[Milsurplus] Fwd: Base Carrier Current ( Milsurplus Vol 132, Issue 4 )
Bry Carling
bcarling at cfl.rr.com
Sat Apr 11 01:57:31 EDT 2015
We had carrier current on campus at Southern technical Institute which is now called Southern Polytechnic in Marietta Georgia.
The station callsign was WSTB.
I think we ran about 10 or 20 W on the a.m. dial and there are even some websites with information about the station. This was all around 1969 in 1970.
The friendships among the guys who worked on that station lasted a long time and I am still in touch with a few of them.
I cannot imagine using the BC 610 and feeding all of that RF on to the AC wiring of the building. If you ran it at full power, it seems like somebody could easily get an RF burn!
An ART13 will produce quite a bit of peak power on AM too.
Best regards - Brian Carling
AF4K Crystals Co.
117 Sterling Pine St.
Sanford, FL 32773
Tel: +USA 321-262-5471
> On Apr 10, 2015, at 8:00 PM, wa5cab--- via Milsurplus <milsurplus at mailman.qth.net> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> I helped start the student AM carrier current station at Louisiana Polytechnic Institute (AKA LA Tech) in 1967 before I went on Active Duty and went to Vietnam. The call sign that we selected was KLPI. As far as I can recall (that was 48 years ago) all that we did was check the FCC's list of current and pending call signs and follow the convention of "K" for west of the Mississippi. The station was operated under the auspices of the School of (I forget right now, speech, Drama, acting, communication, etc.) which furnished the studio and studio equipment and most of the DJ's. As in the beginning we had no funding and only had the support and interest of a few faculty, the first two transmitters were mine. One was an almost box stock BC-610-F and the other a much modified T-47A/ART-13 with the O-16 Oscillator (the BC-610 was crystal controlled). The BC-610 was installed in the campus power station (in those days, the school had its own power station that could be operated
> independant of the grid). The T-47A was installed in one of the dorms.
>
> The station proved to be popular with students, soon began to receive a little funding, and by the time that I got off Active Duty and came back to school, the two original transmitters had been replaced by several low power commercial Carriier Current rigs, approximately one per dorm, which could well have been made by LPB. As also happened in Texas and probably around the country generally, all of the colleges in Louisiana had their names changed to "something" University, and LA Tech is now Louisiana Tech University. I haven't thought to check in recent years to see whether the station is still in service or not.
>
> Robert Downs - Houston
> wa5cab dot com (Web Store)
> MVPA 9480
> Formerly Chief Engineer of radio stations KRUS (AM & FM) and KLPI (AM Carrier Current).
>
> In a message dated 04/10/2015 16:36:12 PM Central Daylight Time, clare.owens at gmail.com writes:
>
> We had carrier current at Clarkson College in 1958 and at the Univ. of
> Buffalo for at least several years after that. I engineered at both
> stations. UB also had an RCA 1KW monaural FM station in that 1959-1965
> time frame. Now stereo, of course. The chief engineer at UB made me climb
> the antenna mast on the top of the tallest dorm to chip the ice off of the
> single loop FM antenna after I blew (literally) the doorknob cap in the
> Xmtr antenna matching unit by repeatedly trying to fire up the transmitter
> one day after an ice storm :-)
>
> The problem with sending carrier current over a large installation is that
> the distribution transformers will not pass the AM broadcast frequencies
> and so you have to provide networks to pass the BC band freq's around each
> transformer.
>
> Ah, the good old days...
>
> Clare
>
> On Fri, Apr 10, 2015 at 4:59 PM, Ray Fantini <RAFANTINI at salisbury.edu>
> wrote:
>
>> AM carrier current was once a widely used technology that the military and
>> educational institutions used. I was involved in the seventies and eighties
>> with systems at college and later servicing and repairing systems for other
>> schools. A company called LPB manufactured most of the equipment that would
>> allow you to connect the output of a AM broadcast transmitter to the AC
>> distribution system of a building or complex of buildings that provided a
>> method for people to listen to the programing without having to broadcast
>> over the air or have a FCC license. In colleges and universities we would
>> usually have a transmitter located in each of the dorms connected to the AC
>> distribution in that building with all the transmitters connected by dry
>> pair phone lines. The transmitters were in the neighborhood of 25 to 35
>> watts and for the most part anywhere in the dorms or just outside the
>> building you would be able to receive the signal but you were not supposed
>> to have it radiate beyond
>> the boundaries of the intuition.
