BOLTR: Stone Age Radio Voice Based Interwebs for Frozen Third World Sit-Holes.

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  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024
  • Ahhh... the smell of nostalgia! RF black magic voodoo!
    Long term projects here Yesterday's Vid: Robot Resolver. / ave
    Easter Egg: • Video

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @ChefSalad
    @ChefSalad 7 лет назад +670

    That conductor that you thought was thread is probably (almost certainly) Litz wire. It's essentially a bundle of braided, individually insulated, very thin wires that together function as a single wire for conducting AC at a high frequencies. High frequencies can't be conducted easily by single wires due to the skin effect. The skin effect is that when AC is put through a conductor, the electrons flow mostly on the outside of the conductor rather than throughout the cross-section. The higher the frequency is, the more pronounced the skin effect is. At 60 Hz (wall AC in NA), the skin depth (the depth above which almost all the electricity is) is 8.5 mm. This means that if a conductor is thicker that 17 mm diameter, then the center of the wire won't be used at all. This means that if you need wire thicker than 17 mm, you should use pipe with a thickness of 8.5 mm. At radio frequencies, the skin depth is practically microscopic, so big conductors are practically worthless. For example, 100 MHz, the skin depth is 6.02 μm (0.0062 mm). Litz wire is a good way of dealing with this problem at high frequencies. Furthermore, you can make good Litz wire for high frequencies by coating a non-conductive material with a few microns of conductor, and then an insulator, and then braiding those conductors together. This will feel like a weird sort of string. This is probably what you saw.

    • @arduinoversusevil2025
      @arduinoversusevil2025  7 лет назад +76

      COOL! So how does this work for PWM frequencies in BLDC motors? Say the carrier is 20kHz?

    • @x3wildcard
      @x3wildcard 7 лет назад +20

      Learn something every day. Good post.

    • @gtb81.
      @gtb81. 7 лет назад +18

      and it soo easy to break while soldering

    • @daviddroescher
      @daviddroescher 7 лет назад +13

      The funny adjustable can may have been adjustable caps for fine tuning the frequency. if so there should be many thin 3/4 circular plates . probably silver plated as skin effect is shallower than the plating.
      pwm question
      wouldn't the 20k Mh be an on/off signal and the motor position would dictate phase of AC ? if so the frequency would be pole count * phase * rpm ,having very little to no skin effect . The 20k is a quasi RPM limit. Pole count*phase* rpm =20k . even if you hit it with more pixie dust your PWM can't switch any faster. With high tork /pole count motors this becomes an engineering consideration.

    • @veritypickle8471
      @veritypickle8471 6 лет назад +2

      YOU sir.

  • @dynasteve1242
    @dynasteve1242 8 лет назад +219

    Mad respect for a man who speaks french, english and northern jibberish

    • @nicusor86
      @nicusor86 4 года назад +5

      I smelled some disguised italiana and recently some deutcholande

  • @ChristopherGaul
    @ChristopherGaul 6 лет назад +138

    These were used all over the Canadian Arctic and sub-Arctic. When I went to work in the NWT in 2007 they were still being used here and there. I decommissioned the last ones in use by the company I worked for in around 2009. This is part of the interesting history of one of the last frontiers on Earth.
    You knew you were experiencing a part of a dying part of history when you:
    - Flew with Joe on Buffalo
    - Crossed your first Ice Road
    - Did all your laundry the day before the water truck came
    - Sat on top of misc cargo with a sled dog or two in the back of a bush plane
    - Went out to a fish camp in an old bombardier
    - Made a radio-telephone call

    • @621gotdown4
      @621gotdown4 2 года назад +1

      In northern Quebec those radios are still used to this day

    • @SuperCanuck777
      @SuperCanuck777 2 года назад

      @@621gotdown4 I was born and brought up in Montreal. i find this all facinating !

