 The Early Days          of Amateur Radio Slow-Scan TV
The Early Days          of Amateur Radio Slow-Scan TV       by Copthorne Macdonald
       I got my ham license          in 1951 at age 15, and like many hams of that era, the bug hit hard.           I worked my way through the University of Kentucky's engineering school,          taking 5 years to go through, working nights and weekends out at the transmitter          of a local 5 kW AM station.  Naturally, I was hamming on the way to and          from work in my oil-guzzling 1948 Chrysler.  The rig was a 15 watt surplus          WWII AM rig that took up most of the leg room under the dash.
       One day in 1957 I          was in the engineering school's library, thumbing through the Bell System          Technical Journal, when I came across an article on some Bell Labs signature          transmission experiments using ordinary phone lines.  For the first time          I realized that picture transmission didn't necessarily mean extremely          wide bandwidth.  And being the ardent ham I was, I instantly wondered          if some sort of practical SSTV system could be worked out for ham radio.
       I spent my spare          time during the next few months looking into the feasibility of the idea.           What sort of display tubes were available? (Ans: P7 phosphor.)  How did          you get frequency response down to DC if ham rig audio response cut off          at 300 Hz? (Ans: Modulate an audio subcarrier.)  I kept waiting for the          fatal flaw to appear, but I saw none.  The idea looked feasible.
       I took my paper feasibility          study to the head of the EE Department, and asked him if I could design          and build such a system as part of an independent problem course.  (This          would give me a few credits as well as legitimize my use of school facilities          for the project.)  He agreed, and I ordered surplus CRTs and power transformers          and such from surplus houses like Fair Radio Sales in Lima, Ohio.  During          the next 6 months I designed the unit stage by stage, built a "tank"          of a flying-spot scanner in the school's machine shop, and put it all          together.  I still kept waiting for the fatal flaw to appear, but it never          did.  The system worked!  
       What is now the Citizen's          Band was at that time the 11 meter ham band.  All sorts of strange emissions          were allowed on 11 meters then, and the first on-air tests were conducted          on that band.  Since only one set of SSTV equipment existed, audio tape          recordings of the SSTV signal were transmitted on the air by one ham station.           At the receiving station we listened to this weird sound coming out of          the receiver's loudspeaker as we watched the transmitted pictures being          painted in light on the screen of the P7 (long-persistence phosphor, radar-type)          cathode ray tube.
       I wrote a paper describing          the system, and entered it in the American Institute of Electrical Engineers          (now IEEE) student paper competition in 1958.  It won national first prize          that year.  The ham community first heard about the system in articles          that appeared in the August and September 1958 issues of QST magazine.           
       Shortly thereafter          we hams lost the 11 meter band to CB, and had no long-distance HF frequencies          on which to use SSTV.  I spent the next 10 years working with hams like          Don Miller, W9NTP, and Robert Gervenack, W7FEN in specially authorized          on-air tests to convince the FCC that slow-scan would cause no problems          to regular ham activities and should be permitted in the 75- to 10-meter          voice bands as a regular operating activity.  In 1968 the FCC finally          authorized SSTV operation on a regular basis in the HF bands.  In the          1970s my interests shifted to the USES of ham radio -- to "New Directions          Radio" -- ham radio for personal growth and social change.  Since          1985, I've been spending most of my time writing -- some of it for rent          and food money, some on dear-to-my-heart subjects like the development          of wisdom, and strategies for living the most effective life possible.