[Milsurplus] [armyradios] Re: [vmars] Re: [ham-hist] Fox-hole radios
W2HX
w2hx at w2hx.com
Wed Jul 7 21:49:16 EDT 2010
When I was a kid (not so very long ago) my father taught me how to make one
of these. We made one together using a "safety razor blade" which was the
kind that the handle opened up and the blade set into it. The darn thing
worked great. I got both stations! WHLI and.ok, maybe one station.
I was amazed that a radio could work without electricity. So I then
proceeded to connect it to a bogen amp my father had and we had loud music!
Days of awe.
73 Eugene W2HX
From: armyradios at yahoogroups.com [mailto:armyradios at yahoogroups.com] On
Behalf Of Robert Nickels
Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2010 10:42 AM
To: armyradios at yahoogroups.com
Cc: J. Forster; milsurplus at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [armyradios] Re: [vmars] Re: [ham-hist] Fox-hole radios
On 7/7/2010 8:45 AM, J. Forster wrote:
>
> some years ago there was a thread on another Group about the
> properties of a Razor Blade detector
>
Back in my yout' I build many of them and the foxhole radio got me
through several grade school science fairs ;-) Mine were based on an
article from Popular Mechanics (or Science?) that used a bent safety pin
as the catwhisker, but with a piece of pencil lead wired to the end to
actually contact the razor blade. They said a blade with some rust
would probably work better, and you'd have to probe around to find a
sensitive spot. They worked as well as my storebought "Remco" crystal
set, which is to say, you could hear the local BC station but not much else.
> IMO, a comparison between a Razor Blade and a Galena "Cat's Whister"
> (ie point contact diode) detector would be very interesting indeed.
>
A few years ago I became interested in early solid state and especially
negative resistance devices, which led me to the fascinating website of
my pal Nyle Steiner K7NS: http://home.earthlink.net/~lenyr/
He's put several photos of the waveform and V/I curve on his negative
resistance pages that will give you some idea of how well these devices
perform.
I was able to adapt Nyle's oscillator concept to create a crystal
controlled RF oscillator using a piece of oxidized galvanized sheet
metal that could be keyed and even amplitude modulated. We've been
able to copy the microwatt-level signal from these simple transmitters
up to several miles away. Our experiments with this type of oscillator
can be found at his new website: http://www.sparkbangbuzz.com/
I've had many questions after I put up a little Youtube video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cDBpBYkRw0Q
but this is more of a novelty than a practical way to communicate.
Finding a spot that provides the right characteristics to sustain
oscillation at RF frequencies is painstaking and if you bump the table
you'll probably go off the air! But making an RF signal using "junk"
without an active tube or semiconductor is quite a thrill, and I've
fantasized about how an military radio op behind enemy lines might have
put this idea to use, had he known about it.
73, Bob W9RAN
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