K9WG
Member
Seeing the glow of the tubes. Selecting the band. Tuning the bandspread. Adjusting the antenna trimmer…. And hearing….
Interval Signals Online
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Thanks 902not running yet but I am working on it. Meantime she's safe and cozy in the closet wrapped in linen
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I know it was posted months ago, but that SX-88 is beautiful. Thirty years ago I had the HT-32B transmitter which would have looked very sharp next to it, but being a kid, I sold or traded it for something stupid. I wouldn't know where to start in tuning the transmitter anymore. Hope ridgescan has her hp and running by now. I have an SX-110 that I gave my son to mess around with. I think I'll repo it and set it up in my shack.
Seeing the glow of the tubes. Selecting the band. Tuning the bandspread. Adjusting the antenna trimmer…. And hearing….
Interval Signals Online
Seeing the glow of the tubes. Selecting the band. Tuning the bandspread. Adjusting the antenna trimmer…. And hearing….
Interval Signals Online
You remind me of my grade school days and my very first clock radio which was an ivory Zenith tube radio with the circular tuning dial, volume and tone knobs. It lulled me to sleep despite my stressing out over tomorrow's math test, with the warmth, glow and soft hum of the tubes-and its flawless delivery of WNUS Chicago known as "the quiet oasis" with its super soft music format.I have a nice Hallicrafters S-38 that I got in a flea market for five bucks 10 or so years ago. I am too young to have grown up with tube stuff, but somehow, I just love how the tubes light, how the old radios feel, and how they smell. People can't understand why some of us are in love with old radios and tubes, but I can't understand people who aren't. My gtandfather was a TV repairman after he served in WWII, so maybe the love of tubes is in my blood.
Nothing sounds better than an AM broadcast on an old tube receiver.