Lucky America still having AM radio stations. Lucky to see Supervisor-Kitty who I was missing in last video 🙂
@fretlessfender2 ай бұрын
Building a hardwired valve radio is one thing... designing and blowing your own valve is a totally different thing. Thank you Ron for being on the KZreads and showing us what it takes to make these things.... amazing!
@CATech1138
2 ай бұрын
taking the next level to the next level
@mayshack2 ай бұрын
When someone says "homemade radio" usually they just mean they assembled a radio. This reminds me of the Sagan quote, "If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch you must first invent the universe."
@dennis8196
2 ай бұрын
Sometimes. Some people still make, that's why so many makerspaces have been opening over the last decade. There are 5 within an hour's drive from me that I know of and 2 on the coast where I often go on holiday 20 minutes drive drive away. I am planning to make a large variable capacitor for a tunable magnet antenna design I have, but I need to source suitable materials for my design, something I am having difficulty doing locally. I'd love to be able to do what Glasslinger does, making valves looks fun.
@kishascape
2 ай бұрын
That’s a pretentious neckbeard quote
@jonathanhughes3802 ай бұрын
Thank you Ron Soyland some young Kids are very interested in learning from the past and how things were done back then. Thank you for Sharing your knowledge and experience with us.
@apexmcboob51612 ай бұрын
That's very cool. I think of the dozens, maybe hundreds of electronic devices I've constructed, never have I hand made all the components. Kudos to you Sir!
@sciencefollower
2 ай бұрын
FN - Not "Sir" but "Madam" please.
@hazevthewolf1782 ай бұрын
It's good to see that both you and your cat are doing well. This video really blows me away and lends new meaning to the term "home made". BTW I've watched quite a lot of your videos and have enjoyed them all.
@alanwheeler33092 ай бұрын
Your expertise on this old technology is great! I am a 73 year old electronic tech, I really like your videos!
@TimHollingworth2 ай бұрын
That is truly amazing! A totally handmade radio. It would have been interesting to see the original schematic diagram, to see how they drew the components.
@migsvensurfing63102 ай бұрын
You are such an amazing person. Thank you for sharing with us.
@KeritechElectronics2 ай бұрын
Genius level of simplicity, built from the grounds up :)
@johnwynne-qx6br2 ай бұрын
Amazing radio a true home made. Thankyou for sharing.
@edmaster31472 ай бұрын
One of the last people able to produce old tubes. Great seeing it in action. Thank you for another amazing video.
@LostDeadSoul
2 ай бұрын
He mentioned at some point "Tyne - Saga of the vacuum tube" Great book I must say.
@jamied21082 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your work with us. I am sitting here smiling and speechless. What I just viewed after the video of you making that tube is something very special. Take care sugar stay well !!
@user-Atamigaputer2 ай бұрын
Not exactly HIFI but brilliant work to emulate old tech Ron, please keep making this stuff for historical record making
@nudebaboon48742 ай бұрын
What a fantastic set Ron.👌
@Robb4032 ай бұрын
You are an Incredibly skilled person that I am very happy to learn from.
@monteceitomoocher2 ай бұрын
Superb result, apart from the very expensive audion valve that's how ordinary folk had to do their wireless, make everything themselves, commercially bought components would be beyond the reach of all the the most wealthy, lot of knowledge and skill went into making that audion, glad you're keeping it alive.
@chuck0mx2 ай бұрын
Wonderfull... i like this radio... very nice...
@401ksolar2 ай бұрын
Like the old saying goes, don't breathe on it , but seriously those hand made components are inspiring.
@davidportch88372 ай бұрын
That's a great result.. takes me back to some of the old radios that my Dad had in the early1950s when I was a child...nice to see kitty as well...thanks Ron...
@MrCount442012 ай бұрын
Wow, you are so talented; nice job. :)
@joefish60912 ай бұрын
'Homebuilt Wireless Components' Radio Press Series no.16, an interesting book from 1923, same type of DIY components as this.
@Me11oIngenuity2 ай бұрын
Love the video!
@davidstacy83142 ай бұрын
Hi Ron your friend Dave from up North you did an amazing job on that radio you have amazing talent can't wait to see more may God bless you and keep you healthy always your friend Dave😅
@michaellichter40912 ай бұрын
A complete success, the tube works very well. A nice look back at the beginnings of tube technology and its first application in radio technology.
