To be fair: at the time of the Nautical Commanders introduction it was the ideal transmitter for r/c submarines -- particularly the two-stick (two-throttle) layout which lended itself to throttle-stern planes on the left side of the transmitter case. And, we have to keep this in mind, computer radios, back then, with all their taken-for-granted attributes, were just coming on the scene but were very expensive and a mystery to most of us.
You have a nice collectors item, buzzby. Like the buggy-whip, time and improvements have passed this ground-breaking piece of equipment by.
David
Nautical Commander
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i don't really know much about it.i purchased it a long time ago for a 1/8 scale hydro i built.looks antiquated compared to todays transmitters.3 PhotosLeave a comment:
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And Yes there are those who convert/have them converted to 2.4 for that "antique" look on period surface boats-there is a market for them , but probably not on RC subs...Leave a comment:
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Nope. (Say someone still uses one, so what?) AM modulation, no easy pre-sets to the channels, clunky transmitter stick and slider arrangement .
Good for paper-weight only.
What is this post, buzzby, a survey? To what end?
DavidLeave a comment:
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