Bob’s Radio Corner: Uncle Clayton and His National NC-188

National NC-188

As recalled by Bob Colegrove

Uncle Clayton was my very first SWLing buddy.  In the late ‘50s there was no Internet – very few ways for SWLs to interact with one another.  There were clubs that published mimeograph bulletins every month or so.  These were mailed to SWLs across the country and around the world.  To come across a fellow SWL in your own town was rare.  As chance would have it, Uncle Clayton and I quite independently discovered our interest in SWLing about the same time, and then only after knowing one another for several years.

Uncle Clayton was not my real uncle.  He and his wife, Evelyn, were dear friends of my mother and father.  You see, there was a social decorum at that time which frowned upon members of the younger generation from referring to members of an older generation by their first name.  At the same time, “Mr. Smith” and “Mrs. Smith” (not their real surname) were regarded as unnecessarily formal; so, for this situation “Uncle Clayton” and “Aunt Evelyn” became the accepted form of address.

My story begins with television, not radio.  By mid-1950 both the Smiths and the Colegroves had acquired their first black and white TV “sets,” theirs a 12-inch RCA and ours a 12-inch Arvin.  Each of these occupied 8 to 12 cubic feet of space and required two well-fit individuals to move them.  Ironically, they were termed “portable” in that they required a low table or stand for proper positioning.  This contrasted with “console” models which incorporated the stand and the TV in a single cabinet.

One must understand that television at that time was what computers would become a generation later.  The nation was on the cusp of a TV frenzy.  My dad and Uncle Clayton jumped into it with both feet.  They couldn’t let the darn things alone.  Antennas were the most obvious source of tinkering.  “Rabbit ears” were the customary solution but adjusting them was a skill rivaling that of playing a cello.  Later, attic designs were fabricated for the new channel in Bloomington, Indiana.

Vaccum tubes, both necessarily and unnecessarily, became questionable components, and Uncle Clayton and my dad developed well-stocked arsenals of spares.  In retrospect the pair were, well…a couple of hacks, and I say that lovingly.  Picture two large, middle-aged men behind the RCA with the back cover off alternately trying to get a 9-pin peanut tube aligned and reinserted into its socket in the very front of the chassis – all this while trying to avoid the high-voltage discharge from the picture tube.  I still recall the looks of frustration and muffled puffs of blue air.  After some time, Aunt Evelyn appeared, looked over the dilemma, grabbed the tube, and jabbed it into the socket on the first try.

SWLing came along several years later.  I discovered it in the fall of 1958 while idly tinkering with the Howard Radio Co. Model 308 radio-phonograph console, which by that time had been relegated to the basement.  After moving it to my room and stringing up a long wire I was forever captivated.  The single SW band covered 5.5 MHz through 18 MHz across a dial a mere four inches long.  I milked that old radio relentlessly finally coming up with about 20 or 30 SW broadcast stations, all in English.

I have no recollection of how Uncle Clayton and I discovered we were going down the same path.  He had already purchased his National NC-188 with a matching speaker and set up his shack in an unused upstairs bedroom.  How I envied him.  His NC-188 was everything I envisioned in a SW radio. I was still earning my way towards purchasing a Hallicrafters S-38E.

National NTS-1 Speaker for the NC-188 and NC-109.
Better radios had separate external speakers, the claim being that there was insufficient space in such feature-packed units

Uncle Clayton’s NC-188 was my first encounter with a bandspread – a term which has virtually gone out of existence.  I immediately knew what it did, but it would take me a while to understand just how it worked.  On my old Howard console, the dial pointer travelling less than a 16th inch could cover 100 kHz or more, conceivably containing 10 or 20 stations.  Furthermore, this range was traversed by a nearly imperceptible rotation of a small knob.  Conversely, the NC-188 might cover the same tuning range over a space two inches long and require four full rotations of a 2-in diameter knob.  That was an incredible mechanical advantage.

For SWLs, there was a restriction on the use of the bandspread.  Most receivers had scales neatly calibrated for the 10-, 15-,20-, 40-, and 80-meter ham bands.  This provided reasonable frequency readout – not the precision we have with today’s digital radios, but close enough.  For international broadcast bands, the listener had to rely on a 0 to 100 linear logging scale which bore no relation to frequency.  This required the listener to generate several lists or graphs translating log readings to frequency.

The NC-188 and -109 had 4.5” bandspreads, not as long as some, but the 2” knob required 9 full rotations to traverse end-to-end.

Everything I have described so far depended on the position of the main tuning dial.  The bandspread operated electronically in parallel with the main tuning.  In short, the main tuning dial had to be positioned precisely at the high end of the tuned band for the bandspread to produce the same results.  Within these restrictions, a bandspread was still a marvelous device.