  • @MicrophonicFool
    @MicrophonicFool 7 лет назад +139

    I've seen this video multiple times as I am a Patreon of yours, but I decided to send it to a co-worker of mine and he has direct experience with this company back in the 70's and 80's. He is one of those dark magic RF dudes through and through. Just thought I would share what he sent back:
    "That radio is a Spillsbury Tindall SBx-11 and believe it or not I used to tune them up and put them in the field in Yukon back in the late 70’s! They were a great HF radio, a bit fussy to tune, but really good with a long wire dipole hooked up to trees…..
    Also used to install them in helicopters with a horizontal whip antenna that was inductively tuned to band and fined tuned with the capacitor in the built in tuner.
    I don’t know if I could tune one now, but I do know that the guys at the arctic institute used to have several.
    Before Sat phones people would wait for the right conditions and could talk over several hundred miles, under the right conditions.
    Single side band so AM modulation with lots of distortion but readable. A great radio in its day.
    25 Watts out and powered by D cells!"

  • @saeedabulhusn4625
    @saeedabulhusn4625 8 лет назад +9

    This is a valuable piece of Canadian history. The manufacturer was in business for over 40 years (From the 1940s till the 80s or 90s), and the model you are in possession of (SBX-11A) is known to have served at the North Pole as well as the summit of Mount Everest.

  • @playswithknives
    @playswithknives 7 лет назад +212

    Chickadee is going to be a bilingual engineer by the time she's 12.

  • @samoksner
    @samoksner 8 лет назад +29

    I was a taxicab dispatcher in my early 20s and I spend a good week figuring out what I would say the first time I came on the radio to 500+ drivers - gotta be coooolll!!

  • @StephenWebbone
    @StephenWebbone 8 лет назад +38

    pcb layout in the 70's was true art. One guy and a pencil got it done, no computers involved in that layout.

    • @dankingsbury9971
      @dankingsbury9971 3 года назад +2

      My memory of PCB layout in that era was using "crepe tape", wrinkly/springy stuff which could be bent into the shapes we saw on that radio board. That was succeeded by mylar tape, which couldn't be bent; you had to do overlapping angled joints. CAD made it all easier, of course, and especially being able to enforce design rules for trace length, spacing, etc.

  • @sidvis7235
    @sidvis7235 5 лет назад +9

    As soon as I saw the little orange box, I got all nostalgic. My dad was the foreman in the metal shop of Spilsbury and Tindall, and when I turned 16, had my first official paying job in that metal shop. This was 1966, and the company at that time was located at 120 E. Cordova St.. Worked there for may years, and the SBX 11 was developed during those years. I remember cutting, punching, bending and welding those aluminum parts, including that cute little riveted shield. Thanks, AvE for the trip down memory lane.
    Sid

    • @evanc.1591
      @evanc.1591 Год назад

      Holy shit, never fails to amaze me who you find in the commbox. Thanks for the info, and for giving a damn at work!

  • @jimbaritone6429
    @jimbaritone6429 7 лет назад +106

    Wow. Haven't seen one of those for about 35 years. I used to work as a Pixie Wrangler (radio tech) in the Northwest Territories, the Yukon and Northern B.C. I've got a whole drawer full of those Buss fuses with springs. The metal cans are tuneable inductors with a ferrite core - the metal can is an RF shield. There was a whole network of these, along with some even older Canadian Marconi tube rigs, all the way down the MacKenzie and across the Northwest. There were a couple of daily radio nets where "outpost" stations would do a daily check-in. They were also used by aircraft landing at isolated strips (2.8 MHz band). As is mentioned in the video, some stations - ones that had a link to the telephone system by wire or microwave - would patch telephone calls through the operator. (All the land mobile telephone networks, even VHF, in Northern Alberta, Northern B.C., and NWT used operators). I've had my mitts into a fair few of this model radio, and seeing this really takes me back. I HATED the Marconi HF radios that used tubes - these were a fantastic improvement. Reception ranged from good (occasionally) to dreadful. The newer radios like this one were really well made, expensive as hell, and didn't break too often (except for the mic cords). I'd love to put "hands on" one of the rigs AvE's got again - they were damn near bulletproof, as radios went back in the day. The 2.8 MHz frequencies are still used on HF (High Frequency) radio on commercial trans-Atlantic airline flights. There's a web site - LiveATC.net - where you can monitor the Air Traffic Control Centre in Gander, Newfoundland, and sometimes Shanwick in the U.K. as well as the aircraft. Between 5 PM and 1 AM Mountain time, literally hundreds of airliners check in with Gander on HF, most heading East. Later on, you hear the West-bound aircraft checking in with Gander when they reach 30 degrees West Longitude. The frequencies change with the time of day, but they still use that real low-frequency radio band among others. Don't know how you came by it, AvE. but thanks for the nostalgia.

