rigs being manufactured, because there'd be demand. If people wanted basic, they'd not be waiting decades for it. And of course, basic does not have to mean tubes. The bells and whistles were added because ICs and the like made it easier to add them, but there was no need to actually add them. There could have been basic solid state rigs, and of course Ten Tec did offer them, as did some of the other manufacturers (though Ten Tec lasted longer than the rest). If you think there's a market for a bare tube rig because of ease of repair, then it's just as easy to use discrete transistors (or discretes with some common ICs) to build a basic solid state rig that is just as easy to repair as that old HW-100. The only difference is that with a solid state rig, there's no tubes that can easily be pulled out to take to the drugstore to test in the tester, which does't matter because the tube tester isn't there anymore, and neither does the drugstore sell the common tubes that was the purpose of the tester being there in the first place. I can't say I'd spend the money, but I want a Clegg Interceptor from the early sixties. There is nothing about that receiver that is better than a more recent and decent receiver. It lacks features, and of course suffers from a relatively high noise figure that came with the tubes. I suspect its selectivity is broad compared to more recent receivers. I don't want it for what it can do, I want it because I remember reading about it, a decade after it was being sold, and simply thinking it was a neat receiver. A copy of the receiver wouldn't be the same, and is pretty inconceivable given that there will be little demand. I am conveying what I think about boatanchors, which may be wrong. But I suspect you are trying to judge a market for such a rig based on your own desires. If you think there is a market, you need to find those people who would actually buy it, who actually do share your thinking on the issue, to prove that there would be a market for such a project. I still think that most people who pursue boatanchors are doing it for nostalgia. A case can even be made that they long for simpler days. But that doesn't mean that they want to give up bells and whistles and modern designs on a permanent basis. I doubt newcomers to the hobby are going off to buy that Drake 2B, they'd pursue it later as another facet of the hobby if they do so at all (though of course there was a time when they might have started with it, because it was seen as a "novice" receiver or because it was available used for cheap). I think most who go after boatanchors have more recent rigs, and they use the old rigs in tandem, for variety. Michael VE2BVW |
#33
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#34
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Where's the chassis
$20 of Korean sheet metal shaped and drilled by a firm in Africa, see recent post knobs Digikey tuning caps 4-gang soviet surplus from EBay, see recent post IF cans toroids Tube sockets PC mount sockets, 50 cents each. Xtal filter $1 each, $5 total, see recent post cabinet more sheet metal dial stenciled plastic, negl cost power xfrmr $5 stack of carbon steel made in Africa, see recent post Using your figure of 20 hours I calculate that you'll clear an income of $40 per week on 2 rigs, $60 if you work nites, if you do it all yourself. No, I'll be using Mexican labor for final assembly If I could build a Galaxy 5 equivalent in 20 hours...never mind... No, this is not a Galaxy 5. This is a 21rst century transciever topology in glass that may deliver multiband audio/cw contacts at less cost. Okay. Paying shipping for one single returned rig in this scenario will have you WISHING you hadn't eaten last week's can of cat food for dinner. Clearly I would have to reduce mass where I can. I interpret a boatanchor as meaning tubes as active units and mechanical tuning with a planetary drive... I don't intepret that as meaning I have to use 50's-70's era parts for anything else or even point to poiint wiring. Maybe I can get the weight down to 15 pounds if I use aluminum for chassis and fiberglass or carbon composite for case. You couldn't do this for less than $500 per rig (sans labour and profit).... Only I use parts from US and attempt to exactly duplicate a mid-60's rig. If instead I can outsource nearly everything and never buy retail, and if I simply make a FET rig in glass, this might be less. and thats why there isn't the market that you imagine. What I have to find out is determine how much someone is willing to buy a glass rig for that delivers similar functionality as a 60's rig, and then determine how many people would buy for that price. At that point, I have to work backwards to see if I can make parts, labor, intermediate freight, and customs fees work inside the interpolated wholesale figure. So let me ask you... if you had the ability to buy a rig, in glass, capable of 4 band operation where you could manually tune and dip the amplifier, that gave you an operating range of 2000 miles on a reference dipole, AND it was built new, HOW MUCH would you pay for that? The Eternal Squire |
#36
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Lazy Senior wrote:
