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Dave
The British Vintage Wireless Society (BVWS) has a regular magazine. I'm sure their members would be interested. "Dave J." wrote in message ... In on Sat, 07 Nov 2009 09:27:04 -0600, in rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors, 'Tim Wescott' wrote: if I were willing to go through the bother of figuring out shipping and all that kerfuffle, but I'd much rather avoid the trouble. I'm willing to accept slightly below what it's worth, or rather roughly what it's worth, but with free shipping (ie delivery, by myself, in a car!). The sticking point is finding someone within 70 or 80 miles who'd be interested. I'm based in Sheffield but regularly travel to N.Wales, so anywhere close to the relevant motorways counts as accessible. Likewise pretty much anywhere in Yorkshire. [1] And of matching it to a homebrew interface card, bolted onto my prized ZX81, running a homebrew RTTY/Morse translator! What a lovely mixture of museum exhibits that would be, what a span of years; if I could only find the relevant bits and have a go at resurrection :-) Thanks for any input, sorry for the distracted ramblings ;¬) Oh, and it's a Mark IV Avo. If it's what we call a 'tube tester' over on this side of the pond, i.e. a serviceman's that you stick a tube into and it tells you if the tube is good, you may want to keep it around as a tool to keep the receiver alive. I think it's a pretty fancy tool. Afaict it measures pretty much everything of a valve's performance and allows you to set each voltage appropriately for the various measurements. The description given by one site is "The AVO Mark 4 Valve Characteristic Meter comprises 19 valve holders. input selector switch and variable operating parameters for testing valves. Provision is made for by means of plug-in adaptors to cater for newly introduced valve bases." If you (or anyone else for that matter) are sufficiently curious, there are some beautifully clear pics, from several angles, large and clear enough to read the function of each control at http://digilander.libero.it/pasqua49...ic%20meter.htm or, to avoid word-wrap hassle, at http://tinyurl.com/AvoMkIV Thanks for the reply anyhow, I suppose it's ebay or nothing. I'm not aware of any antique-radio magazines in the UK or I'd consider advertising it there. It's worth enough to make for a fractionally improved Christmas :-) -- Dave Johnson |
#2
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In message , MoiInAust
writes The British Vintage Wireless Society (BVWS) has a regular magazine. I'm sure their members would be interested. In the right quarters, those valve testers are quite highly prized. Very, very few 'ordinary' UK radio amateurs would be interested - unless they had an interest in vintage equipment. The BVWS seems by far the place to ask. -- Ian |
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