Visited the swap meet at the Vintage Radio and Communications Museum in Windsor, CT last weekend to sell some excess junk, and find new bargains. Most of the tables were previously reserved (mine was), and that surprised me because the indoor winter swaps traditionally don't see much action. The morning was busy, and it stayed busy until about 11:30 when the museum announced that everything on their sale table was now free. I walked away with two 1970's vintage Icom IC-30A 70cm FM transceivers with a full load of crystals, and two different editions of the old Red and Black ARRL Single Sideband For Radio Amateur book, one from the 1950s and another from the 1970s. The Windsor swap meet gets a lot of audiophiles, media collectors, retro-computing enthusiasts, and other non-ham radio nerds so it's a good swap if you're looking for oddball radio stuff without a lot of competition. The SSB books are useful if you want to build your own HF sideband gear, or maybe work on older SSB rigs you own. I'm an advocate of having gear you can fix yourself, and having the knowledge to fix it. DIYing your own stuff is the final step in that process. The Icom 440 rigs are old-school solid state construction that you can repair with a modest workbench, and will outlast a Baofeng by decades. That's not bad for stuff that was about to get tossed in a dumpster.