[Milsurplus] A suite deal?
Mike Feher
n4fs at eozinc.com
Mon Mar 12 15:36:48 EST 2007
I had a German E-52B, that I sold in a lot of German and Japanese WWII
radios, that used the projection system. Now that is some receiver. While
the SRR series was OK, they were never my favorites. I probably had about 20
of them over the years and never experienced any mechanical problems with
any of them like Dave mentioned. Thankfully, I no longer have a single one.
- Mike
Mike B. Feher, N4FS
89 Arnold Blvd.
Howell, NJ, 07731
732-886-5960
-----Original Message-----
From: milsurplus-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:milsurplus-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Ray Fantini
Sent: Monday, March 12, 2007 2:13 PM
To: David Stinson; milsurplus at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Milsurplus] A suite deal?
The SRR-13 use to be one of my favorite radios, have talked with a
engineer who did some of the original work on the set and he supplied me
with a box of steel arms to replace the pot metal ones. I always thought
the damage occurred from people overtorking the hex screws and snapping
the arms then, I know I broke a couple that way. also was always amazed
by the amount of drift the HFO had. but do have to admit the film
display was fun, always thought it was strange how several Russian
radios and the SRR family used the same type of projection schemes, also
the same idea of pot metal compartments for different stages of the
radio. and thoes solder in peanut tubes. What was the first country to
use the micro printed or film projection system on a mass produced
radio?
Ray Fantini KA3EKH
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