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Title: E.F. Johnson Museum Photos, Waseca MN Post by: Todd, KA1KAQ on June 20, 2008, 09:38:14 AM Bob Nickels W9RAN posted a link to some photos on the AMRadio reflector of the E.F. Johnson museum taken recently by Ron Eisenbrey, AB5WG on a trip to MN. Thought I'd repost here for those who may not be aware or aren't subscribed to the list:
http://picasaweb.google.com/RANickels/JohnsonMuseum Very nice display of Johnson history, not to mention having a beautiful yellow brick building to house it all in. It's great to see enough pride in this history to preserve in in such a way. Hopefully this won't go the way of Leo Meyerson's WRL/Globe and antique radio museum display in Nebraska. Title: Re: E.F. Johnson Museum Photos, Waseca MN Post by: N1IDU on June 20, 2008, 12:45:34 PM They used to have a museum in the old EFJ factory. I wonder if this is the same collection. I remember more early NAMPS phones and a gold plated cb. So glad I missed out on that award..Caw-mawn ;D
Title: Re: E.F. Johnson Museum Photos, Waseca MN Post by: w4bfs on June 20, 2008, 01:45:54 PM hmmmmm ... I wonder what the sign above the BC375 said ..73 ..John
Title: Re: E.F. Johnson Museum Photos, Waseca MN Post by: John K5PRO on June 20, 2008, 04:02:54 PM Where's the Thunderbolt?
Title: Re: E.F. Johnson Museum Photos, Waseca MN Post by: Pete, WA2CWA on June 20, 2008, 05:46:48 PM All the 6N2 and II Thunderbolts, the Adventurer, the Navigator, and the Pacemaker weren't captured in any picture that was posted.
Title: Re: E.F. Johnson Museum Photos, Waseca MN Post by: w3jn on June 21, 2008, 08:55:32 AM I don't recall this museum being there in the mid-80s when I visited the factory fairly regularly as part of my college senior design project (my advisor was an EF Johnson engineer). AMfone - Dedicated to Amplitude Modulation on the Amateur Radio Bands
I had, but threw out, one of EF Johnsons prototype AMPS cellphones (circa 1980 or so?) - was the size of a motrac and had a passel of ROMs on it, marked "Dallas" and "Chicago" where apparently the test networks were set up. I got this at the Waseca hamfest years ago; EF Johnson would donate junk like that (engineering test boards, prototypes, breadboards, etc) to the ham club and they'd sell it by the pound. By that time Johnson was making decidedly inferior 2-way radio equipment only. Johnson gear was obviously very popular in Minnesota; many hamfest sellers in the 80s, unable to sell these unwanted transmitters would dumpsterize 'em. I remember lots of Rangers, Viking 1s, etc being tossed in the dumpster or just left behind on the parking lot. I vivdly remember some guy straining to toss a Viking 500 into the dumpster... back then there was NO AM activity in MN and I had no idea about that stuff.... |