Any info or date would be really helpfull
Many thanks
Any info or date would be really helpfull
Many thanks
All I can tell you is it is not WW2 in date. Sorry I don't know more than that.
Cheers, Ade.
what would it say if it was ww2?
Wartime radio sets were, genrally speaking, much larger in size than the item you show. Usually wartime sets are marked "SCR" meaning "Signal Corps Radio" followed by a number.
Have you done a search on the numbers on the case?
Cheers, Ade.
See here for some wartime sets:
U.S. Army Signal Museum, Fort Gordon, Ga
It is not WW2:
AN/PRC 8- 9- 10 (USA, Esp, French)
Radio set AN/PRC-10, frequency range 38.0 to 54.9 MHz, Super-Heterodyne FM Receiver / Transmitter is a Man-Pack or Vehicular fixed station operation, one Watt transmitter Output. Uses 16 miniature wire ended tubes. Power requirements 1.5V, 6V, 67.5V, 135V powered by BA-279 battery.
The AN/PRC-10 is part of a family of radios AN/PRC-8, AN/PRC-9, and AN/PRC-10 which were used as a squad radio by US Army in Korea and Vietnam Wars and by many NATO countries. Made in USA in 1950's and 60's, each radio had a different frequency range.
IK5ZTT's SURPLUS in the middle of the site.
Looks alot like the clansman sets we used in BAOR in the early 80s
Regards
Robin
Hi robin,
I was thinking the same thing, great lumpy things i think they were used in the F.F.R,s also.
dave.
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