Ron in Radio Heaven wrote: Lazy Senior wrote: Gosh I must really bug you Lazy Senior I know for sure that this continuous BS is bugging ME and probably a lot of other people too. Drop it and let's go back to talking about BAs. Ron Beerbarrel, Uncle Pete, and Chuckee seem to have a grudge against me and wont stop. Every post I do they want to humilate me. And I never back from a fight.... I beg your pardon! You are the one that seems to have a grudge against the world. You come storming into this group, asking for opinions, and then get all huffed when the opinions you receive disagree with your own. You make political statements that are guaranteed to draw a heated response, and then get all flustered when they do. You complain about what a cesspool usenet is, and how this group has no value, and then you start leaving your brown ducks in our pond. I have been a contributing member of this group for 3-4 years, but since your arrival, you have offered nothing of value to anyone....Nothing! When I asked a simple question about a Swan 350 (knowing that there were a few Swan 350 users on this group) you took that as an opportunity to make derisive remarks about me owning a Swan. Where are your posts with content? -Chuck |
#37
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On Thu, 24 Nov 2005 09:20:24 -0500, Chuck Harris
wrote: Lazy Senior wrote: Ron in Radio Heaven wrote: Lazy Senior wrote: Gosh I must really bug you Lazy Senior I know for sure that this continuous BS is bugging ME and probably a lot of other people too. Drop it and let's go back to talking about BAs. Ron Beerbarrel, Uncle Pete, and Chuckee seem to have a grudge against me and wont stop. Every post I do they want to humilate me. And I never back from a fight.... I beg your pardon! You are the one that seems to have a grudge against the world. You come storming into this group, asking for opinions, and then get all huffed when the opinions you receive disagree with your own. You make political statements that are guaranteed to draw a heated response, and then get all flustered when they do. You complain about what a cesspool usenet is, and how this group has no value, and then you start leaving your brown ducks in our pond. I have been a contributing member of this group for 3-4 years, but since your arrival, you have offered nothing of value to anyone....Nothing! When I asked a simple question about a Swan 350 (knowing that there were a few Swan 350 users on this group) you took that as an opportunity to make derisive remarks about me owning a Swan. Where are your posts with content? -Chuck Touche! |
#38
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... Where's the chassis Squire.. So far this is all mental gymnastics. Why not do a prototype to prove and debug the design, run it for several weeks to work out glitches, and do one or two more test prototypes to finalize the design? This will give you some idea on labor and material costs, and how much time is needed to acquire parts... assemble... align and test.. etc. I think at that point you'd have a better feel for what you are proposing. One thing to think about: why not also offer a kit version? If you do a magazine construction article, say in Electric Radio, that would give you a "free" ad for the kit of materials, and some exposure. Pete |
#39
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Bill ) writes:
Xtal filter $1 each, $5 total, see recent post Ask for 400 of all of the above and see how quick those 'surplus' sources go dark. And of course, it's all interrelated. If one doesn't buy a lot of stock to begin with, then they have to scramble later to get suitable parts, and in the case of the mechanical parts, that may mean reworking the chassis. Which means if a large stock isn't bought in advance, then the chassis work can't be done in bulk, because that might mean the prepunched and drilled chassis have to be scrapped. And if production has to stop while new sources are discovered, that may cause significant problems. That's why there's all those second sources for semiconductors; if a manufacturer can't count on being able to get those ICs on a continuous basis, they won't use the part. Michael VE2BVW |
#40
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Things have changed since the 'old' days.
You could perhaps sell a 2NT-like transmitter for about 500 bucks and make little profit, but not sure how big the crowd at the check out line would be. Sounds nice though...but I think those days are gone. Unless you come up with a cake pan thing such as had been done. Or, take a look at doc bottleheads site at... http://www.bottlehead.com/ No reason you couldn't take some tips from him, and make something with a wood box, and a sheet of metal. Hit 'products' , then scroll to the right. Some pretty nice shots, eh?? .....Dave wrote in message oups.com... All, I've occasionally seen homebrew tube transceivers on Ebay that range from really good to too gnarly looking to seem safe. I am thinking of creating a line of clean-looking, attractive, rugged tube equipment for casual or missionary use with a reasonable price/output performance that is easy to repair and adjust, based on schematics and design principles that have gone into the public domain. Would there be an audience? Comments? The Eternal Squire |
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