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[TowerTalk] Nostalgia continued, July 1952 QST: Looking back, plus some

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: [TowerTalk] Nostalgia continued, July 1952 QST: Looking back, plus some conclusions
From: "Rob Atkinson, K5UJ" <k5uj@hotmail.com>
Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2003 01:47:02 +0000
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
QST is in the old National Geographic size, 40 cents and in black, white and red. The huge art deco "Amateur Radio," as in, "Devoted entirely to..." is there.
The art of Phil Gildersleeve (Gil) is on the cover with what can only be the Podunk Hollow Radio Club out in the field but the XYLs are doing all of the operating while the OMs hang up clothes, wash dishes and change diapers. What's also noteworthy is all the feedlines in Gil's cover are open wire. Am I the only one who still misses Gil's artwork on the column headings today? A.L. Budlong, W1BUD, is editor. Also on staff: Don Mix W1TS, Byron Goodman W1DX, Ed Tilton W1HDQ, Rod Newkirk W1VMW (later W9BRD), and Eleanor Wilson W1QON and others. L.A. Moxon G6XN writes on 2 element driven arrays. There's an excellent article for novices by Richard M. Smith, W1FTX on "Getting the Most Into Your Antenna" with beautifully drafted drawings of E and I curves on open wire line and center and end fed (zepp) wire antennas. In How's DX? the unforgettable Rod Newkirk predicts (humorously of course) how things will be in 1975 and 2002: We'll be working dxpeditions on Neptune, XF1A and KV4AA (remember Dick?) will have their QSL files on microfilm, W1FH has color tv DXCC, and W1DX needs Jupiter for WAP (that's Worked All Planets). A youthful Noel Eaton, VE3CJ is shown on one of the Cayman Is. for the '52 DX Test.


Ads:

Why all this JUNK?...When you can have a HARVEY - WELLS B A N D M A S T E R?

ARRL Licence Manual 50 cents

Amphenol folded dipole twin-lead amateur antennas. New models available shortly for 10, 20 and 40 meters.

Self Supporting Steel Towers for rotary beams, FM, TV. Attractive--no guy wires! 4 post construction for greater strength! Galvanized steel--will last a lifetime! SAFE--ladder to top of platform...easy monthly payments; up to 12 months to pay. Width at base = 1/5 of height.
22' $94.75, 33' $135.75, 50' $217.75, 61' $279.75, 100' $1060.00. Vesto Co., Inc., North Kansas City, Mo.


Towers by Trylon
Amateur radio types, guyed towers for FM/TV antennas, vertical radiators, microwave towers, commercial communication towers, transmission line supports, etc. Completely fabricated by the most modern methods by 20 year tower specialists, Trylon towers offer top value for any installation--commercial or amateur, Made only by Wind Turbine Company, West Chester, Pa.


Easy to learn Code
Instructograph Company, 4709 Sheridan Road, Chicago 40, Illinois

When you plan your civil defense nets, You'll get longer range with Premax Antennas.
Premax Products, 5202 Highland Ave., Niagara Falls, N.Y.


Some Ham Ads
Wanted: Late model Globe King. Best offer takes a large, used, unconverted prop-pitch motor. H.F. Cushing, W1EUS, 16 Preston Drive, Manchester, Conn.


10 and 20 meter beams, $23.25 up. Aluminum tubing, etc. Willard Radcliff, Fostoria, Ohio.

5 element 2 meter beams. Riverside Tool Co., Box 87, Riverside, Ill.

Announcing Chicago Hamfesters Radio Club Eighteenth Annual picnic at Frankfort Grove, Ill., Aug. 10th, 1952. Donations $1.50.

-----------
I have drawn a few conclusions from looking back at yesterday's old QST ads with 25 years of hindsight that I think can be applied today and I thought I'd briefly pass them on:


1. If it seems too good to be true, it probably is.
There are ads in old magazine issues selling antennas that promise great performance out of packages that look, shall we say, doubtful. If these antennas were so great, I think their manufacturers would be around today and their products would be in use everywhere. Instead they are on the scrapheap of history.


2. It pays in the long run to buy quality.
There are KLMs, Hy-Gains, Mosleys...20 years old and still in use. There are ads for budget antennas in those old magazines. I never work anyone using them today.


3. Resist the temptation to be the first kid on your block with the latest whiz-bang rig. 25 or so years ago, the first all solid state transceivers were beginning to appear. How many of them are in use today? Not that many. That's because many weren't really ready for prime-time. But there are plenty of TS520s, FT101s, Collins, TR4s etc. bought back then that are still in operation, collected and venerated as classics. Unless you want to be a beta tester, do yourself a favor and buy a rig that's been out for a few years on a shakeout and uses technology that's simmered in the pot for a bit.
Hope we can do this again someday.


73,

Rob Atkinson
K5UJ

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