[Milsurplus] BC-645 & my memories of G&G
Bruce Gentry
ka2ivy at verizon.net
Mon Sep 4 17:17:28 EDT 2017
One item I bought from G&G was at an excellent price for me. In the
summer of 1968, I wanted to collect and build up an ARN-6 ADF system.
All other sources wanted far more for the central component, the R-101
receiver. Thanks to G&G, I spent less on the entire setup than I would
have for the R-101 alone from all the other sources. The SCR-583 and
284 were totally out of reach and not of much interest anyway. I was
working at my father's garage in 1967 and in the summer of 1968 at a TV
radio shop for 50 cents or 1.00 an hour, and my parents waited to
pounce on me on payday to take 95% of my paycheck away. It took the
entire summer and a bit of subterfuge (like getting my pay raise at the
TV shop in cash so I could hide it!) to pay for the ARN-6 and a few
other goodies before school started again for the 12th.grade. G&G and
Fair were very sympathetic to my pleas to be sure nothing was included
in the package that would reveal the purchase price. My control freak
parents still could see the shipping charges, and usually went off until
I gathered the confidence to get the items shipped to the TV shop.
Odors are THE most powerful memory inducing sense, and opening a piece
of gear and getting a whiff of MFP is an instant time trip.
Brucer Gentry, KA2IVY
On 9/4/17 4:16 PM, Peter Gottlieb wrote:
> A lot of radio and electronics prices were very high back then. By
> the time I was old enough to be making enough money cutting lawns G&G
> was gone but I did know about Fair Radio and bought similar items from
> them mail order. There was also Canal Street where surplus radio gear
> showed up, although nothing like G&G or Fair. My peers were spending
> their money on beer and weed and there I was sniffing MFP surrounded
> by radio parts. I still love that MFP smell, and am still surrounded
> by radio parts.
>
> Peter
> kb2vtl
>
>
> On 9/4/2017 3:18 PM, Hubert Miller wrote:
>> Some of those early prices were pretty unrealistic. The SCR-583, what
>> surplus hound was going to pay that ? Or the SCR-284, when other
>> places sold the
>> radio alone, condition all the way from new to used, for $15 - $50 ?
>> I think when you scale the money up for today, the BC-645 was not
>> really a bargain,
>> especially when you saw what you got, and how ugly the conversions
>> turned out, and how minimally useful. But the dealers had stacks and
>> stacks of them
>> to push out. I suppose it was a good bed for some UHF experiments,
>> but less than an ideal "learning kit".
>> -H
>>
>>> If anyone is interested, I have a scanned copy of G & G Catalog No.
>>> 67 (Maybe from 1967?). It is 7.7 MB pdf size; but may be able to
>>> reduce the size to make it easier to email to anyone.
>> How about a BC-645 complete package for $26.95. Radio Set SCR-583
>> complete for $575, SCR-284 set complete for $475.
>>
>> The catalog has a lot of detail on each Mil sets for sale. Great
>> piece of history.
>>
>> Verne
>> W6LPM
>>
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