Grandpa, tell me bout the good ole days............

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   / Grandpa, tell me bout the good ole days............ #371  
Talk about bumpers,
how about all those nice Pontiacs with the Endura nose,
those things could take quite a tap and never show it.

School teacher bought a GTO new with that bumper. Of course he wanted to demonstrate it's durability. Group of kids standing around watching. He has a long handle Mall. Takes a whack at the center vertical part. Of course it glances off and takes out half of the grill. That teacher was forever known for that act of stupidity after that. :)
 
   / Grandpa, tell me bout the good ole days............ #372  
DIESEL? The You Tube Piece actually made no mention of pickups though, just SUVs. Nowadays, when you hear abut a "GOOD" Diesel for vehicles, you take notice.

Nope gasser Tundra. 500 (+ ~ -) HP Only 3 in Canada apparently. (Factory models)
 
   / Grandpa, tell me bout the good ole days............ #373  
We had a Science Teacher in Grade 7 (Junior High) who would walk around talking, playing with his FLY!
 
   / Grandpa, tell me bout the good ole days............ #374  
Wasn't there a station in Cincinnati that was also popular with truckers?



He had a syndicated show in the 70s/80s that was on lots of stations, either one could have carried it. He initially became famous in the 60s on one of the Mexican "border blaster" stations. I guess he was quite well known in the southwest...I never heard of him until American Graffiti.

The Big One! WLW

WLW - Wikipedia

500,000 watts! Largest transmitter ever in the U.S. at the time. Eventually put down to 50,000 like everyone else. My mom was from Cincinnati, and when my grandpa would visit us here in South Bend, he'd sit in his machine (whatever vehicle he was driving at the time) in our driveway, and listen to the Reds games.

E716078F-F1F1-46EE-868A-683B4E8A9D31.png
 
   / Grandpa, tell me bout the good ole days............ #375  
Some fun reading in the WLW wiki article....

"WLW's 500,000-watt "RCA 1" transmitter was in operation between 1934 and 1939, and was the highest power ever used in the United States for public, domestic radio broadcasting. It was designed as an amplifier of the regular 50 kW transmitter. It operated in class C with high-level plate modulation, and required two dedicated 33 kilovolt electrical substation lines and a large cooling pond complete with spray fountains. It operated with a power input of about 750 kW (plus another 400 kW of audio for the modulator) to produce 500 kW. Even after 1939, when regular WLW programming was prohibited from operating with more than 50,000 watts, the station continued post midnight high-powered operation as experimental station W8XO, which helped to greatly improve the RCA 1 transmitter's power and reliability. By the end of World War II, it was capable of producing one million watts, and it "loafed along" at 600 kW.[47]

WLW's 500,000-watt authorization included the requirement that the station limit its nighttime skywave signal toward Canada to the equivalent of 50,000 watts, which led to the construction of two shorter towers, electrically a quarter wavelength in height and separated by a half wavelength, that were located 1850 feet (560 m) southwest of the main tower. The two shorter towers were fed using trolley car wire to produce an 85 kW signal at 96 degrees out-of-phase with the principal signal, which produced a null in the opposite direction from the main tower.[70]

Many reports have surfaced over the years, from those who lived near the 500-kilowatt transmitter, of power fluctuations. Residents would see their lights flicker in time to the modulation peaks of the transmitter. It was widely reported that the signal was so overpowering that some people picked up WLW radio on the metal coils of mattresses and boxed bedsprings.[71] Arcing often occurred near the transmission site.[72]"
 
   / Grandpa, tell me bout the good ole days............ #376  
Wow, what a station. I am expecting to get my new solid state HF/6 meter amplifier kit in about 2 weeks. It will be capable of 1.2 Kilowatts maximum. I am looking forward to putting it together and getting it up on the air. It will have a nice Arduino controller and a nice 7 inch color touch screen display. Seems a little small when compared to a 500 kilowatt station though. :) Amateur radio stations here in the US are limited to 1.5 Kw output, but there are no limits on antenna gain.

Here is an initial fire up after kit build up by one guy:

 
   / Grandpa, tell me bout the good ole days............ #378  
   / Grandpa, tell me bout the good ole days............ #379  
Talk about bumpers,
how about all those nice Pontiacs with the Endura nose,
those things could take quite a tap and never show it.

Yep... we kids saw the commercials and neighbor had a new one and us kids took turns hitting the front of the GTO with a baseball bat. .
 
   / Grandpa, tell me bout the good ole days............ #380  
(removed), no offense, heaters were not optional in cars in the sixties. Without doing a lot of research, I doubt they were optional in the fifties. :)
Certain cars heaters were optional in the 60s, ones that come to mind were super stock cars (although rare). I still have my first car, '66 Rambler American base (220) model, the only option were seat belts.
 
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