Viet Nam Veterans Recognition Day
43:24
SPA Corn Roast  about four years ago
14:43
Grandma's Attic Antiques
12:33
Жыл бұрын
Antenna Party
27:58
2 жыл бұрын
Ag Day Breakfast 4min
4:39
2 жыл бұрын
Johnny Dark 5min
5:44
2 жыл бұрын
DMR on the Fire Tower rev 2
19:44
3 жыл бұрын
NCMCRC.mpg
34:13
3 жыл бұрын
B-25 comes to Bemidji, MN.
22:23
3 жыл бұрын
Keith Winger Jam Session
1:07:33
3 жыл бұрын
Andrusia Lodge with Helene Reed 50min
49:34
EAA Young Eagles Flight  50 min
50:22
3 жыл бұрын
Anchorage Resort 4min
4:34
3 жыл бұрын
Class 58  2016
19:28
3 жыл бұрын
Sterling Fire Tower VHS
17:28
3 жыл бұрын
KNOX TV
1:56
3 жыл бұрын
EAA Chapter 1397 Fly In for 2018
1:25
Grand Forks Class of 1960 Class Reunion
1:33:43
Class of 58 Central High  Rev 1    35min
35:35
Reeves with audio 2min
2:39
3 жыл бұрын
Dragonsong
1:26:30
3 жыл бұрын
Lester and Irene 2hr
2:06:44
3 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@zepps88
@zepps88 3 күн бұрын
How did they start those carburetor engines back then in that horrible cold?
@SuperTerminator83
@SuperTerminator83 7 күн бұрын
USS Forrestal waou
@MichelleMaitland-u2j
@MichelleMaitland-u2j 9 күн бұрын
I just discovered your bracelet in my parents estate and had no idea what it meant. Thank you for your service and welcome home.
@kokoskowapanienka
@kokoskowapanienka 10 күн бұрын
Thank you for this video. I was there in July 2014 with my grandpa. Then,I had no chance to revisit cause I'm from Europe and my grandpa rests there forever. It's great to have a look again. Thank you❤
@thecommercialpilot
@thecommercialpilot 18 күн бұрын
I’d love to attend some day
@kmalerich
@kmalerich 24 күн бұрын
A thing of beauty !
@mattandresen1661
@mattandresen1661 Ай бұрын
Thank you for your service. Prayers and Condolences to Mr Jim Williamson and Family. ❤🙏🏼
@masoodkhalid21
@masoodkhalid21 Ай бұрын
This thing is very affordable but very few people will go for it
@tuneman55118
@tuneman55118 2 ай бұрын
Love it this is my Grandfather 😢
@tuneman55118
@tuneman55118 2 ай бұрын
And my dog that he watched when I moved ❤
@TempoDrift1480
@TempoDrift1480 2 ай бұрын
Unfortunately all this equipment was used for 96 percent advertising.
@nibiruresearch
@nibiruresearch 2 ай бұрын
For many years, the NTSC video system in America had such a poor quality, that many shows were shot on film. Otherwise they could never sell them to other countries. Thanks to the fact that nowadays we have very high quality digital film scanners, we can transfer these filmed show to an unbelievable quality digital video.
@altaischurale7324
@altaischurale7324 2 ай бұрын
The Commandant of the Nuremberg Prison , Col. Burton C. Andrus did not think highly of the soldiers under his command . Boe failed to guard Goering properly , allowing him to commit suicide.......
@davidglickstein5169
@davidglickstein5169 2 ай бұрын
Why the creepy music? Ridiculous.
@DavidBerquist334
@DavidBerquist334 3 ай бұрын
Did the first TV sets made in 1929 by RCA and Telefunken in Europe work with vhf that will work with today's VCR or DVD player
@Sally-ge4lr
@Sally-ge4lr 3 ай бұрын
I watch the video after my brother called and told me about it . Found it interesting and knowing Gary as a neighbor and growing up in the small town of cold spring. I remember when this was happening. So glad that you made it back and now wondering how your life is now. Thank you
@SpecialNoob27
@SpecialNoob27 3 ай бұрын
Such a beautiful plane
@steveschein2619
@steveschein2619 3 ай бұрын
I spent years learning how to restore these wonderful creations of our mind. I still listen to old time radio on a regular basis. It seems to me that we have lost the theater of the mind.
