That is a quote from me when I was asked about a project I managed some 40 years ago. Most hams have or had a working life outside of ham radio. A few hams got a chance to do both simultaneously (Art Collins, Bill Halligan, Al Khan, Gerald Youngblood, Jim Millen, Leo Myerson, Herb Johnson). [Collins, Hallicrafters, Ten Tec, FLEX, Millen, WRL and Swan/Atlas] My work experience involved managing large construction projects associated with developing high tech manufacturing facilities ranging from a VLSI Microelectronic Fab to the Apache Helicopter plant. Thus, I have a feel of how long it takes to bring such facilities online. It isn't 3 weeks. In the case of the VLSI Fab and my quote, it was over 3 years before chips were coming off the line. The facilities are very sophisticated and much of it involves clean space (Class 10 or better clean rooms) and processes that are simply downright dangerous. Your life revolves around Material Safety Data Sheets. Then you have the savant...
It would be an understatement to not acknowledge the troubling times we are all facing. UNCERTAINTY is a great word, and we can only hope to cope with all of the fall out. For many a solace is found in the world of diversion with the likes of homebrew ham radio. This leads our path to what to build or in the case of today's topic what to modify. Many commercial radios of old were based on solid designs and at their conception used the then current technology. In 60 years, the technology, like in brain surgery, has shifted from the use of a rusty spoon to a futuristic gamma knife. Now if we could meld the old solid designs with a selective use of today's cheap technology, for a very small investment, this could give us a very modern radio. Heathkit HW-12 Back in the day, both Heathkit and Swan produced single band SSB rigs intended primarily for mobile operation. The Heathkit rigs I think could be had for about $100 as a kit and were "basic starter rigs". The Swan Rad...