After 5 years, its time to bring this thread back to life. Here is a new acquisition.
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Photos of communication equipment in use
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It is a WR1 receiver. You can find them in various threads on this forum, e.g.: http://dev.wehrmacht-awards.com/foru...&highlight=wr1
regards,
Funksammler
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As far as I am aware there are no books on the entertainment radios. On military radio equipment there are some, mostly German language, books (Trenkle etc.).
English language books are mainly the Charles C. Barger's books (long out of print),
Metsu's picture book (published by Heimdal) and "Wireless for Wehrmacht" published by wwp are still be available. These are mainly picture books, relatively light on technical detail, that give a good overview of the types of equipment used.
regards,
Funksammler
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Originally posted by Todd Gylsen View PostThis is a great and very informative forum. I'm not a collector of communication equipment, per se', only having a couple German field phones in the collection. However, I do have a few images of communication equipment in use. If you have any photos of communication equipment in your collection, please post them.
Here is a LW signals unit setting up an antennae of some sort.
I think that there are mounting the "anspannbock" where the “Schweres Feldkabel” from FF33,s or trunk lines from other Klappenschranks, spread over the front, end.
Here they mount the abspannbock with porcelain isolators to retain cables and guide them to one or more 20 pairs terminal box, where the field lines are connected to binding post and go to the klappenschrank room by only a 20 pairs cable, avoiding to have someting similar to a "spiderweb" on the room.
You can see it on the KatS-Dv. 861 "Feldkabelbau" from German Bundesamtes für Zivilschutz, page 94.
Regards.
César.
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Originally posted by ezesar View PostHi Todd.
I think that there are mounting the "anspannbock" where the “Schweres Feldkabel” from FF33,s or trunk lines from other Klappenschranks, spread over the front, end.
Here they mount the abspannbock with porcelain isolators to retain cables and guide them to one or more 20 pairs terminal box, where the field lines are connected to binding post and go to the klappenschrank room by only a 20 pairs cable, avoiding to have someting similar to a "spiderweb" on the room.
You can see it on the KatS-Dv. 861 "Feldkabelbau" from German Bundesamtes für Zivilschutz, page 94.
Regards.
César.
Also a photo of taken from internet to my "nachrichten album" of the abspannbock on working...
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