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Old December 24th 06, 01:41 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
Michael Black Michael Black is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 322
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ken scharf ) writes:
julian814 wrote:
Doug Smith W9WI wrote:
julian814 wrote:
All right, I'm hoping someone here can clue me into finding the one(s)
I want. What I need is a handbook that has schematics for tube
equipment circa the 1960's. I have a boxful of tubes from television
sets from that era, and I was hoping I could put together a receiver
from some of them. I do have the first volume of Impoverished Radio
Experimenter, which talks about using "newer" tubes in older
schematics, but the scant few Lindsay talks about aren't among the
tubes in my box.
How complex of a receiver are you looking to build?


Nothing too complex, two tubes or so. What I want to build is something
that looks like it's from a 1950's Cold War era post apocalyptic story.
I definitely want to use tubes, and I have some headphones from that
era as well. The receiver has to be able to drive the headphones. They
are NOT crystal headphones.

There are a PILE of simple tube circuits on
http://www.intio.or.jp/jf10zl/index.html .

Most of them use Japanese tubes (the site is in Japan, after allg) but
I would suggest in many cases you can figure out what U.S. tubes are
similar.


Fascinating, but I didn't see anything close to what I'm looking for.
Thanks anyway.


Ralph

I don't recall the url but I remember a 2-3 tube receiver from the 40's
that might be what you want. It was a simple superhet with a
regenerative detector. Used a 6k8 as the converter and a 6c8g as the
detector / audio.


They were called "supergainers" and apparently Frank Jones, of later
VHF fame, was a big proponent of them in the thirties.

The earlier Radio Handbook on that webpage someone posted about would
have them, the 1936 version or whatever. I didn't suggest downloading
that one since I had the impression the tubes available to the original
poster were miniature, and the book predates those.

Michael VE2BVW
k