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The SpringRadio › topic 27

Boatanchors - Big, Heavy, and Fun

topic 27 · 4 responses
~aa9il Sun, Mar 21, 1999 (16:28) seed
Hi Yall Do you like radios that glow in the dark? Does the sight of heavy iron make your heart go a-flutter? Do you wish we could go back to those glorious days of yesteryear where Collins, National, Hallicrafters, and Drake filled the ads in ham magazines? Is your garage 'full of radio gear' but you only have two or three radios stored there? Well, we cant travel back in time but we can still operate the vintage stuff. What kind of gear do you operate?
~terry Mon, Mar 22, 1999 (09:35) #1
I use Yaesu's new stuff mostly, I have an 8500 for a mobile rig, or is it the 8000? And I have their handheld. Both have rs 232 ports for programming fequencies which I get from repeater.org (naturally). Boat anchors? Does my atlas 210x count? I have the drop in console and matching receiver only also. Wouldn't really call it a boat anchor though. Lots of folks are lusting over the new Yaesu FT100, have you heard about it?
~aa9il Tue, Mar 23, 1999 (19:32) #2
Hey There I have seen the new FT100 Commander rig which is kinda cute in the way you get HF, 6, 2, and 440 in a tiny little box. Not quite a boatanchor but then again, you can run it off 12v without much problem. Much more tiny than the Icom 706 MKIIG but the nice thing about the Icom is that it has the coax connectors mounted to the bulkhead (solid) vs having pigtail cables coming out the back. I guess the Atlas would make a good canoe anchor. :) Here is some of the heavy metal I'm running... For general receive: Hammarlund SP600 JX 26 50+lbs of hunka hunka radio For AM: Heathkit DX 100 - 100lbs This last weekend, I fired up my Collins KWM2 and was working Europe on 20m - you could keep your hands warm over the rig too... I have some less heavy radios too. I dont think my back could take to lugging around the above mentioned sets. de Mike
~Bavarian29 Sat, Oct 19, 2002 (23:18) #3
First, let me admit that I not a ham. Have had the radio bug since I was 12 when someone gave me a deluxe chrystal set and when the local AM stations shut down when Allied bomber came within 200 miles, I was able to receive BBC London with that little beast. Later build my first regenerative 2-tube rig. Around 1958 I wound up with a Navy version (Black wrinkle finish - ugggh) rackmounted with all the coils and dis some serial AM and SW listeing. Due to many moves I soldl the 120+ pound rig and now having withdrawal symptoms of sort for all these years, found a HRO-50T1 in almost mint condition. Somewhere out there in cyberland I will find another HRO-50 user to compare notes about tune-up and other technical matters. Waiting for the arrival of a tube tester right now.
~g7hvp Sun, Oct 20, 2002 (19:16) #4
look for G3OTH Russ on the internet he is a very big fan of the HRO or any radio with bottles in. Joe G0PWE England
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