@TheStuffMade2 ай бұрын
That is so cool, love it. 👍
@tueironАй бұрын
Love your ingenuity, and well explained.
@thakyou50052 ай бұрын
As someone who's all about pioneering technology, I don't quite know why I really like old stuff like this and old techniques. Is it simplicity? Am I reincarnated? Idk
@aggie462 ай бұрын
glad to see you back...worried how you had fared as the storm hit the hieghts rather badly..
@PilotInCommand777Ай бұрын
I love how the kitty sits on the chair and talks to you!
@tinygriffy2 ай бұрын
Thanks for bringing a little history back to life ! ❤
@richardsmith77832 ай бұрын
Welcome back my friend? I wish i was as smart as you are back when i was 30 years old!
@Monaco-BuilditFixitDriveitEver2 ай бұрын
This makes me think that there are so many things I wish I could do. So many things fascinate me. There are not enough hours in the day to learn everything, but thank you for putting this video together. It is fascinating! To know so much about something is very inspiring.!
@glasslinger
2 ай бұрын
I see some other impressive videos on YT and think the exact same thing! :)
@UDX-3402 ай бұрын
Beautiful radio and explanation , thank you .
@tomweickmann6414Ай бұрын
Quite amazing. The most DIY radio I have ever seen. You should rent that out to movie companies as a period piece prop. Reminds me of the radio set the Norwegian spy had in Sink The Bismark.......before the Nazis burst in and machine gunned him to death.🤧
@alexandracrawford8002 ай бұрын
Dear Glasslinger, I am so happy to see your demonstration of turning science mystery into practical fact. Some years ago somebody demonstrated constructing a complete workshop by casting aluminium into 'green sand' molds showing how by hand it was possible to create an engineering grade flat surface for the guide bed of a machine lathe. There was a logical sequence to the building of each piece of workshop equipment, leading to the possibility of constructing the next machining function at high precision! Illustrated books of men building sand molds with wooden geometry tools, casting geared wheels and machine frames of high tonnage weight... This was the very beginning of the industrial revolution from which the first machines then produced thousands of other machines. But the people who created those first big molds are like yourself, true heroes and heroines without whom none of what we apparently take for granted would have been at all possible. Thank you for making electronics and radio REAL. I would like to begin studying for my amateur radio license. You have made it accessible to me by your dedication and genuine skills. Would you consider teaching an online course to pass all your skills to the next generation... Lately electronics has moved away from accessibility into elite black box tech, beyond sustainable, out of reach. Your skills are absolutely sustainable providing for future proof radio and telecomms roots? Thank you for your marvellous demonstrations...Live Long and Prosper!
@ThePeaceableKingdom
2 ай бұрын
I don't know who demonstrated it, if it was on video, but was almost certainly based on Dave Gingery's series of books on building a charcoal furnace to melt aluminum (or bronze or brass) and pour sand molds, how to use those castings to create a lathe, how to use the lathe to make a shaper, how to use the shaper and lathe to make a mill, how to use the three to make a drill press, etc, and to increase the precision with a dividing head for gear cutting and cutting screws, et al, etc... When early tech is forgotten no one will understand modern tech, and the movie Idiocracy pretty much predicts what that world will be like.
@pat30342 ай бұрын
You never cease to amaze!
@waxore11422 ай бұрын
Remarkable! Well done! 100% home made. Unreal that you made all your own components.
@oddo7102 ай бұрын
Yes. It was Armstrong that figured out what the Audion was capable of doing.
@yardleybottles60252 ай бұрын
My jaw just dropped. Homage to the Master Craftsman!
@ThePeaceableKingdom
2 ай бұрын
Aye!
@Donno30828 күн бұрын
Wow this was a really interesting one. I watched you make the Audion first then this. Taking things back to the beginnings of radio is fascinating. I would like to try my hand at some earlier receivers myself. I'm getting tires of fixing up 40's & 50's radios and this seems like an interesting direction to go.
@EzThomas.2 ай бұрын
Amazing...including the cat! 😻
@suzakule2 ай бұрын
I'm glad that you are OK. i heard that the Houston area was hit pretty hard, We here in the Austin area were lucky and missed out on the worst of it, this time!