    • @StagrLee
      @StagrLee 7 лет назад +6

      Yes, tunable Inductor! My old Heathkit FM section has a huge tunable inductor and the tunable slug in it is so soft that it crumbles when you put in the plastic hex tool. The fix is a harder less magnetic slug adding a static inductor in series to compensate for the inductance loss or switch the LC oscillator to a static inductor with a tunable capacitor. The Bible for this stuff is "RF Components and CIrcuits" by Joe Carr. Great addon to the Art of Electronic Book. Friggin Skookum

    • @samuelsims4625
      @samuelsims4625 6 лет назад +3

      Jim Baritone So its just a hopped up hf radio? Seems interesting but is it tunable when using the phone patch? Id hate to be trying to land a plane, talking to the ground, and having to listen to a guy talking to his wife. Pretty cool tho and thanks for the info

    • @scottwelch1148
      @scottwelch1148 4 года назад +2

      I grew up in the NWT and maintained our radios. We had the Marconis at first, CH-25 with tube finals, and then we switched to a Daniels all solid state. When I went to university in the south (Winnipeg) I took the CH-25 with me and laid a dipole on the roof my residence building. Worked like a charm! At the time Bell Canada ran the phone service out of Frobisher Bay, that was shut down in 1983.

    • @PGE564
      @PGE564 2 года назад +1

      I have one in mint shape!

  • @smokinghull
    @smokinghull 7 лет назад +88

    The Sex life of an Electron
    by Eddie Currents
    One night when his charge was pretty high, Micro-Farad decided to seek out a cute little coil to help him discharge.
    He picked up Milli-Amp and took her for a ride in his Megacycle. They rode across the Wheatstone Bridge and stopped by a Magnetic field with flowing currents and frolicked in the sine waves.
    Micro-Farad, attracted by Millie-Amp's characterisic curves soon had her fully charged and proceeded to excite her resistance to a minimum. He gently laid her at ground potential, raised her frequency and lowered her reluctance.
    With a quick arc, he pulled out his high voltage probe and inserted it in her socket, connecting them in parallel. He slowly began short circuiting her resistance shunt while quickly raising her thermal conductance level to mill-spec. Fully excited, Milli- Amp mumbled "OHM...OHM...OHM"
    With his tube operating well into class C, and her field vibrating with his current flow, a corona formed which instantly caused her shunt to overheat just at the point when Micro-Farad rapidly discharged and drained off every electron into her grid.
    They fluxed all night trying various connectors and sockets untill his magnet had a soft core and lost all of its field strength.
    Afterwards, Milli-Amp tried self-induction and damaged her solenoids and with his battery fully discharged, Micro-Farad was unable to excite his field. Not ready to be quiescent, they spent the rest of the evening reversing polarity and blowing each others fuses.

    • @robertlee5456
      @robertlee5456 7 лет назад +7

      Should've been read in my intro to electrical engineering class.

    • @Norm475
      @Norm475 5 лет назад +6

      I first saw this probably about 50 years ago, It was funny then and just as funny now. Thanks for the memories, I passed this on to several buddies.

