These pictures
are of the ham station that James Millen
operated in the late 30's. Photographs were
obtained from the book "Notes on Amateur Radio
Transmitter Design" that was compiled by Jim
and published in 1937. I was fortunate to
obtain an original copy of the book that was
sent to the editorial department of
Radio-Craft magazine in 1937. I even have the
letter that was sent
to Radio-Craft along with the book. The
station equipment still exists today at the Museum Annex of the
Antique Wireless Association in Bloomfield,
NY. For a detailed description of this see the
article "W1HRX-A Ham's
Paradise" located elsewhere on this
website.
A Picture of the famous "hilltop"
bungalow that housed the amateur radio
station. In the center clearing you
can see the 34 foot tower that holds
the 20 meter wire beam array. Also
noticeable on the left side is the
smaller tripod mounted 5 meter beams
that Millen used in experiments with
the ARRL staff in Hartford some 128
miles away.
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A full view of the inside of the
bungalow. The unit on the left is a
high power transmitter/amplifier that
is link coupled to a low power exciter
located in the main operating position
on the right (described below).
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The main operating position at W1HRX
in the late 30's. Just above the small
operating desk is an early National
HRO receiver. To it's left is the
complete low-power transmitter/exciter
using a pair of RK-20's in push-pull
final. |
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