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Re: [Amps] Panasonic tube radio

Subject: Re: [Amps] Panasonic tube radio
From: Jim Isbell <millenniumfalcon@cableone.net>
Date: Sun, 12 Sep 2004 09:09:40 -0500
List-post: <mailto:amps@contesting.com>
In the late 50s when I started, almost everything was home brew or modified Surplus. If you had commercial gear it was because you were either wealthy or had a wealthy ham friend who was upgrading and liked you a lot. My first commercial gear was an NE-6 (12 watts on 6 meters) transmitter that a good friend gave me because he felt sorry for me with a ticket and no gear. I then homebrewed (from scratch) a converter for the car radio to put 50.0 to 51.0 on the car broadcast band.

Bill Turner wrote:

On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 10:26:48 +0200, peter.chadwick@Zarlink.Com wrote:



I find the older ones (1946 to about 1965)even more interesting. As a percentage, did many more people build their rigs rather than buy? Kits were perhaps more available, which skews the numbers a bit, I suppose.



_________________________________________________________


When I got into ham radio in the late '50s it was more common for
transmitters to be homebrewed than bought, especially if you include
kits as "homebrewed".  Thinking back on all my friends from those
days, not one had a commercially made transmitter.

Receivers were a different matter.  Nearly all were commercial or
modified war surplus, which there was a ton of back then.

Ahhhhh... the good ol' days. :-)

--
73, Bill W6WRT

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