If you were implying that the KW2000 transceiver was used at Bletchley Park, which was only used for code breaking activities, you are hopelessly WRONG...The KW2000 was first manufactured in the late 1950s and was used essentially by amateur radio operators, as it offered the new radio transmission mode of Single Sideband (SSB), compared to the older AM transmitters...Also the KW2000 transceiver replaced the need for seperate transmitters and receivers..There was some brilliant minds at Bletchley Park even though some of them were closet queers or communists.
What I've got is an alleged temporal communicator. The core of it seems to be a bank of Eprom's cobbled onto the side of amateur radio.
I've got some wire that I'm going to string over some trees as an aerial and will crank the thing up on Sunday
I also got some converted and modified walkie-talkies.
Not bad for 150 English pounds.
Below at the bottom of the page are pictures of the receivers that were mostly used back in the code breaking days of World War 2, both types manufactured in the USA...The receiver on the left is an HRO, the receiver on the right is the AR88, both were superb receivers and used by thousands of amateur radio operators World Wide during the late 1940s and 1970s...Both are still fabulous short wave receivers!


It was said that you could chuck out an AR88 from the top of a 10 storey building, go down and pick it up, switch it on again, and you still got perfect reception, built just like the proverbial "Brick Shyte House"

Tell me more about those "converted and modified walkie talkies" Lord Henry, iam literally dying to find out what nonsense you come up with this time, dont disappoint me will you!