@steveschein2619
@steveschein2619 3 ай бұрын
This is wonderful! Did I see a TV7 tube tester in a shot?
@kingtut8381
@kingtut8381 3 ай бұрын
LOTS OF ERRORS IN THIS PRESENTATION. TANNER'S INDIAN NAME WAS AS THE NARRATOR SAYS BUT IT WAS AN OJIBWA NAME, MEANING THE , SWALLOW. THE NARRATOR JUST REPEATS THIS AS HE LEARNED IT LIKE MANY OTHERS BUT NEW EVIDENCE SUPPORTS HIS OJIBWA NAME AS MEANING THE SWALLOW.
@kingtut8381
@kingtut8381 3 ай бұрын
MANITO GEE SHIK WAS AN OJIBWA FROM THE SAGINAW BAY VILLAGE, NOT A SHAWNEE
@kingtut8381
@kingtut8381 3 ай бұрын
NET NO KWA WAS AN ODAWA NOT OJIBWA
@ttskidoo6228
@ttskidoo6228 4 ай бұрын
Well hell’s bells - right behind Göring in the courtroom is where Gerald Boe claims he was! Did the interviewer even check to see if they recognized each other by photo or knew each other? Sadly, no - and this would’ve been a bonanza of info bcz Art Olson is telling it square. I don’t see why the interviewer didn’t check for any of the documents with Gerald Boe that Olson clearly had, even more so why he didn’t question Olson about Boe’s claims. Notice Olson stated the guards went as a unit and went home as a unit less than 2 months of the hangings. So why is Gerald Boe, a leftover 1st Infantry Division, combat zone vet who got promoted to Sgt Maj in less than two years, at Nuremberg as a guard NOT from Olson’s unit with a very different mish-mash story from books & created from whole cloth than Olson’s, and why didn’t the interviewer ask the other guards about his suspicious tales?
@ttskidoo6228
@ttskidoo6228 4 ай бұрын
This guy is the real deal. 3 minutes in and an experienced veteran officer can tell his story is genuine. The interviewer doesn’t seem to know what year WWII ended so it’s unsurprising he wouldn’t know enough to distinguish a fake from a genuine history.
@ttskidoo6228
@ttskidoo6228 4 ай бұрын
The praise dripping in these comments is sickening, and clearly the interviewer doesn’t know anything about the military. As a VFW service officer specializing in WWII & Korea records it’s obvious this guy is lying about something & his interviewer never insisted on seeing his DD-214 discharge document which lists period of service, dates of rank, military occupations & codes, awards & decorations, and where, when and for how long overseas. Even without a DD-214 there are a few obvious things. Firstly, although men often quickly advance in rank during wartime, no one goes from Private to First Sergeant (E-1 to E-7) in less than a year. NOBODY. Secondly, if he can remember details such as what state he went to basic training in (Louisiana, probably Fort Polk at that time), he can certainly what country he first saw the first time he left the United States. Thirdly, his answer of going straight to France is bulls-t; all enlisted soldiers during the war from CONUS (Continental United States) to ETO (European Theater of Operations) first disembarked somewhere in Northern Ireland or Great Britain, where some were re-organized into different units or received further training, and processing, before being sent to the combat zone. That he says he got off the boat in the combat zone of German-occupied France in 1944 is a blatant lie. But the granddaddy of them all is the whopper about guarding Göring. You see, after VE Day soldiers rotated home for demobilization on a point system. Those with valor decorations, formerly wounded, served in combat had more points so went home first, followed closely by those who served in a combat zone without being in combat (those on duty in continental Europe). People enlisted or were drafted for the duration of the war, not 2-year or 4-year contracts. A Military Police unit, complete with that MOS (military occupational specialty) & code is on the discharge documents of those who served in the MP unit that guarded the Nuremberg Nazis LONG AFTER THE WAR VETS ROTATED HOME by Göring’s suicide in late 1946. Either this guy is lying about his war service (he certainly is about his disembarkation station and rank), or he’s lying about being a Nuremberg guard, or both. There are so many falsehoods in his tall tale about being a Nuremberg