For Sale: Boatanchor Test Gear and Similar Stuff HP 606A HF signal generator covering 50kc-65mc with a great waveform, high dial accuracy and metered output voltage level. This is the classic BA signal generator that Fair Radio Sales has had in their catalogs for 20 years or more. This one did not come from Fair and it has been well taken care of. Very good cosmetic and operating condition. With manual photocopy. Tube lineup is 5 6AW8, 4 12AT7, 2 6CL6, 7 12B4 and 1 5651. Big BA signal generator needs a big workbench or big shelf above or below. $80
B&W 210 Audio Oscillator. Works and looks great. This is a 1962-vintage test bench audio oscillator covering 10cps100kcps with good distortion characteristics, variable output to 150mw, 600 ohm bal or unbal output, etc. This is a cosmetic match for B&W 410 distortion analyzer below. With original manual. Tube lineup is simple: 1-6AU6 and 1-6CG7. $35 B&W 410 Distortion Analyzer. Looks Great. This is a workbench audio distortion analyzer and AC voltmeter. Matches B&W 210 audio oscillator above. Working as designed. Worth it for the AC voltmeter alone. With original manual. Tube lineup is 1 12AX7, 1 12AU7, 1 0A2, 1-6X4 and 2-6U8. $35 Hal-tronix HAL-600 unbuilt frequency counter kit. The original receipt is dated April 22, 1977. So this is about 30 years old. Typical 600Mhz counter kit of the era. It uses 7447, 7475, 7490 ICs plus some others. The internal AC supply uses a 309K voltage regulator or it can be run on 12VDC. . It has a 7-digit LED display with a selectable time bade of 0.1 sec or 1.0 sec (with 10 sec optional). In the original mailing box with all parts and original instructions. Cost $139 in 1977. $39 Greenlee #733 1/2 inch D-shaped punch with box and data sheet. Might not be brand new, but it sure hasnt been used much. $12 National NOS R-175A plate choke. The A version includes 6 meters and 15 meters. With May, 1954 QST reprint. $20 Cute bench variac: 7x5x5 inch box with on/off/breaker switch, pilot light, variac and 0-150VAC meter. The 3-wire cord goes in the back and the single 3-wire outlet is also on the back. This looks professionally made and says Allen-Bradley on the switch/circuit breaker. But that may just be the switch and not the whole thing. Given its small size, this is probably good for 2-3 amps, just right for bringing up your untested BA. $20 Military RBH-2 Navy WWII HF Receiver s/n 35 made by National Radio Company. WWII Navy HF receiver variant of National NC-100A. Covers .3-12 mc and 1.7 to 16mc. Contract number NXss-19881 dated January 2, 1943. This radio has been restored. The dial and dial face are crisp and clean. The paint has been oversprayed very smoothly and you have to look hard to readlize it is not the original paint. It has an unoriginal toggle switch to the left of the dial, in line with the knobs along the left edge. This switch looks like it could be original because of the way it is done, but I think it is not. Electrically restored and working reasonably well. $139 Kaypro II 1984-vintage CP/M computer with kbd. Dual floppy. The cord that connects the keyboard to the PC is missing. Otherwise in nice shape. No software. $12 Kaypro IV vintage CP/M computer with kbd. Dual floppy. The cord that connects the keyboard to the PC is missing. Otherwise in nice shape. No software. $12 HP 5302A counter for parts or repair. 50Mhz counter works intermittently. Shows signs of being used in a smoking environment. So it may just need internal connections cleaned and reseated. $5 General Electric Adjustable Capacitor catalog no. 28F311. This is a 9x6x5 inch black wrinkle-painted steel box with 2 binding posts and 6 toggle switches on top. The toggles select 1/2MFD, 1MFD, 2MFD, 4MFD, 8MFD and 16MFD. The tag says its good for up to 500VDC or 250VAC. Its heavy so Im assuming that whatever is inside is oil-filled. Untested and as-is. $10 Thanks for looking. 73, Don Merz, N3RHT ______________________________________________________________ AMRadio mailing list List Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/amradio Partner Website: http://www.amfone.net Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.html Post: mailto:[email protected]

