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#1
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![]() Hi all Cam someone please help me with a query I have about an old crystal set I used to own. When I first came to live in Melbourne (1970s) my parents purchased for me a small crystal set.at a local, now long gone, toy store. As I recall the set was manufactured in England although I may be wrong on this point. It was housed in a small plastic box (red?) and from memory was about 2 inches long and maybe an inch wide and high. Inside the box was a small wound coil (about 1/4" diameter) around a thin cardboard tube. There was a ferrite rod inside this which could be slid back and forth within the tube by means of a small rod that stuck out of the end of the ferte rod and protruded from the end of the box. This was used for tuning stations. There was also a piece of wire coming from the box with an alligator clip on the end. This was the antenna and by attaching it to a long piece of wire one could receive stations. There was also another piece of twin wire protruduing from the box which went to a crystal earpiece so that you could listen to stations. Aside from this I think there were only two other components - a diode and a capacitor as I recall which formed the crystal set circuit. Unfortunately the set is now lost after so many years. This was my first introduction to radio and despite moving on to bigger radios and getting my ham license, this example of a crystal set has always stuck in my mind as being a particularly simple but efficient example of electrical engineering. I now have a young son of my own and would like very much to buy one of these sets. Does anyone know who manufactured these sets and whether they are still available to be purchased? cheers Peter VK3PB |
#2
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We used to build them with 1N34A diode, capacitor across the headphones,
and a coil wound on a toilet paper tube, with taps on the coil that you'd clip an allegator clip to, for tuning. Assemble atop wooden board. There were some with an actual cat whisker instead of the diode, but we went the modern way mostly. The project is mostly winding the coil, many turns of enameled wire, and scraping bits of it clear of enamel for the allegator clip landing spots. Another tuning method was a slider over the coil but it never seemed like that would be very easy to get to work reliably. Antenna and ground across the live portion of the coil. -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#3
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That sure brings back some memories S. I made one with a piece of Galena and a cat whisker and a headset. I didn't have any tuning, just a wire for an antenna and a wire to connect to ground - and it worked ! Later I got a diode, as that seemed to work better, but I also managed to get a transistor to work as detector as well simply by the way the leads were connected. It was great fun experimenting. Dad bought me one similar to what you describe, but it was red and white plastic in the shape of a rocket, and it had a metal rod that you could push in or pull out to tune. It had a piece of germanium that slid in and out of a coil. Your son would love it s.mm
Peace + "Ron Hardin" wrote in message ... We used to build them with 1N34A diode, capacitor across the headphones, and a coil wound on a toilet paper tube, with taps on the coil that you'd clip an allegator clip to, for tuning. Assemble atop wooden board. There were some with an actual cat whisker instead of the diode, but we went the modern way mostly. The project is mostly winding the coil, many turns of enameled wire, and scraping bits of it clear of enamel for the allegator clip landing spots. Another tuning method was a slider over the coil but it never seemed like that would be very easy to get to work reliably. Antenna and ground across the live portion of the coil. -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#4
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Ron Hardin wrote:
We used to build them with 1N34A diode, capacitor across the headphones, and a coil wound on a toilet paper tube, with taps on the coil that you'd clip an allegator clip to, for tuning. We still do! And they still work great! They're not hard to construct with inexpensive readily-available items. There are several good websites with tips and hints for simple construction, and they're great fun. Try making one! Bruce Jensen |
#5
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Ron Hardin wrote:
We used to build them with 1N34A diode, capacitor across the headphones, and a coil wound on a toilet paper tube, with taps on the coil that you'd clip an allegator clip to, for tuning. We still do! And they still work great! They're not hard to construct with inexpensive readily-available items. There are several good websites with tips and hints for simple construction, and they're great fun. Try making one! Bruce Jensen |
#6
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I bought a crystal radio set from an ad I saw in a Popular Mechanics
magazine in 1947.It worked great too. cuhulin |
#7
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![]() My father was telling me recently about how he built capacitors from scratch when he was a boy. He scrounged broken bits of glass and alternated them with pieces of tinfoil from gum wrappers. Together with some wire leads they formed a capacitor for use in homebrew crystal radios. He used the large oatmeal boxes for coil forms, and transducers from old telphone handsets for the earpiece. A galena crystal and safety pin was used for the detector, but I don't know where he came upon the galena. Guy Atkins Puyallup, WA USA "Ron Hardin" wrote in message ... We used to build them with 1N34A diode, capacitor across the headphones, and a coil wound on a toilet paper tube, with taps on the coil that you'd clip an allegator clip to, for tuning. Assemble atop wooden board. There were some with an actual cat whisker instead of the diode, but we went the modern way mostly. SNIP |
#8
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Ron Hardin wrote:
There were some with an actual cat whisker instead of the diode, but we went the modern way mostly. I had a crystal set in the 1960's that used a real galena crystal which was mounted in a small metal cup. The cup served as one of the electrical connections for the crystal. The crystal was embedded in some kind of metal which I assume was poured into the cup in a molten state. Could it have been lead? ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= East/West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#9
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On Thu, 13 Jan 2005 00:21:42 -0500, starman wrote:
I had a crystal set in the 1960's that used a real galena crystal which was mounted in a small metal cup. The cup served as one of the electrical connections for the crystal. The crystal was embedded in some kind of metal which I assume was poured into the cup in a molten state. Could it have been lead? You can use solder, but Woods Metal is better as it melts in boiling water and you can make your mould in wood or plastic. I've just made some crystals using it for a reproduction 1920s style xtal set. -- Cheers, Stan Barr stanb .at. dial .dot. pipex .dot. com (Remove any digits from the addresses when mailing me.) The future was never like this! |
#10
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Was the radio shaped like a "rocket"?
Like: http://www.tompolk.com/radios/rocket.html or: http://home.earthlink.net/~wb5rex/xt...osrockets.html There is a company making a reproduction. I will dig out their name and URL tonight. Terry |
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