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7"estatdef 12-07-2009 09:31 PM

Farmers Unite!!
 
3 Attachment(s)
Was tinkering around today and put together a simple power supply for the forgotten farm radio. I'm sure a us lot of have one or two of these set that haven't been turned on in years, lots of years. One of mine is a Crosely 2V Fiver I got back in the '70s. Back then it had a few problems including a bad osc coil. Fixed it all up and it's been sitting since. Thought I'd take her for a spin hence the power supply. The HV is a typical AC/DC design.Was able to get 130V under load. The A voltage is provided by a 6.3v transformer, bridge rectifier and adj ic regulator. It will deliver up to 8v @ 1.5A which is adjustable down to 1.2V. A lot of the parts I scrounged from some old computer p/s and from the junk box. Most of them are not very critical.

Let's make January farm radio month. Dust one off or if you don't had one get one. And get her going!
Terry

bandersen 12-08-2009 12:43 AM

Very nice :thmbsp:
I have an old Philco 643B farm set that was converted to AC operation by a hack long, long ago.
I think I'll strip it down and restore it to DC operation one of these days :scratch2:

jeyurkon 12-08-2009 02:45 PM

What qualifies a radio as a farm radio?

John

truetone36 12-08-2009 03:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jeyurkon (Post 2961566)
What qualifies a radio as a farm radio?

John

A farm radio is a battery-powered set. A lot of these were used in rural areas as many rural homes were without electricity, some up to the mid-50's.

7"estatdef 12-08-2009 04:05 PM

Well I'd say made from early 1930's thru mid '50's. Most will uses Battery type tubes 1.4v or 2.0v with low current consumption like 50ma. Has no pilot lamp or it will have a switch to turn it off and on. No handle on the top. May be powered by a wind-generator or 6v car battery/vibrator.

Terry

bgadow 12-08-2009 09:58 PM

I need to cobble together a good power supply one of these days. I built a kit from AES in the 90s but it never worked right and I finally junked it. My lack of understanding of solid state circuits doesn't help.

I do have at least a couple farm sets that I have brought back to life. One is a Sparton, the other an Airline. I have some batteries I've built in cigar boxes for when I want to play with them. Recently I aquired a neat set, another Airline that is a convertible so that when the REA came to the farm it could be switched from battery to AC with a flick of a switch. (at least, I guess that is how it works-I haven't dug into it yet) I have picked up some respect for these farm sets. Usually a nice, big cabinet on the table models, but with just a tiny chassis. Good thing is that chassis makes them easy to work on.

Eliot Ness 12-09-2009 12:21 PM

Excellent idea! I have an L 'Tatro I picked up ages ago because I liked the small simple dial and the history of the company being from Iowa. It will be fun to work on something different like this 6 volt farm set, plus maybe it will give me a chance to verify the colorful history of the company as it was once told to me.

electronjohn 12-10-2009 03:15 PM

I have a 32V Philco I picked up at a farm auction for a buck (only bidder!) but I've never played it due to its odd power requirement. Probably should cook up something to remedy that. I've run across 32V appliances (mixers, fans, etc) at farm auctions as well. Evidently some windmills were 32V, along with the DelcoLite plants that were in use in those pre-REA days.

jr_tech 12-10-2009 04:27 PM

electronjohn,

Does your 32V farm radio employ a vibrator to generate B+ for the tubes , or does it use low voltage tubes that can function with a B+ of only 32 volts?

jr

electronjohn 12-10-2009 04:42 PM

Think it might be a vibrator...I'll have to dig it out of storage to be sure.

amptramp 12-10-2009 07:23 PM

The DC farm radios like the Philco Models 48 and 49 did not have a vibrator. The filaments were in series with the speaker electromagnet and usually a ballast. The tubes ran directly off low-voltage DC. Some of the supply voltages in some makes of radio were 32 VDC.

Sandy G 12-10-2009 07:36 PM

I'd be happy to get some sort of rig to fire up & try my '27 Grebe Synchrophase...I THINK it has 3 different voltages....

bandersen 12-10-2009 08:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sandy G (Post 2961694)
I'd be happy to get some sort of rig to fire up & try my '27 Grebe Synchrophase...I THINK it has 3 different voltages....

Ditto on my Philco 643. There is an A, B & C battery. I think the A is filament, B is plate and C is bias.

jr_tech 12-10-2009 08:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by amptramp (Post 2961692)
The DC farm radios like the Philco Models 48 and 49 did not have a vibrator. The filaments were in series with the speaker electromagnet and usually a ballast. The tubes ran directly off low-voltage DC. Some of the supply voltages in some makes of radio were 32 VDC.

I may be all wet here, but I think remember reading about a "mobile" version of the R-390 that used low plate voltage tubes.... I can't imagine that it would perform as well as a standard R-390 or R-390A... anybody here know how well it worked? Would it qualify as a "war farm" radio? :)

jr

Sandy G 12-11-2009 06:14 AM

It's called an R-392, & it used a 28VDC military supply...I have a Collins example that uses a modified AC supply, & it works great...They make dandy camp stools, & get nice & toasty after they've been running awhile...You could also use one to hold up a corner of a Jeep if you wanted to change a tire, the cases are THAT tough...Supposedly, the cases are waterproof, & the radio reportedly will operate underwater, but I ain't ever been THAT brave/foolhardy.


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