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Sommerkamp cb

B

big_sho9

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This was my 1st radio ever. my father gave it to me in 92, i was 17. The kids in town would cruise around a theater parking lot, and some of us had cb's. That's what got me addicted.. This isn't an actual photo of mine, just one I found online. I set it up as a base, and before I could get my dad to help me with the swr, my stupid ex wife blew the finals talking to her mother. I told her to wait, but she wouldn't. It got lost over time.... I wonder if anyone else ever had one. Doing research, i discovered it was actually made by yaesu. Im not sure if this was a 10 meter radio, or if someone put upper channels in it. 2009_0817Jalan30561.JPG
 

It is a export 10 meter radio.
Yes they were part of Yaesu, but most of them were sold across the pond.
Sommerkamp had several radios, like the TS2000Dx , same as the RCI 2950 , the famous coffee warmer, the dx 789 dx, and others.
I have a Sommerkamp PA 100 it is a small amp with 2 mrf 454 transistors in it.
Here is a link to Rig refrance showing the whole sommerkamp line.
Note that many were sold also as Yaesu branded.
https://rigreference.com/manufacturers/sommerkamp

Here is a little more history.
""
This is how the 10 Meter market evolved. In 1969, Herb Johnson of Swan Engineering produced the Cygnet 260, a 10-80m bare bones transceiver. It was basically a Swan 350-C with much of the circuitry eliminated to better compete with the new Japanese sideband rigs appearing on the market. At this time, CB radio was going great guns. Sam Lewis and his father, of Palomar Electronics, were producing the 546 side cuffband rig and eventually the Skipper 71, 73, 73B, and private labeled the 1046 for Swan. Herb removed all but 10 Meters from the Cygnet 260, added there most sophisticated VFO circuit, and replaced the final section with a single 6LF6 to increase the power output because the 260 only put out 60-Watts on 10m. He stared selling the radio as the Swan 1011. Sales of the 1011 went through the roof.

Someone else that went through the roof was Johnny Griggs of the west coast head of the ARRL (American Radio Relay League). Inside of six months, Griggs went down to see Herb several times threatening to have the amateur fraternity boycott Swan. Sam Lewis’s dad and Herb cooked up a deal, Swan would not market the radio, they would build the radio a under private label program under the Palomar Siltronix label. During this period, Palomar was also building VFOs for Baggys radio under his “Slider/Scanner” brand. Siltronix took over the marketing and expanded the distribution to their Palomar 2-step distributors. Up until then, the 1011 was only available through Swan amateur dealers.

Swan was bought out buy Cubic Corporation, a San Diego based conglomerate that mainly sold sophisticated communications equipment to the US government and military agencies around the globe. A couple of years after that, Cubic bought Siltronics from Palomar. At that time, Palomar hooked up with Les Ernshaw and started the Kachina project. At the same time, Palomar was in partnership with Communications Power Incorporated (CPI), developing the DigiCom, the first programmable CB radio, until the FCC, under pressure from Cobra and EF Johnson, told them they had to change the circuit, even though they (FCC) type accepted the radio. The partnership lead to the CPI radio and accessory lineup.

In 1980, Palomar died while the10 Meter market faded. However, the Palomar people continued in the amplifier business, making amplifiers for their friend Im, the owner of Sommerkamp. Sommerkamp had the European distribution sewn up. Im was also responsible for putting Yaesu Munsen (YM) on the map in the early 70’s. When he first visited Mr. Hasagowa in Japan, his main business mainly consisted of repairing color TVs in Tokyo. He had built a few sideband radios and was starting to build up sales outside Japan. Meanwhile, in the US a couple of guys started Spectronics East & West. They would drive around LA in a converted ambulance (circa Ghostbusters) delivering radios to anyone with the cash. Im made a deal with Mr. Hasagawa. Im put money into YM, in return, Im got total distribution rights for a specified period and all would bear the Sommerkamp brand. Im showed Mr. Hasagawa the one thing that put YM on the map, how to install the crystal for easy 11 Meter conversion.

Im had an engineer named Mr. Sakamoto in Japan. When the exclusive ran out in the late 70’s, Im had Mr. Sakamoto develop the TS788, Palomar/RF Limited supplied the MRF454 transistors and when the radio was available, RF Limited in exchange got the TS788 exclusive for the Americas. This was when I got involved with RF Limited, repairing Sommerkamp 788 radios.

The 788 was a compact 10/11 Meter transceiver with output power around 70 Watts PEP. The SSB transmission was not the cleanest on the market and there were many problems with the Circuit boards. It was a dual board radio with a wiring harness sandwiched between them. The boards were also phenolic double sided and the feed-thoughs were constantly breaking. Although this was a very innovative radio, it was a nightmare to work on. Im realized the magnitude of the problem and after a while abandoned the project.""

73
Jeff
 
Yeah I've got the 788dx one, which I'll likely sell. It's an interesting radio, but not my thing so much.

73's
 
So now I wonder why it looked so much like a royse 639. It was a clone? or not? I actually remember using it in my 83 regal, with a 102 whip. It had really good performance.
 
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That is a nice example of the coffee warmer.
The little PA 100dx amp I have has lasted years, and still going strong.
In fact I used it last nite to check into the ditch bank net, it is perfect running behind my 2510.
I think Tony here still has a 2000Dx.
Not a brand you run across much.

73
Jeff
 

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So now I wonder why it looked so much like a royse 639. It was a clone? or not? I actually remember using it in my 83 regal, with a 102 whip. It had really good performance.

Just for giggles I went and searched on "sommerkamp ts-310 dx schematic" and "royce 639 schematic". What I got back was a nice copy for the sommerkamp and a rather nasty one for the royce. Comparing them showed pretty much the same circuit diagram. I would exactly the same, but the royce one was hard to read, so I couldn't compare component values, etc.

Best guess, same mainboard with slightly different parts/wiring depending on what the brand ordered.
 
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i have fixed a 780dx & 788dx years ago for a local Ham, they were a real pita to fault find, fix one bad joint & cause another, lid off lid on lid off lid on,
happy days,

when they first came out the 780 coffee warmer was probably the rig most wanted CB by my locals,
famed for warble on ssb audio because people turned them up above about 50w,
back then if somebody had a warble folk would ask "are you on a coffee warmer"

788 always looked like a 780 that somebody stuck bits on,
not a good rig but i still have a soft spot for them,


Jeff
my Ham buddy threw a black pa100 away not long back,
it had sat on a shelf in his shack with a blown 454 using it as a paper weight for as long as i remember.
 
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Bob, mine is the silver one, it has served me well over the years with never a problem.
I don't run it much above 100 watts, maybe that is why.
I like it because I can run it and the 2510 on a 25 amp power supply and it gets the job done.
I was using it about a hour ago working dx on ssb, as the band was open here.

73
Jeff
 
I have a handful of Royce 639’s and a single Sommerkamp TS-340DX. They are neat radios, but if I remember right someone swapped a crystal on second band, so it does not track on that band like it should. Still works great though otherwise!
 
Ich suche Sommerkamp TS-788DX, 788DXcc und TS-780DX in allen
Kondition. Ich kaufe auch gerne mehrere Einheiten
Kaufen. Falls noch jemand etwas hat und verkaufen möchte, warte ich auf deine Nachricht.
 

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