OT: Heathkit Catalogs

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OT: Heathkit Catalogs

w7aqk
Very cool scanning through the 1958 catalog.  I had forgotten that they had that “analog computer” as a kit, even back that far.  Consider this, though.  If you get one of those musical birthday cards in the mail, open it up, enjoy the message (maybe even a personal message added), then toss it in the trash can at some point.  When you do that, you have thrown away a bunch more computing power than that Heath analog computer had!  In fact, I read once that such an act effectively tosses away more computing power than what existed in the late 40’s!  

Dave W7AQK





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Heathkit catalogs

Bill McDowell
A year or so ago, a local friend WB2VSJ borrowed my small collection of Heathkit catalogs and scanned them to his website.

The 1958 issue even has usable schematics for almost all the products.

Enjoy them at:

http://www.heilsnis.com/wb2vsj/BA/page7.html

73
Bill, K4CIA
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Re: OT: Heathkit Catalogs

AB2E Darrell
In reply to this post by w7aqk

Interesting info Dave. The computer on the 1970s Voyager space probe had a whopping 68K of memory total! And that was multitasking.
Source: http://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/faq.html

73 Darrell AB2E


> From: [hidden email]
> To: [hidden email]
> Date: Mon, 12 Sep 2011 10:00:22 -0700
> Subject: [Elecraft] OT:  Heathkit Catalogs
>
> Very cool scanning through the 1958 catalog.  I had forgotten that they had that “analog computer” as a kit, even back that far.  Consider this, though.  If you get one of those musical birthday cards in the mail, open it up, enjoy the message (maybe even a personal message added), then toss it in the trash can at some point.  When you do that, you have thrown away a bunch more computing power than that Heath analog computer had!  In fact, I read once that such an act effectively tosses away more computing power than what existed in the late 40’s!  
>
> Dave W7AQK
>
>
>
>
>
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Re: OT: Heathkit Catalogs

K6LMP
In reply to this post by w7aqk
I know this is getting 'way off topic and extended, but I have been very interested in how pervasive the Heathkit experience is among the Elecraft community, so I'll add my own experience with Heath.

I built an AR-15 stereo receiver while I was in the Navy, on an ammunition ship in the South China Sea during the Vietnam war. I can't tell you what a thrill it was to fire it up and pick up an FM station from Manila as we were heading back into port to the Naval Station at Subic Bay.

Some years later, I built a Z-89 "all in one" computer, primarily for use as a word processor. Its Z80 processor addressed 64K of memory (yes, K, not M). The entire CP/M OS was 31K, and it had a BASIC interpreter.  It had space to install two 5" floppy drive units, which was a big advance, at the time, over the RadioShack TRS-80, which used a cassette tape recorder for storage. Later, a third party came out with a memory-based "hard drive" that replaced one of the floppy drives, predating the recent trend toward silicon-based storage by three decades. This served me very well as a line-oriented word processor, using a program called WRITE ("Writer's Really Incredible Text Editor"), which was developed by sci-fi writer and Byte magazine columnist Jerry Pournelle.

For its time, the Z-80 was The Best. Even better, in many respects, than something called an Apple. (There was a competitor called Orange, too.)

Lew K6LMP

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Re: OT: Heathkit Catalogs

VE3GAM Allen McRorie
In reply to this post by AB2E Darrell
when I started working in 68, the company I worked for had an IBM model 30
with 32K of memory,
card readers and all, tapes, not sure about disk drives, but guys preceding
me had written the mortgage
program for it in COBOL I believe, on punched cards no less.  long time ago,
hard to believe the progess
in the last many years, still it was an awesome and scary night when we
finally decommisioned the card
reader a lot of years later!

pcs, small radios, cell phones, screens, microwaves, none of that was dreamt
of yet.  most of what we take
for granted today and use every day did not exist even 30 years ago.

al ve3gam


Interesting info Dave. The computer on the 1970s Voyager space probe had a
whopping 68K of memory total! And that was multitasking.
Source: http://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/faq.html

73 Darrell AB2E



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Re: OT: Heathkit Catalogs

k6dgw
In reply to this post by w7aqk
On 9/12/2011 10:00 AM, Dave wrote:

> If you get one of those musical birthday
> cards in the mail, open it up, enjoy the message (maybe even a
> personal message added), then toss it in the trash can at some point.
> When you do that, you have thrown away a bunch more computing power
> than that Heath analog computer had!  In fact, I read once that such
> an act effectively tosses away more computing power than what existed
> in the late 40’s!

The computer that adjusts the driver's seat in my Chevy truck [one of
six in the vehicle] has more "computer power" than we sent to the moon
on Apollo.  It's had to be re-booted twice when it decided to pin me to
the steering wheel instead of backing the seat up all the way for easy
egress.  The Apollo computers did not need to be, and in fact could not
be, re-booted.  Their programs were hard-wired.  I have no idea what
"computer power" resides in my Elecraft radios, but its probably a lot
more than in the seat of my truck.

Some IBM executive was quoted in the late 40's/early 50's that he saw a
market for perhaps 6 or 7 of "these computers," worldwide.

73,

Fred K6DGW
- Northern California Contest Club
- CU in the 2011 Cal QSO Party 1-2 Oct 2011
- www.cqp.org
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OT: Heathkit Catalogs

Edward R Cole
In reply to this post by w7aqk
Darrell,

WE forget how far computers have evolved.  In the 1970's I worked at
Goldstone for NASA and the station computers were Dec-910s (TTL and
core memory) and big reel-to-reel recorders.  I calculated the
Doppler for Mariner Venus-Mercury (MVM-73) encounter at Venus using a
HP desk calculator as we attempted to find the signal after the
spacecraft exited from behind Venus (I was the station receiver
project engineer in then-new PLL s-band Rx).  Computers were so
untrustworthy they had five duplicates on Apollo and took a majority
vote on calculations.  I was involved with Voyager/Pioneer/Viking
missions.  I left JPL in 1979 (fun to think back).

In 1982 I worked as a programmer using one of the early IBM-PC with
128K mem and dual cassettes (no HD).

73, Ed - KL7UW
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Message: 5
Date: Mon, 12 Sep 2011 13:12:11 -0400
From: AB2E Darrell <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] OT:  Heathkit Catalogs
To: <[hidden email]>, <[hidden email]>
Message-ID: <[hidden email]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="Windows-1252"


Interesting info Dave. The computer on the 1970s Voyager space probe
had a whopping 68K of memory total! And that was multitasking.
Source: http://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/faq.html

73 Darrell AB2E




73, Ed - KL7UW, WD2XSH/45
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