Garey, 

The IF BW was spec'd at 30 kHz.....   



Now I know why you like the "gentle slopes" of the RC filtered Drakes.  And the 
ability to hear what's "around you".   LOL


It's all about where you grew up.  :-)  



Being a bit younger, my window started at the end of the tube era.  I 
had to thin the herd or I would still own a 2B.  But I really do like my
 B twins and TR7,  the movers and shakers of my Novice.



73,

Ron WD8SBB



--- On Sat, 6/18/11, Garey Barrell <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Garey Barrell <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Drakelist] First Rigs - If you could do it all over  again, what 
would your first station be?
To: [email protected]
Date: Saturday, June 18, 2011, 10:49 AM

My first 'station' cost me all of $5.00.

I received a Heath AR-3 kit for Christmas 1956, which was fun to build, and had 
a lot of fun listening to the SWBC and Ham signals.  I had been experimenting 
with some old telephone equipment my Dad brought home from his company.  They 
had completely renovated the phone system and had dozens of desk sets, patch 
boards, cables, etc. that all went into the dumpster.!  After playing with that 
for a while, I managed to get a friend two houses away interested.  The phone 
stuff wasn't much fun, since we already had phones (Gee, kinda like SSB today!) 
so we decided to put in a telegraph line between us.  We knew just enough to be 
VERY dangerous, and ran a single wire from his room to mine, through a tree in 
the back yard of the house between us.  A few hardware store items, and we had 
a 40W light bulb and key in each of our rooms, with the return the power 
ground.!  Yes, the wire carried 120 VAC...  Fortunately, the neighbor never 
trimmed his tree or we
 would have had a very messy situation!  Anyway, that got us to learn the code, 
and I went on and studied the License Manual and Handbook to get my Novice 
license in 1957, KN4OAH.

I had a lot of help from my Elmer, W4EEI, who provided much encouragement and 
had the neatest SX-28 / Viking II station.  'We' built a single 6L6 along the 
lines of the 'QSL 40' from a 1938 QST with parts from his junk box.  It wasn't 
pretty, but sure would light up a light bulb with 600 VDC on the plates.  Just 
don't hold the key down too long.

After listening to a friend's ARC-5 receiver, and seeing how much more stable 
and easy to tune it was than my AR-3, I bought a brand new BC-454 for $4.95.  
The power transformer, rectifier tube and socket, and electrolytic cap were 
'borrowed' from the AR-3 and mounted on the back deck of the BC-454.  When my 
license finally arrived, (or perhaps 'shortly' before,) I was actually heard by 
a few stations on 80M.  I made a LOT of contacts with that station, including 
one with the Grand Island Nebraska FCC monitoring station!  Strangely enough, 
that was my best DX at the time from KY, and even stranger it was on 7440 kHz 
even though I was transmitting on 3720 kHz.!

While the BC-454 was VERY stable and sensitive, the selectivity was great, for 
FM.....  The IF BW was spec'd at 30 kHz, meaning I could hear the entire 80M 
Novice band without moving the tuning knob.  This was handy for spotting 
responses to CQ's, (most only had one or perhaps two crystals,) but made it 
difficult to hear just ONE, especially in the evening on 80 when the Novice 
band sounded like today's contest weekends.  I determined that I needed an IF 
frequency lower than the 1415 kHz of the BC-454, and just happened to have a 
clock radio on hand.  So I wove a piece of hookup wire into the loop antenna on 
the back of the clock radio, and stuck the other end down into the top of the 
last IF of the '454.  Tuning the clock radio to 1415 kHz, I had a double 
conversion receiver, PLUS _Passband Tuning_ .  This helped matters 
considerably, and then I saw a Heathkit Q-Multiplier in operation and HAD to 
have one.  I managed to get it installed in the
 clock radio, with only a couple of house fuses blown before I got the grounds 
correct!

I used this rig for a few months, and got my General license when the FCC came 
to town on one of its bi-annual trips.  This let me stretch out to the lower 
part of 80M. My Dad took pity on me and 'helped' me purchase a WRL Globe Chief 
90 kit and a Heathkit VF-1 kit.  Looking back, I think he just wanted to 
prevent any further contact with the FCC, which was a pretty formidable 
organization in those days.

About this time, a friend from school came over and decided he wanted to get a 
Ham license also.  I showed him what I was doing, demonstrated the code, and 
loaned him my License Manual and Handbook.  About a month later, he said that 
he was still studying, but was losing interest.  "Just can't learn the code".  
However, it seemed his Dad had bought him .....  A brand new 75A-4, AND a brand 
new factory wired Johnson Ranger!  Yikes!  My friend allowed as how his Dad 
wasn't too pleased that he had 'lost interest', and would I be interested in 
buying his gear to get him off the hook!  Yeah, right, assuming I could talk MY 
Dad into selling the family car and my Mom to get a job. :-)   So, the next 
question was could I help him sell it?  About the same chance as me buying it, 
but I said I would try.  The next unbelievable statement out of his mouth was, 
"Why don't you set it up in your shack so you can show it, and, get it out of 
my Dad's
 sight!"   Of course, I was reluctant, but to help out a friend!!!!  The next 
day he showed up with both units, in their boxes, to set it up.  I scraped my 
'station' off on the floor and set that A-4 and Ranger right up there.  A 
little hook up work, and I was on ALL bands.  Talk about culture shock.....  
Unfortunately, after about six weeks, someone actually offered to buy it, and I 
was done.  What a drop...  I just couldn't face putting my 'receiver(s)' back 
on the desk and had accumulated $50 in lawn mowing money, and found that I 
could afford a used Hammarlund HQ-129X.  I transferred my Q-Multiplier, and had 
a decent station for the time.

Visiting another friend, I saw a Drake 1-A.  It sure was a funny looking 
receiver.  All the manufacturers were touting "big", "heavy", "battleship", and 
other words in their ads, and here was this little 'mailbox' that didn't weigh 
anything.  I wasn't all that impressed until I started to tune around with it.  
AMAZING!!  It sounded as good or better than I remembered the 75A-4, was VERY 
stable, and you could tap or even thump on the cabinet and it stayed right on 
the signal.!!  I was sold!  I bought my first 'used' Drake receiver about three 
months later, and have since owned at least one of all their HF radios.  The 
S-Line is in the closet, the B-Line is on one desk and the 7-Line on another.

73, Garey - K4OAH
Glen Allen, VA

Drake 2-B, 2-C/2-NT, 4-A, 4-B, C-Line
and TR-4/C Service Supplement CDs
<www.k4oah.com>




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