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This is what my father used in the sixties, Hallicrafter Loudenboomer Mk2. You can see the glowing massive pentode. He was a big believer in moar power! There was no need to heat the radio shack! You wouldn't survive a shock from the power supply, unlike the Model T spark coils that were popular for pranks in the 60's!
TAT
There's nothing wrong with thinking Except that it's lonesome work sevil regit
This is what my father used in the sixties, Hallicrafter Loudenboomer Mk2. You can see the glowing massive pentode. He was a big believer in moar power! There was no need to heat the radio shack! You wouldn't survive a shock from the power supply, unlike the Model T spark coils that were popular for pranks in the 60's!
TAT
Assuming it's transmitting into a dummy load, because that was an incredibly low SWR reading. Pentode almost reminds me of an Eimac tube.
"The Best of the Leon Russell Festivals" DVD deepfreezefilms.com
Mine was made from a flowerpot that was easy to drill hole for carbon rods harvested from D cell batteries
Exactly my setup. I suspect we both had the same "Boy's Guide to Deadly Fun" book. Glass pan filled with salt water? Yup.
Never once burned or zapped by either the carbon arc or the neon sign transformer. Later in Electronics class, our teacher demonstrated how to tell if a lamp socket had 120 VAC live by sticking your finger in it. And yes, I did it. Not painful if your finger is dry and you are not grounded anywhere. Mr. Deason would have been fired in a minute if stuff he did like that every got out!
pondering_it_all Quote Exactly my setup. I suspect we both had the same "Boy's Guide to Deadly Fun" book. Glass pan filled with salt water? Yup.[/quote]
That book, our blue Bible, is still available kid danger book Except it was Titled: 700 Science Experiments for Everyone Hardcover – January 1, 1958 compiled by UNESCO (Author) I found my copy but cant quite figure out how to post the reminiscent images of the carbon arc furnace with salt water rheostat. My copy has some interesting stains on it, and a few holes burned into the cover. Will post them when I figure it out. Had trouble with dropbox.
TAT
There's nothing wrong with thinking Except that it's lonesome work sevil regit
That dummy heated up a gallon of mineral oil pretty quickly! TAT
Yeah I bet! PS: Isn't it a shame we stuck with that old 1930's analog TV tech for as long as we did? Looking at that video, which is admittedly quite a few generations down and already run through some horrible codec, you can still tell that the moire patterns in that clip originated in the master. I'm not even sure it would have been avoidable if we'd moved over to PAL, (albeit with 30 fps instead of 25) but it might have been less pronounced. The crowd dissolved into "HOLY BEAT FREQUENCY, BATMAN!"
Last edited by Jeffery J. Haas; 11/18/2102:14 PM.
"The Best of the Leon Russell Festivals" DVD deepfreezefilms.com
Mine was made from a flowerpot that was easy to drill hole for carbon rods harvested from D cell batteries
Exactly my setup. I suspect we both had the same "Boy's Guide to Deadly Fun" book. Glass pan filled with salt water? Yup.
Never once burned or zapped by either the carbon arc or the neon sign transformer. Later in Electronics class, our teacher demonstrated how to tell if a lamp socket had 120 VAC live by sticking your finger in it. And yes, I did it. Not painful if your finger is dry and you are not grounded anywhere. Mr. Deason would have been fired in a minute if stuff he did like that every got out!
Did your Science Teacher ever recite any Little Willie limericks, like
Little Willie was a chemist, Little Willie is no more. What Willie thought was H20 Was H2SO4
"The Best of the Leon Russell Festivals" DVD deepfreezefilms.com
That dummy heated up a gallon of mineral oil pretty quickly! TAT
Yeah I bet! PS: Isn't it a shame we stuck with that old 1930's analog TV tech for as long as we did? Looking at that video, which is admittedly quite a few generations down and already run through some horrible codec, you can still tell that the moire patterns in that clip originated in the master. I'm not even sure it would have been avoidable if we'd moved over to PAL, (albeit with 30 fps instead of 25) but it might have been less pronounced. The crowd dissolved into "HOLY BEAT FREQUENCY, BATMAN!"
Was the Beat Frequency Mastered? TAT
There's nothing wrong with thinking Except that it's lonesome work sevil regit
Yes Indeed, but I didnt have a real science teacher until 7th grade, and by then safety instruction was pretty much too little too late! You learn lots more in the lab from experience than instruction, like hot glass and hot steel look pretty much like cold glass and steel. We were more visual in our chemical humour, but my high school chem teacher did ponder a bit when I asked him what was H2O4, and groaned when the answer was to drink! Chemical naming quiz
The blue book does have scattered safety hints strategically placed. It suggests that for the salt water 120V rheostat, you should use a glass or ceramic dish, not metal! Also, while using the carbon arc, the use of sunglasses is advisable. I have never seen an arc that was safely viewed through sunglasses, and most of us didnt have welding goggles back then. We used heavily smoked glasses, like you could use to view the eclipse that starts here around 1 here EST and peaks around 4! Dont look directly at it, because your cataracts from carbon arc use will obscure the details!
Mr Barr, if you're still out there, my parents did not appreciate your sarcasm when you suggested that for a particular experiment we should use our parents best china, but at least I seemed to have taken the sarchasm to heart and long term memory. TAT
There's nothing wrong with thinking Except that it's lonesome work sevil regit
Funny, I never took chemistry in high school. (I did actually have a radiation biology class, though.) A lot of my science was self-taught. Still aced the ACT and was offered honors classes when I started college. Loved all my chemistry classes.