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D Peter Maus wrote: Telamon wrote: In article , D Peter Maus wrote: Damn...that goes back some. My first radio was a Remco crystal set. From there it was a crystal radio made by Bell Manufacturing in St Louis under the Futura brand. Then a Trancel 8 transistor. Followed by an onslaught of AM transistor radios. The first shortwave was a Hallicrafters S-53A. Followed in short order by my grandfather's Hammarlund BC-794 (Super Pro). The Halli, I gave to a kid who's father I worked with to start his own swl hobby. The Super Pro got a recapping, and sits on the desk next to my RX-350, and an assortment of hundreds of others. It got out of control pretty fast. And thank God, stayed out of control. Me too. Mine was a blue color not black but otherwise looked just like this one. http://www.peeblesoriginals.com/vintage/Remco-crystal-radio.jpg Yep, that was it. Mine was blue, too. Still have it somewhere. My Dad made a sloping wire antenna out the back window. I could pick up a number of stations very well with it. I made some minor mods to it to sharpen up selectivity. I was kind of surrounded by 50k blowtorches, so it was easy to be overwhelmed by a single signal. My grandfather showed me how to pad the input to bring some of that overload under control. Later on I bought a radio kit with a crystal mounted in a piece of lead for one contact and it had a Cat's whisker contact for the other side. You had to find a "hot spot" on the crystal for the radio to work, which was a spot were the crystal operated as a diode. That made it a challenge to get it working at first because you had to have the radio tuned to a station and find the crystal "hot spot" to get anything. I built one of those in the Cub Scouts. Got tired of it pretty fast, and went straight to the two tube set in the Lions (or was it Webelos) handbook. That didn't last too long after my mother ran over it with the Kirby. I was listening to it at the time. She did a lot of **** like that, too. She killed more model airplanes than Von Richtofen's. Average life of a modelling project at my house from the time I opened the box, was about as long as it would take her to go to the closet and get out the vacuum cleaner. The S-53A was too big to get into the beater bar. That's when it finally ended. Sounds like you had a rough childhood. When I was a kid I used to hook up a high fidelity amplifier and speakers to a crystal set. With no limit on the bandwidth local stations sounded great. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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