[Hallicrafters] Questions for OLD-timers (Hams)
Hunter Ellington
hunter.ellington at gorrellgiles.com
Thu Apr 24 14:35:28 EDT 2008
As of April 1, 2008, Hunter Ellington is no longer with our firm.
You may contact him via his new email of hellington at lindquist.com.
If you need further assistance, please contact me by email
christina.meisel at gorrellgiles.com or telephone (303) 996-6595.
Thanks,
Christina M. Meisel
Legal Assistant/Accounting Manager
(303) 996-6595 Direct
Gorrell Giles PC
-----Original Message-----
From: hallicrafters-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:hallicrafters-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Jim
Brannigan
Sent: Thursday, April 24, 2008 10:31 AM
To: Waldo Magnuson; hallicrafters at mailman.qth.net
Cc: Waldo Magnuson
Subject: Re: [Hallicrafters] Questions for OLD-timers (Hams)
> I'm interested in your answers/comments on the following topics.
>
> 1. I've read that the Post Office Technical Branch was at one time
> (1920s, 1930s?) responsible for enforcement of amateur radio practice
> (operating frequency, power output, etc.). Does anyone know if that
was
> the case? The Federal Radio Commission came into being in 1927, later
to
> become the FCC in 1934.
Not in this country, see other posted answer
>
> 2. At one time Hams were required to keep an accurate log of every
> contact. Was that true and is it still required but not practiced?
Yes, the requirement was deleted some 20 years ago. Most active hams
still
maintain a paper or electronic log.
>
> 3. In the 1940s and 1950s I think the amateur license application
> required you to list how the station frequency was to be monitored
> (measured). Was that true? When did that requirement get replaced
with
> "Operated in accordance with good engineering practice"? I suspect
most
> operators now rely on the crystals in the transmitters or/and a
crystal
> calibrator to remain in the band. Crystal use started in 1934.
>
The only requirement was to stay within the band(s). A 100kc marker
crystal
was a standard station accessory.
Accurate frequency measurement was never really an amateur concern.
Precise
frequency measurement became a necessity with the advent of VHF
repeaters.
It is too bad that the League stopped selling the QST archive CD's, but
the
book "200 meters and down" is still available
Jim
> I'm trying to put together an article and the above questions/thoughts
> have a bearing in the article content.
>
> Thanks.
> 73, Skip W7WGM
> Spokane, WA
>
> ______________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________
More information about the Hallicrafters
mailing list