Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #11   Report Post  
Old March 8th 09, 09:58 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Aug 2008
Posts: 53
Default Anybody know what this receiver is?



Thanks to all who weighed-in with their ideas.

I too feel that this is a homebrew artifact although I know in the 1930s
there were many kits sold by companies that used
readily available parts such as the National vernier. I am waiting for a
copy of the book suggested by K7FM and will compare the schematic to what I
find underneath this receiver. Frank Jones also had a very similar receiver
in his Radio Handbook which is why I am anxious to compare it to the E&E
Radio Handbook version but there are subtle differences in the Jones
version.

Also, it was not uncommon in those days (up until the 1950s) for a homebrew
project to appear in a magazine and...voila'...it soon appeared as a kit for
sale in Popular Mechanics a year later, which is why I am still scratching
my head a little. In the early 1950s "Radio-TV Experimenter" ran a
construction article for a home "radio broadcaster/phono amplifier." Their
schematic was identical and photo of their prototype was nearly identical to
the Knight Kit "radio broadcaster/amplifier" that I built from a kit in 1963
as a very young kid. Old Allied catalogues show the device appearing a
couple years after the article appeared. (By the way, that humble little
functional toy is still in regular service to this day as I transmit old
time radio shows to antique radios I have throughout the house.)

Who needs HDTV, tetrabytes and Blue ray when you've got an autodyne in the
house?

WA9VLK

  #12   Report Post  
Old March 9th 09, 01:42 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Mar 2008
Posts: 618
Default Anybody know what this receiver is?

On Sun, 8 Mar 2009, SX-25 wrote:



Thanks to all who weighed-in with their ideas.

I too feel that this is a homebrew artifact although I know in the 1930s
there were many kits sold by companies that used
readily available parts such as the National vernier. I am waiting for a copy
of the book suggested by K7FM and will compare the schematic to what I find
underneath this receiver. Frank Jones also had a very similar receiver in his
Radio Handbook which is why I am anxious to compare it to the E&E Radio
Handbook version but there are subtle differences in the Jones version.

The Frank Jones radio handbook and the other radio handbook are the same
thing.

At some point, I'm not sure when or why, he gave up editorship of the
book and it morphed a bit. But even as it published its last few
editions, reference was made to the humble beginnings. The 23rd edition,
from 1987 (which I think was the last), has a foreward by Frank Jones
where he talks about the early days, and then preface by Bill Orr where
he acknowledges Frank Jones early involvement.

Since it's the same book, unless one was printed in a much later edition
than the other, there's no reason to believe it's not the same article.
It's no different from the ARRL Handbook, where things would remain
multiple years, but over a long enough period of time the contents would
be quite different.


Also, it was not uncommon in those days (up until the 1950s) for a homebrew
project to appear in a magazine and...voila'...it soon appeared as a kit for
sale in Popular Mechanics a year later, which is why I am still scratching my
head a little. In the early 1950s "Radio-TV Experimenter" ran a construction
article for a home "radio broadcaster/phono amplifier." Their schematic was
identical and photo of their prototype was nearly identical to the Knight Kit
"radio broadcaster/amplifier" that I built from a kit in 1963 as a very young
kid. Old Allied catalogues show the device appearing a couple years after the
article appeared. (By the way, that humble little functional toy is still in
regular service to this day as I transmit old time radio shows to antique
radios I have throughout the house.)

And it was never uncommon for someone to put together the parts to build
specific construction articles, not so much a kit as an aid to the home
builder. A company would collect the parts, maybe do the metalwork, and
then the builder didn't have to track down the parts. Wayne Green did
this when he was editor of "CQ", and maybe a bit after "73" started,
and even circa 1971 the ARRL Handbook had an ad in the back from B&W
selling kits of parts for specific ARRL projects.

For that matter, then we saw the rise of kit companies that created kits
and then sold articles to the magazines aobut the projects. You could
build them from the details in the article (well, up until the computer
age when the schematics got too big for the magazines and you'd at the
very least have to order a set of plans), or buy the kit. A lot of
companies started in Popular Electronics (and the other hobby electronic
magazines) this way, including what became PAIA and SouthWest Technical
Products. In the ham magazines, Hamtronics did this quite a bit in
the seventies, and the same company under a different name was doing
it in the sixties. VHF Engineering did it too.

Michael VE2BVW

  #13   Report Post  
Old March 9th 09, 02:00 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Aug 2008
Posts: 80
Default Anybody know what this receiver is?


"Michael Black" wrote in message
mple.net...
On Sun, 8 Mar 2009, SX-25 wrote:



Thanks to all who weighed-in with their ideas.

I too feel that this is a homebrew artifact although I know in the 1930s
there were many kits sold by companies that used
readily available parts such as the National vernier. I am waiting for a
copy of the book suggested by K7FM and will compare the schematic to what
I find underneath this receiver. Frank Jones also had a very similar
receiver in his Radio Handbook which is why I am anxious to compare it to
the E&E Radio Handbook version but there are subtle differences in the
Jones version.

