Biography
Callsign R3T-100 was issued by RO RRR of Nizhny Novgorod region to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the radio amateur movement in Russia.
On July 28, 1924 the Council of People's Commissars (SNK) of the USSR adopted the “Law on Freedom of the Air” (the Decree “On Private Radio Receiving Stations” was published in the newspaper “Izvestia” on September 9 and in the September issue of the magazine “Radio Amateur”). which allowed citizens of the USSR to use individual radio receivers.
The first appearance on the air on KV happened on January 15, 1925, Fedor Lbov and Vladimir Petrov transmitted the first amateur radiogram under the call sign R1FL from Nizhny Novgorod, by the way, not having at that moment a receiver).
In 1926 in the magazine “Radiolyubitel” were published the names of the first amateur radio observers (SWL) with short-wave receivers:
- RK-1 - Gaukhman Theodore (Fedor) Abramovich (Yaroslavl, Svobody, 40-2; receiver according to the scheme of Reynartz - 0-V-2, later in Rybinsk: 93RB, eu2DF; in Leningrad: eu3DE, U1BP);
- RK-2 - Anikin Yuri (Georgy) Lukich (N.-Novgorod, Sverdlovskaya, 51; receiver 0-V-1, earlier illegally - R1UA; later: 39RA, U3VW) ;
- RK-3 - V.S. Vaimboym (Moscow, Prechistenka, 28-5; receiver 0-V-1, antenna 2 m, counterweight 15 m on the level of the 3rd floor) ;
- RK-4 - Vladimir Ivanovich Vaneyev (N.-Novgorod, Tikhonovskaya, 40-2; shortwave receiver “Mikrodin” [earlier illegally - R1WW; later: 12RA, in Leningrad - eu3DM, in Irkutsk - U0NB, in Moscow - U3DP]).
Many later famous shortwave operators went through the “school of observers”, as well as later famous contesters and DX-men
Source: QRZ.RU https://www.qrz.ru/db/r3t-100
There are already more than 5000 logs in the hardware w/ R3T-100
Logs are carefully poured on each of the services
https://hamlog.online
https://www.eqsl.cc
https://qso.su