guard it takes too long to write it all out. The guy who made this video - if he cares about his integrity - should get this guy’s DD-214 from the national archives And the list of all soldiers in the MP unit who guarded the cells in Nuremberg for this period - and since guys came & went, the list will have a few more men than guards at any one time. But this guy is pulling everyone’s chain for attention. It isn’t just the young who commit stolen valor. And don’t think his sweet wife didn’t know what he was doing….he’d been doing this for years and she either was beaten down into going along, one way or another, or simply married him after all this and believes it herself. Don’t be fooled just bcz he’s old. He has the Big Red One patch on his uniform tunic arm - 1st infantry division. They were the first on the beach on D-Day, June 6th 1944, so IF that was his unit and he left the States in 1944, he was a replacement soldier for someone in the division who died. IF he was in the Big Red One then he was an infantryman - which means he WASN’T an MP. And if he was a 1st Division replacement he rotated home long before the MP unit that guarded Nazis in Nuremberg were there. The only ribbon on his uniform is that of an army Good Conduct Medal. Why not the American Defense Service Medal or the European-African-Middle Eastern Theater Medal, which are considered much more important than something any Joe can earn stateside in peacetime? No National Defense Medal? No OCCUPATION OF GERMANY medal - which he’d be entitled to wear if he really was guarding Nazis at Nuremberg. The interviewer did a rotten job checking any of this out and will remove all such “I was a Nuremberg Guard” videos until he verified the info these Stolen Valor hacks serve up - which he can easily do by writing to National Archives & Records Administration in St Louis, Missouri. On his uniform he’s displaying the “Ruptured Duck” World War II veteran patch given to all the veterans to differentiate them from those who never served overseas. He’s also displaying the Presidential Unit Citation on (his) left chest - what unit was he in that got that citation? A division had 25,000+ men, so is too large a body for such a citation in most circumstances. He seems to have an MP unit’s lapel pins on each uniform tunic lapel - but in no branch of service are any such pins actually worn on the lapels, if indeed they’re allowed on the uniform at all, and certainly were not during the period the uniform he displays was in use. If that is a lapel pin for an MP unit, AND the very same unit at Nuremberg 45-46, it would not be worn on the uniform. These facts and this uniform is all quite strange - except for someone telling tales. Remember, no real veteran is insulted by an interviewer asking to see his discharge or other documents verifying his claims - you’ll find it’s quite the opposite. People who are the real deal may not remember the details correctly but if you read the records you can quickly tell the wheat from the chaff. Some know many WWII & Korea (to letter H) records were burned in the big fire at National Archives in 1973 and think it can’t be verified. They’re wrong. There’s a whole unit that reconstructs records from a number of sources, and for famous historical circumstances like the MPs at Nuremberg there’s a great deal of detailed unit history. It’s a shame the younger generations are so steeped in ignorance and guys like this take advantage. Instead of getting huffed at me, get huffed at guys like this & interviewers who don’t verify anything - so we honor the ones who really earned our admiration.
@daniochoa2110
@daniochoa2110 4 ай бұрын
What a sight!
@Breaknwid
@Breaknwid 4 ай бұрын
Sept 15 2024 DC-3 flies again from Greenville ME. Airport for the 1st time in decades, complete with water landing and take off on Moosehead Lake
@Chris-o9q7q
@Chris-o9q7q 4 ай бұрын
It flew.. on floats today again!! Sept 14 24
@mothmagic1
@mothmagic1 5 ай бұрын
The original "Gooney Bid"
@walkertongdee
@walkertongdee 5 ай бұрын
I wasn't looking to become a drug smuggler for the CIA, I was just lucky it worked out that way...