The Frank Jones radio handbook and the other radio handbook are the same
thing.

At some point, I'm not sure when or why, he gave up editorship of the
book and it morphed a bit. But even as it published its last few
editions, reference was made to the humble beginnings. The 23rd edition,
from 1987 (which I think was the last), has a foreward by Frank Jones
where he talks about the early days, and then preface by Bill Orr where
he acknowledges Frank Jones early involvement.

Since it's the same book, unless one was printed in a much later edition
than the other, there's no reason to believe it's not the same article.
It's no different from the ARRL Handbook, where things would remain
multiple years, but over a long enough period of time the contents would
be quite different.


Also, it was not uncommon in those days (up until the 1950s) for a
homebrew project to appear in a magazine and...voila'...it soon appeared
as a kit for sale in Popular Mechanics a year later, which is why I am
still scratching my head a little. In the early 1950s "Radio-TV
Experimenter" ran a construction article for a home "radio
broadcaster/phono amplifier." Their schematic was identical and photo of
their prototype was nearly identical to the Knight Kit "radio
broadcaster/amplifier" that I built from a kit in 1963 as a very young
kid. Old Allied catalogues show the device appearing a couple years after
the article appeared. (By the way, that humble little functional toy is
still in regular service to this day as I transmit old time radio shows
to antique radios I have throughout the house.)

And it was never uncommon for someone to put together the parts to build
specific construction articles, not so much a kit as an aid to the home
builder. A company would collect the parts, maybe do the metalwork, and
then the builder didn't have to track down the parts. Wayne Green did
this when he was editor of "CQ", and maybe a bit after "73" started,
and even circa 1971 the ARRL Handbook had an ad in the back from B&W
selling kits of parts for specific ARRL projects.

For that matter, then we saw the rise of kit companies that created kits
and then sold articles to the magazines aobut the projects. You could
build them from the details in the article (well, up until the computer
age when the schematics got too big for the magazines and you'd at the
very least have to order a set of plans), or buy the kit. A lot of
companies started in Popular Electronics (and the other hobby electronic
magazines) this way, including what became PAIA and SouthWest Technical
Products. In the ham magazines, Hamtronics did this quite a bit in
the seventies, and the same company under a different name was doing
it in the sixties. VHF Engineering did it too.

Michael VE2BVW


What happened to Wayne Green? Was he the NSD never say die) bloke? If so,
I'll always remember his detailed serve to a previous teacher who was
negligent as well as incompetent. He named him and the school and added 'So
sue me'!


  #14   Report Post  
Old March 10th 09, 02:14 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 113
Default Wayne Green, still going strong

MoiInAust wrote:
What happened to Wayne Green? Was he the NSD never say die) bloke? If so,
I'll always remember his detailed serve to a previous teacher who was
negligent as well as incompetent. He named him and the school and added 'So
sue me'!



Hi,

73 Magazine is gone, but Wayne Green W2NSD is still editorializing:
http://www.waynegreen.com/wayne/news.html

73,
Ed Knobloch
  #15   Report Post  
Old March 10th 09, 05:38 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Aug 2008
Posts: 80
Default Wayne Green, still going strong


"Edward Knobloch" wrote in message
...
MoiInAust wrote:
What happened to Wayne Green? Was he the NSD never say die) bloke? If
so, I'll always remember his detailed serve to a previous teacher who was
negligent as well as incompetent. He named him and the school and added
'So sue me'!



Hi,

73 Magazine is gone, but Wayne Green W2NSD is still editorializing:
http://www.waynegreen.com/wayne/news.html

73,
Ed Knobloch


Crikey! That's Wayne all right! How does he do it? I'll email him but
probably he'll be too busy to answer... Thanks for the heads up

73 indeed




  #16   Report Post  
Old March 12th 09, 08:31 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 41
Default Wayne Green, still going strong

"MoiInAust" wrote in :

http://www.waynegreen.com/wayne/news.html


Still sufering from crainial rectosis as well I see ;-)

--
Panzer

Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
navtex receiver/AM receiver sensitivity bigorangebus Homebrew 4 February 13th 07 06:33 PM
FA SP-600 Receiver Knobs, S-40 Receiver, KWM-1 and more Charlie Hugg Swap 0 January 6th 07 03:37 PM
Looking for SW receiver jacques Shortwave 14 October 19th 06 01:11 AM
FS AN/GRR-24 Receiver UHF 243 MHz Guard Receiver **THE-RFI-EMI-GUY** Scanner 1 May 28th 06 03:25 AM
FS AN/GRR-24 Receiver UHF 243 MHz Guard Receiver **THE-RFI-EMI-GUY** Swap 1 May 28th 06 03:25 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:43 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Radio"

 

Copyright © 2017