I have a few BC Band crystals available for that rig if anyone needs them.
Several 1288 kHz and a few others here... On 13 Nov 2004 at 8:23, Larry Roohr wrote: > Alan Cohen wrote: > > > > > > > In any case, it is certainly a lot more interesting than the usual > > radio fare. It sure beats the likes of morning drive blatherers like > > Howard Stern and Don Imus, the right wing echo chamber of Limbaugh and > > Hanity, the semi-automatic no-personality bad music juke boxes that > > populate the FM band, and 99% of the other garbage on commercial radio > > these days. > > > > Alan Cohen > > WA2DZL > > > > > > Amen. Hard to find anything worth listening to these days, npr is a > broadcasting breath of fresh air wether you agree with the slant or not, > IMO. > > I've gone so far as to build a part 15 transmitter so I can listen to > streaming internet stations on my old radios. www.live365.com has the > Jack Benny show streaming, what a hoot. Also radio.grassyhill.com is a > folk music non-profit in Connecticut that plays a lot of local > recordings along with more familiar acoustic fare. I also run solo cello > music from a cd, sounds great on the old sets. > > In case anyone is interested this transmitter is excellent and easy to > throw together: > > http://www.techlib.com/electronics/amxmit.htm > > It actually sounds good and gets around the house quite well. I built > the 'lil 7 transmitter earlier and was not happy with it, may have been > my fault but I didnt take the time to dig into it. > > Larry > KZ0E > ______________________________________________________________ > AMRadio mailing list > Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/amradio > Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.html > Post: mailto:AMRadio@mailman.qth.net