Subj : LPDA antenna To : Ed Vance From : Roy Witt Date : Sun Jun 08 2014 01:11 pm Greetings Ed! RW>> I also have my 1st ever Amateur Radio Handbook from 1964, but RW>> it is too fragile to handle these days without damaging the so RW>> often referred to antenna information pages I used back then. EV> The 1957 Handbook that someone gave me (in 1961) is still all EV> together. EV> My 1960 Handbook (which was the first I ever bought) has fell apart. EV> It is hard to handle and even though I don't read it very often, I think that is the problem with my 64 ARHB...it was handled a great deal in the coming years as we used it as a reference for antenna building. EV> it is still part of my library, and I keep it if ever I wanted to EV> re-read an article or project in it, it's there for me to fumble EV> with. In 1977 I opted for the ARRL 'antenna handbook' rather than pay for a bunch of things not required at the time. EV> I'd guess the Company A.R.R.L chose to Print (and Bind) the EV> 1960 Edition issue of the Handbook had used a 'less expensive' method EV> of putting the sections of that Edition together. That may be so. Have you looked in those books for the printers names? You might also note that there is a difference in the books; one being a paper binding and the other being a cloth binding. i.e my 1977 ARRL hand book is paper bound and the suggested retail inside the cover says that it was sold at $7.50, whiie the cloth bound edition cost $12.50...I would expect that the cloth bound books would last a lot longer. EV> The later Handbooks I have bought since 1964 all have been bound much EV> better than that 1960 copy I got when I was in Norfolk, Virginia at EV> Navy Radiomans School and was wanting to learn enough so I could get EV> Commercial RadioTelephone and RadioTelegraph Licenses from the F.C.C. EV> office in downtown Norfolk. I think that (license) is the only reason I'd join the Navy back then. I've wanted to get one of those for years, but never had the time to take a course that would get me there. EV> I took the F.C.C.'s tests and got 3rd Class Licenses for both of them EV> before I finished School on the Base in May 1960. Great. EV> I never used the CW License, but I once was a Radio Dispatcher for EV> the local government 'City Radio' station and showed my Third Class EV> RadioTelephone License to the boss when he asked me to fill out a EV> Form to get a Restricted RadioTelephone Permit, to show him I didn't EV> need a 'Permit' because the 'License' I already owned gave me all the EV> permission needed to be a Radio Dispatcher for the City. You were right to do so. When/if the FCC were to inspect your station, they wern't going to be looking for a city permit... EV> He still had me fill out the 'Permit' Form just to keep me legal. Yeah, that's called CYA... EV> I did ask him a few months later to sign (Endorse) my License so I EV> could get the F.C.C. to renew it for another Term. Did he? Have a day! R\%/itt - K5RXT --- GoldED+/W32 1.1.5-31012 --- D'Bridge 3.99 * Origin: HAM Radio, aka Amateur Radio. 804? Over! (1:387/22) .