Saturday, April 26, 2008

Boyd "Tom" Sigler's Bio, at age 83, 1998 for Ham Newsletter


MEMBER PROFILE: BOYD SIGLER, AE4LV:
Our member profile this month is from Boyd Sigler, AE4LV, who lives in Louisville. Since getting back on the air recently, Boyd has become very regular on KYN, working his average checkins into the twenties in the last couple of months. He send the interesting biography below, plus a copy of an article he wrote for the ARTS Club of Louisville, describing how his present antenna got put in place and thanking them for the help.
I remember Boyd from years back, when he used to check in to KYN, but I couldn't trust my memory and knew him as "Tom" back in the W4BAZ days of KYN. It's nice to find out once in a while that your memory was correct, since Tom is part of his name. The last time I saw him was at a "Lidfest" at Kincaid Lake State Park in Northern Kentucky. At that time, he was in a wheelchair after his bike accident, and he could really make the wheelchair scoot, and you could tell he was anxious to be out of it.
As you can tell from the story, Boyd is a person of many interests and when he undertakes something, from the Extra exam to riding that bicycle on long trips, he gets it done. I will put the antenna article on the web page with his story, and probably put all of it here in a later issue. Enjoy his story:

" I first saw the light of day on Wednesday morning August 25th., 1915 in a farm house at the head of Sharps Run in Pleasants County W.Va. A couple of years after my birth my folks separated and my mother and I moved in with "Bonna", my maternal grandmother in Norwood,OH. Bonna died when I was 10. Three years later I built a radio as a science project in grade school. It was a one tube affair with buss wiring - square wire with no insulation bent at right angles. That was state of the art at that time. As I recall it worked until the batteries wore out. My teacher was building a television with a mechanical scanner - a disk with a bunch of holes in it. He had trouble with the sync. That's understandable. Don't remember if he ever got it to work or not. That was in 1929.
During high school, I worked in a photo lab. We had the second floor and shared the first with a radio store. Used to go over and loaf in the radio service department in my spare time. When I got old enough to drive, they used to let me make service runs. I would take a caddy of tubes and a tube tester. If I couldn't get it to work I would take out the chassis and bring it back to the shop. After high school I enrolled in the University of Cincinnati Engineering Evening School. Took Electrical since they didn't offer a Radio Engineering Degree. Had a day job wiring controls for The American Laundry Machinery Co. During the Depression people began to wash their own clothes and the laundry machinery business went to pot. I wound up Installing dial systems in the telephone co. for Western Electric. They were replacing their operators with dials. Finally worked my self out of a job. So much for the best laid plans of mice and men.
During the Depression, nobody had any money. S0, that spawned the credit business. My mother worked for a dollar down and a dollar a week furniture store. I became the guy who collected the dollar a week.
I did a brief stint with the Coast G uard Reserves in Gary, IN. Our mission was to protect the steel mills from enemy submarine's. We were successful. The only action we saw was trying to pick up a blonde in the Trianon Ballroom in Chicago.
One thing led to another and I wound up in Hazard running a Finance co. from 1945-1950. Pretty soon after the War, people started to heat their homes with gas and the coal business went to pot. (As did business in Hazard) I wound up in Louisville with five kids.
My son and I went over to see Russ Palmer and got our Novice Ticket. At that time you could get a Conditional License. We went back to Russ and flunked the code. We practiced some more and Russ told us that the FCC Engineer was in town and advised us to go down and take our General. We passed.! My son went off to the Coast Guard Acelectronic supply house and his father fixed TV's in his basement.
I built a Heath kit receiver and transmitter and fooled around with DX. Had an old dipole with one leg thrown over the roof. It got wrapped. around the stack coming out of the commode. It worked pretty well. Worked Barnahl, Russia on it, but it bothered me that it was wrapped around that pipe. So I borrowed a forty foot ladder and climbed up on the roof and unhooked it. It never worked after that, and my son had gone to the academy and I didn't have anybody to climb around on the roof. So, I gave up dx, joined MARS and went into traffic handling. Also worked KYN. The net manager at that time was W4BAZ, J.B. Wathen.
The kids grew up and quieted down, and I felt more comfortable up stairs so I gave up ham radio for a while. When they were young I couldn't stand the din and retreated to my shack in the basement.
My daughter, The one born in Hazard, had gone to Eastern Ky. University, and was a Phys. Ed. major. We decided to do triathlons. I bought a bicycle and while I was still in the white knuckle stage I fell off of it and broke my hip. W4WZU, another frustrated engineer with whom I had worked in the Insurance business for twenty years, gave me a two meter rig to play with while I was mending and I got hooked on Ham radio again.
By that time I had retired and decided to get my Extra. Got some tapes and listened to them until I almost memorized them. Encouraged by W4XT I went over to see Otis and passed it on the second try by the skin of my teeth. Kept my old call until 1995. I had just come back from a bicycle trip to Michigan. I was riding real good when I got too close to the edge and broke my scapula and helmet. The bike wreck wasn't too bad but I picked up a staph infection in the Hospital that about did me in. I used my 2 meter rig in the Jewish Hospital but when they sent me to a skilled nursing facility to pump anti-biotics in me for seven weeks the administrator said I couldn't use it because it might louse up a patient's pacemaker. I used it any way, figuring the worse they could do was to kick me out and they wouldn't do that because of the revenue loss.
While I was in the Frasier Rehab Center I was working the wide area two meter net, when a guy broke in and asked if anybody could handle traffic for New Albany IN. Told him I could; I took the message and the nurse wrote it down as I received it. Some guy had died at sea and they were trying to get word to his old.
skipper. He seemed pleased to get the message
I went down to my daughters in Lexington to recuperate and took my HF rig with me. Was working the low end of twenty. Must have been sending pretty sloppy, when a guy from New York broke in and asked my what class I was. Well, I thought, I will put a stop to that and applied for an Extra type call. (2X2, editor)
My broken hip had deteriorated, and they put in a new one, This one is supposed to last ten years and the IRS says I only have 6.4 years left. If you know of anyone that needs a three year hip, I'll make a deal.
I went hack to Louisville. My wife of fifty years died in 92 and the kids have all grown and their kids have kids and I couldn't maintain the old homestead so I sold it after 40 yrs. I Moved to the 13th floor of a high rise. Thought all I would have to do was hang a wire out the window and I could work the world. Wrong!! (See the WEBSITE article or next NL about the antenna ordeal!)

73, boydsiigler@juno.com

Boyd, AE4LV, at his station.

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2 comments:

Richard Pomeroy said...

Boyd Sigler should be listed as age 83 and the date as 1998. When I posted the original article, I mistakenly was thinking that the '73 by his name was his age, but was a Ham notation for best wishes or some similar notation.

wm tho sigler ii said...

I saw the date discrepancy, but din;t know how to easily fix it..
I type in Mott Haven, but with Luddite fon opportunities.

I hope to connect with Kathy's Colin this pm..

bil