Uncle Clayton and I were still in our formative SWLing period when our family would visit him and Aunt Evelyn.  I remember him patiently tuning across portions of the SW spectrum oblivious of the international band boundaries slowly rotating the main tuning dial and stopping at points that interested him.  When my turn at the helm came, I would often seek out the General Overseas Service of the BBC and listen to the football scores or Victor Sylvester and his Ballroom Orchestra.

Victor Silvester conducting his Ballroom Orchestra in 1938. His orchestra was still a fixture on the BBC in the ‘50s and ‘60s. Source:  Victor Silvester and His Orchestra – You’re Dancing on My Heart

Neither Uncle Clayton nor I set the bar very high in terms of DXing prowess.  We had fun and made a lot of interesting discoveries.  Isn’t that what it’s all about?

Some years ago, I had the opportunity to buy a fairly clean National NC-109.  The -109 is an upscale version of the -188.  It has a crystal filter, an early SSB product detector and a voltage regulator.  Otherwise, the two radios are virtually identical.  I did all the usual things, cleaned it up, performed an alignment, and restrung the main tuning and bandspread dial cords.  Later I found a matching speaker.  When I was finished, I had what I regard as a museum-quality radio.  It occupies a prominent corner of the shack, but I don’t operate it that much.  Sometimes I just sit in front of it, spin the dials and remember Uncle Clayton and how it all started.

National NC-109

8 thoughts on “Bob’s Radio Corner: Uncle Clayton and His National NC-188

  1. Jim

    Nice story. Made me think of our first Motorola TV which was as much a piece of furniture as a TV.
    My first real shortwave receiver was an S-40B. I still remember all the cool sounds on shortwave. With a 40M dipole at 20′ the 40 meter band was full of CW, AM and SSB. TX was a DX-20. Later I stepped up to a BC-779 and a Viking Valiant.
    Lots of fun back in the 60’s.
    Jim WB4ILP

    Reply
  2. Jock Elliott

    Bob,

    What a wonderful write-up!

    “Rabbit ears” were the customary solution but adjusting them was a skill rivaling that of playing a cello. — Exactly!

    In our house, rabbit ears adjustment was a two-person job: one person to actually manipulate the rabbit ears (actually an instrument of the devil, in my opinion, since I was the one doing the adjustments to the fiendish device) and another person to watch the picture and direct the adjustments.

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane.

    Cheers, Jock

    Reply
  3. Lee

    Nice story. I was ten or fifteen years behind you but I got started with an old Grundig desktop radio that was pretty deaf but I could hear the locals on 80 meters with it and a long wire dangled out the widow of our top floor apartment.

    Did have a guy who sparked my interest in amateur radio specifically – G3WCK, Bob Godley.

    Was years into the hobby before I found that the WRTH existed, still longer before I found there were actual clubs for people similarly mentally afflicted.

    Had many radios since, the SDRs are wonderful but what I’d really like for nostalgia’s sake would be a Murphy B40D and a Murphy B41,

    Ah my.

    Reply
  4. Jim Byrne

    Love these “down memory lane” posts. I was born in 1936, and grew up with my parents’ Philco console of that same year, and its shortwave bands. Then in 1955, I built a Heathkit AR-3 receiver to take to college with me. That radio entertained me and my dormitory chums until graduation. Still enjoy SWLing, but miss the glow of the vacuum tubes. Thanks for the memories!

    Reply
  5. Price K

    A very nicely done article. I grew up in Orlando, FL, in the 1950’s and had an older ham friend/mentor, Mr Harold J Klaiss, W4QN, about two blocks away who helped me ‘tune up’ my 1 tube, a 1H5GT (with a really neat grid cap), regenerative receiver which I built in the 7th grade. Many fond memories of that little set and the many receivers which followed; HQ140-X, HeathKit SB310, Collins surplus R390, several Tecsun’s and several still active SDR’s. In retrospect, I think that I had more fun with that little 1-tube than any of the others.

    Reply
  6. Dan Greenall

    Excellent post, Bob. Your article hits home on more points than I could begin to explain. It brings back memories of my first real receiver, a Hallicrafters S-52, which was donated to me from a ham operator at the other end of my street. For the first year or so of my SWLing career, I had to borrow my parents Philips portable kitchen radio. It only had shortwave coverage from 5.8 Mhz to 10 Mhz. I had to make my own band spread out of paper and attached it with scotch tape. My life long friend who got me interested in the hobby was known by my kids for years as “Uncle Ken.” Thanks for the memories and keep up the great work. Dan VE3HLC

    Reply
  7. Thomas Post author

    As always, Bob, another superb post. Thank you for taking us down memory lane with you and introducing us to Uncle Clayton and his National NC-188. No better way to start my day! -Thomas

    Reply

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