In a message dated 10/7/2017 4:46:42 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,  
[email protected] writes:

On  2017-Oct-07, at 2:39 PM, Ed via cctalk wrote:
> Good      collection  start  Al!
> What  homed  you in   collecting Hallicrafters?
> 
> We have various  SW radios  at  SMECC  but  I was  really  touched to get 
  
> hold of a S-40B  like  I had   in my youth.   Now to put new power supply 
> capacitors in it  and make   it  Fly.
> 
> I imagine there are a number of  folks on  list  that like  radios  too 
as  
> before we were  able to own computer to  do  electronics  with in  the  
times 
> of  old  (50s &  60s)  we  ll  played  with radios, got ham licenses, 
> shortwave  listened,  got CBs or had a pirate neighborhood radio station!

SW is dead. The  Internet killed it.

You can fix your S-40B but there won't be much to  make it fly with.

There are a couple international broadcasters left,  but nothing like it 
used to be.
I was an SWL'er as a kid in the 70s,  learned a lot about the world.
Voice of America, Armed Forces Network,  Radio Japan, Radio Hilversum 
Holland, Deutsche Welle, HCJB Voice of the Andes,  Radio Prague, Radio Moscow, 
Radio Peking, BBC, etc., etc., etc.
Listening  to the Cold War play out on the international airwaves.

Pretty much all  gone.  Left between the static are a few religious  
broadcasters.
Yes  very diminished from the 60s...
 
2 things I always  considered  my gateway to freedom... by SW  sets and   
my motorcycle! in my youth... Got  to have both at  young ages.... a  quick 
push to   dead end of Crenshaw.... and I  could  go allover part of Palos 
Verdes on dirt roads and trails...
 
I was  quite shocked  when I heard on radio Havana    most  Americans 
supplemented their  daily diet  with   dog  food!
 
Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)  
 

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