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Foxhole Radio detector variant

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vu2nan

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May 14, 2013, 7:21:31 AM5/14/13
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Please do check this out.

http://tinyurl.com/cccnh6d

Many thanks.

73,

Nandu.




--
vu2nan

Channel Jumper

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May 14, 2013, 8:22:51 AM5/14/13
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vu2nan;804917 Wrote:
> Please do check this out.
>
> http://tinyurl.com/cccnh6d
>
> Many thanks.
>
> 73,
>
> Nandu.


Thanks

That is a real old web site - saw it many times before.

The problem is - not many safety razor blades anymore - other then
cardboard cutters or utility knife blades.

With the commercial broadcast bands going digital - it is hard to find a
good signal anymore.. Even KDKA is hard to hear at night with the
digital signal of another station in about the same exact place.




--
Channel Jumper

vu2nan

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May 14, 2013, 9:17:37 AM5/14/13
to

Channel Jumper;804920 Wrote:
> Thanks
>
> That is a real old web site - saw it many times before.
>
> The problem is - not many safety razor blades anymore - other then
> cardboard cutters or utility knife blades.
>
> With the commercial broadcast bands going digital - it is hard to find a
> good signal anymore.. Even KDKA is hard to hear at night with the
> digital signal of another station in about the same exact place.

Hi,

You are absolutely correct. The way things are changing, I wonder if
future generations will appreciate old tech!

Thanks.

Regards,

Nandu.




--
vu2nan

philo

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Jun 15, 2013, 3:55:09 PM6/15/13
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I found this


http://www.midnightscience.com/



So I guess there is still interest.


I am disappointed how there are so few good radio stations
but am very glad there is still NPR.

Ralph Mowery

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Jun 15, 2013, 6:22:52 PM6/15/13
to

"Channel Jumper" <Channel.Jum...@radiobanter.com> wrote in message
news:Channel.Jum...@radiobanter.com...
>
>>
> The problem is - not many safety razor blades anymore - other then
> cardboard cutters or utility knife blades.
>
> With the commercial broadcast bands going digital - it is hard to find a
> good signal anymore.. Even KDKA is hard to hear at night with the
> digital signal of another station in about the same exact place.
>
>
The real problem is the blades needed to be the Blue Blades. The other ones
did not work well if at all. The blue was not paint, but some form of
coating on the blades that kept them from rusting. I am not sure if it is
similar to the blueing on guns or not.



coffelt2

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Jun 16, 2013, 1:51:04 AM6/16/13
to
> I am disappointed how there are so few good radio stations
> but am very glad there is still NPR.

NPR is pretty interesting, but a mite too liberal for my standards,
what I crave is some good old "Wolfman Jack" or even back a bit
more, "Innersanctem" {sp?} and the squeaking door! XERF DelRio?

Old Chief Lynn

philo

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Jun 16, 2013, 8:16:55 AM6/16/13
to
Still plenty of stations that rebroadcast the old programs,
but there is still nothing like live radio.

As to NPR and liberalism...they have /many/ good programs that have
nothing to do politics of any sort.


I love this one

http://www.waywordradio.org/

Michael Black

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Jun 16, 2013, 12:50:39 PM6/16/13
to
The sad part about the AM band is that at night when you can move out of
the local, so much of it is syndicated, and usually the same show or two.
The local stations love it, filler for a time when audience is down, but
no thrill when tuning the band. There was a local station carrying "Coast
to COast" and every time it looked like the station was going to fail,
everyone would say "but what about Coast to Coast?" as if they couldn't
get the program so easily up and down the dial. And when that station did
finally die, another station grabbed it right away. Sad, that station
used to have local programming overnight.

For about a decade, I'd listen to WBZ out of Baston overnight if the local
overnight programming wasn't interesting that night, and the overnight
syndicated programming wasn't interesting. WBZ has a good reach
overnight, and except for the fading, might as well be local then. And
they know it, so they keep local programming (though often the guests and
calls are not just about Boston) and basically invite callers from all
over.

