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In article , "Rick Gray"
writes: I plan on building a crystal radio and need to get some 1N34A diodes. (I figure about 50 would last me a lifetime). Can anyone recommend a good supplier who has reasonable shipping charges? I see a bunch of people selling them but I don't want to spend more on shipping then I do on parts. An average shipping charge on a small quantity of parts such as 100 or less small-signal diodes is roughly $9US. At www.circuitspecialists.com you can get 1N34s for 14 cents at 100+ or 16 cents at 10 to 99 or 17 cents at quantities 1 to 9. If you purchased 100 diodes the total price would be equal to 23 cents per diode. Buying 10 would be equal to $1.06 per diode. But that's if ALL you bought was the diodes. Circuit Specialists (prompt good supplier) has lots of hobbyist electronics and some nifty deals on instruments (check out the Protek 100 MHz dual-trace scope for $500...new, not "seconds"). For orders over $50 you can get a nice promotional item (last year's item was a nice 3 1/2 digit DVM. good all-around meter). Going to www.oselectronics.com (Ocean State Electronics in Rhode Island) you can find some nice prices there on many things plus lots and lots of single and multi-gang variable capacitors (expensive because those are rare items nowadays). Digikey in Minnesota has all sorts of new components of a wide variety and will waive shipping charges on orders over $25 (?). www.digikey.com Until chain drug stores carry germanium diodes on easy-to-grab sales racks, expect to pay at least $9 to get any small, low-weight mail order delivery via FedEx or UPS. Or go to a Radio Shack store and pay much more (if they have it) and spend gas driving to it. Also does anyone know where to get the old Quaker Oats containers? The ones I see in the stores have plastic tops. "Plastic tops" won't hurt any hand-wound coil done in the old, old traditional manner of crystal sets. If it has a metal band somewhere in that circular container, you've got big trouble from the "coupled shorted turn" effect lowering the inductance. [plastics used in most packaging are non-conductive] A better bet is to visit an office supply store chain such as Office Depot or Office Max and check out the cardboard mailing tubes both carry. All kinds of diameters and lengths to choose from. The cardboard is thicker and sturdier and will have some slight effect on copying a traditional oat-box coil former, but not over a few percent off. For a VERY sturdy coil former, DIY stores usually carry ABS waste line pipe stock, diameters roughly to 4 inches with thick walls. ABS (acrylonitrile butadiene styrene) plastic is non- conductive, non-magnetic. Check out the plumbing section at those stores. retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |
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