[ARC5] ARC5 Digest, Vol 173, Issue 31

K5MYJ macklinbob at gmail.com
Tue Jun 19 16:21:23 EDT 2018


Ham radio was used for real emergency communications several years ago after 
the Haiti earthquake.

Does serve it's purpose once in a while.

Bob Macklin
K5MYJ
Seattle, Wa.
"Real Radios Glow In The Dark"
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Richard Knoppow" <1oldlens1 at ix.netcom.com>
To: <arc5 at mailman.qth.net>
Sent: Tuesday, June 19, 2018 12:01 PM
Subject: Re: [ARC5] ARC5 Digest, Vol 173, Issue 31


    I have been following this thread with great interest. I am
not a contester and have never been attracted to it but I think
the contests help to keep the bands alive and prove to the FCC
and others that there is still justification for the ham bands.
    Most of my reactions have been stated by others. I will say
only that I've seen a few people who were used to rigs that did
it all for you become totally lost when confronted with any sort
of manually operated rig. I also think part of the justification
for having ham radio at all is still to have a corps of people
with some communication skills. I also have the awful nightmare
of the time the LGM (Little Green Men) of ancient science-fiction
fame, destroy all life on Earth and the contest goes on all run
by computers. This is one reason I think some modest ability at
Morse should still be a part of getting a license.

On 6/19/2018 11:08 AM, Kenneth G. Gordon wrote:
> On 19 Jun 2018 at 12:40, Mkdorney via ARC5 wrote:
>
>>
>> Contesting is not my thing, so I wouldn´t know. But it´s a big deal with 
>> our local club on field day.
>> So I work the go-to station and make sure the kids have fun.
>
> The ONLY "contest" I have ever enjoyed is Field Day.
>
> I did make a "personal" contest, once, out of seeing how many DX stations 
> I could work with
> my AN/GRC-109: 15 watts crystal controlled, and an end-fed wire.
>
> Last count was 35 countries, mostly on 40 meters.
>
> I haven't done that for a while though.
>
> And another friend of mine, Carl Heuther KM1H, made DXCC using a 1930s 
> designed
> push-pull TPTG transmitter, just to prove it could be done. I don't 
> remember what he used
> for tubes: maybe 211s.
>
> He told me that he was asked what transmitter he was using by only ONE of 
> the DX entities
> he worked.
>
> Of course, his TPTG transmitter's signal quality rivaled modern rigs'. No 
> chirp, nor drift, nor
> clicks. Beautiful tone, in fact.
>
> Much like Jack Meadows' push-pull 809s in a TPTG transmitter. I have a 
> photo of Jack's rig
> on my website, and have worked him on 80 and 40.
>
> I  love the old stuff.
>
> Ken W7EKB
>

-- 
Richard Knoppow
1oldlens1 at ix.netcom.com
WB6KBL
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