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#1
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I'm scouring sites for my Coopersville survivors. I even ordered a Lehman's catalog. Looking up Marconi for Napolean's Own to explain vacuum tube radios. Crazy Crow is also on my reference list.
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#2
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.45,
These will help understand pre-digital radio recievers and transmitters of the 1930's until 1990's http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superheterodyne http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superhe...ne_transmitter http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_tube |
#3
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#5
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Kippertool seems like another nice additon to the CoT portfolio.
http://www.kippertool.com/military/m...tool-kits.html http://www.kippertool.com/military/p...documents.html I processed a bunch of their toolkits in 2007 but they have added some neat stuff since then |
#6
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#7
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That will be nice, a 'catalog' of general products with a price list. Are you going to break it down into sections by tech level for the price or are you going to have conversion factors to change the price as you change from one tech level to another tech level?
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#8
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Yes, a lot of lower tech is cheaper for the citizens and avg tech for thier neighbors. The counties that Coopersville is a part of are TL D, but can be TL C soon.
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#9
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I have not really looked over it yet but there is a 1200 page Sears catalog from 1912 here.
https://archive.org/details/catalogno12400sear I have been looking for the 1896 one (the first) as that feels closer to what you might see from post war tech, but it might be interesting. Edit. I took a look at it and parts would probably be useful for what might be available in KFS. Since it is a pretty big download 220MB i thought a few example pages might help one decide if a download is worth it. Last edited by kato13; 02-26-2015 at 03:14 PM. Reason: added example pages |
#10
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Thanks! |
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