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On Jan 11, 6:49�pm, "Michael J. Coslo" wrote:
What manner of batteries did they use? I'm imagining salt water batteries, but not sure. I'm not sure what you mean by "salt water batteries", Mike. The book and QST articles only mention "dry batteries", which in 1947 pretty much meant carbon-zinc batteries. They A batteries wore down before they ran out of B batteries, so some B batteries were taken apart and resoldered to do the A job. (High humidity was a majorproblem.) "Wet" storage batteries were rejected because of the danger of acid spillage. A hand-cranked generator was the backup source. They were on the raft 101 days, so they must have had a considerable battery supply. btw, the transmitter designs were based on QST articles. They used quick-heating 2E30 tubes, so they only used power when transmitting. The receiver was almost certainly modified to reduce the battery drain. No need for the last audio stage if headphones were used, saving a considerable amount of power. No need for AVC or dial lights, either. Still, a heater drain of over 2A would result. An amazing adventure, even today. 73 de Jim, N2EY |