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Shortwave Radios
About three months (or less) ago,I saw a website at www.gizmodo.com
about a guy in Norway who owns a lot of German World War Two era Shortwave Radios.I am not a computer guru about back tracking and looking up things like that,I am only a guru with the pretty wimmins.Some of y'all so-called computer experts might want to look up those radios on the internet. cuhulin |
skrev i en meddelelse ... About three months (or less) ago,I saw a website at www.gizmodo.com about a guy in Norway who owns a lot of German World War Two era Shortwave Radios.I am not a computer guru about back tracking and looking up things like that,I am only a guru with the pretty wimmins.Some of y'all so-called computer experts might want to look up those radios on the internet. cuhulin Why? What do you want to know? They used tubes, coils, capacitors, resistors and a few other things. Nothing special, except the power supply - that was great stuff. -- Anders Henriksen - born without teeth supermule [at] lite [dot] dk Whosoever is delighted in solitude, is either a wild beast or a god |
What is so special about their power supplies--silver chokes or super
filter capacitors? |
When I first saw that website,I immediatly emailed it to one of my six
webtv email addresses.I am sure it is still floatin around somewhere. cuhulin |
Nawww,the website I saw was about some super duper German Shortwave
Radios that y'all would drool over,I kid you not.hey Anders,tell all of them purty wimmins over there that old Hansom Larry in Mississippi loves them.Get some of them to email me too. cuhulin |
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"Arthur Pozner" skrev i en meddelelse ... What is so special about their power supplies--silver chokes or super filter capacitors? Parallel resonance. -- Anders Henriksen - born without teeth supermule [at] lite [dot] dk Whosoever is delighted in solitude, is either a wild beast or a god |
Will you be so kind and be more specific?
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"Arthur Pozner" skrev i en meddelelse ... Will you be so kind and be more specific? After rectification of the the line voltage, two parallel resonance filters are employed in the positive supply line and the ground line respectively. Take a look at http://www.loddeklatten.dk/radio/schem/tanksupply.htm I have put some more information there. One of these days I will upload the original schematics. -- Anders Henriksen - born without teeth supermule [at] lite [dot] dk Whosoever is delighted in solitude, is either a wild beast or a god |
Thanks,very informative. Germany did possess a scientific cutting edge
once upon a time... |
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"Odo Of Bayeux" skrev i en meddelelse ... On Mon, 4 Jul 2005 20:26:25 -0400, (Arthur Pozner) wrote: Thanks,very informative. Germany did possess a scientific cutting edge once upon a time... dk is Denmark, not Germany. Ja, aber vee ver diskossing se Shermann ekvipment. I am from Denmark, so my homepage and my email is Danish. But I do believe that I can write about German equipment on my Danish homepage? Maybe even in English? You see, my German is a bit rusty, I have not got a .de (sub)domain and I cannot imagine you learning Danish just to look at my page ;-) Oh, one more thing: LC filters has hardly been cutting edge technology since the 19th century - I think even the Americans had heard of them at the time of WWII :-) -- Anders Henriksen - born without teeth supermule [at] lite [dot] dk Whosoever is delighted in solitude, is either a wild beast or a god |
Tesla built his remote controlled boat while living in US in the late
1800's. It certainly contained LC resonant circuits. However, finding resonant LC componenents in a linear power supply is highly unusual-especially in the ground side.Never seen this concept before. |
"Arthur Pozner" skrev i en meddelelse ... Tesla built his remote controlled boat while living in US in the late 1800's. It certainly contained LC resonant circuits. However, finding resonant LC componenents in a linear power supply is highly unusual-especially in the ground side.Never seen this concept before. I know what you mean. I made the circuit (with just one LC) at a power supply course during 2nd semester at my newly passed electronics engineering class. My teachers were highly spectical and failed to grasp the idea behind it, but they had to give me an A for that one, seeing how well it actually worked. No need telling them were the idea came from - haha. Maybe I should improve this design; in many applications you just need a pure voltage, not necessarily a regulated voltage. Maybe I'll use it for some of my radios. -- Anders Henriksen - born without teeth supermule [at] lite [dot] dk To alcohol! The cause of - and solution to - all of life's problems! |
To alcohol! The cause of - and solution to - all of life's problems
or as my buddy's T-Shirt explains it: "Booze is the answer..... What was the question?" |
I would NEVER dispute a Homerism...
"Rufus Leaking" wrote in message oups.com... To alcohol! The cause of - and solution to - all of life's problems or as my buddy's T-Shirt explains it: "Booze is the answer..... What was the question?" |
I would NEVER dispute a Homerism
pre-dates HJS by a few years actually |
MMMMMMMMM
pre- DATES "Rufus Leaking" wrote in message oups.com... I would NEVER dispute a Homerism pre-dates HJS by a few years actually |
Well,tell all them wimmins in Danske,I love them too.DE is Germany and
of course,what can I say? cuhulin |
Back in the 1950's,there was a family that lived next door to me and the
guy owned a Zenith Transoceanic radio,it was one of the original old Zenith Transoceanic radios.He kept that radio stored in a room in his garage where they used to have their clothes washing machine and some other stuff.I was only about nine years old back then and I never did pay too much attention to that radio.Honestly,I was more interested in his daughter.I am not lieing either,it is the truth. cuhulin |
ooops,DE is Deutsche,Germany.I already knew that.
cuhulin |
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