[ARC5] WWII Navy Control Tower Radio

Jay Coward jcoward5452 at aol.com
Wed Feb 13 19:59:31 EST 2013


Well you have probably seen photos of AN/ARR-2, AN/ARC-5 HF and AN/ARC-5 VHF all in the same rack.The Mast may well be the AN-104-* VHF antenna. My guess is as good as any ones.
Comments  from the Group please.
Jay





-----Original Message-----
From: Michael A. Bittner <mmab at cox.net>
To: W9RAN <W9RAN at oneradio.net>; arc5 <arc5 at mailman.qth.net>; Jay Coward <jcoward5452 at aol.com>
Sent: Wed, Feb 13, 2013 4:37 pm
Subject: Re: [ARC5] WWII Navy Control Tower Radio


Numerous pics of Seahawks on bing images show wire antenna from mast in front of windshield to top of vertical fin.  Where visible, the downlead is some distance forward of the tail fin insulator suggesting a zep-like HF antenna similar to that on the Kingfishers.  Some images of Seahawk models and 3-views show the downlead right at the tail fin insulator.  These are probably incorrect.  Being late in the war, I'd guess most likely HF ARC-5 equipped.  Mike, W6MAB
  
----- Original Message ----- 
  
From:   Jay Coward   
  
To: mmab at cox.net ; W9RAN at oneradio.net ; arc5 at mailman.qth.net 
  
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2013 12:52   PM
  
Subject: Re: [ARC5] WWII Navy Control   Tower Radio
  


Well actually it would make a difference.   The Seahawk entered service in late 1944 and being a single seater with a bunk   in the fuselage, a smaller radio set than the GF/RU would be required. That   leaves AN/ARC-5 which would have VHF capability. So the set in the tower photo   may well be VHF.   
 Just surmising...
  
Jay


  
-----Original   Message-----
From: Michael A. Bittner <mmab at cox.net>
To: W9RAN <W9RAN at oneradio.net>; arc5 <arc5 at mailman.qth.net>; Jay Coward   <jcoward5452 at aol.com>
Sent: Wed, Feb 13, 2013 12:32 pm
Subject:   Re: [ARC5] WWII Navy Control Tower Radio

  
  
Not that it makes any difference, but some of those floatplanes are   Curtiss Seahawks.  Mike, W6MAB
  
 


 



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