For those who are interested, I noticed that AT&T is removing the microwave horns and gantry on the roof of the tandem center in downtown Columbus, Ohio (CLLI:...
Let me know how large they are. I might be able to help out depending on size. I have a web site for my video business that's almost empty. Mike Harpe, N4PLE ...
Yes, I think all four of the full-size Project Office sites have undergone extensive renovations over the past few years, presumably as a component of a...
I'm guessing that I'm not the only member of this group who is also interested in the history of electric power generation, transmission and distribution. Can...
As I mentioned before, I have many photos of the horn removal. I took a ridiculous amount of pictures, and still ended up with a few dozen after choosing the...
... Russian Federation) chancery building ... Looking at the above shots, I would'nt go for the corners, too easy to "see" a antenna through the windows with a...
In picture CLMBOH11 of the Columbus shots, whats on the round gantry in the tall building in the right hand upper half of the photo, ever time I drive...
Steve, I'm not quite sure which building you're talking about. All the photos are titled the same (shame on me). Can you give me the URL of the picture you're ...
columbus certainly has changed that site was installed. we didn't use a 100 ton luffing gib crane though. we used a 100' blaw knox gin pole and an american ...
NOTE... to the Yahoo:Coldwar Group, this is a followup to what I posted earlier today to several other Yahoo Groups (and a non-Yahoo email list) regarding the...
"I'm guessing that I'm not the only member of this group who is also interested in the history of electric power generation, transmission and distribution....
Albert and group. In New Mexico, last month, I took some photos of what i suspect is an old AT&T site. It is located on HWY 285 (US ?) ~19 miles south of the...
To the other groups/etc. where this reply is cross-posted, this is a reply to something originally posted to the Yahoo:ColdWarComms group. There might be some...
Albert/Mark Although I enjoy the "techno" landscape of the telephone network, my heart is truly in the electric system history. I have amassed quite a...
I'm glad you mentioned insulators, because I forgot to add that I have found one e-mail list where electric-power history is sometimes discussed. It's the...
Well, it only took me four years, but here's the article I cited: http://coldwar-c4i.net/SIGINT/EE0256/085-086.html and the magazine's front cover with a large...
A 1955 General Electric comic-book-style publication titled "Adventure in Electronics" includes an illustration of two huge troposcatter reflectors and feed...
Kinda off topic but... Sometime around May or June of '69, I picked up a fresh new collegue at the Air America terminal at Nha Trang, Vietnam. As we got on one...
I would guess the panel with the red dots is a matrix plugboard of some kind, as I have seen similar things - I'm thinking of a Burroughs desk-size computer...
Albert, I'll be glad to upload the photos. Since i didn't have my digital camera with me. i made them with my wifes "conventional" camera. I'll try to get them...
I located an abandoned repeater hut near San Luis Obispo. Location is N 35.41317 W120.74100. This is near Cerro Alto. If anyone is interested I can send them...
As the "fist" of the CW operator varies from individuals, I'd suppose this would be most applicable to machine sent CW. (Ive heard some seriously sloppy fists...
blitz
blitz@...
Aug 12, 2006 3:42 am
10549
Ken Bowles has contributed a set of exterior photos of this station on the bypass/express loop around St. Louis: ...
The more I look at it, the more I'm inclined to agree that it is a plugboard. The red dots seem too small to be indicator lights or pushbuttons for that...