Date: Fri, 15 Aug 2008 07:50:55 -0700
Reply-To: Andrew Martin <campahvan@EARTHLINK.NET>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Andrew Martin <campahvan@EARTHLINK.NET>
Subject: Re: Are Today's Young People Mechanical Nitwits?
In-Reply-To: <48A58E49.8010808@gmail.com>
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For the youngsters in our group.... :)
I have a great photo of one of the tube tester that was in Hal's Rexall Drug
in Kingston WA in the early 60's. P-mail for a copy if interested.
Andrew
Bainbridge Island WA
-----Original Message-----
From: Vanagon Mailing List [mailto:vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com] On Behalf Of
Mike Elliott
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2008 7:10 AM
To: vanagon@GERRY.VANAGON.COM
Subject: Re: Are Today's Young People Mechanical Nitwits?
But a brilliant stream of consciousness. There may have been transistors
in those radios that did nothing, but I distinctly remember there being
several transistors being used merely as diodes, with the collectors not
connected. I recall the smell of tube radios, with their phenolics and
waxes, and remember trailing Dad to the local drugstore to test tubes.
If a bad tube was found, the store manager appeared to open the cabinet
that the tester sat upon and, after fishing around inside for a few
moments, pulled out the replacement tube with a flourish.
How the flourish got into the cabinet in the first place has always
puzzled me.
--
Mike "Rocket J Squirrel" Elliott
------
On 8/15/2008 6:46 AM David Beierl wrote:
> At 02:35 PM 8/14/2008 -0600, Gary Lee www.vwrack.com wrote:
>> I am told that in the 70s there used to be tube testers and vacuum
>> tubes sold at the grocery store. I guess people, just ordinary
>> people, would fix their own tvs and radios. That was also a time
>
> Definitely '60s. Fading in the '70s I think, as transistors took
> over. Tubes were consumables and mounted in sockets (and on the
> opposite side of the steel chassis from the fiddly bits, so other
> than getting burnt they were pretty safe to deal with). There were a
> gazillion table radios that all used the same set of five tubes whose
> filament voltages not coincidentally added up to 117 volts -- that's
> the sort of thing the drug store would carry.
>
> The testers were about the size of an open briefcase on a stand, big
> meter, bunch of dial switches, sockets for quad, octal, 7- and 9-pin
> miniature, clip lead for tubes with a top contact, and a big list of
> tube types with switch settings for each, maybe on a scroll behind a
> window on the tester. Testing instructions printed on the
> machine. So if your radio or TV got funny, you'd pull all the tubes
> and stick them in a paper bag (not so many plastic bags then) and
> take them to the drugstore, or Radio Shack, or Lafayette Radio, or a
> repair shop maybe, and test them all. With any luck (or some
> patience) you wouldn't burn yourself much, and with *decent* luck you
> wouldn't have rubbed off the tube numbers, or would have wrapped a
> piece of paper around them with the number on it.
>
> There is absolutely nothing like the smell of tube electronics that's
> lived in the company of smokers. Not bad, but distinctive.
>
> When we attended John Kennedy's funeral in fall '63, we also listened
> to it on a (paperback-size) Matsushita Electronics five-transistor
> AM-only radio that Dad got for CONELRAD alerts. Like most (?) radios
> then it had the two CONELRAD frequencies marked on the dial (Dad was
> an engineer, his version of two-weeks-rations for our "shelter" --
> the pantry under the cellar stairs -- was whatever was in the pantry
> plus our spare 50-lb bag of Purina dog chow). Nice little radio,
> orange front and gray back. Cost maybe $50 or so? Used a 9v
> battery. We were far enough away that we heard it on the radio 2-3
> seconds before we heard it live. That was maybe a little before the
> "transistor wars" when cheap radio brands (Lloyds comes to mind)
> would throw transistors at a design so they could boast about how
> many there were, like 23-jewel watches. I think one or two maybe
> even stuck totally nonfunctional transistors on the board. Circuit
> boards (Wow! Printed Circuits!) were single-sided phenolic/paper.
>
> Interesting times...if you get a chance to view Robert McNamera's
> _The Fog of War_ you'll get to see the then SecDef forty years later
> so frightened of what almost happened in the Cuban Missile Crisis
> that he still can't come right out and say the words. You can see
> him try, and fail. I recommend it -- I started to watch it
> perfunctorily because it had to go back to the store that night, and
> was absolutely riveted.
>
> </stream of consciousness>
>
> David
>
>
> --
> David Beierl - Providence RI USA -- http://pws.prserv.net/synergy/Vanagon/
> '84 Westy "Dutiful Passage," '85 GL "Poor Relation"
>
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