N8NM/p, Lakeland, Florida |
That's trust, and I wasn't disappointed. Other than the meter's backlight being dead, the old rig still works as well as it did when it came over from Japan during the Reagan Administration. Better, actually, thanks to some nice International Radio crystal filters that I installed years ago.
I was a part-time tech in a local ham radio store, they still had such a thing in the mid-'80s when the '735 came out, and I remember thinking that, with all that's crammed into that box, I'm gonna hate working on them. We sold tons of them, and almost none made it to the bench for anything other than having options installed. At nearly $800, they were out of my reach until the next new thing came out and they started showing-up second-hand. So, it was probably about 1990-1991 before I could get one of my own. I sold that one a few years later, regretted it, and probably bought this one somewhere around 2000ish. I know I had it shortly after 2001, because it was unfortunately damaged by a hasty repackaging job performed by a member of a new branch of government called the TSA. Luckily, the damage was cosmetic - the bottom panel was caved in - and the electronics were unharmed.
In the mid 2000s, I added a second IC-735 to the fleet and equipped both with the aforementioned aftermarket filters and tweaked them so they'd go down below 5W (the minimum was 10 from the factory). Using them as a portable SO2R contest station and with wire dipoles, I won the QRP class in quite a few state QSO parties, including in-state wins in Michigan and Tennessee. I beat the poor things like rented mules, and only managed to break one once when I blew some switching diodes out on the bandpass filters by accidentally getting my cables mixed and transmitting directly into it.
I suppose that makes the rig Idiot Resistant rather than Idiot Proof. Fortunately, 1N4148s are pennies and the repair took maybe an hour, and I haven't done that again.
So, here I am, enjoying my first winter someplace where the air doesn't hurt, and along comes this pesky virus from far away. It looks like I may be here a while, but that's OK - the weather's nice and, as someone who spends his time building ham radios in his basement, I'm well adapted to social isolation.
I've got my '735 and soldering iron set-up out in the lanai, the sun is out and the weather is warm. I think I'm gonna be OK.
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