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In Reply to: Valvo EZ80 with gold pins posted by Seán on February 21, 2007 at 01:01:46:
Sean,I've had a fair number of EZ80's, EZ81's, U709's, etc. pass through my hands and I have NEVER seen one w/gold pins. Not saying they don't exist ... just saying I've never seen one. Can you post a picture? A definite oddity.
Follow Ups:
Currently I am running a pair of the gold pin Valvo EZ80 in the external power supply for my Border Patrol SE300B. I am due to leave for Scotland, tomorrow, and presently haven’t the time to remove the case etc. to photograph the tube — there are more pressing things to be done before departure. I will be back home by the middle of next week and will have the time, then, to photograph.I have not posted a photograph before, and, having quickly read relevant section of FAQs, can’t see the browse button option mentioned there. What does one do? Alternatively, I could e-mail photo to you.
Sean, do not put yourself out. I just thought if it was someting you could easily do ... Have a good trip to Scotland!
I need to find out how to post images, for, surely, at some time or another, the value of posting an image will arise again. So, I’ll look into the matter next week.’Looking forward to another visit to Scotland and thank you for the sentiment.
’Taking the opportunity on this occasion to hear a concert at a concert hall I have never visited before, namely, the Royal Concert Hall in Glasgow, with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra under Lazarev performing Sibelius’s Violin Concerto and Elgar’s Second Symphony, on Saturday; before travelling on north to Sutherland, to visit the kind friends of my wife’s late aunt who died in 2005, resident in Sutherland, and visit her grave in the Highlands in the Strath of Kildonan. We only occasionally find the time to visit — indeed, this is the first occasion since the funeral in the summer of 2005 — the journey from home to the Strath being well over half the length of the British mainland and into a landscape less remote in some ways than it was thirty years ago but so peripheral to the contemporary order of things and slowly dying as a site of human habitation.
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