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![]() wrote in message ... I just got word that Tom Kneitel has passed away. Tom was a good friend to anyone who loved radio in the 60's, 70's, 80's and early 90's. My bookshelf is full of books that Tom wrote on all kinds of radio topics. He walked, talked and breathed radio. He was the inspiration behind Popular Communication which grew out of the old CB magazine S9. He did a lot for radio and for those of us who love it as a hobby. I will miss Tom Kneitel! So will I. I never met him or talked to him, but I greatly enjoyed his "Uncle Tom's Corner" column in _Electronics Illustrated_. Long before the Internet arrived, sometimes the only way you could get an answer to a radio-equipment question was to send a letter to a columnist at an electronics magazine, wait for a few months, and HOPE your letter got printed and answered. Tom Kneitel wrote very well and one of my all-time favorite answers in his column concerned a ham who had found some weird type of vacuum tube at a hamfest but could not find any technical documentation on it at all. Kneitel solved the problem: "It's not a vacuum tube. It's a projector bulb. Don't feel too bad, though. This one had the folks at Westinghouse [or whoever the manufacturer was -- Matt] running in circles for two weeks before they figured this one out." One of my all-time favorite radio articles was one he wrote about Radio Swan for _Electronics Illustrated_ back in the 1960s. It was a shortwave radio station broadcasting from a tiny island in the Caribbean, but many hams thought it was actually a cover for a CIA operation to overthrow Fidel Castro. Was this powerful radio station really where it said it was? Kneitel and Bob Beason, the editor of _EI_, thought it might make for a good magazine article to try to find out. They decided to visit Swan Island, and chartered a plane to go there. And they did. They got to take the official tour of the entire station and island, and Radio Swan was there, all right. Deisel generators, huge antennas, and a few dozen souls. Kneitel still thought the CIA had something to do with it, though, and time has probably proven him right. Radio Swan shut down very soon after _EI_ published their article. I don't know if it ever went back on the air again, but some research I did on the Net some months back suggests that the transmitting equipment subsequently wound up being used in Vietnam. Swan Island is still there, but I don't think Radio Swan is anymore. The Net has some recent photographs of what the island looks like now. 73, Tom. DE KJ5BA Matt J. McCullar |
#2
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![]() "Matt J. McCullar" wrote: wrote in message ... I just got word that Tom Kneitel has passed away. Tom was a good friend to anyone who loved radio in the 60's, 70's, 80's and early 90's. My bookshelf is full of books that Tom wrote on all kinds of radio topics. He walked, talked and breathed radio. He was the inspiration behind Popular Communication which grew out of the old CB magazine S9. He did a lot for radio and for those of us who love it as a hobby. I will miss Tom Kneitel! So will I. I never met him or talked to him, but I greatly enjoyed his "Uncle Tom's Corner" column in _Electronics Illustrated_. Long before the Internet arrived, sometimes the only way you could get an answer to a radio-equipment question was to send a letter to a columnist at an electronics magazine, wait for a few months, and HOPE your letter got printed and answered. Tom Kneitel wrote very well and one of my all-time favorite answers in his column concerned a ham who had found some weird type of vacuum tube at a hamfest but could not find any technical documentation on it at all. Kneitel solved the problem: "It's not a vacuum tube. It's a projector bulb. Don't feel too bad, though. This one had the folks at Westinghouse [or whoever the manufacturer was -- Matt] running in circles for two weeks before they figured this one out." One of my all-time favorite radio articles was one he wrote about Radio Swan for _Electronics Illustrated_ back in the 1960s. It was a shortwave radio station broadcasting from a tiny island in the Caribbean, but many hams thought it was actually a cover for a CIA operation to overthrow Fidel Castro. Was this powerful radio station really where it said it was? Kneitel and Bob Beason, the editor of _EI_, thought it might make for a good magazine article to try to find out. They decided to visit Swan Island, and chartered a plane to go there. And they did. They got to take the official tour of the entire station and island, and Radio Swan was there, all right. Deisel generators, huge antennas, and a few dozen souls. Kneitel still thought the CIA had something to do with it, though, and time has probably proven him right. Radio Swan shut down very soon after _EI_ published their article. I don't know if it ever went back on the air again, but some research I did on the Net some months back suggests that the transmitting equipment subsequently wound up being used in Vietnam. Swan Island is still there, but I don't think Radio Swan is anymore. The Net has some recent photographs of what the island looks like now. Radio Swan/Radio Americas: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirate_..._Caribbean_Sea http://cuban-exile.com/doc_226-250/doc0241.html Radio Swan/Radio Americas operated on 1160 and 6000, as I recall. Heard here on the 6 Mhz frequency in the mid to late 60's. One fellow I know has two QSL's, one MW and one SW. Unfortunately, being somewhat of a novice in the hobby, I never sent off a report :-) As a side note, I've seen their QSL go for $300 + on eBay, only eclipsed (at least from what I've observed) by a Radio Lebanon QSL (have one of those!) which I saw go for $700 +. |
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