@m00iwi00m2 ай бұрын
Oh! You listen the sounds that was sent form 1912! 🤣🤣😂😂😂
@fibrodad13542 ай бұрын
Welcome back
@stanleygerrick60532 ай бұрын
It's amazing what they we able to do so long ago. Human ingenuity. 73's!📻
@derstrom82 ай бұрын
Very cool! Thanks for sharing the demo! Was eager to see how well the tube worked
@Radio4782 ай бұрын
Great radio project, thanks from England
@timhull86642 ай бұрын
How good is that, a hobby taken to its max.. if only there was something decent to listen to..A.M in the uk is dead.
@wechselrichterschaltungen
2 ай бұрын
Leider hier in Deutschland auch kein AM mehr..schade.
@timhull8664
2 ай бұрын
@JaneChristensen. sure there are, but his unit doesn't transmit, and even if it did the power that it uses might get a signal next door.. I was talking about commercial radio.. HAM in the UK uses 420-450MHz AM commercial is up in the 535 - 1705 MHz range..
@JaneChristensen.
2 ай бұрын
@@timhull8664 At night, with a very simple home made AM receiver, I can occasionally receive music, and sometimes sermons being broadcast by amateur operators thousands of km's away! You don't have to be able to transmit to hear these signals obviously, but it's still fun trying to find these pirate broadcasts.
@user-ff3qn1ky8g2 ай бұрын
sincerely thank you for your effort deployed in the electronic field I have always followed your video for a long time.// MOROCCO //
@frankowalker46622 ай бұрын
That's such a cool radio. Nice work building it.
@glasslinger2 ай бұрын
Oh well, an anachronism won't hurt anything! I didn't have any of the hard rubber that was used back that far!
@theriverlab2 ай бұрын
beautiful video, you are a great technician and a great person
@JaneChristensen.
2 ай бұрын
That's engineer, and after having watched many videos now, I agree, amazing person!
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@ThePeaceableKingdom2 ай бұрын
Absolutely stunning work. Good job! Love to see that hand built variable condenser. And to build your own capacitors and resistors! Wow. Haven't seen the audion vid but surely is as impressive. Excellent.
@k8bypАй бұрын
look at the rotatable link coupled transformer!
@Baa52802 ай бұрын
I live in Los Angeles. If I touch the input of an amplifier i hear KNX news radio !!
@zoeyzhang98666 күн бұрын
Nice restoration! I'm just wondering if any custom PCBs and 3DP/CNC'd part may help for future work? If so, we'd like to support free services (PCBWay zoey)
@prabhakarv419310 күн бұрын
Very nice and informative
@TheCubbyman612 ай бұрын
Marvelous! I love builds like that, I have built some one tube regenerative radios, but nothing beats a radio with a homemade triode.
@jeffhaskins52362 ай бұрын
This is so cool! Thank you for sharing!
@hugovale80702 ай бұрын
No words , thank you ron greetings from portugal
@k8bypАй бұрын
congrats, something there Ive never seen, pencil lead resistor! Outstanding! When the Great Tech Reset happens, and semiconductors cant be made, this will be the technology.
@Movieman19652 ай бұрын
Fantastic work on that radio! To believe that's enough to pick up broadcasts.
@atmylab2 ай бұрын
Fabulous, thank you for sharing.
@clyde14062 ай бұрын
Outstanding! So neat. Would sure like to learn more of this!
@krz88888882 ай бұрын
I thought the getter was only for outgassing of the tube internals and not micro leaks
@NoCurtain2 ай бұрын
"Unbelievable" I hear myself say over and over when I watch what you do. But I believe it after seeing some of your videos, all the while becoming more inspired. Although it may be more grounded for me to hear you speak of something you cannot do. I have come to believe, if you had enough time and materials, you could create any modern CPU out of only discrete components.
@andygoldensixties42012 ай бұрын
a beautiful job indeed, congratulations from Italy, expecially for the amazing tube
@rivards12 ай бұрын
IIn the days (like 1912) when EVERYTHING had to be made by hand by hobbyists, how did they know when their homebrew part had achieved 2Meg Ohms or 2200 pF? What did they use for testing or checking?
@yuriivanov12
2 ай бұрын
There were books with instructions how to make parts, simple formulas, etc. There wasn't need also for high accuracy of resistors and capacitors in such radios as this.
@glasslinger
2 ай бұрын
They used their HP 8 digit Digital VOM! What else! :)
@CATech1138
2 ай бұрын
with large amounts of adjustibility tolerances can be low and still work
@va3ngc2 ай бұрын
Beautiful. I would love to get an audion (reproduction or otherwise). Great work.
