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Author Topic: BBC engineering website  (Read 825 times)
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Sam KS2AM
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« on: June 11, 2025, 11:18:38 PM »

Stumbled across this site with links to seemingly endless BBC engineering and historical articles.  Interesting!

https://www.bbceng.info/

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W7TFO
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« Reply #1 on: June 12, 2025, 11:53:45 AM »

Beautifully built, weird electronic designs.

73DG
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W1ITT
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« Reply #2 on: June 12, 2025, 01:55:13 PM »

That web site must be running on dial-up as it's wickedly slow.  When I was with TCI I worked at BBC sites in Oman and on Cyprus at the British Middle Eastern Relay Site, so called.  I was in and out of there for over a year.  We replaced about 28 HF curtains there and they all had to be tuned to 1.35 SWR or better across the whole octave range, not just the broadcast allocations.  I would get one or two tuned in and call London and an engineer would fly down to witness final acceptance tests.  The site was a large circle of arrays that pretty much covered the compass at most all the SW broadcast frequencies. It was all very British and the "transmitter hall" was impressive.  I think there were 11 transmitters that fed into a switch matrix.  The site was right on the Med with temperatures often over 100F and no shade but it was the ultimate in HF radio and very hot with RF.  I used a high power  RF network analyzer setup feeding as much as 100 watts to the directional coupler to compete against the co-site RF.  It was a wonderful place to be an antenna guy and we had a good crew with a mix of Brits, Scots, Irish and Welshmen and Cypriots on site and  more Brits back in London.
We did most of the work around 2007 plus and minus and a few short years later the Beeb decided that short wave wasn't the going thing any more and dismantled the site to the ground.  It was fun while it lasted.
73 de Norm W1ITT
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W1DAN
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« Reply #3 on: June 21, 2025, 08:58:50 AM »

Yes..

A well-made site by BBC broadcast retirees and hobbyists. Dave G4OYX is a main contributor and used to manage the Woofferton shortwave "sender" station.  I'm in there:

https://www.bbceng.info/Technical%20Reviews/tott/21-36_W1DAN_Signal_Issue_62.pdf

Dan
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« Reply #4 on: June 21, 2025, 11:02:02 AM »

Yes..

A well-made site by BBC broadcast retirees and hobbyists. Dave G4OYX is a main contributor and used to manage the Woofferton shortwave "sender" station.  I'm in there:

https://www.bbceng.info/Technical%20Reviews/tott/21-36_W1DAN_Signal_Issue_62.pdf

Dan

Very interesting reading, Dan.  Thanks for sharing!
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Rick / W8KHK  ex WB2HKX, WB4GNR
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« Reply #5 on: June 21, 2025, 12:16:04 PM »

  Very British indeed. I've seen pictures of the stationary steam engines that powered the old British textile mills. Here in America, those massive steam engines likely lived in greasy, grimy rooms with oil-soaked brick or concrete floors, but their British counterparts lived in ornate "halls" with shiny marble floors and surrounded by polished brass railings. British steam locomotives, too: where American engines bristled with exposed plumbing and valves, British locomotives wore neat metal sheathing over it all. A very different attitude.

It was all very British and the "transmitter hall" was impressive.
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« Reply #6 on: June 21, 2025, 09:05:09 PM »

Norm is my hero.  Just sayin.

Between him and Gary Shirk.


--Shane
Wp2ass / ex KD6VXI
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