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What year and why did you get into the Radio Hobby?


Since my first walkie-talkie, 1988 I think, I was obsessed with wireless. It wasn't really a walkie-talkie, it was a 40 channel cb HT, but I had 2 of them and my cousins and I terrorized the band with adolescent antics, not realizing that we were transmitting farther than an eighth of a mile and that others could hear us, until someone keyed up on us and taught me many new cuss words and proceeded to tell me about my momma. Some things never change.
 
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My radio addiction started when i was about 8 years old, which would have been around 1982.
I spent a lot of time in our garage replacing bike chains and splitting my dad's hardwood collection with 16 penny nails. (i was trying to build an airplane lol).

He had a radio in there that had more bands than just AM and FM. PB, VHF Hi, Air, that type of thing. so i started tuning around on one of these bands and heard some guys talking so i listened.
they said the name of my street!
so i ran around the corner to find the city crew working on something.
I ran back to the house and started listening to their radio conversations and that was it.

I was hooked. still am.

After that, Radio Shack was an almost daily visit for me, and when dad's engineering firm decided to upgrade their mobile radios from CB's to Motorolas, my dad brought home a TRC-451 mobile and a TRC-440 base station for me.
LC

oh and here's the pic for the extra entry:

1755051961548.png
 
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My dad bought me a Radio Shack police band receiver kit for Christmas in 1975 or 1976. Never did get anything on it that I can remember. CB would have been 1978. Dad bought one and put it in his Nova. TRC-11, one channel for each cylinder in the engine. It was just so cool, and I craved that power for myself.
 
It was about 74-75 when a buddy got me into CB and my first radio was a 23 channel Royce mobile with a 102 whip for my Volkswagen and a Shakespeare Big Stick for the house with a little Radio Schack power converter. Heard of and wanted a SSB radio but poor-boys could only dream. I got married in 76 and dropped out of radio because of too many irons in the fire. A little less than 20 yrs later I found myself buying a Cobra 29 NW ST ( Finally hit 40 Channel ) and I've been building on the Sickness ever since. I still have that old Cobra 29 and I should dig it out and fire it up, but SSB is my disease. LOL
 
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1975 or 76. My Sergeant bought himself a new Royce and talked me into CB and his 23 channel Sharp 500, which I hooked up in my 1972 Ford custom van with a dual gutter mount antenna system from Lafayette electronics. Anyone remember rain gutters? This has grown to about 50 radios and radio accessories that I now own. sick
Back in the day when you could hardly squeeze in a conversation. Got married, my father in law was into SSB and radio repair, 1979 I got a 79-892 SSB, "freaked and peaked".

Well, maybe the antenna was from Olson as I found the "twins" in one of their older catalogs...made by Hustler I think. The SDT version is what I think I had.

twin antenna.jpg


Sharp.jpg
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Like the title says, what year and why did you get into the Radio Hobby?
My Dad painted houses and did remodelling for a living. People who could afford to hire a house painter often replaced "furniture" at the same time when they upgraded their house.

So he would bring me home these big cabinet radios that had shortwave bands. They were often un-working, and I would test and swap tubes and poke and prod, often finding a loose wire or some other thing an eager pre-teen could repair. It was often a broken or loose grid-cap wire.

I would stay up late at night, in rapt attention as I tuned the airwaves for weak and distant stations, sending them reception reports and getting QSL cards back in the mail!

I can't pinpoint the exact year, but it was in the late 1960s. Call it late 1965, when I was ten.

That was long before the Internet, and I got most of my information from magazines, like Popular Electronics and Radio Electronics. My grass-cutting money went into subscriptions, books, electronic parts (remember Poly Paks?) and eventually, a Lafayette five-band. It was $120, which was a whole summer of grass-cutting back then! (The Drake belonged to a high-school buddy.)
1971 0124 radio gear.jpg

(Photo circa 1970.)

That fascination led me to get my first ham radio "ticket" at thirteen (WB7RRB) and a First Class Radiotelephone Operators License, too. I got a job as a technician-trainee, then started my own repair business out of high school, eventually working for a large company and travelling the world to maintain their communication gear.

These days, I play with Arduinos and Raspberry Pi boards. I'm currently building an interface to a geiger counter to automatically record and store ionizing events, getting ready for the next melt-down. (Manually recording 24-hour counts, I was able to detect the rise in background radiation following Fukushima. In a way, this is a form of DX "listening", no?)
 
Me and my friend across the street both had cheap walkie talkies and would talk every night until our parents intervened and made us turn them off. (age 14 - 1977) (his dad was the local Police Chief)

I turned 16 years old in February 1979. All my friends had a cb in their car/truck and we were constantly talking. If I remember right, I had a used Sears roadtalker ? I'm not 100% sure about that.. But.. besides meeting up somewhere, this was the only communication we had! We didn't use the phone because we were never home!!

73
 
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My dad had a Johnson 100 6 Channel CB in his car & he allowed me to use it. It was in 1965 before my 5th birthday. I had a couple of local friends that were Ham Operators & they convinced me to get into Ham Radio which I did in March of 1994. Radio is in my blood & I am usually chasing DX on some Amateur Band daily either from home or my mobile & sometimes both. Sold all of the CB's & I now have a lot of Amateur Radios & all are ICOM except Two of them. I have worked 293 Entities at this time so they are very tough finding a New one but I love a good challenge. I don't need another HT so give it to someone who wants or needs one.
 

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