FS: Misc BA Gear Military WWII TS-34/AP ocilloscope. These WWII-era tst oscilloscopes with their distinctive shape and rubber viewing hood used to be common in surplus. But like the command sets, now they are somewhat harder to find. This one is in nice original shape and has the rubber hood. $39
Military SG-83/URM-25D. Classic military HF signal gnerator. The nice thing about this one is that it has the front cover and about half of the accessories that mount in it. Seven of the 15 normal accessories are present. I tested this using an HP counter and it seems to be working well on all ranges. The calibration is, of course, slightly off. So you will want to use a counter with this for precision work. Some scrapes on the case but excellent front panel. Controls all work smoothly and meter works. I do not have a manual and you will probably want one because the URM-25 is is not a self-explanatory signal generator. $109 Military WWII key. This is the British made key with the steel base and cover that goes with the Wireless Set Number 19 Mark II Tank Radio. (There were two styles--this one is the rounded steel cover type.) Some scratches on case. No cord. Key mechanism is stiff but works. $27 mailed to your door. National Union Lecture Set. Small set of lectures on stuff like "The Pentode Tube" and "Space Current" presented by National Union tube company in the 1930's. Small format, no covers, about 6 complete and pages from a few others. Free. 1928 Hamilton Radio Catalog (Chicago) for the broadcast and amateur set builder. Nice sections on Silver Marshall, Norden- Hauck, Browning-Drake and other famous names. Cover is loose and has a chip out of it. But this is very nice. 100+ pages. $16 PPD Dressen-Barnes Corp Model 5-300F Regulated HV Power Supply. Looks like 0-500VDC at 0-300ma. 19 inch rackmount. Very impressive construction and more impressive weight--probably about 75 pounds. Untested. Complete and unmodified. $39 + shipping (ouch!) Military Power Cable CX-13306/VRC. Possibly for the VRC-12. This is 5 feet long, with a 4-pin female on one end. The other end is a large-ish 3-pin male connector with an external screw-on clamping ring that definitely fits the VRC-12 radio. These are heavy gauge cables--obviously for power. The cable is dated 1992 and humorously has "use by 1/02" stamped on it. $12. Thanks for looking. 73, Don Merz, N3RHT The information contained in this e-mail may be confidential and is intended solely for the use of the named addressee. Access, copying or re-use of the e-mail or any information contained therein by any other person is not authorized. If you are not the intended recipient please notify us immediately by returning the e-mail to the originator.(B)

