[Milsurplus] Ham ads DL - CQ 1949
Bob kb8tq
kb8tq at n1k.org
Wed Feb 20 19:04:27 EST 2019
Hi
The same process you describe on the planes also applied to other categories
of “stuff”. An HRO from 1938 likely was not on the list of things to hang onto. It
also may have been non-functional when checked over. Off it goes into the pile
to be turned into frying pans. Somehow somewhere along the route to the smelter
it gets diverted ….. It may have been the way the haulers got paid.
Bob
> On Feb 20, 2019, at 4:35 PM, Hubert Miller <Kargo_cult at msn.com> wrote:
>
> Yes. Interesting comments.
> I read that in Europe, once the front had passed, and immediate great danger had receded, civilians turned out in force to strip vehicles of whatever they could remove.
> With all the junk, like disabled vehicles lying around, "dumpster diving" was probably pretty easy. But as you say, how to get it home ? And the lower your rank, the more
> difficult.
> I have also been interested in how equipment found its way to the civilian market.
> Some of it was "leakage"; stuff somehow "leaked out" from the military; somehow "written off" or "expended in use". Sometimes this was all for the good, as when maybe
> for example, some manuals were kept by an administrator for his own collection rather than being destroyed when obsoleted.
> I recall about a decade ago on Ebay was a GRC-9 set; the seller said something like, his brother had gotten it from the National Guard. No, not "bid on" or "MARS program".
> I also back during the "gas emergency" of around 1976, I heard talk of National Guard gasoline ending up in Guard members' own cars.
> I do NOT mean by this to deprecate our fine military, which in many ways is the pillar of American values, just to mention some problems.
> -Hue
>
>> Subject: Re: [Milsurplus] Ham ads DL - CQ 1949
>
> HI
>
> To whatever extent surplus radio gear showed up here in the US, it also showed up
> a *lot* in places like Europe. It was already over there lying around :) The cost of
> packing it back up and hauling it home ….. yikes ….. Even more so when “new in the
> box” equivalents were sitting in warehouses “back home”.
>
> Just how any of it went from “government property” to “in my basement” always is an
> interesting sort of question. One would guess that dumpster diving was one of many
> ways it happened ….
>
> Bob
>
>
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