Vintage amateur radio

Vintage amateur radio

Vintage amateur radio is a subset of the amateur radio hobby, considered a form of nostalgia much like antique car collecting, where enthusiasts collect, restore, preserve, build, and operate amateur radio equipment from bygone years, most notably those using vacuum tube technology.

Appeal

Vintage radio enthusiasts contend that while modern, state-of-the-art, microprocessor based amateur radios are extremely good at what they are designed to do, they lack the aesthetic appeal and "soul" of amateur electronic gear from the vacuum tube era. Additionally, many find satisfaction in taking commercially-made amateur equipment from the 1930s - 1970s (affectionately called boat anchors by US/Canadian amateurs because of their relatively large size and weight) and carefully restoring it back to health. The simple, roomy electrical and mechanical designs of boat anchor radios are more easily worked on, modified, and tinkered with than their modern Japanese counterparts. In an age where fixing a transceiver is accomplished by boxing it up to send to the manufacturer for a custom VLSI chip replacement, devotees think of boat anchors as "real radio". According to these hobbyists, a hot soldering iron is almost a requirement for operating a vintage station. Other enthusiasts claim that boat anchors sound better than their silicon descendants, saying that the tube audio from vintage gear is "warmer" and more aesthetically pleasing than the audio produced by the typical modern transceiver. [http://www.virhistory.com/ham/rrab.faq.htm Boatanchors FAQ] Some hobbyists see vintage radio operation as a valuable asset to help preserve the history and heritage of radio for future generations, and may assist in the restoration and operation of vintage radio equipment for historical exhibits, museums and museum ships.

AM activity

Amplitude modulation (AM) was once the main voice mode in amateur radio before being superseded by Single-sideband modulation (SSB). But AM has recently become a nostalgic specialty interest on the shortwave ham bands. Vintage radio operation has drawn a wide range of amateur radio enthusiasts from rock star Joe Walsh, WB6ACU, to Federal Communications Commission attorney Riley Hollingsworth, K4ZDH.

A majority of "AM'ers" stations consist of vintage transmitters and receivers housed in separate cabinets. Some operators have even obtained retired AM broadcast transmitters, donated or sold cheaply to hobbyists by radio stations with no further need for them. Others build their equipment from scratch (called homebrewing) using combinations of modern and vintage-era parts. [http://www.rwonline.com/reference-room/special-report/rwf-chromeJune20.shtml Radio World Online]

In the United States, shortwave HF frequencies (in MHz) on which amateur radio AM activity can be found include "1.885", "1.930", "1.985", "3.870--3.885", "7.285", "14.286", "21.425", and "29.010", and sometimes feature "special event" stations using unique call signs. In the United Kingdom, AM activity can be found almost every day on frequencies between "3.615" and "3.625" MHz.soundbox| file=N3wwl.ogg | caption=LISTEN TO A SAMPLE of the "broadcast quality" sound exhibited by some vacuum tube-based vintage amateur stations. This example features "AM'er" N3WWL. | align=right Conversations (QSO's in ham slang) are typically configured as "roundtables" where several participants take turns developing and presenting their thoughts in a storytelling fashion. Often the conversation revolves around do-it-yourself experimentation, repairs, and restoration of vintage vacuum-tube equipment, which has been rising in value because of nostalgic demand. Interested newcomers are usually encouraged to switch their modern transceivers to AM mode, introduce themselves, and join the conversation. [http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/pdf/9302043.pdf ARRL QST article: Classic Rigs And Amplitude Modulation]

Classic gear

Vintage operating activity is not limited to the AM mode. Many devotees use their "classic" amateur gear from vintage-era American manufacturers like Eico, EF Johnson, National, Heathkit, Hammarlund, Drake, Collins, WRL, Swan, Signal/One, Lafayette and Hallicrafters, to make CW, SSB, FM and RTTY two-way contacts. Although 1930s through 1970s gear is considered "vintage", collectors may differ on the cutoff dates.

Some even sub-specialize in military radio collecting and undertake to restore and operate surplus communications equipment, much of it dating back to World War II, from the ubiquitous US Signal Corps SCR-300 and SCR-536 walkie talkies to exotic gear like the British Paraset, a small espionage transceiver supplied to Resistance forces in France, Belgium and the Netherlands.

There is considerable interest in vintage military and commercial radio equipment among EU amateur radio operators, especially gear from British manufacturers such as Marconi, Racal, Eddystone, Pye, and a variety of Russian, German, Canadian, British RAF and British Army equipment, such as the well known Wireless Set No. 19.

