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Thread: Wwii heavy bomber radio gear

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  1. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    Houghton Lake Area, Michigan
    Posts
    1

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    Hi,

    There are more than a few people who would have an interest in that equipment. I have been meeting younger, new hams who have acquired a taste for gear like that. You probably won't get as much for it as some YaeComWood or Ten Tec gear that was purchase new in the last year or two but it still has enough value that somebody will be willing to pay for shipping after paying you a few to quite a few dollars for it. The BC-221s are still very usable unmodified - I have two that are daily drivers. There are some fellows who are passing the word about your post on mail list where the interested people live.

    73,

    Bill KU8H

  2. #12

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    I'd agree eBay is the place to sell it, because it's a worldwide audience who get caught up in auction frenzy.

    I see all of that stuff in gorgeous condx at local swap meets for $10-$25, but eBay is a whole different experience.

    Ironically, a lot of "collectors" of American war surplus gear aren't Americans...I see the Japanese bidding on a lot of this stuff. They seem to revere American-made gear for some reason. Go figure.
    A government which robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.

    -- George Bernard Shaw

  3. #13

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    Quote Originally Posted by wb2wik
    Ironically, a lot of "collectors" of American war surplus gear aren't Americans.
    I see the Japanese bidding on a lot of this stuff. They seem to revere American-made gear for some reason. Go figure.
    Built to Last.

    America's contributions to the Art of Radio, for the first seven decades of the 20th Century ...
    was equivalent to being in Florence during the Italian Renaissance.

    w9gb
    Last edited by W9GB; 05-28-2012 at 01:32 AM.
    We keep moving forward, opening new doors, and doing new things, because we're curious and curiosity keeps leading us down new paths. -- Walt Disney

  4. #14

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    Quote Originally Posted by WB2WIK View Post
    I'd recommend finding a collector, and those are thinning out over the years.

    All of this stuff -- ALL of it -- was available from surplus electronics shops after WW2 and into the early to mid-60s very inexpensively, with much of it "brand new" (meaning never used, still in original packing). I used to buy BC-348s, BC-221s and such for maybe $5 each on Radio Row in NYC -- they had hundreds of them, maybe thousands of them.

    I'm sure they're worth more now, as "collectables." As recently as the mid-60s, they weren't collectable yet.
    They weren't really collectible until about 1990. Then, a combination of rarity and quality caught up to them.

    More than most gear, surplus has an enormous range of condition because hams typically hacked it up to get it working, yet examples survive which are still new in the original packing.

    Truth be told, surplus wasn't all that cheap when you allow for inflation. $10 for a Command set was a fair price in the 1960s outside of the big cities with surplus outlets, but that $10 equates to $60-70 now. And you usually didn't get a power supply or manual with it.

    What made surplus so appealing was that it was so much cheaper than manufactured or kit gear of the day.

    73 de Jim, N2EY

  5. #15

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    Quote Originally Posted by N2EY View Post
    They weren't really collectible until about 1990. Then, a combination of rarity and quality caught up to them.

    More than most gear, surplus has an enormous range of condition because hams typically hacked it up to get it working, yet examples survive which are still new in the original packing.

    Truth be told, surplus wasn't all that cheap when you allow for inflation. $10 for a Command set was a fair price in the 1960s outside of the big cities with surplus outlets, but that $10 equates to $60-70 now. And you usually didn't get a power supply or manual with it.

    What made surplus so appealing was that it was so much cheaper than manufactured or kit gear of the day.

    73 de Jim, N2EY
    The mil surplus material (not materiel!) was certainly "inexpensive." A Command receiver or transmitter for, say 40 Meters may have been $5-$10, but what other equipment was available for that price in the early to mid 60's? Sure,it required a supply (maybe another $10, unless yo were lucky enough to scavenge an old TV,) but for $25-$35 you had a station. WHAT commercial Amateur equipment was available for that price, with the "built-in" "MADE IN AMERICA" quality? Even kits cost more than that in those days. Back then, there was plenty of information on the modification of mil surplus equipment in the ham magazines, QST included, and "ham ingenuity" was able to fill in the rest.

  6. #16

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    Quote Originally Posted by WA9SVD View Post
    The mil surplus material (not materiel!) was certainly "inexpensive." A Command receiver or transmitter for, say 40 Meters may have been $5-$10, but what other equipment was available for that price in the early to mid 60's? Sure,it required a supply (maybe another $10, unless yo were lucky enough to scavenge an old TV,) but for $25-$35 you had a station.
    Not really. You'd need the receiver, transmitter, power supplies (the receiver shouldn't be run at more than 250 volts B+, while the transmitter needed more), TR system, meters, tuning knob for the rx, modification parts, etc. And what you got was a single-band station that probably chirped, clicked and got into local TV sets unless it was seriously modified. And if you were a Novice, as most new hams were, you needed to be crystal controlled, which was another mod. And the info was in books that cost more $$.

    This doesn't mean surplus couldn't be a bargain. But it took some doing.

    For example, take a BC-453 receiver and put a crystal-controlled converter in front of it. (Most of the parts for the converter could be scavenged from a defunct AM BC radio, and if you found one with a transformer supply, even better!) 80 and 40 meters with the selectivity and tuning rate of much more expensive receivers.

    OTOH, Command set transmitters were best used as part sources. They could be decent VFOs, once you got the General.

    Quote Originally Posted by WA9SVD View Post
    WHAT commercial Amateur equipment was available for that price, with the "built-in" "MADE IN AMERICA" quality? Even kits cost more than that in those days.
    The Heathkit DX-20 cost $36 as a new kit in the late 1950s. Used, in the early 1960s, they could be had for $20-25. A used Johnson Adventurer was a bit more money. What you got was a complete CW transmitter with TVI-proofing, all 5 bands, and a clean signal, that could match almost any antenna without a tuner.

    In those days practically all ham gear used by US hams was "MADE IN AMERICA" anyway.

    Quote Originally Posted by WA9SVD View Post
    Back then, there was plenty of information on the modification of mil surplus equipment in the ham magazines, QST included, and "ham ingenuity" was able to fill in the rest.
    Actually the info was quite limited unless you bought books like the Surplus Conversion Manuals, which had schematics. Today is paradise by comparison; we can download all sorts of manuals and info for free.

    But I think you missed my real point:

    "Truth be told, surplus wasn't all that cheap when you allow for inflation. $10 for a Command set was a fair price in the 1960s outside of the big cities with surplus outlets, but that $10 equates to $60-70 now. And you usually didn't get a power supply or manual with it.

    What made surplus so appealing was that it was so much cheaper than manufactured or kit gear of the day."


    What I was getting at there is that there are hams today who expect to pay 1960s prices for surplus. They forget that $10 in 1962 was like $60-70 today.

    And note the last sentence: "What made surplus so appealing was that it was so much cheaper than manufactured or kit gear of the day."

    I know, I was there. Novice 1967, Tech and Advanced 1968, Extra 1970. Graduated high school 1972.

    How many converted surplus rigs did you put on the air back then?

    73 de Jim, N2EY
    Last edited by N2EY; 05-29-2012 at 12:07 AM.

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