@Deuceismavscopilot
@Deuceismavscopilot 5 ай бұрын
Hi David do you know Scott proulex
@thearchitect4726
@thearchitect4726 6 ай бұрын
looks likee you have a dick smith multimeter on your bench, i have one here too in australia.
@muzzcovw7674
@muzzcovw7674 6 ай бұрын
Such a great video! As a teenager in the 80's I developed a hobby of repairing old TVs. One of my grandfathers friends had a brother who ran a TV repair shop in Bloomfield CT. He really helped teach me and help me understand the basics of diagnostic repair. I wish I still had the 1960 RCA color Roundie that he gave to me, it was such a cool basic styled set. Now years later I suddenly have the urge (and time) to get back into this hobby. I just picked up a REALLY nice 1959 Silvertone Medalist to begin the new adventure. The set looks to be very low hour but will get the recap treatment. The prior owner said it doesn't work... I don't plan to try to fire it up without being a little more careful
@ElijahRadioProphet-mb9zu
@ElijahRadioProphet-mb9zu 7 ай бұрын
History of the manufacturer National Radio Institute (NRI); Washington, DC ID = 7536 As a member you can upload pictures (but not single models please) and add text. Both will display your name after an officer has activated your content, and will be displayed under «Further details ...» plus the text also in the forum. Name: National Radio Institute (NRI); Washington, DC (USA) Abbreviation: nri Products: Model types Summary: National Radio Institute (NRI) Washington, DC National Radio Institute (NRI) was a correspondence school that specialized in training for radio repair and operation. Conar Instruments was a division of National Radio Institute and supplied test equipment for NRI. Founded: 1914 Closed: 2002 History: The National Radio Institute was founded by James E. Smith, a high school teacher, in Washington, D.C., in 1914. McGraw-Hill purchased NRI and the correspondence division of Capitol Radio Engineering Institute in 1968. The school was renamed NRI Schools, McGraw-Hill Continuing education center. James E. Smith remained as NRI chairman until his death in 1973. James' son, J Morrison Smith, succeeded as president, retiring in 1976. McGraw-Hill announced in 1999 that it would phase out NRI Schools, citing "changes in the marketplace". They ceased operation on March 31, 2002. This manufacturer was suggested by Wolfgang Scheida. Some models: Country Year Name 1st Tube Notes USA 49 Professional Tube Tester 70 Eight valve holders, manual test voltage adjustment, neon lamp for short tests, one instru... USA 22 Crystal Radio 4,25" tapped coil with two times each four selectable positions, condenser tuning knob in ... USA 47 Signal Generator 88 6BE6 Provides 170 kHz to 60 MHz on fundamentals (120 MHz harmonics) in six ranges, attenuato... USA 47 Signal Tracer 33 6SK7 Covers 170 kHz to 11,3 MHz in four ranges. Band A: 170 - 490 kHz Band B: 490 - 1470... USA 47 Professional Radio Tube Tester 68 Advertised in National Radio News Vol 13 Oct-Nov 1948 No. 5 (Issued by NRI Training hea... USA 70 Oscilloscope 2500 USA 48 Signal Tracer Professional 34 6BA6 This signal tracer has a complete AM 4 band radio circuit incorporated. USA 50 Electronic Multitester USA 48 Professional Tube Tester 69 USA 47 Professional Resistor-Condensor Tester 112 6SL7 Capacitance/Resistance & Leakage Tester. Six capacitor ranges: 100pF to 200... USA 62 Tube Tester 71 NRI tube tester, 9 tube sockets. USA 50 Professional Resistor-Capacitor Tester 311 The RC-tester 311 is equipped with a magic eye as indicator for measurements. [rmxhdet-en]
@pollydor07
@pollydor07 7 ай бұрын
1970 I was stationed on top ATTAPEU HILLS west of HO CHI MINH trail Laos hired by the CIA officers in Laos . They trained us and transported to ATTAPEU hills plateau BOLOVENS hills code names was PS-38 , PS-72, -S-165 . The Laotian army was at PS-22 . We were KHMER republic Army served 1970-75 the fall of Saigon caused domino in S.E ASIA Laos Cambodia April 1975 .
