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#1
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Does anybody have a digital photo in fairly high res of an old Narco
Superhomer that they would be willing to copy to me for an article I'm doing for both Oshkosh forum and a Kitplanes column? A VC-27Z would do just as well. If you've got a good photo and can upload it to your web page FTP server, I'd be happy to do the download. What I'm really after is to show the little "transmit" light just under the receiver dial. For those of you who came into this game too late to "enjoy" this little rascal, it gave you your choice of four (count 'em again, FOUR) transmit channels and a slide-rule type tuner that would go all the way from 108-126 MHz. in one continuous band. That little "transmit" light was really neat -- it actually stole a little power directly from the transmit antenna port so that you knew for a fact that the transmitter was mitting. It also flickered in time with your voice so you knew that the microphone was doing its job also -- so far as I know, this was the last device to have both a positive RF and audio indication of transmit. Those were the REAL days of voice-over-VOR, because once you dialed the VOR in, there was no way to switch back and forth between the COM and NAV bands. At some point, one of the smarter troops at Narco put in a little switch called "whistle-stop tuning" that turned the transmitter on at micropower and let you zero-beat the receiver to the crystal so that you were on the correct channel. I went from San Diego to Boston in a C-120 behind one of these boxes and didn't know any better. Jim |
#2
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Jim, what years was it produced?
(I may have some old magazines with an ad.) |
#3
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Search for Superhomer on Ebay. 23 hours left.
-- Gene Seibel Hangar 131 - http://pad39a.com/gene/plane.html Because I fly, I envy no one. RST Engineering wrote: Does anybody have a digital photo in fairly high res of an old Narco Superhomer that they would be willing to copy to me for an article I'm doing for both Oshkosh forum and a Kitplanes column? A VC-27Z would do just as well. If you've got a good photo and can upload it to your web page FTP server, I'd be happy to do the download. What I'm really after is to show the little "transmit" light just under the receiver dial. For those of you who came into this game too late to "enjoy" this little rascal, it gave you your choice of four (count 'em again, FOUR) transmit channels and a slide-rule type tuner that would go all the way from 108-126 MHz. in one continuous band. That little "transmit" light was really neat -- it actually stole a little power directly from the transmit antenna port so that you knew for a fact that the transmitter was mitting. It also flickered in time with your voice so you knew that the microphone was doing its job also -- so far as I know, this was the last device to have both a positive RF and audio indication of transmit. Those were the REAL days of voice-over-VOR, because once you dialed the VOR in, there was no way to switch back and forth between the COM and NAV bands. At some point, one of the smarter troops at Narco put in a little switch called "whistle-stop tuning" that turned the transmitter on at micropower and let you zero-beat the receiver to the crystal so that you were on the correct channel. I went from San Diego to Boston in a C-120 behind one of these boxes and didn't know any better. Jim |
#4
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In article ,
"RST Engineering" wrote: Does anybody have a digital photo in fairly high res of an old Narco Superhomer that they would be willing to copy to me for an article I'm doing for both Oshkosh forum and a Kitplanes column? A VC-27Z would do just as well. If you've got a good photo and can upload it to your web page FTP server, I'd be happy to do the download. Yes, I remember the "Stupidhomer" and spent a few hours behind some of them back in the late 50s-early 60s. I also remember the joy of actually having 90 comm channels that you could reliably pull up, as well as discrete nav channels, a la KX-100s and Mk 12s. -- Remove _'s from email address to talk to me. |
#5
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No NARCO photo, but I have a Nova-Tech with power supply (no vor head) for
your collection. "RST Engineering" wrote in message ... Does anybody have a digital photo in fairly high res of an old Narco Superhomer that they would be willing to copy to me for an article I'm doing for both Oshkosh forum and a Kitplanes column? A VC-27Z would do just as well. If you've got a good photo and can upload it to your web page FTP server, I'd be happy to do the download. What I'm really after is to show the little "transmit" light just under the receiver dial. For those of you who came into this game too late to "enjoy" this little rascal, it gave you your choice of four (count 'em again, FOUR) transmit channels and a slide-rule type tuner that would go all the way from 108-126 MHz. in one continuous band. That little "transmit" light was really neat -- it actually stole a little power directly from the transmit antenna port so that you knew for a fact that the transmitter was mitting. It also flickered in time with your voice so you knew that the microphone was doing its job also -- so far as I know, this was the last device to have both a positive RF and audio indication of transmit. Those were the REAL days of voice-over-VOR, because once you dialed the VOR in, there was no way to switch back and forth between the COM and NAV bands. At some point, one of the smarter troops at Narco put in a little switch called "whistle-stop tuning" that turned the transmitter on at micropower and let you zero-beat the receiver to the crystal so that you were on the correct channel. I went from San Diego to Boston in a C-120 behind one of these boxes and didn't know any better. Jim |
#6
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("Gene Seibel" wrote)
Search for Superhomer on Ebay. 23 hours left. http://makeashorterlink.com/?Q6694323B E-Bay Narco Superhomer, Radio, Vintage Aircraft, NR Montblack High bidder :-) |
#7
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Jim,
I'll take a look at my dad's house. We removed the Superhomer from the family Cessna 140 back in the 80s and replaced it with an RST-572 from some place that sold radio kits in California. ![]() Seems to me, the Superhomer was more like 10 or 12 channels. The receiver dial indicator was circular. The designation on ours was VHT-3. Is this the same model you are looking for? I do remember the incandescent light bulb for transmit... Scott N0EDV RST Engineering wrote: Does anybody have a digital photo in fairly high res of an old Narco Superhomer that they would be willing to copy to me for an article I'm doing for both Oshkosh forum and a Kitplanes column? A VC-27Z would do just as well. If you've got a good photo and can upload it to your web page FTP server, I'd be happy to do the download. What I'm really after is to show the little "transmit" light just under the receiver dial. For those of you who came into this game too late to "enjoy" this little rascal, it gave you your choice of four (count 'em again, FOUR) transmit channels and a slide-rule type tuner that would go all the way from 108-126 MHz. in one continuous band. That little "transmit" light was really neat -- it actually stole a little power directly from the transmit antenna port so that you knew for a fact that the transmitter was mitting. It also flickered in time with your voice so you knew that the microphone was doing its job also -- so far as I know, this was the last device to have both a positive RF and audio indication of transmit. Those were the REAL days of voice-over-VOR, because once you dialed the VOR in, there was no way to switch back and forth between the COM and NAV bands. At some point, one of the smarter troops at Narco put in a little switch called "whistle-stop tuning" that turned the transmitter on at micropower and let you zero-beat the receiver to the crystal so that you were on the correct channel. I went from San Diego to Boston in a C-120 behind one of these boxes and didn't know any better. Jim |
#8
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Late '50s through mid '60s.
Jim "john smith" wrote in message . .. Jim, what years was it produced? (I may have some old magazines with an ad.) |
#9
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The VHT-1 had only 4 channel transmit, the VHT-3 (pre-solo for me) was
the 10-12 channel. Remember the funky OBS system with the 12 position switch etc? or asking for a short count from the tower for tuning with the coffee grinder knob? There was a later Narco (Mark II?) with "whistle stop tuning" and a continuous edge mounted OBS. I recall it had 27 channels of transmit & was legal for IFR. It was really big time. Jim - I thought I had a manual for the VHT-3 but can't find it. How times have changed. |
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