Glowbugs

"Glowbugs" are a related aspect of vintage radio and harken back to the early days of amateur radio, when the majority of hams hand-crafted their own equipment. Relatively smaller in size than "boat anchors", "glowbug" is a term used by US amateurs to describe a simple home-made tube-type radio set, reminiscent of the shortwave radio-building craze of the 1920s and 30s. Classic glowbug designs from that era include the famous twin triode Doerle regenerative receiver and single-tube Hartley, TNT and TPTG transmitters. "Glow" refers to the glow of the vacuum tubes and "bug" to the gear's relatively diminutive size. Generally, any small, home-built tube-type transmitter or receiver may be referred to as a glowbug. The majority of glowbug transmitters are designed to be used in the CW radiotelegraphy mode.

As late as the 1960s, glowbugs were part of many beginner ham stations, and the ARRL Radio Amateur Handbook for those years exhibited a number of such simple, tube-based designs. Today, glowbugs are enjoying a resurgence of interest among QRP enthusiasts and others with a penchant for constructing their own equipment. A growing number of hams are "getting back to their roots" by assembling glowbugs on steel chassis, tin cakepans, and wooden boards, and putting them on the air. Amateur radio glowbug enthusiasts can often be heard communicating on the shortwave bands via CW using Morse code. A popular frequency to hear glowbug contacts is 3.579.5 MHz, chosen because crystals for this frequency can be salvaged from discarded color TV sets, along with other transmitter components. [http://www.make-digital.com/make/vol09/?pg=141&search=tv+set+color+burst+crystals&u1=texterity&cookies=1 "TV Set Salvage" by ThomasArey] [http://webhome.idirect.com/~griffith/gb.htm Glowbugs resources]

Clubs, events, and publications

Many vintage radio clubs sponsor special events and contests, such as the "AM QSO Party" sponsored by the "Antique Wireless Association", the "Heavy Metal Rally" sponsored by "Electric Radio Magazine", and the "Classic Radio Exchange". [http://qsl.asti.com/CX/ Classic Exchange] Such operating events are not traditional ham radio contests inasmuch as they are a night of friendly QSO’s using home-built, restored commercial ham, broadcast or military equipment.

"The Amateur Radio Lighthouse Society" and "The AM Radio Network's" [http://amfone.net/amradionetwork/index.htm AM Radio Network] "Expedition to Thomas Point Shoal Lighthouse" in Chesapeake Bay, MD honored the heritage of lighthouses. The call sign K3L was issued by the Federal Communications Commission for a vintage special event station that helped commemorate the 100 year anniversary of radio's first voice communications mode, AM. [http://amfone.net/K3L/ AMfone.net K3L information]

Britain's "Vintage and Military Amateur Radio Society" (affiliated with the Radio Society of Great Britain) coordinates regular on-air "nets" where enthusiasts gather as well as massive technical files for the benefit of members. [http://www.vmars.org.uk/ Vintage Military Radio Society] "The Surplus Radio Society", a Dutch society of collectors of old ex-military radio equipment and other nostalgic receivers and transmitters holds weekly radio activity nets every Sunday on 3.575 MHz and sponsors several flea markets and exchange fairs each year. [http://www.xs4all.nl/~srsnl/ Surplus Radio Society]

Perhaps in response to interest in vintage radio, the ARRL publishes "Vintage Radio", a collection of articles from QST magazine describing vintage equipment and restoration, and CQ Amateur Radio magazine releases a yearly "Classic Radio Calendar" featuring full-color vintage radio images.

Safety

to all equipment is encouraged. [http://www.virhistory.com/ham/rrab.faq.htm Boatanchors FAQ]

Notes

See also

*Amateur radio
*AM broadcasting
*Amplitude modulation
*Antique radio
*Boat anchor
*Valve sound

External links

* [http://amfone.net AM Fone Page]
* [http://amwindow.org The AM Window]
* [http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/am.html ARRL amplitude modulation page]
* [http://www.antiquewireless.org/ Antique Wireless Association]
* [http://webhome.idirect.com/~griffith/gb.htm Glowbug resources]
* [http://www.ermag.com/ Electric Radio Magazine]
* [http://www.vmars.org.uk/ Vintage And Military Amateur Radio Society (UK)]
* [http://www.rwonline.com/reference-room/special-report/rwf-chromeJune20.shtml Radio World article about hams using vintage broadcast gear]


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