126 Years of HF Amateur Radio Innovation Part 2 ~ 1930 to 1945

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“126 Years of High Frequency Amateur Radio Innovation” tracks the evolution of amateur radio from Marconi’s Sparks in 1894 through CW, AM, SSB and digital technology to the present SDR Transceivers of 2020.

James T. Hanlon, “Jim,” has been a licensed amateur since 1952 and W8KGI since 1970. He has BEE, MS and PhD degrees in Electrical Engineering from Ohio State, and worked as a television engineer for WCPO-TV, Cincinnati, taught EE at Ohio State while getting his last degree, and worked for Bell Labs and Sandia National Labs. Jim collects and restores “vintage” amateur equipment, and currently has 24 receivers, 42 transmitters, and 3 transceivers on the air. He is a former sponsor of the Classic Exchange and an avid participant in the CX and the AWA on-the-air events. He is retired and lives in Sandia Park, New Mexico where his antennas are at 6900 feet elevation above sea level.

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