>> Have been told and assume it to be true that the military also used this
>> same system only on a large scale for entertainment. That the difference
>> would be that the distribution on an military installation would consist of
>> a large transmitter that feeds from a central point where the power came in
>> or was distributed on base.
>> All of this is now a somewhat dead technology today being that now we have
>> web base streaming and also a ton of LPFM, 100 watt and below educational
>> allocations that are used by colleges and universities. Would speculate
>> that the kids today have no idea what AM radio is or would have any
>> interest in attempting to listen.
>>
>> Ray F
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Milsurplus [mailto:milsurplus-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of
>> Hue Miller
>> Sent: Friday, April 10, 2015 4:37 PM
>> To: milsurplus at mailman.qth.net
>> Subject: Re: [Milsurplus] Base Carrier Current ( Milsurplus Vol 132, Issue
>> 4 )
>>
>> Ray, what years approx are we talking about here, the base carrier current
>> stations?
>> Did they use call letters, made-up or real?
>> That's news to me; I'd never heard of them before.
>> Interesting that you say, 1 kW level. This was also the standard level of
>> the AFRS stations, the ones with the four-letter WX-- calls. Also the
>> power level of the Mobile Broadcasting units that traveled with the U.S.
>> forces in Europe WWII.
>>
>> As a youngster I walked the long halls of the wooden building hospital
>> complex at Ft. Lawton, Seattle, with a radio in hand, trying to find
>> station "KURE", which I'd noticed some sign about. I could never find
>> anything like that, and I think I finally decided it was some kind on
>> intercom wired-broadcast.
>> -Hue Miller
>>
>>
>>> Date: Fri, 10 Apr 2015 20:10:58 +0000
>> From: Ray Fantini <RAFANTINI at salisbury.edu> Often wonder what happened to
>> all the old RCA AM carrier current transmitters that were once in military
>> service as broadcast systems for military establishments?
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: WA5CAB <WA5CAB at cs.com>
> To: clare.owens <clare.owens at gmail.com>
> Sent: Fri, Apr 10, 2015 6:46 pm
> Subject: Re: [Milsurplus] Base Carrier Current ( Milsurplus Vol 132, Issue 4 )
>
>
> I helped start the student AM carrier current station at Louisiana Polytechnic Institute (AKA LA Tech) in 1967 before I went on Active Duty and went to Vietnam. The call sign that we selected was KLPI. As far as I can recall (that was 48 years ago) all that we did was check the FCC's list of current and pending call signs and follow the convention of "K" for west of the Mississippi. The station was operated under the auspices of the School of (I forget right now, speech, Drama, acting, communication, etc.) which furnished the studio and studio equipment and most of the DJ's. As in the beginning we had no funding and only had the support and interest of a few faculty, the first two transmitters were mine. One was an almost box stock BC-610-F and the other a much modified T-47A/ART-13 with the O-16 Oscillator (the BC-610 was crystal controlled). The BC-610 was installed in the campus power station (in those days, the school had its own power station that could be operate
> d independant of the grid). The T-47A was installed in one of the dorms.
>
> The station proved to be popular with students, soon began to receive a little funding, and by the time that I got off Active Duty and came back to school, the two original transmitters had been replaced by several low power commercial Carriier Current rigs, approximately one per dorm, which could well have been made by LPB. As also happened in Texas and probably around the country generally, all of the colleges in Louisiana had their names changed to "something" University, and LA Tech is now Louisiana Tech University. I haven't thought to check in recent years to see whether the station is still in service or not.
