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![]() See below... On Wed, 11 Apr 2007, NS7F wrote: Hello all, I have discovered how much fun tubes can be, and am in the process of planning one or more transmitters to go along with my 2-tube regenerative receiver. Now, I'm only 23 years old, so I'm in the process of researching hollow state technology. Could you please put together a short list of the "best" ARRL handbook editions? I have 99 and 05- I'm just looking for a few years to watch for on amazon, etc. Of course, recommendations for other books would be appreciated, too, but I'm on a tight budget... Thank you very much in advance for your advice. Ross, NS7F I am 63, and retired, and am also having a ball building my own tube gear. Generally, solid state began to take over all the low level circuitry in the ARRL handbooks in the 1960s and particularly afterwards. There was a blend (between tube and solid state) at some interval but I don't look at the later handbooks at all any more. My handbooks are from early 1960s and go back. The "Radio Handbook" by Bill Orr, also has editions going back, annually or almost annually, for a long time and has a different flavor but also good, and alternative presentations including very nice schematics and photos. The Radio Society of Great Britain (I think) also sponsored ham radio handbooks but I think may also be geared to European tube types which are different (at least to some degree) than US "valves" (as they call them), but you might try to do some research on that. You might want to think about the tube evolutions: the very early tubes are harder to find and more expensive and particularly the tube sockets. Around the 1940s we had mostly octal base (key plus 8 pins) and they are easy to find from tube supliers, but many were metal (not good if you like to see those filaments light up). If you like battery filament types (1.4 v for single C cell, 2.0 v for lead-acid cells, and 2.8 v, for two C cells in series) you have a small variety of nice 7 pin tubes (eg. 1T4, 1U4, etc), and a few 8 pin octal tubes (eg. 1A7, 1H4, etc). Prior tubes had poorer specs and the sockets are hard to find. The so-called Loctal tubes (very thin pins and special 'click in' keys)..you just about can't find sockets for and they would be the hardest to build homemade sockets for, and, they themselves are not easy to find, either (I think they were mostly for car radios). Most of these tubes will run plate voltages on a handful of 9 volt batteries you can get at Dollar Tree for two for a buck, and you hook them in series with each other since the connectors are all male-female and otherwise don't need much to hold them together if you just lay them on the table and hook aligator clips to the terminal negative and terminal positive. A lot of the earlier tubes have difficult to find sockets (but Radio-Daze, in New York, has a lot of sockets). Public libraries can be a resource but be aware that most smaller ones "discard" their older holdings and replace them with newer versions. Your best bet is to ask at the reference desk to find out how you can find which library has the older editions. The _central_ or _main_ branch (in your state) may be the only one that keeps older editions but you should be able to arrange an inter-library loan where you can borrow the book for, say, two weeks, and then if you like it, look for a copy on Amazon.com or www.addall.com or www.bookfinder.com or www.abe.com or www.alibris.com where you will find used copies at generally very reasonable prices. To find booksales where used books are very cheap, go to: www.booksalefinder.com Good luck. |
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