[GreenKeys] things
Joe Stevens
jbs at kadiak.org
Fri Jan 2 03:44:33 EST 2009
It just started snowing here in Kodiak Alaska. I read some of Don's
postings, N9TTY. I really enjoyed them and it brings back a lot of
memories of when I worked on the east coast for a telco. Actually,
before that, I worked at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard and spent a
wonderful 6 months in the teletype shop on the 5th floor of building
510. I was the only shop 67 electronics tech there, the rest were
machinists from shop 35. There was one very quiet older fellow who I
later learned had been in the Bataan death march. He was very
patient teaching me a lot of stuff that I only figured out much later
was very valuable. Mostly they had me installing RFI filters in
model 28 ASRs. The radio section which I worked in later actually
had a model 19 in the shack. I would get on the air on HF or UHF and
have QSOs with the other tech on board the ships in the yard just for
testing. This was with a URA-8 demod and a URC-32
transceiver. Later I was put in the shop that maintained all the
shipyard's internal FM mobile radios and base stations. I got into
the WeCo strowger exchange they had in the shipyard occasionally to
run jumpers on the mainframe for radio circuits. Later in 1970 I got
a call that there was a vacancy at the Norfolk and Carolina Telephone
and Telegraph company in my home town. As the shipyard was not as
much fun as it had been, I jumped at the chance and became a
Transmission Technician for this independent telco. They had about
25 or so exchanges in NC and VA. I was one of two technicians the
company had to maintain all their microwave, cable carrier and
special circuits. There was open wire with telegraph on it along
with physical voice circuits. You could hear the thumping noise on
the voice circuits from the telegraph keying it's polar signal from
one wire to ground. We had WeCo O and H carrier, WeCo N1 and N2
carrier and just about everything Lenkurt ever made. Lenkurt 33, 45,
46 ... Lenkurt 45 on 74 radios. Even one microwave hop with
Panhandle X carrier serving subscribers. There were several voice
circuits that had multiple telegraphs on them. VF-931 was one of the
voice circuit numbers. They normally fed the loop with +130 volts on
one side and -48 on the other. There was a 130 volt wet-cell battery
bank in each exchange that had telegraph. It was not nice when the
installer hanging on the pole by his spikes in the rain came in
contact with one of those telegraph pairs. I spent a lot of time
troubleshooting open-wire lines. We had three crossarms going north
for about 30 miles and one crossarm going south for about 45
miles. I used Murray, Varley and other tests I have forgotten now
with a Wheatstone bridge. I could often put the guy on the road
within sight of the trouble. When the company surplused their WeCo H
carriers, K4VHV and I hooked up some filters to interconnect our home
telephone pairs to each other above 7.5 KHz. We had an H carrier
circuit between our ham shacks. Around this time, the telco being
all rotary dial with Strowger switches, we decided to build a
touch-tone autopatch on our two-meter repeater. I designed and built
a huge kluge of a contraption that stored DTMF digits on relays and
then outpulsed them to telco. Telco had no DTMF service. Even our
intertoll trunks to AT&T were dial pulse, most with SF
signalling. Even our EAS circuits had 4-wire E&M channels with
external term sets. Every circuit through the toll center was on
jacks at every point. 2-wire jacks, 4-wire jacks and 6-wire
jacks. Racks and racks of jacks. I made a recording of the last
call on the O carrier on the open-wire line to the north. It was me
and the other tech cutting the circuits over. During this time Al,
K4VHV, and I were operating a Model 28 on the air. We could melt
RG-8 with the continuous duty transmitter. We had a Drake L4 but it
wasn't up to the task of RTTY. We built a 4-1000 linear with a
pole-pig hooked up backwards for the high-voltage supply. We had to
switch to RG-17 for the coax. I don't know what the statute of
limitations is on that, but we ran some power... Those Drake T4X
series of radios were very good for teletype as they had a terminal
on the side of the VFO that you could attach a simple FSK
circuit. Tonight I have been working on my basement Strowger
telephone exchange. I've been trying to hook it up for the
collectors net with Asterisk. I have Asterisk working very well on
several computers. It's the interfacing of the computer to the
electro-mechanical switching Strowgers that is giving me trouble. I
had everything working then the card in the computer quit. It sure
is easier to fix a model 15 than a computer... At N&CT&T, we had an
Automatic Electric SATT toll ticketing system for direct dial long
distance billing. It used a Kleinschmidt 6-lever paper punch if I
remember correctly. Later they switched it out for a 9-track
magnetic tape drive. I wish I had taken more pictures during that
time. Of the pictures that I have, a few are on my web pages
http://www.kadiak.org/joe
Each email that comes across this list with remembrances like this
gets stored here permanently and is valued very much. I love to read
them again and again. I really enjoy the WWII period of
technology. I get to explain to hordes of cruise-ship passengers
what punched tape is for and why you would need it. I have fun
asking them what is the 5th power of two. That is 2 states (binary)
and 5 holes in the tape for 32 characters. Many of our younger
visitors have never even seen a typewriter! We have several (never
enough) manual typewriters out to play with. We let them dial the
phones on the Strowger switches and jam up all the keys on the manual
typewriter by hammering all the keys at once. They get a hell of a
bang out of it all. They can crank the old phones and scream in a
very high squeal when somebody answers one of the other phones in the
museum on the same magneto line. I don't mind fixing this stuff at
all. It's important to let them experience it all
themselves. Museums behind glass cases turn me off. They can get in
the 1945 jeep and try their best to break it. It's Ok, we will fix
it later. There is one rule, they have to wear a military
uniform. We have a large rack of them for their use. A 5th grade
blonde girl in a sailor suit behind the wheel of the jeep is quite a
sight. There are a few 5th grade teachers here who bring their
classes to the museum as close to December 7 as possible every
year. Our museum is a half-mile up a road that is not kept plowed in
the winter. They hike the whole lot of them into the park on foot if
necessary, rain or shine. Has anybody else tried to explain to a 5th
grade class how a model 15 printer works? Once in a while you get a
really live one who asks really good questions. That one student
makes it all worthwhile. It does concern me though, that I haven't
been able to recruit a young person to learn how to continue
this... The high-schoolers that get interested leave for college and
never come back.
Tomorrow morning, just about daylight, I will be tying up the M/V
Kennicott at Pier 2. Thus begins 6 straight days of ferry service
for Kodiak then 8 days of no ferry while she runs to Prince Rupert
BC. Gotta earn some money to buy more boatanchors.
Don, thanks for making me remember.
Joe Stevens, WL7AML
Kodiak Military History Museum
http://www.kadiak.org
Alaska Marine Highway
http://www.dot.state.ak.us/amhs/
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