'It's like Frankenstein's lab': Massive 78-year-old transmitter for sale - Action News
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New Brunswick

'It's like Frankenstein's lab': Massive 78-year-old transmitter for sale

As part of the decommissioning and clean up of the former RCI site, the new owner is hoping to sell the massive 1940 RCA 50 kW shortwave transmitter.

Mi'kmaq group hopes it finds 'a good home'

This photo was taken when the Radio-Canada International site was still broadcasting in 2012. (Thomas Witherspoon)

Apiece of radio history could be yours for $5,000.

A1940RCA 50kW shortwave transmitter, located at the decommissionedRadio Canada International Site in Sackville, is up for sale.

The transmitter is a small room,about fivemetres long by two-and-a-half metres wide, and it's filled with lever, buttons, glass tubes and wires.

The property was bought in February 2017 byMi'gmawe'lTplu'taqnnIncorporated (MTI), a group of Mi'Kmaq First Nations. Jesse John Simon, the group's executive director, said workers are still taking electronic components apartand removing old equipment that won't be needed now that property is no longer a broadcast site.

The former RCI building was bought by Migmawel Tplutaqnn Incorporated (MTI), a group of Mi'Kmaq First Nations in New Brunswick. No decision has been made about what will happen there, but Jesse Simon, executive director of MTI said, "We have nothing set in stone yet, we have out technicians looking at every opportunity and were not in a rush. (Tori Weldon/CBC)
The old transmitter doesn't work anymore,said Marc Goldstein, an mechanicalengineer helping to take out equipment no longer needed, addingitwas decommissionedin the 1970s.

"It took three men to operate this radio," he said.

"We're trying to find a home for it."

Lots of character

Goldsteinsaidthe group is asking$5,000 for the transmitter.While it no longer works, he said it does have character.

"It's like Frankenstein's lab," said Goldstein.

Marc Goldstein is an electrical engineer who is working on the site, helping to decommission and clean up the site. He said he uses old diagrams to help find wiring. (Tori Weldon/CBC)
Tasked with finding a buyer, he reached out to Amanda Dawn Christie. She made an art film based on the towers andthe site's rich history.Christie passed word of the historic transmitter via her social media accounts.

"I emailed her asking if there was a home for this thing and she started a wildfire," Goldstein said.

While people interested in the transmitter have been reaching out, there are no takers so far.

"A couple of the fellows thought this was still operational. They wanted to use it as a radio, but now they know it's a museum piece, there's still some interest in the components."

Rich history

The transmitter was kept on site so visitorscould get a sense of RCI's history. Opened in 1944, the first RCI broadcast went out over the airwaves, transmitted to spots around the globe from Sackville's 13 towers.

This photo was taken at the site in 2012 a few months before the Radio Canada International towers stopped broadcasting. (Thomas Witherspoon)
But after budget cuts in 2012, CBC announced that the shortwave service would end after 67 years of broadcasting. The towers were taken down after a buyer couldn't be found for the site as it was.

Simon said the group has hopes for the 222-acre property. But for the time being, the group plans to remove everything not needed, while maintaining the building.

Part of the RCA 50 KW transmitter on the former RCI radio tower site. The property was bought by a group of New Brunswick Mi'kmaq First Nations last February. The 1940 transmitter doesn't work but is for sale. (Tori Weldon/CBC)
"What we want to do is generate some economic development for the First Nations, and this is our first foray into a multi community investment," said Simon.

He said some ideas already brought forward were medical marijuana, honey productionand retail. The group is consideringoptions at the moment, but Simon said one important factor iswhatever is developed on the site must be a good environmental fit.

The site is near wetlands, and the group doesn't want any heavy industry damaging it.