[Milsurplus] ARC 65 control boxes

antqradio at sbcglobal.net antqradio at sbcglobal.net
Tue Sep 22 23:37:56 EDT 2015


Speaking of the ARC-38, does anyone know the month and year when it first entered Navy inventory?

WA3KEY in the Collins Quick Reference says 1952 -1954 for the 618S and the ARC-38.  JANAP 161 dated March 1953 doesn't list the ARC-38 so I assume that it entered the inventory after March, 1953?
Jim


  From: Mike Morrow <kk5f at earthlink.net>
 To: milsurplus at mailman.qth.net 
 Sent: Tuesday, September 22, 2015 12:31 PM
 Subject: Re: [Milsurplus] ARC 65 control boxes
   

> Always wondered why the only really versatile control box for the ARC 65
> was found on the test set. This box allows direct dialing of frequency, no
> codes needed as on ARC 38.

That would be the C-1210/ARC, one of which is shown on the website of Mike Hanz:

 http://aafradio.org/flightdeck/arc-65.htm

I do NOT believe the C-1210/ARC was ever intended solely for use in the test equipment...hence the ARC (rather than ARM) in the nomenclature.  And your report shows that to be true.

> The control box for planes had  20 channels, set by movable pins on a
> rotating drum. No way to directly dial up a new freq.

The RT-128A/ARC-21 and the RT-400/ARC-65 used the C-451A/ARC-21 master contol panel.  The auxiliary channel-select control panel was the C-455/ARC-21.

The auxiliary receiver in these systems was the R-224/ARR-36, which also could not be easily tuned because it used a C-451A/ARC-21 as its control as well, and through that a C-455 as well.

I like the approach used by the USN sets of that era...the RT-311/ARC-38 and the RT-594/ARC-38A.  Those used the continuously dial-tunable R-648/ARR-41 as the auxiliary receiver.

> Some of the "good" boxes were in USAF/ANG  planes.

Yes.

> Here is a pic from  KC 97L showing the test set control box mounted above
> the window at the NAV station. 
>
> http://www.flyian.net/cockpit/pits/kc97/kc97nav.jpg
>
> The APN 70 LORAN set marks this as a late serving KC 97, probably late 60s
> early 70s. APN 9 preceded the APN 70.

Could be...but not because of the R-277/APN-70 LORAN.  The AN/APN-70 is referenced in the connection diagrams of the AN/ARC-21 at least as far back as the 15 July 1958 field maintenance manual.

FWIW, a Royal Netherlands Navy destroyer (D819) on which I was stationed in 1973 still carried a R-65/APN-9 LORAN A.  It was not used in the north Atlantic...the Decca Navigator system was far easier to use.

Mike / KK5F

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