your
tuned to 'boatanchors downunder' radio on 3402 Megs... A
collaborative effort from collective sourcesresulting in
3.4GB of data (2,000+ pages)ONLINE
It uses
a pair of 49 tubes (included) and operates with a 1.5 volt D-cell and a
9 volt transistor radio battery (also included). Features hand rubbed lacquer on the
well-made cabinet with box cut corners. All the wiring and hardware is
brass. The front panel brass has been 'antiqued' for that vintage
appeal.
Under
the hood you'll find an extra high quality National DX tuning capacitor
and a vintage Dubilier capacitor/grid leak mount. Tuning knob is a
great 4 inch AMCO type for accurate tuning. The batteries are
self-contained, hidden inside the little box shown in the rear photo.
You'll
have a ball tuning around the old time way with this little set. You'll
need an outdoor antenna and a good set of high impedance headphones like
were used back then. I can copy more than a dozen stations at my
location during the day and plenty more at night.
Bill's Hikers Two - Shortwave
This
is my homebuilt version of the 2-tube shortwave band regenerative
receiver based on the space charge technique as used in the Hiker's Two
radio developed in New Zealand in 1937. You can read more about the
Hiker's radios at this website.
https://www.oldradios.co.nz/hikers
It uses
a pair of 49 tubes and operates with a 1.5 volt D-cell and a 9 volt
transistor radio battery. Three plug-in coils provide coverage from
3-12 Mc/s. Has vernier tuning plus an 8pf bandspread cap for easy
tuning.