Reception got sporadic when a local station started up at 1040, just above
WBZ.

And I'm finding I'm not listening to much radio late at night.

Michael VE2BVW

Ralph Mowery

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Jun 16, 2013, 2:18:54 PM6/16/13
to

"Channel Jumper" <Channel.Jum...@radiobanter.com> wrote in message
news:Channel.Jum...@radiobanter.com...
>
> vu2nan;804917 Wrote:
>> Please do check this out.
>>
>> http://tinyurl.com/cccnh6d
>>
>> Many thanks.
>>
>> 73,
>>
>> Nandu.
>
>
> Thanks
>
> That is a real old web site - saw it many times before.
>
> The problem is - not many safety razor blades anymore - other then
> cardboard cutters or utility knife blades.
>

The real problem is the razor blade had to be a "Blue Blade". I think they
were only made by Gillette. This was not a paint, but some form of coating
on the blade. Not sure if it was similar to the blueing on guns or not.


philo

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Jun 16, 2013, 2:32:40 PM6/16/13
to
On 06/16/2013 11:50 AM, Michael Black wrote:
>

<snip>
>>
> The sad part about the AM band is that at night when you can move out of
> the local, so much of it is syndicated, and usually the same show or two.
> The local stations love it, filler for a time when audience is down, but
> no thrill when tuning the band. There was a local station carrying
> "Coast to COast" and every time it looked like the station was going to
> fail, everyone would say "but what about Coast to Coast?" as if they
> couldn't get the program so easily up and down the dial. And when that
> station did finally die, another station grabbed it right away. Sad,
> that station used to have local programming overnight.
>
> For about a decade, I'd listen to WBZ out of Baston overnight if the
> local overnight programming wasn't interesting that night, and the
> overnight syndicated programming wasn't interesting. WBZ has a good
> reach overnight, and except for the fading, might as well be local
> then. And they know it, so they keep local programming (though often
> the guests and calls are not just about Boston) and basically invite
> callers from all over.
>
> Reception got sporadic when a local station started up at 1040, just
> above WBZ.
>
> And I'm finding I'm not listening to much radio late at night.
>
> Michael VE2BVW



I'm retired now, but when I was working I'd spend many hours a day
driving and radio was very important to me. When radio pretty much died
I stocked up on CD's but that was hardly the same...it got boring pretty
fast.

Now, I find myself listening to a few hours of NPR on weekends
and that's about it.


BTW: I am also a ham radio operator, but am no longer active.
I actually prefer Usenet.

philo

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Jun 16, 2013, 2:34:07 PM6/16/13
to
When my dad and I built the never-to-work crystal set, the plans said
not to use a blue-blade. OTOH, we did try it after the regular razor did
not work.

Jim Mueller

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Jun 16, 2013, 5:19:57 PM6/16/13
to
Gun blueing is available at sporting goods and gun stores. Try it and
see if it works. Then tell us all.

--
Jim Mueller wron...@nospam.com

To get my real email address, replace wrongname with dadoheadman.
Then replace nospam with fastmail. Lastly, replace com with us.

Ralph Mowery

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Jun 16, 2013, 6:10:08 PM6/16/13
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"Jim Mueller" <wron...@nospam.com> wrote in message
news:51be2bfd$0$40764$c3e8da3$3304...@news.astraweb.com...
> Gun blueing is available at sporting goods and gun stores. Try it and
> see if it works. Then tell us all.
>
> --

There are atleast two kinds. One is the cold blueing that is just brushed
on and wiped off. Not too much trouble, but the process I was thinking of
is the hot blueing that is lots of trouble. Both are not worth my time or
money to try just for a one time deal. Also I do not have any high
impedance ear phones..hihi.


Frank

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Jul 2, 2013, 1:38:47 PM7/2/13
to
Blue on razor blades is selenium, which is how it
works as diode. Poisonous stuff, have fun, but be
careful.
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