[ADXA] Good stuff Steve and memories there for a lot of us... Thanks!!

HamOP k5yy1 at cox.net
Tue Aug 11 18:53:37 EDT 2020


Excellent summary Steve! Memories of the NRD receiver line, have had the 525, 535 and 545 in the past and NOW still have the 535 ”D” sitting to my right and occasionally turn on to listen to  3.8 mc stuff locally.  Offered it for sale cheap to someone who could really use a Top of the Line receiver, digital R/O and many filters. Paid $675 and that was a deal.

Knew Chod Harris very well and we stayed with each other in Visalia one year. Super guy!  And those Yellow Sheets, could not wait to get them to see what was for sale. But always the W6 area got them first and beat us out on great deals. Keep up the great news like this, many of us are interested in the old days. Hope to get to Memphis before end of 2020 and give you a call. Sonny (George) Flinn, main owner of WHBQ, WMCT and 50+ other radio/TV stations across the nation, etc is a ham but never gets on the air. Sold him several pieces of Collins but they just sit in a bedroom of one of his 3 homes in Memphis. Main home is on Memphis CC Golf Course south of Poplar a few blocks. 

TU again and keep up the good chasing over there in my old home grounds of Memphis.
San YY

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From: Crownhaven
Sent: Tuesday, August 11, 2020 5:27 PM
To: adxa at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [ADXA] The old days Rory... all started with SWLing in 1954 inMemphis. Who knew what followed?

Hi San.  Thanks for the history.  We are lucky to have ops in ADXA who have been there.  The past is as important as the future.  I'm a latecomer, 1982 but a utility listener long before that.  JRC NRD-515 and Icom R-70 then R-71.  Both of my Icoms are in use by active and very experienced UTE listeners today.  UTE, by the way, is everything but SW broadcasts, ships, aircraft, ground stations, etc.  Back in the day, I used an Info-Tech M600 sold by Universal Radio to decode RTTY transmission or RATT as it was called in the USCG.  It was amazing all the unencrypted traffic out there.  You could monitor HF phone calls from AF1 and AF2 plus any number of other VIP flights.  All on SSB.  My favorite agency to listen to was the CG.  They rarely if ever used encryption and were continually active on HF.  They would return QSL cards for ships and aircraft.  One of my best catches was a QSL card from a C130 deep in the Pacific flying from Honolulu sending traffic via RTTY.  
On another occasion, I heard a US Navy P3 come up on the Atlantic ASW channel, 8992 and announce they had a "Russian submarine on fire in sight."  It was off the Atlantic Coast.  The non-stop voice traffic was just incredible.  The operator talking to the AC kept reminding them that the Pentagon and the White House Situation Room were on the circuit.  Finally, after several hours, the aircraft was told to encrypt as "CNN was listening."  It was all in the news the next day.  This was before the Internet, etc.  We all used to send our intercepts in to a little rag who would then print them in a monthly publication, kind of like the Yellow Sheets we used to get.  Anyone remember those?  How about the QSL routes that we subscribed to that we coveted and even the printed callbook.  Great days.  Not to mention Chod Harris and publication plus others.  
And the anticipation of checking the mail box every day wondering if you actually got that ATNO or not.  No way to know until the card got there.  It was a blast.  I didn't get on LOTW until somewhat late.  Fortunately, K8NA, San, Rick and Joel know Ted, wrote but I'm glad I got them on the computer.
So San, you aren't the only one out there who misses the old days.  Thanks for sharing that with us.  I hope I didn't bore anyone.  BTW, if you get bored, you can still hear a lot of HF civil aviation traffic around the world talking to air traffic control.  A lot of it is being done by SATCOM now, automatically reporting positions, but the older aircraft still use a lot of HF SSB.  
Steve, QQ
On 8/11/2020 1:58 PM, HamOP wrote:
Rory.. 
If the Asia QSL envelopes have “seeds” in them, then don’t open! Just send to ARRL like it is and let them confirm there! HI  They have plastic gloves and don’t eat seeds.  😊  Strange world we are in now. I will take the 50s and 60s back any day, especially when just starting out as an SWL in 1954 with an S38A, being at Elvis’ home on Audubon Drive 3 times in 1956 and dancing on Wink Martindale’s WHBQ show on Saturdays from March to December 56 before moving back to Sugartown (Stuttgart) on Jan 1, 1957.. 
 
Then the SWL cards I got back from many hams stimulated me to get my license. I had an ARRL 15 WPM certif before becoming a ham in 1957. And I made schedules with those hams I had sent SWL cards to and WORKED them on ham radio a few months later on CW. I was so happy. Then DXing came along in late 57 - early 58 and the world changed!! 
 
I was an AM announcer at WHBQ in Atlanta during my first 2 years at Georgia Tech, doing fill-ins on weekends doing 50/60s rock and roll song requests. Next door was the ham station at Ga Tech and I used it sometimes to chase DX with only 100 watts with a DX100. I was paid 70 CENTS an hour to announce, usually 3 hours and sometimes 4.  I was a sidekick guy at KXLR radio and did color analyst work for Arkansas Traveler Baseball in 1969, fun and got a ballpark burger and all the Coke I could drink. No $$ paid to me.. Uggggh
Big DX chasing started in 1965-66 and the ADXA kept my interest in a big way starting in 1967. FUN HOBBY, Rory…  You are really doing well.
73 and be safe more than ever these next 2 months. Our CY0 trip will be delayed til next year but some other neat options are being looked at for 2021 too. Prop will be SO much better in 2021 anyway.. 😊
San
 
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On Tue, Aug 11, 2020 at 12:03 PM HamOP <k5yy1 at cox.net> wrote:
Sent out about 50 QSLs with SASE or $2/SAE about 3-4 months ago. Thought I would make a concerted effort to mail direct cards to some unconfirmed band/mode QSOs from YEARS ago. After sending initial QSLs years ago and nothing coming back, I assumed some were lost and that I would spend a few bucks to confirm a few more, if possible. One more attempt! :-)
 
Recently got QSLs from the late 1990s thru 2011, including AH4/AH7G Midway and SV7CFC. Fun seeing them come thru, some from family members who are QSLing with the original operator terminally ill or in a nursing home, etc. Couple came from deceased operator operations but some friend was assisting and had old logs in hand. One from a ham now living in the USA the past 2 years. Too many situations, but I tried to get a few cards in but will not spend the time again on something just going in a shoebox..  LOL  Just got a wild hair back in April. 
 
So far about 15 new ones to add to my current country 10 band total. With the max at 340 current countries (3400 possible 160-6m) I may not see 3000 confirmed before passing on. If we could throw in 2m, 222 and 432mc, I could help some. 😊   
Then there’s 60m and it’s 177 would put me over the 3000. For sum reason the ARRL is staying away from that situation that started July 3, 2003.. IIWII ☹
 
San YY
 
 
 
 
 
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