T. R. McElroy was a blazing fast telegrapher -- any code, any time. He worked both landline and radiotelegraphy, and set speed records.
But he was ambitious, too. In the 1930s, he started manufacturing semiautomatic telegraph keys of his own design, massive, heavy bugs that suited his own style -- and which appealed to plenty of others, too.
The original Mac bugs were heavy, rectilinear keys with their own style, a little "Arts & Crafts meet heavy industrial" look. But the times --and the styles -- were changing and shortly before WW II, Mac introduced a series of streamlined telegraph keys unlike any any other, culminating in the S-600 Super Streamspeed semiautomatic key, possibly the most graceful "bug" ever made.
I own a few Mac keys and recently bought an accessory:
There's an uncommon Bakelite-based Streamkey at far left, followed by a Telegraph Apparatus Co. (not Inc.) copy* of the wrinkle-finished metal-base Streamkey (you can tell by the bulge in the lever arm at the contact area) and a pair of chrome-plated McElroys. The Streamspeed is at far right, and it handles just as fast and sleek as it looks. At the very back, the accessory and its box: an Oscillatone code-practice oscillator. They are not especially rare and this one was offered at a very low price -- how could I pass it up?
Restoration will be interesting. The Bakelite is likely to be very brittle.
There are still McElroys in the electronics business. They're not making telegraph keys any more, but the name lives on.
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* TACo was a co-venture between McElroy and Hallicrafters. They built copies of Mac Streamkeys and their own interesting semiautomatic key, sometimes known as the "hole-in-the-wall" bug.
Monday, February 15, 2016
Friday, January 15, 2016
A VINTAGE-SUITABLE CALENDAR
I needed a calendar for my mostly-vintage hamshack. 1932 and 2016 share the same calendar, but buying an old one in intact shape and ripping each month off seemed too destructive to me.
So I made one.
The backing sheet is card stock. The calendar pages look crooked -- the paper fasteners that hold them are a bit loose in the punched holes. It straightens out when hanging. The printer output does not look like hand-set type, but might pass for offset printing or lithography.
I'm trying to figure out how to post the original as a PDF, if any readers would like their own copy.
So I made one.
The backing sheet is card stock. The calendar pages look crooked -- the paper fasteners that hold them are a bit loose in the punched holes. It straightens out when hanging. The printer output does not look like hand-set type, but might pass for offset printing or lithography.
I'm trying to figure out how to post the original as a PDF, if any readers would like their own copy.
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