@glasslinger
2 ай бұрын
This is possible. I am trying to figure how to email someone on YT. They don't make it easy!
@user-rr4rs3nt7y2 ай бұрын
The only way this could be more gloriously Heath Robinson is... If you were to build a model steam engin to gererate the B+, and a flame-triode for the amplifier(That way you don't need a heater filement). Then you'd have what might be the first ever steam powered radio.
@wolfgangrichter60882 ай бұрын
If you would connect the outer foil of your tuning capacitor to the lower impedance side of your circuit, reception would be twice as good. );
@MrDuffman832 ай бұрын
Nice!! I'm building one radio like that with the home made triodes. This video will be veeery helpful. 1 valve radio would be nice, like the Reflex receiver. And the cat is lovely, by the way
@catherineladd53002 ай бұрын
Good to see the supervisor over-seeing the work. Missed her in the vacuum tube video last week.
@TheTreegodfather8 күн бұрын
Nicely done 👍🏻
@bigguyprepperАй бұрын
This was super cool!
@kenw.11122 ай бұрын
VERY COOL ! YOU DID A GREAT JOB MAKING THAT RADIO!!😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
@pjosephlthewonder50822 ай бұрын
I have recreated the early crystal sets from several of the books I have collected. Now I have to do this set! Peace
@robtitheridge97082 ай бұрын
An excellent video an amazing job,
@redneckways19332 ай бұрын
That is amazing.
@DeadKoby2 ай бұрын
I wonder if there was much to listen to in 1912.......
@Dan40049
2 ай бұрын
Just the Titanic's distress calls...
@jamest4092 ай бұрын
Aww rescue kitty TNR good for you thank you!
@H2Oredfirefox2 ай бұрын
It's crazy to think how simple that radio is There's hardly any components at all🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
@newtronix2 ай бұрын
Superb!
@sonofeloah2 ай бұрын
Now then, time to make either a triode or a tetrode audio amplifier?
@shamrockisland2 ай бұрын
Love it.
@kid_missive2 ай бұрын
So cool!!!
@brianbloom17992 ай бұрын
Thats amazing rod, If we Have a war, Everyone better make friends with you, Cause you can throw parts together to hear whats going on, in the World
@russedmonds2272 ай бұрын
Great work! I think that rotating coil variable inductor is called a variometer also what kind of antenna did you use for this? amazing!
@brendanbarker20952 ай бұрын
love it, made me research the development of the tube
@coolbluelights2 ай бұрын
Amazing! i've built many one tube radio kits but I could never get one to make a sound. idk if they just don't work or they don't go loud enough for me to hear them.
@ricardosalesdemello41302 ай бұрын
Ohh yeah! Glaslinger, esse é um lindo Radio
@ricardosalesdemello4130
Ай бұрын
Oh thanks friend glaslinger
@jeffreyyoung41042 ай бұрын
Hi Ron! Nice radio!
@user-kj1od5ed7p2 ай бұрын
Wow very cool thank you for the video
@guitarsid2 ай бұрын
Very nice, what kind of wire is used for connecting and for the coils. I have some cloth insulation wire from 1929.
@jeffjordan38062 ай бұрын
Amazing !
@labiadh_chokri2 ай бұрын
nice project , does the humidity affect that 2Mohm resistor u can coat it with resin or wax , u can make the variable capacitor with half circle shape instead of square plat for more linearity . I'm happy cause they still maintain high power AM radio for us to experiment radio reception , just imagine how many tubes u need to recive DAB radio :-).
Пікірлер: 208
Lucky America still having AM radio stations. Lucky to see Supervisor-Kitty who I was missing in last video 🙂
Building a hardwired valve radio is one thing... designing and blowing your own valve is a totally different thing. Thank you Ron for being on the KZreads and showing us what it takes to make these things.... amazing!
@CATech1138
2 ай бұрын
taking the next level to the next level
When someone says "homemade radio" usually they just mean they assembled a radio. This reminds me of the Sagan quote, "If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch you must first invent the universe."
@dennis8196
2 ай бұрын
Sometimes. Some people still make, that's why so many makerspaces have been opening over the last decade. There are 5 within an hour's drive from me that I know of and 2 on the coast where I often go on holiday 20 minutes drive drive away. I am planning to make a large variable capacitor for a tunable magnet antenna design I have, but I need to source suitable materials for my design, something I am having difficulty doing locally. I'd love to be able to do what Glasslinger does, making valves looks fun.
