Note
Ham Radio, May 1971, p. 76.
Ham Radio, Aug 1971, p. 57.
The unit shown in ad is just the control head. The actual transceiver is designed to be trunk mounted. Still, it looks almost "home brew." Its unlabeled controls and unadorned cabinet give it the feel of the prototype it may well have been. And the power output of "20–30 watts" is a considerable spread.
10 independent Receive-Transmit Channels
.34, .82, .88, .94 transmit - .76, .82, .88, .94 receive supplied
20-30 watt output
Frequency stability .W1% -20' t o +60*C
0.3 uV sensitivity for 20 db quieting