You could use it as an absorption wavemeter, in its broadest sense of a passive 
tuned circuit with an indicating load.  The headphone jack was normally used to 
calibrate the VFO against a harmonic of the internal crystal oscillator, but it 
could zero beat an external source as well.  It stretches the nomenclature but 
the job still gets done.

Even as late as the 1980s a BC-221 (or LM-10 in my case) was a useful piece of 
gear.  As Bill suggests, all the qualities needed for indulgence in 
time/frequency nuttery were present.  They were incredibly expensive to build, 
being engineered to survive bombs that hadn't even been invented yet, and they 
could perform at levels beyond any reasonable requirement.  I used one for 
frequency spotting on my even-older Philco console.  

Just the other day, I visited the Spark Museum in Bellingham, WA, and was 
amused to see one over by the 'Titanic' exhibit.  Not a curation mistake on 
their part, just a consequence of having more cool stuff than exhibit space.  I 
had to restrain myself from reaching down and giving the dial a tweak.

-- john, KE5FX
Miles Design LLC

> Hi Bob:
> 
> The BC-221 is usually referred to as either a Frequency Meter or a
> Heterodyne Frequency Meter.
> 

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