#16
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I have the Tooob era equivalents of these Bad Boiz-a couple of pre-war Arvin sets-One has 2 tubes, & the other one has 3. They were salesmen's or travelers' sets, designed to be thrown in a suitcase, & they do a reasonable job of picking up the local Angel Modulation station in whatever town you found yrself in. They were both under $12, I think, new, so even back then if they got "borrowed" or lost it wasn't a big deal. The mighty 2-tube special, I think, ALMOST picked up WLAC, 1510 in Nashville one night...
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Benevolent Despot |
#17
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FM is transmitted horizontally polarized like TV, so your antenna should be 'flat'. Generally with low power FM stations they use yagis so they can direct the signal exactly where they want it to go.
With am the big stations use 2 or 3 vertical antennas and can direct exactly where they want the main radiated lobe to go by phasing the antennas. Sense it skips all over the place, polarization doesnt matter. The general rule is bigger is better. All the ferrite rod does is makes the coil appear much larger than it really is. Im not saying that that the front end and IF doesnt affect it, but antenna is the majority. I have noticed some degradation with KNX, our local CA powerhouse that any radio, even you teeth could pick up at night through CA, NV, AZ on and on. I figured they just cut their power back trying to save money because of the economy. |
#18
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...
Last edited by electroking; 05-26-2010 at 01:09 PM. Reason: deleted by author, sorry! |
#19
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According to the FCC website, KNX still transmits at 50KW. http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/amq?list=0&facid=9616 Perhaps their ground system has degraded over the years? jr |
#20
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I don't know how often the Atlanta area or the New Orleans area (wherever your mother lives today) has power outages, but she will be ready for the next one, if and when...maybe. I say "maybe" because I wonder just how much emergency info she will hear over the radio. Wasn't there a discussion here just before the DTV transition addressing the fact that radio is utterly useless these days in emergencies, because radio stations no longer broadcast local emergency information--despite the fact that they must have EAS (Emergency Alert System) monitoring gear? I would think your mother's Flavoradio would be worse than useless in any emergency worse than a power outage these days for that reason.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. Last edited by Jeffhs; 05-26-2010 at 03:48 PM. |
Audiokarma |
#21
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Quote:
Where I live today, 33 miles from downtown Cleveland and ten-fifteen miles further from the city's radio stations, however, I don't know how well that Arvin set would have worked; for all I know it might have been a decent performer here, at least on the local station five miles from my apartment. It would definitely fail miserably trying to pick up a 0.5-kW day/0.042kW (42 watts, directional night pattern) station near where I grew up; that is, the radio might get the station during the day, but just barely. After sundown, forget it; the station's gnat-sighing-through-a-window-screen-at-ten-paces 42-watt night signal, along with the sharply directional nighttime antenna pattern, very neatly exclude my area, and everywhere else east of me, from their coverage--all night long, until the following morning (the station has a PSA, pre-sunrise authorization, to operate at reduced power if sunrise occurs before 6 a.m. local time, but I still wouldn't hear it here until well after dawn--and if I did hear it before then, it would be so weak as to be unlistenable). These radios, as you mentioned, were built only for local AM reception; your 2- and 3-tube sets more so than mine was (I don't have mine anymore), but not by much.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. |
#22
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Interesting stuff. |
#23
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jr Update... Scott Fybush to the Rescue....He says that in the late 50s CBS experimented with a directional array...but it did not work out: http://www.fybush.com/site-020313.html Last edited by jr_tech; 05-26-2010 at 05:03 PM. Reason: add tower of the week link for LA |
#24
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This guy has got my KIWA BCB loop borrowed out...Maybe I oughta get it back from him, & hook it up to the little Arvins...Mbwahahahahaha...I took the KIWA over to a bud's house one time, Sunday afternoon in the winter, we hooked it up to his-I think it was a Philco late '30s cathdral-that he'd had trouble picking up ANYTHING on, & Voila' ! the radio came alive...We were picking up AM daytimers outta KY & Virginia, local service stations that whose coverage usually petered out by their county lines...Plus, he lives in a bowl/box shaped valley, closed in on 3 sides by mountains,& on the 4th side by one a field's length away. The nite Mr. 2-Tuber almost picked up WLAC, I had it hooked up to a reasonable antenna I have strung around the ceiling in my "Ship's Radio Room". I had Terry re-cap him not long ago, he may do better now. Not too shabby for a el-cheapo 72 yr old set...
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Benevolent Despot |
#25
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I have two of those Flavoradios and you are right. They are a true example of a real transistor radio. The performance is typical of a six transistor set of the era. They are cheaply made but not flimsy and are quite dependable. Everyone should have at least one of these.
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Just look at those channels whiz on by. - Fred Sanford |
Audiokarma |
#26
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We have one AM station (WWL, which also simulcasts on FM) that is very dependable for news/weather coverage during the day, and although they've slipped a few times they've often covered weather events live in the wee hours. We used to have WDSU-TV 6 to fall back on - their audio signal was on the bottom of the FM dial. Truthfully, I can count on my transistor and weather radios and the rotary dial phones when the power fails. |
#27
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I do remember seeing one new AM-only radio about 2004 or maybe 2005. This was soon after a large chain of discount food stores (one of the ones that mainly sells their own brands) had been selling a "Micro FM" radio for $1, including earphones.
This one was built into the same tiny clear plastic cabinet the FM radios were, only it had a dial (not a scan button) for AM, and a tiny (2 cm long, maybe a gram) loopstick visible in the case. It did not perform nearly as well as a Micro-FM, downright abysmal. It needed about 25mV/m to hear a thing, and was about 300 kHz off calibration. I might still have it in the basement somewhere. |
#28
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