On 11/22/2011 12:16 PM, TexasRF@aol.com wrote:
> Hi All, do you think the 40ft moile antenna might have been mounted on
> one end of the vehicle and pulled diagonally across to the other end
> and cinched down forming a near half circle?
> Done that way, the required clearance would be on the order of 15 feet
> or so. That would clear most obstacles.
> I ran a 15 ft mobile whip for a while back in the late 60's and that
> was ok nearly everywhere except under the canopy of a filling station
> with fluorescent lighting. Ask me how I know!
Those tubes are "out in the open too" IE, no covers<:-)) I use the same
set up in my shop where I have 22 8' tubes mounted in 2 tube fixtures.
Forgot and left them on last night. My wife (N8JBW) says it's coming out
of my allowance. <:-))
73
Roger (K8RI)
> 73,
> Gerald K5GW
> In a message dated 11/22/2011 11:05:44 A.M. Central Standard Time,
> sub1@rogerhalstead.com writes:
>
> On 11/22/2011 9:11 AM, k7fm wrote:
> > Just ran into an article in the May 1952 issue of CQ. W6RL
> installed a
> > teletype model 12 into his 1952 Chevy Carryall. A seperate
> Kohler "light
> > plant" was also installed in the back. BC-348 receiver and 813
> transmitter
> > running 300 watts was the transmitter.
> >
> > The 80 meter whip is 40 feet. The article says he did operate
> while in
> > motion. (maybe less overpasses in those days).
> 52? Overpasses? There was a whole lot less of everything back
> then. I
> don't think they'd even started on the Interstate Highway system
> yet so
> there were many areas of highways in the middle of the country and
> mountainous states where he could have used that antenna. "I'd guess"
> though that his use of that antenna mobile was actually quite limited.
>
> There would have been few over passes and virtually none of the
> type
> we see on the expressways. BUT he'd have wanted to travel them
> first as
> every once in a while you'd find overhead power lines. Sometimes they
> were pretty low and difficult to spot till you were right up to them.
> We also had few of the huge high tension transmission lines you see
> today. Cars had not reached the gargantuan size of the 60's and 70's
> either. Course anything with 30 to 50 thousand miles was
> considered worn
> our.
>
> BTW a good B&W Television with a little screen cost as much as
> today's
> 50 or 60" HDTV...or more in some instances for a not so great picture
> quality. The new huge CRTs gad reached a whole, monstrous 21". <:-))
> They had a horizontal sweep oscillator you could sometimes hear for a
> half mile or more and it might have harmonics up to 40 meters.
>
> 73
>
> Roger (K8RI)
>
> >
> > 73, Colin K7FM
> >
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>
>
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