>
> Robert Downs - Houston
> wa5cab dot com (Web Store)
> MVPA 9480
> Formerly Chief Engineer of radio stations KRUS (AM & FM) and KLPI (AM Carrier Current).
>
> In a message dated 04/10/2015 16:36:12 PM Central Daylight Time, clare.owens at gmail.com writes:
>
> We had carrier current at Clarkson College in 1958 and at the Univ. of
> Buffalo for at least several years after that. I engineered at both
> stations. UB also had an RCA 1KW monaural FM station in that 1959-1965
> time frame. Now stereo, of course. The chief engineer at UB made me climb
> the antenna mast on the top of the tallest dorm to chip the ice off of the
> single loop FM antenna after I blew (literally) the doorknob cap in the
> Xmtr antenna matching unit by repeatedly trying to fire up the transmitter
> one day after an ice storm :-)
>
> The problem with sending carrier current over a large installation is that
> the distribution transformers will not pass the AM broadcast frequencies
> and so you have to provide networks to pass the BC band freq's around each
> transformer.
>
> Ah, the good old days...
>
> Clare
>
> On Fri, Apr 10, 2015 at 4:59 PM, Ray Fantini <RAFANTINI at salisbury.edu>
> wrote:
>
>> AM carrier current was once a widely used technology that the military and
>> educational institutions used. I was involved in the seventies and eighties
>> with systems at college and later servicing and repairing systems for other
>> schools. A company called LPB manufactured most of the equipment that would
>> allow you to connect the output of a AM broadcast transmitter to the AC
>> distribution system of a building or complex of buildings that provided a
>> method for people to listen to the programing without having to broadcast
>> over the air or have a FCC license. In colleges and universities we would
>> usually have a transmitter located in each of the dorms connected to the AC
>> distribution in that building with all the transmitters connected by dry
>> pair phone lines. The transmitters were in the neighborhood of 25 to 35
>> watts and for the most part anywhere in the dorms or just outside the
>> building you would be able to receive the signal but you were not supposed
>> to have it radiate beyond
>> the boundaries of the intuition.
>> Have been told and assume it to be true that the military also used this
>> same system only on a large scale for entertainment. That the difference
>> would be that the distribution on an military installation would consist of
>> a large transmitter that feeds from a central point where the power came in
>> or was distributed on base.
>> All of this is now a somewhat dead technology today being that now we have
>> web base streaming and also a ton of LPFM, 100 watt and below educational
>> allocations that are used by colleges and universities. Would speculate
>> that the kids today have no idea what AM radio is or would have any
>> interest in attempting to listen.
>>
>> Ray F
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Milsurplus [mailto:milsurplus-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of
>> Hue Miller
>> Sent: Friday, April 10, 2015 4:37 PM
>> To: milsurplus at mailman.qth.net
>> Subject: Re: [Milsurplus] Base Carrier Current ( Milsurplus Vol 132, Issue
>> 4 )
>>
>> Ray, what years approx are we talking about here, the base carrier current
>> stations?
>> Did they use call letters, made-up or real?
>> That's news to me; I'd never heard of them before.
>> Interesting that you say, 1 kW level. This was also the standard level of
>> the AFRS stations, the ones with the four-letter WX-- calls. Also the
>> power level of the Mobile Broadcasting units that traveled with the U.S.
>> forces in Europe WWII.
>>
>> As a youngster I walked the long halls of the wooden building hospital
>> complex at Ft. Lawton, Seattle, with a radio in hand, trying to find
>> station "KURE", which I'd noticed some sign about. I could never find
>> anything like that, and I think I finally decided it was some kind on
>> intercom wired-broadcast.
>> -Hue Miller
>>
>>
>>> Date: Fri, 10 Apr 2015 20:10:58 +0000
>> From: Ray Fantini <RAFANTINI at salisbury.edu> Often wonder what happened to
>> all the old RCA AM carrier current transmitters that were once in military
>> service as broadcast systems for military establishments?
>
>
>
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