@kishascape
2 ай бұрын
That’s a pretentious neckbeard quote
Thank you Ron Soyland some young Kids are very interested in learning from the past and how things were done back then. Thank you for Sharing your knowledge and experience with us.
That's very cool. I think of the dozens, maybe hundreds of electronic devices I've constructed, never have I hand made all the components. Kudos to you Sir!
@sciencefollower
2 ай бұрын
FN - Not "Sir" but "Madam" please.
It's good to see that both you and your cat are doing well. This video really blows me away and lends new meaning to the term "home made". BTW I've watched quite a lot of your videos and have enjoyed them all.
Your expertise on this old technology is great! I am a 73 year old electronic tech, I really like your videos!
That is truly amazing! A totally handmade radio. It would have been interesting to see the original schematic diagram, to see how they drew the components.
You are such an amazing person. Thank you for sharing with us.
Genius level of simplicity, built from the grounds up :)
Amazing radio a true home made. Thankyou for sharing.
One of the last people able to produce old tubes. Great seeing it in action. Thank you for another amazing video.
@LostDeadSoul
2 ай бұрын
He mentioned at some point "Tyne - Saga of the vacuum tube" Great book I must say.
Thanks for sharing your work with us. I am sitting here smiling and speechless. What I just viewed after the video of you making that tube is something very special. Take care sugar stay well !!
Not exactly HIFI but brilliant work to emulate old tech Ron, please keep making this stuff for historical record making
What a fantastic set Ron.👌
You are an Incredibly skilled person that I am very happy to learn from.
Superb result, apart from the very expensive audion valve that's how ordinary folk had to do their wireless, make everything themselves, commercially bought components would be beyond the reach of all the the most wealthy, lot of knowledge and skill went into making that audion, glad you're keeping it alive.
Wonderfull... i like this radio... very nice...
Like the old saying goes, don't breathe on it , but seriously those hand made components are inspiring.
That's a great result.. takes me back to some of the old radios that my Dad had in the early1950s when I was a child...nice to see kitty as well...thanks Ron...
Wow, you are so talented; nice job. :)
'Homebuilt Wireless Components' Radio Press Series no.16, an interesting book from 1923, same type of DIY components as this.
Love the video!
Hi Ron your friend Dave from up North you did an amazing job on that radio you have amazing talent can't wait to see more may God bless you and keep you healthy always your friend Dave😅
A complete success, the tube works very well. A nice look back at the beginnings of tube technology and its first application in radio technology.
That is so cool, love it. 👍
Love your ingenuity, and well explained.
As someone who's all about pioneering technology, I don't quite know why I really like old stuff like this and old techniques. Is it simplicity? Am I reincarnated? Idk
glad to see you back...worried how you had fared as the storm hit the hieghts rather badly..
I love how the kitty sits on the chair and talks to you!
Thanks for bringing a little history back to life ! ❤
Welcome back my friend? I wish i was as smart as you are back when i was 30 years old!
This makes me think that there are so many things I wish I could do. So many things fascinate me. There are not enough hours in the day to learn everything, but thank you for putting this video together. It is fascinating! To know so much about something is very inspiring.!
@glasslinger
2 ай бұрын
I see some other impressive videos on YT and think the exact same thing! :)
Beautiful radio and explanation , thank you .
Quite amazing. The most DIY radio I have ever seen. You should rent that out to movie companies as a period piece prop. Reminds me of the radio set the Norwegian spy had in Sink The Bismark.......before the Nazis burst in and machine gunned him to death.🤧
Dear Glasslinger, I am so happy to see your demonstration of turning science mystery into practical fact. Some years ago somebody demonstrated constructing a complete workshop by casting aluminium into 'green sand' molds showing how by hand it was possible to create an engineering grade flat surface for the guide bed of a machine lathe. There was a logical sequence to the building of each piece of workshop equipment, leading to the possibility of constructing the next machining function at high precision! Illustrated books of men building sand molds with wooden geometry tools, casting geared wheels and machine frames of high tonnage weight... This was the very beginning of the industrial revolution from which the first machines then produced thousands of other machines. But the people who created those first big molds are like yourself, true heroes and heroines without whom none of what we apparently take for granted would have been at all possible. Thank you for making electronics and radio REAL. I would like to begin studying for my amateur radio license. You have made it accessible to me by your dedication and genuine skills. Would you consider teaching an online course to pass all your skills to the next generation... Lately electronics has moved away from accessibility into elite black box tech, beyond sustainable, out of reach. Your skills are absolutely sustainable providing for future proof radio and telecomms roots? Thank you for your marvellous demonstrations...Live Long and Prosper!
