Steve08CVPI
Member
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2017
- Messages
- 72
My grandfather had one on a side table in the living room when I was a kid. I was fascinated by it listening to the fire dept and cops. My first was a Realistic Patrolman 10 in the 70s
Those were really popular with the on-call FF, where I grew up. Almost everyone on my dad's FD had one.My father by virtue of being city manager was also civil defense director...he got two of the Federal Ten Ten receivers for the house...one for our local PD and FD He might turn them on in the morning while he got ready for work, but not often. I talked him out of them, and into my room they went...on 24/7 and I could even sleep thru alarms. Eventually he got a two frequency that would scan and I got a crystal for intercity! So I guess that's about 58 years or so of messing with receivers...
View attachment 111114
This was my first mobile police and fire receiver in 1969 that I traded for an old CB radio that I had. It was modified before I got it to Boston Fire and State police along with my local police and fire. That radio was the beginning of my life long addiction to police receivers and various radio equipment and my becoming an Extra class ham. but I have recently progressed to a Uniden SDS200 scanner and I am just loving it as I slowly learn the new technology.
My grandfather had one on a side table in the living room when I was a kid. I was fascinated by it listening to the fire dept and cops. My first was a Realistic Patrolman 10 in the 70s
I had the same rcvr for the TX Highway Patrol...the dispatcher used 42.90 and the mobiles were on 42.74. Tuning it just a hair below 42.90 I could hear the mobiles if they were within a few miles!!!My father had one of these in the sixties some time and we would sit in the kitchen and he would tune into Boston police and fire on lowband and I was probably 10 at that time if not younger. This one was 30-50 tunable. I justy threw it out about 60 years later and it still worked.
View attachment 111165