Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Hamguy" wrote in message .. . Here's the new URL: http://www.radiowrench.com/siltronix/ Thats a nice site. Remember the "tempo one"? Kind of reminds me of that. I had Simba with a pal VFO long ago. I think it MAY have gone up to around "375"....drifty as hell, too. But it was fun. x-- 100 Proof News - http://www.100ProofNews.com x-- 3,500+ Binary NewsGroups, and over 90,000 other groups x-- Access to over 1 Terabyte per Day - $8.95/Month x-- UNLIMITED DOWNLOAD |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hello R.F. Burns:
Oh man does that web site fire up old memories, Big TEN-4. My first SSB Radio was a Johnson 350 Transistorized 2 channel radio, when you screamed into the mic you might get 2 watts. But the Contex 500 helped maters out some on the base. hehehehehehehe Dear ol Dad had a 104 foot long commercial fishing boat during the late 1960's and early 1970's, we had a General Radiotelephone Super MC-11A, the Johnson 350 SSB only radio, and a Mustang 100 two tube linear amp, made by the technicians and engineers at General Radiotelephone. And Dad replace the old 1938 Aircraft Bendix Radio Direction Finder Antenna with a two element quad beam antenna that allowed us to DF (Direction Find) the other fishing boats on the CB Band. The old pre W.W II Bendix DR Radio had a large aluminum box that was mounted to the wheel house ceiling, that had a wheel on the bottom to turn the antenna, that its pointed direction was indicated on a Compass Rose display in a circle, so you knew where the antenna was pointed, and after a while we got really good at DF (Direction Finding) the fishing fleet even as far away as 40 miles away. Most all the fishing fleets called the CB the "Mickey Mouse" meaning if won't travel too far, most fishing boats used a vertical dipole antenna made from hardware store wire and cheap rg58 coax. So hot fishing locations, techniques, and fish count for the day where talked about more freely than the Marine HF Frequencies. But there where also marine pirate frequencies used by the fishing fleets. So this justified a CB DF type capability. Then there was the Cobra 138, 23 channel modified into a 50 or 60 channel SSB and AM radio. Then came the Mark Sidewinder model 27, a six channel only SSB radio. Then the Tempo 1, Yeasu's my favorite was the 902 DM. We all had a blast. Dear ol Dad would drive and steer the boat, whiles shooting skip, and monitoring the marine radios. Then upgrading to the Icom 760, and now Icom 760 II. And other radios. I found a mint Tempo 1 that I picked for a few bucks and it works great! Glad to see the web site Jay in the Mojave R. F. Burns wrote: "Hamguy" wrote in message .. . Here's the new URL: http://www.radiowrench.com/siltronix/ Thats a nice site. Remember the "tempo one"? Kind of reminds me of that. I had Simba with a pal VFO long ago. I think it MAY have gone up to around "375"....drifty as hell, too. But it was fun. |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hello Jay:
That's some great equipment.......I didn't know Johnson made a 2 channel SSB unit. I'd love to see a pic of it. I can't remember the make, but in the early 70's I bought a used tube base station that was AM and Double Side Band. It was pretty old at the time I got my hands on it. We'd all hang on ch 16, and then slide down to "145" .......alot of fun memories. Thanks for the post. R.F. Burns "Jay in the Mojave" wrote in message ... Hello R.F. Burns: Oh man does that web site fire up old memories, Big TEN-4. My first SSB Radio was a Johnson 350 Transistorized 2 channel radio, when you screamed into the mic you might get 2 watts. But the Contex 500 helped maters out some on the base. hehehehehehehe Dear ol Dad had a 104 foot long commercial fishing boat during the late 1960's and early 1970's, we had a General Radiotelephone Super MC-11A, the Johnson 350 SSB only radio, and a Mustang 100 two tube linear amp, made by the technicians and engineers at General Radiotelephone. And Dad replace the old 1938 Aircraft Bendix Radio Direction Finder Antenna with a two element quad beam antenna that allowed us to DF (Direction Find) the other fishing boats on the CB Band. The old pre W.W II Bendix DR Radio had a large aluminum box that was mounted to the wheel house ceiling, that had a wheel on the bottom to turn the antenna, that its pointed direction was indicated on a Compass Rose display in a circle, so you knew where the antenna was pointed, and after a while we got really good at DF (Direction Finding) the fishing fleet even as far away as 40 miles away. Most all the fishing fleets called the CB the "Mickey Mouse" meaning if won't travel too far, most fishing boats used a vertical dipole antenna made from hardware store wire and cheap rg58 coax. So hot fishing locations, techniques, and fish count for the day where talked about more freely than the Marine HF Frequencies. But there where also marine pirate frequencies used by the fishing fleets. So this justified a CB DF type capability. Then there was the Cobra 138, 23 channel modified into a 50 or 60 channel SSB and AM radio. Then came the Mark Sidewinder model 27, a six channel only SSB radio. Then the Tempo 1, Yeasu's my favorite was the 902 DM. We all had a blast. Dear ol Dad would drive and steer the boat, whiles shooting skip, and monitoring the marine radios. Then upgrading to the Icom 760, and now Icom 760 II. And other radios. I found a mint Tempo 1 that I picked for a few bucks and it works great! Glad to see the web site Jay in the Mojave R. F. Burns wrote: "Hamguy" wrote in message .. . Here's the new URL: http://www.radiowrench.com/siltronix/ Thats a nice site. Remember the "tempo one"? Kind of reminds me of that. I had Simba with a pal VFO long ago. I think it MAY have gone up to around "375"....drifty as hell, too. But it was fun. x-- 100 Proof News - http://www.100ProofNews.com x-- 3,500+ Binary NewsGroups, and over 90,000 other groups x-- Access to over 1 Terabyte per Day - $8.95/Month x-- UNLIMITED DOWNLOAD |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Siltronix 1011D Comanchee For parts | CB | |||
For Sale:Non Working Siltronix 1011D | CB | |||
problems reading W3UHF's icomclassic site, too much 'script' | Boatanchors | |||
Classic Rock Web Site for sale (Q-106) | Broadcasting |