@ThePeaceableKingdom
2 ай бұрын
I don't know who demonstrated it, if it was on video, but was almost certainly based on Dave Gingery's series of books on building a charcoal furnace to melt aluminum (or bronze or brass) and pour sand molds, how to use those castings to create a lathe, how to use the lathe to make a shaper, how to use the shaper and lathe to make a mill, how to use the three to make a drill press, etc, and to increase the precision with a dividing head for gear cutting and cutting screws, et al, etc... When early tech is forgotten no one will understand modern tech, and the movie Idiocracy pretty much predicts what that world will be like.
You never cease to amaze!
Remarkable! Well done! 100% home made. Unreal that you made all your own components.
Yes. It was Armstrong that figured out what the Audion was capable of doing.
My jaw just dropped. Homage to the Master Craftsman!
@ThePeaceableKingdom
2 ай бұрын
Aye!
Wow this was a really interesting one. I watched you make the Audion first then this. Taking things back to the beginnings of radio is fascinating. I would like to try my hand at some earlier receivers myself. I'm getting tires of fixing up 40's & 50's radios and this seems like an interesting direction to go.
Amazing...including the cat! 😻
I'm glad that you are OK. i heard that the Houston area was hit pretty hard, We here in the Austin area were lucky and missed out on the worst of it, this time!
Oh! You listen the sounds that was sent form 1912! 🤣🤣😂😂😂
Welcome back
It's amazing what they we able to do so long ago. Human ingenuity. 73's!📻
Very cool! Thanks for sharing the demo! Was eager to see how well the tube worked
Great radio project, thanks from England
How good is that, a hobby taken to its max.. if only there was something decent to listen to..A.M in the uk is dead.
@wechselrichterschaltungen
2 ай бұрын
Leider hier in Deutschland auch kein AM mehr..schade.
@timhull8664
2 ай бұрын
@JaneChristensen. sure there are, but his unit doesn't transmit, and even if it did the power that it uses might get a signal next door.. I was talking about commercial radio.. HAM in the UK uses 420-450MHz AM commercial is up in the 535 - 1705 MHz range..
@JaneChristensen.
2 ай бұрын
@@timhull8664 At night, with a very simple home made AM receiver, I can occasionally receive music, and sometimes sermons being broadcast by amateur operators thousands of km's away! You don't have to be able to transmit to hear these signals obviously, but it's still fun trying to find these pirate broadcasts.
sincerely thank you for your effort deployed in the electronic field I have always followed your video for a long time.// MOROCCO //
That's such a cool radio. Nice work building it.
Oh well, an anachronism won't hurt anything! I didn't have any of the hard rubber that was used back that far!
beautiful video, you are a great technician and a great person
@JaneChristensen.
2 ай бұрын
That's engineer, and after having watched many videos now, I agree, amazing person!
สวัสดีครับ ผมกดติดตามช่องของคุณ ในปีนี้ ผมรู้สึกได้ว่า คุณมีความชำนาญเก่งในเรื่อง วิทยุหลอดแบบโบราณ ผมว่าคุณอธิบายในแต่ละคลิปVDOได้ละเอียดดีมาก แต่เสียดาย ผมพูดภาษาอังฤกษไม่ได้ เลยฟังไม่รู้เรื่อง ที่คุณพูดสื่อสารออกมา แต่ผมเข้าใจว่าคุณเก่งเรื่องวิทยุมากมาย ผมอยู่ประเทศไทยครับ ถึงผมพูดภาษาอังกฤษไม่ได้ ฟังไม่ออก แต่ผมก็ได้เข้าดูภาพ VDO เท่านั้น เพราะใจผมชอบวิทยุ อยากเรียนรู้ซ่อมวทยุได้เหมือนคุณ จากFC ที่ประเทศไทยครับ
@shaggydogg630
2 ай бұрын
Couldn’t have said it better myself.
@20kilovolt
2 ай бұрын
ดีที่คุณสนใจวิทยุเก่า หากคุณต้องการแปลบางสิ่ง Google translate เป็นตัวเลือกที่ดี ตอนนี้ฉันก็ใช้มันเช่นกัน คำทักทายจากเนเธอร์แลนด์
Absolutely stunning work. Good job! Love to see that hand built variable condenser. And to build your own capacitors and resistors! Wow. Haven't seen the audion vid but surely is as impressive. Excellent.
look at the rotatable link coupled transformer!
