[MRCA] Torn Fu. restoration
Captain D.
mkdorney at aol.com
Fri May 29 22:48:05 EDT 2020
You do realize that German Armored Divisions had other radios, especially in their HQ elements, besides the Torn Fu.d2. More than likely those radios.
I would also think that compared to even 1960, with technology over 30 years beyond when the Torn Fu.d2 was designed ( 1930s ) and an antenna that actually was better matched to frequencies being used, that low power am had a better chance of working well. One of the challenges of restoring vintage military radios to original condition and configuration is getting things to work while accepting the shortcomings that the early technology of these radios presents to restorers/operators. Modifying the krap out of these radios may make them work better, but it ruins the true historical value of the radio.
Mark D.WW2RDO
In a message dated 5/29/2020 7:49:44 PM Eastern Standard Time, n4fs at eozinc.com writes:
Back in the early 60’s. I could work all six continents within and hour running low power AM. When 10 opens up, it opens up. Lots of fun. Probably still have the QSL cards to prove it. 73 – Mike
Mike B. Feher, N4FS
89 Arnold Blvd.
Howell NJ 07731
848-245-9115
From: mrca-bounces at mailman.qth.net <mrca-bounces at mailman.qth.net> On Behalf Of Tim
Sent: Friday, May 29, 2020 7:14 PM
To: Mkdorney <mkdorney at aol.com>
Cc: Ray Fantini <RAFANTINI at salisbury.edu>; mrca at mailman.qth.net; tbryan at nova.org
Subject: Re: [MRCA] Torn Fu. restoration
Ha! Well, maybe. During WWII German armored units in North Africa were reportedly being heard by hams in the US at times. Presumably Lo VHF AM...
I don't doubt it..
Tim
N6CC
On Fri, May 29, 2020 at 2:02 PM Mkdorney <mkdorney at aol.com> wrote:
I’m about 3000 miles away from California, so I don’t thing the Torn Fu.d2 has quite the range to reach.
Mark D.
WW2RDO
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.qth.net/pipermail/mrca/attachments/20200530/ae7d111c/attachment.html>
More information about the MRCA
mailing list