Hello,
At this year's Dayton Convention one of the factor reps told me that
there have been about 1,500 87a sold (since 1984?). If that is the case,
two things are obvious: the market is small and the Alpha people have
been running a charity and not managing an investment. It appears that
the majority of these units run, under what would be abusive conditions
for other amplifiers, for years on end. So, if what is out there it
lasts in the future as well as it has lasted in the past it still has to
be a better "investment" than fast women, cars or drink, then again . .
.
Perry W1COW
-----Original Message-----
From: LEE R. WICAL [mailto:leewical@lava.net]
Sent: Sunday, September 10, 2000 1:09 PM
To: HAMKE4WY@aol.com; amps@contesting.com
Subject: [AMPS] Alphas
I'LL BET THEY'LL BECOME ALBATROSSES AROUND THE NECKS OF TOO
MANY.
At 11:43 AM 9/10/00 EDT, HAMKE4WY@aol.com wrote:
>
>(87A) Main concern as time passes and current units go out of warranty,
>availability of control circuitry parts and components.
>
> What do you think the recent announcement of closing Alpha will do to
the
> value of 99's, 89's, 91B's and 87A's especially since the 87A's have
control
> circuitry, motors etc. The 87A's ???????????
>
>
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