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My First QSL card from 1976
Original RAW art
They guy on the
left with the microphone is me. The girl is Marcie – my
girlfriend at the time.
On the right is Randy Wright, and his girlfriend.
Randy designed/drew this (he was an art student at the same univ
I was going to)
This was a rather
controversial QSL card at the time.
Most hams, particularly in 1976, were very conservative.
This “hippie” card got a lot of comments – I must have sent out
400-500 of them.
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My next QSL Card was
when I moved to Australia and got the call VK8RP.
I let my XYL (who later became VK8KYL) design it – we were staying
in someones apartment while they were back in the states
(it was about 2-3 months before we had a place to stay when we first
got there).
As you can see from
her design – I think she felt like I had taken her hostage in the
outback.
1983-1984 |
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I
got her to design a new one fairly quickly, but I bet I sent out 500
of these
(in those days I was making about 1,000 contacts a year – so I sent
a lot of cards)
This was a bit more popular -- I prob sent 1,500 of these out
1984-1985 |
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Later, I got ‘in
to’ OSCAR – “Orbiting Satellites Carrying Amateur Radio”
We were downtown at the newsstand (what the called the bookstore)
and saw a postcard that I thought would be perfect for a QSL card,
so I bought one and called up the company and asked if they knew
what a QSL card was.
They did, and I had
them print up 2,000 of the postcards with my Callsign on the front
1985-1989 |
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Back to Rockwal, TX – I
had to give up my Australian call sign and I got WK8U.
In rockwall, my interest was ‘ATV – Amateur Television”
I made this one up.
This was the first computer generated/designed one.
I only had a black and white laser printer
1989-1995 |
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When we moved to
Palm Bay I got my present callsgin W4RP, I still did ATV and
started printing color ones |
1995 - 2005 |
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In 2006, my very
talented son designed two new ones for me |
That will be it for
2006 - ? |