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View Full Version : See my new old toy - Globe Scout 65A



WN9HJW
05-15-2010, 01:18 PM
Deleted

KG4CGC
05-15-2010, 01:26 PM
Very Chilled Legumes!
When you say period mic, what years are you talking about and are you talking about a fixer upper?

WN9HJW
05-15-2010, 01:35 PM
Deleted

WØTKX
05-15-2010, 02:25 PM
Here's some Globe Scout guru stuff... http://www.w8ji.com/boatanchors.htm

N4VGB
05-15-2010, 03:33 PM
Built for use with a high impedance mic. So any crystal mic will work FB but I'm betting old Leo had a D-104 in mind for it.

N8YX
05-16-2010, 06:30 AM
Built for use with a high impedance mic. So any crystal mic will work FB but I'm betting old Leo had a D-104 in mind for it.
Have a couple of those, and things are always 'for sale' around here...

N9FE
05-16-2010, 06:48 AM
http://www.vintagessb.net/index.htm Get on with the guys on saturday morning. Send your pic in. Be famous.

W1GUH
05-18-2010, 07:36 AM
Or a JT-30, the "poor man's D-104!" (http://hohner-harmonica.laikeng.com/astatic-by-hohner-jt30-roadhouse-harmonica-microphone/) <-- That's a link.

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41rPBFHC83L.jpg

AND...if you play harp, those are the gold standard for amplifying the blues!

N4VGB
05-18-2010, 12:01 PM
Strange how the old JT-30 ended up being the perfect "harmonica mic" and is still in use today. Something meant to be a cheap PA mic ends up being a legend.

N9FE
05-18-2010, 05:24 PM
There are alot of astatic mics in use. I suspect that continue for years and years.

N8YX
05-19-2010, 11:42 AM
There are alot of astatic mics in use. I suspect that continue for years and years.
Ahhh....yep:

http://www.wb4hfn.com/DRAKE/DrakeArticles/InsideTheTR7/Drake_7077Mic.jpg

http://www.collins-21.com/1104c_astatic_beau_c.jpg


http://salestores.com/stores/images/images_747/AST878DM.jpg

The differences being that the Astatic-branded version goes for $59.00 new and the Drake fetches upwards of $200.00 used. :shock:

N4VGB
05-19-2010, 02:48 PM
Ahhh....yep:

The differences being that the Astatic-branded version goes for $59.00 new and the Drake fetches upwards of $200.00 used. :shock:



Which points out what a low sales market ham radio is for most manufacturers and why the old originals bring so much $$$$ while the JT-30 was so popular among musicians playing the harmonica that when Astatic stopped making it another company started production. It looks like the JT-30 will be around for a long time to come. Along with some other old mic styles and types that have been discontinued by the original manufacturers for a long time but others brought back because of high demand.

w2amr
05-20-2010, 03:34 AM
One of my favorite mics was the Argonne AR-57 duel element. I had on on my 11 meter good buddy radio , back in the day
. 2800

ka4dpo
05-23-2010, 10:58 PM
I just got ahold of nicely restored Globe Scout 65A transmitter. This is the model I had as a Novice in 1972 so it's a nostalgia thing.

2783

After I check it out this weekend if it's all good put it on the air on CW tommorro night. I'll also be looking for an appropriate period microphone and try it on AM too.

Now if I can get one of my old Hammarlund HQ-110s working right, and scrounge up a 1960s vintage Radio Shack straight key, I'll basically have my old Novice station on the bench in time for the CW "Rookie Roundup" later this year.

I bought a Globe Scout 65B last year and even though it worked, it was pretty beat up, so that will be a restoration project for me to try when I find time some day.

That's a true beauty. Almost any of the high impedance mics from the 50's will work but the Shure DNHZ or D-104 (with the crystal element) would be a good match for that rig.

N4VGB
05-23-2010, 11:57 PM
That's a true beauty. Almost any of the high impedance mics from the 50's will work but the Shure DNHZ or D-104 (with the crystal element) would be a good match for that rig.

I think the DN-HZ was made by Astatic.

w2amr
05-24-2010, 03:52 PM
I just got ahold of nicely restored Globe Scout 65A transmitter. This is the model I had as a Novice in 1972 so it's a nostalgia thing.

2783

After I check it out this weekend if it's all good put it on the air on CW tommorro night. I'll also be looking for an appropriate period microphone and try it on AM too.

Now if I can get one of my old Hammarlund HQ-110s working right, and scrounge up a 1960s vintage Radio Shack straight key, I'll basically have my old Novice station on the bench in time for the CW "Rookie Roundup" later this year.

I bought a Globe Scout 65B last year and even though it worked, it was pretty beat up, so that will be a restoration project for me to try when I find time some day.Nice find. Does it run sweep tubes in the final?

WN9HJW
05-24-2010, 06:58 PM
Deleted

W1GUH
05-26-2010, 07:43 AM
It's a single 6146 tube final amplifier. 65 watts "input" CW 50 watts AM. I am guessing that means about about 30 watts CW and 25 watts AM actual RF output power. Someone correct me if that's a bad guess.

Whatever it was, it was enough to get me somewhere around 400 CW contacts in one year on 80 and 40 meters all over the USA with a folded dipole made of 300 ohm TV twinlead stapled up under the eves of my parent's house (they didn't want the neighbors to see the antenna). Probably a good thing I didn't know about SWR and impedance matching back then . . .

One regret I've had is that somewhere between 1973 and 2003, all my logs and QSL cards from that period of my life got lost.

Had the same antenna with a Globe Chief 90A. The good old days when the transmitter would tune practically 0 - 1000 ohms!

ka4dpo
05-27-2010, 07:26 PM
I think the DN-HZ was made by Astatic.

I think I owe you a beer, I just looked at mine and it was made by Astatic. I'll send that beer to your address in a baggie so it will stay fresh....