I live in Los Angeles. If I touch the input of an amplifier i hear KNX news radio !!
Nice restoration! I'm just wondering if any custom PCBs and 3DP/CNC'd part may help for future work? If so, we'd like to support free services (PCBWay zoey)
Very nice and informative
Marvelous! I love builds like that, I have built some one tube regenerative radios, but nothing beats a radio with a homemade triode.
This is so cool! Thank you for sharing!
No words , thank you ron greetings from portugal
congrats, something there Ive never seen, pencil lead resistor! Outstanding! When the Great Tech Reset happens, and semiconductors cant be made, this will be the technology.
Fantastic work on that radio! To believe that's enough to pick up broadcasts.
Fabulous, thank you for sharing.
Outstanding! So neat. Would sure like to learn more of this!
I thought the getter was only for outgassing of the tube internals and not micro leaks
"Unbelievable" I hear myself say over and over when I watch what you do. But I believe it after seeing some of your videos, all the while becoming more inspired. Although it may be more grounded for me to hear you speak of something you cannot do. I have come to believe, if you had enough time and materials, you could create any modern CPU out of only discrete components.
a beautiful job indeed, congratulations from Italy, expecially for the amazing tube
IIn the days (like 1912) when EVERYTHING had to be made by hand by hobbyists, how did they know when their homebrew part had achieved 2Meg Ohms or 2200 pF? What did they use for testing or checking?
@yuriivanov12
2 ай бұрын
There were books with instructions how to make parts, simple formulas, etc. There wasn't need also for high accuracy of resistors and capacitors in such radios as this.
@glasslinger
2 ай бұрын
They used their HP 8 digit Digital VOM! What else! :)
@CATech1138
2 ай бұрын
with large amounts of adjustibility tolerances can be low and still work
Beautiful. I would love to get an audion (reproduction or otherwise). Great work.
@glasslinger
2 ай бұрын
This is possible. I am trying to figure how to email someone on YT. They don't make it easy!
The only way this could be more gloriously Heath Robinson is... If you were to build a model steam engin to gererate the B+, and a flame-triode for the amplifier(That way you don't need a heater filement). Then you'd have what might be the first ever steam powered radio.
If you would connect the outer foil of your tuning capacitor to the lower impedance side of your circuit, reception would be twice as good. );
Nice!! I'm building one radio like that with the home made triodes. This video will be veeery helpful. 1 valve radio would be nice, like the Reflex receiver. And the cat is lovely, by the way
Good to see the supervisor over-seeing the work. Missed her in the vacuum tube video last week.
Nicely done 👍🏻
This was super cool!
VERY COOL ! YOU DID A GREAT JOB MAKING THAT RADIO!!😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
I have recreated the early crystal sets from several of the books I have collected. Now I have to do this set! Peace
An excellent video an amazing job,
That is amazing.
I wonder if there was much to listen to in 1912.......
@Dan40049
2 ай бұрын
Just the Titanic's distress calls...
Aww rescue kitty TNR good for you thank you!
It's crazy to think how simple that radio is There's hardly any components at all🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
Superb!
Now then, time to make either a triode or a tetrode audio amplifier?
Love it.
So cool!!!
Thats amazing rod, If we Have a war, Everyone better make friends with you, Cause you can throw parts together to hear whats going on, in the World
Great work! I think that rotating coil variable inductor is called a variometer also what kind of antenna did you use for this? amazing!
love it, made me research the development of the tube
Amazing! i've built many one tube radio kits but I could never get one to make a sound. idk if they just don't work or they don't go loud enough for me to hear them.
Ohh yeah! Glaslinger, esse é um lindo Radio
@ricardosalesdemello4130
Ай бұрын
Oh thanks friend glaslinger
Hi Ron! Nice radio!
Wow very cool thank you for the video
Very nice, what kind of wire is used for connecting and for the coils. I have some cloth insulation wire from 1929.
Amazing !
nice project , does the humidity affect that 2Mohm resistor u can coat it with resin or wax , u can make the variable capacitor with half circle shape instead of square plat for more linearity . I'm happy cause they still maintain high power AM radio for us to experiment radio reception , just imagine how many tubes u need to recive DAB radio :-).
And those handmade components last for ever!
great work