@sarahpitcher3286
@sarahpitcher3286 7 ай бұрын
Is this Bemidji, Minnesota?
@StillmanSpinningSteel
@StillmanSpinningSteel 7 ай бұрын
Outstanding. I want floats on a Cessna 310
@jourwalis-8875
@jourwalis-8875 7 ай бұрын
And you don´t have to register your cameras either.....
@jourwalis-8875
@jourwalis-8875 7 ай бұрын
This demonstration of the modern computer editing was rather superfluous. I wanted to see more of the historical and old machines and procedures. Today I myself edit in Premiere Pro. But I have been editing in both the U-matic and Betacam formats back in the days.
@jourwalis-8875
@jourwalis-8875 7 ай бұрын
Could you video-tape the pictures from the first colour cameras?
@jourwalis-8875
@jourwalis-8875 7 ай бұрын
How could you overcome the problem when cutting and splicing the tape when the picture was cut at one point and the sound at another point?
@jourwalis-8875
@jourwalis-8875 7 ай бұрын
Well, didn´t colour TV start in the US already in 1953? So I have heard...
@joannstearns7297
@joannstearns7297 8 ай бұрын
My name is JoAnn and I am working at the Bear Mountain Fire Lookout this summer. I'm completely socked in with fog this morning so I thought I would organize the file drawers and came across a note in the back of the communication log binder. It lead me to your KZbin channel - which makes me think of my father - Ham Radio, EAA, Oshkosh, etc. I've been to several of the things you've included here so I and members of my family may ever show up in these. Thanks for the memories.
@erikakliem6661
@erikakliem6661 9 ай бұрын
Those of us who knew and flew often with Max Folsom will totally affirm this is totally plausible. I knew him at his Dad’s air service when he was a kid. Loved flying with all including Dick, Charlie Coe, and all. Fantastic memories for my whole family including my 3 sons.
@marcdepiolenc1880
@marcdepiolenc1880 9 ай бұрын
Jet flap?
@avmech2126
@avmech2126 9 ай бұрын
Worked as an A&P/IA at KSUA in Florida in the early 1990s, saw this beauty a few times. At the time the taxiways were barely wide enough for it to taxi.
@craigpetties1476
@craigpetties1476 10 ай бұрын
💯💯💯
@victor-th4qs
@victor-th4qs 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for the informative video. I live in Oregon. To me, South Dakota is fly over country. I was a former lookout, in SW Oregon. Worked four towers over the years. They are all automated now
@victor-th4qs
@victor-th4qs 10 ай бұрын
. I was a Ranger, Fire fighter. As most lookout staff.
@victor-th4qs
@victor-th4qs 10 ай бұрын
I worked 4 lookouts in Oregon. The real thing. Thank you for this video. My first visitor. After 3 months. An Army vet from the Vietnam War. Good man. He stayed a long while. 3 hours. But a smoke popped up in my area, while he was here. Above a cloud deck. I reported it.
@55pilot
@55pilot 10 ай бұрын
Brought me back to 1952. My first airline flight in a Chicago and Southern Airways DC-3 from St. Louis to Memphis. Came back to St. Louis in a Connie. Wait while I dry my eyes.
@ntvrthmn
@ntvrthmn 10 ай бұрын
Knowing that "we" put Japanese people into camps...I was surprised to learn we had such a language school. I'm retired Army, too young for even the Korean War, and I'm a fairly good linguist...but this wasn't something I had expected. He cites many parallels to the Palestine-Israeli present problem. Priceless interview here.