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#1
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The famous Hallifactors SX-62A...
You're going to be kicking yourself forever for missing this one. I know I was depressed all day:
http://cgi.ebay.com/Hallifactors-SX-...QQcmdZViewItem
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I may be growing older, but I refuse to grow up. |
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#2
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Waa-aa-ahhh... But mine's at Terry's, gettin' washed, waxed, 'n' lubed, the whole 9 yards...I played w/it a little before I took it down there, & I could tell it was/is a SUPER radio, excellent sound...Plus, not many Boatanchors have FM on 'em, that is just an extra feather in this set's cap.
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Benevolent Despot |
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#3
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You know the absolute worst part...it's only 30 minutes from my house.
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I may be growing older, but I refuse to grow up. |
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#4
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Oh, that IS a Boo-Boo of monumental proportions...Lettin' THAT one get away...that close...
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Benevolent Despot |
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#5
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A guy on the Halli list got it. They're all talking about it just for the price, but he didn't link it to the auction, so nobody knows the unbelievable condition yet.
The maroon seller not only got the name wrong, he didn't even list it in Ham/Shortwave Radios. That's why nobody found it. Maybe I should set up a permanent search for "Hallifactors".
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I may be growing older, but I refuse to grow up. |
| Audiokarma |
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#6
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wow not a bad price at all.case looks and facepalte look to be in great condition.that dust on the chassis shold clean up easily.i'm still kicking myself for selling mine years ago.
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real radios glow in the dark... |
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#7
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Hallicrafters SX-62
I had an SX62 until about seven years ago; worked great while I had it. Got rid of it when I moved. Oh well. It was too big and too heavy for the apartment I moved to; wouldn't have been able to find a desk or anything strong and/or stable enough to support it. That receiver weighed a ton, like all early Hallicrafters sets. It was also the first communications receiver I ever saw with the American FM broadcast band. I only used it with a small speaker from an old car stereo, but if I had had the original Halli extension speaker, I bet the FM would have sounded fantastic. Even with the small speaker, however, the FM didn't sound half bad. AM radio reception on the broadcast band sounded great as well (this was when Cleveland and other cities still had AM music stations), and shortwave reception was also typical Hallicrafters quality, probably much better than the receiver section of my Icom IC-725 ham radio transceiver.
BTW, I wonder if Hallicrafters is still in business, even in this age of most American electronics firms having gone overseas. I haven't heard much if anything lately about the company Bill Halligan founded ages ago, so I think Hallicrafters either went broke or is now a subsidiary of some offshore company. If either of those is the case, it was a darn shame, as Hallicrafters had some of the best shortwave and amateur receivers around in their heyday. I had a Halli SX-101A Mark III in my first amateur radio station in the early 1970s; served me well then (I really liked the step-variable selectivity down to 500 Hz; great for Morse code reception) and also 10 years later when I reactivated my ham station under then-new FCC amateur rules. It got lost when I moved, but again, it's probably just as well, as I don't have much room here, and certainly no room for two huge boatanchors such as the SX62 and 101.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. |
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#8
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Hallicrafters kept sputtering along, under a variety of owners, til the early '80s, IIRC. By then, nothing they sold was actually made by them, it was all imported Japanese or Taiwanese stuff.
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Benevolent Despot |
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#9
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SX-62a "hottie"?
Newbie post, please forgive format. Lot's of great info here, wanted to ask a question since it's relative to this post.
My SX-62a gets REALLY hot on the right front, like it could burn my hand if left on the top of the radio. A bit worried about leaving it on? I've retubed the radio and it sounds great, I even found a matching speaker. I know they're supposed to get warm, but enough to cook on? Thanks, Lee |
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#10
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I'm guessing Sandy will chime in shortly, but I'll give you my thoughts even though I don't own one!
I'm assuming everything's fine with yours, based on the fact that you retubed it and it's working fine. The heat is either from tubes, or from the frying power transformer, which I believe is in the back of the chassis, not the front. If the transformer was that hot, you'd probably smell something, and it probably wouldn't still be working. The 62 has a pretty hefty audio amplifier circuit, and the output tubes would put out some heat. What you're feeling is probably normal.
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I may be growing older, but I refuse to grow up. |
| Audiokarma |
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#11
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Quote:
btw welcome to ak. chris
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real radios glow in the dark... |
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#12
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I don't recall mine getting THAT hot, but it is well-ventilated. Biggest problem w/all these old Boatanchors is that they're drifty as hell. You REALLY notice it on FM-no AFC circuitry. The R-390As don't drift, however.
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Benevolent Despot |
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#13
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FYI, Kinda Related. There is supposed to be a sx-62a up for auction at the HVRA "mega auction" on September 22. I plan on going.
http://www.hvra.org/2007FALLMEGA.HTML Steve |
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#14
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goodluck steve.they are a nice radio and although they arnt up to collins or national type specs they do have some of the finest audio i've heard out of a communications receiver.
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real radios glow in the dark... |
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#15
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Quote:
I posted the info in case someone else here would be interested. Plus I think the wife would shoot me. I'm gonna go see if any audio stuff shows up. Steve |
| Audiokarma |
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