Tavaniotis..................SV1KE (silent key) 3.PolycarposPsomiadis..............SV1AZ (now N2DOE) 4.Aghis Cazazis......................SV1CA (silent key) 5.NikosKatselis.....................SV1NK (silent key) 6.GeorgeZarifis...............SV1SP/SV6SP (now SV1AA) 7.NasosCoucoulis....................SV1SM(silent key)8.GeorgeYiapapas....................SV1GY (now QRT) 9.Menelaos Paidousis.................SV1MP 10.Norman Joly........................SV1RX (now G3FNJ)In 1952 Costas Karayiannis who ran a big business called RADIO KARAYIANNI published an amazingly comprehensive book entitled ELLINIKI RADIOFONIA which means 'Greek Broadcasting'.It contained a vast treasure of information on many subjects allied to broadcasting, and there was a page entitled DAWN (1930-1940) which dealt with ******* radio activity in Greece before World War II.It confirmed most of the names listed above as can be seen in the photo-copy of the original Greek text, and it mentioned three others: George Gerardos SV1AG, (silent key), S.Stefanou and Mikes Psalidas who was allocated the callsign SV1AF 20 years later, though he, like many others had come on the air after the end of the war with an unofficial callsign.
Were all these operators who functioned strictly in accordance with international regulations pirates? In my view they were certainly not pirates.If the State was officially unaware of the existence of ******* radio how could they apply for licences and be issued with official callsigns?
Later in this book N2DOE describes how a handful of amateurs hadprepared draft legislation in 1937 at the request of Stefanos Eleftheriou of the Ministry but the outbreak of World War II in September 1939 had prevented him from taking any action in this connection.
The island of Crete in southern Greece was first heard on the air in 1938 when George Zarifis came on 40 metre CW using the callsign SV6SP.His transmitter consisted of a single metal 6L6 crystal oscillator with an input of about 7 watts.For reception he used an American CASE broadcast receiver in which he had fitted a BFO.In a very short period he had about 500 QSOs.
Forty four years later some of the younger generation of operators who had not heard of this early activity from Crete allocated the prefix SV9 to the island.Rather illogically they allocated SV8 to all the other islands irrespective of their geographical position and with yet another exception -- SV5 for the twelve Dodecanese islands.
General George Zarifis (retired) SV1AA as he is now, had started playing with 'wireless' a long long time before he went to Crete.In 1921 when he was in the 4th form at school he had bought two kits of parts from France and put them together with the help of his fellow-student George Grabinger.The kit consisted of a bright emitter triode in an oscillating circuit.The heater supply was a 4 volt accumulator, and a dozen or so dry cells, with an earphone in series, supplied the anode voltage.The tuned circuit consisted of a coil with a small pressure operated capacitor across it.A carbon microphone with a dry cell in series was connected to two or three turns of wire wound over the coil.The assembled kits were tested close to each other and they worked.Later, when they had connected random length wire antennas to the circuits the two schoolboys were able to talk to each other across the 400 metres which separated their homes.These contacts quite definitely heralded the dawn of ******* radio in Greece at about the same time as the 1921 Transatlantic tests were taking place.
On the 1st of September 1939 Hitler's armies invaded Poland.Great Britain which had a treaty with Poland was compelled to declare war on Germany two days later on the 3rd, followed by France.Canada and Australia declared war on Germany the next day.All the radio amateurs inAthens immediately dismantled their transmitters and dispersed the components.
So ended the first phase of ******* radio activity in Greece.