    • @bigpappahemi4263
      @bigpappahemi4263 4 года назад +4

      What sort of stranger electro-porn is this?

    • @jonanderson5137
      @jonanderson5137 3 года назад +2

      Be blessed by my 69th like.

  • @benbrown5159
    @benbrown5159 4 года назад +4

    Hearing chickadee’s sweet little voice brought a “happy tear” to my eyes and a big smile to my face, reminding me of similar moments when my kids were little and everything was good in the world. You’re a great dad. Thanks for sharing these videos.

  • @thestalkinghead
    @thestalkinghead 8 лет назад +272

    aww, she even knows to use a spanner for ripping apart broken electronics

    • @Beany2007FTW
      @Beany2007FTW 8 лет назад +44

      The Spanner of Learning - smaller cousin to the Hammer of Learning.

    • @jacksonledford6874
      @jacksonledford6874 8 лет назад +7

      +Beany2007FTW also in the family is the cheater bar of learning

    • @bmx4free
      @bmx4free 8 лет назад

      +AtomicSpoon i was thinking the same

    • @Beany2007FTW
      @Beany2007FTW 8 лет назад +2

      Don't forget the Bin of Art.

    • @askjacob
      @askjacob 8 лет назад +1

      have these "" for your "Art"

  • @richbooth8948
    @richbooth8948 8 лет назад +22

    +AvE The Slo Blow fuse you have is fairly common. The ceramic ones you refer too are usually for high heat applications. The spring isn't for vibration, it is made of relatively high resistance material, helping to heat up the lump of fusable material on the fuse element, and pulling it rapidly apart when it melts. The combination of lump and spring, with its relatively high thermal mass, also allows the surge to pass, but provides the protection for longer term but lesser overloads.
    The silver "WTF are these things?" are tunable coils (inductors) for adjusting the oscillator frequency.

  • @davidchristensen6908
    @davidchristensen6908 7 лет назад +27

    The little one take your videos from a 10 to an 11. Always enjoy your interaction with the little one.

  • @helifixer206
    @helifixer206 6 лет назад +2

    That is great, I loved the Frontier Helicopters sticker on it, they used to put these things in helicopters way back, you had to be careful if you got to close to the huge long antenna sticking out the front of the helicopter when they were transmitting it would zap you good.

  • @elijahaitaok8624
    @elijahaitaok8624 6 лет назад +6

    I never understood how something that where I live is used fairly regularly and for mundane weather reports and conversations in the native tongue could be so expensive, but hearing you enthusiastically explain the tech makes me appreciate it far more

  • @Sidmariner
    @Sidmariner 8 лет назад +1

    Jim Spilsbury is a legend in British Columbia. He provided HF radios to the coast and serviced them from his boat. His travels and a lot of BC history are documented in a series of his books called "Spilsbury's Coast". Later he founded Queen Charlotte Airlines which morped into Pacific Western Airlines, once upon a time the third largest airline in Canada. His stories make fantastic reading

  • @TylerBoespflug
    @TylerBoespflug 8 лет назад +9

    "Cowboy coffee and sweat lodge" - That really paints a hell of a picture.

  • @mkeyser
    @mkeyser 8 лет назад +2

    Hi AvE. The spring loaded fuse is not for shock dampening, the spring is to force the fuse element to clear when the fuse blows, it also acts as an indicator when the fuse is blown.
    The thread is Litz wire. They use multiple strands of fine wire to reduce the self-capacitance of the inductor.
    Electronics is an art, the trouble is understanding why someone chose to do something a particular way, a lot of times it's to cut-corners, or cost savings, and sometimes its just an outright mistake. the mistakes are the funny ones to find, and sometimes very complicated to fix.

  • @wesleydevries875
    @wesleydevries875 8 лет назад +60

    best part is you get to keep an fucking awesome box

    • @Keduce22
      @Keduce22 8 лет назад +1

      I was thinking the same thing ;)

  • @furrymessiah
    @furrymessiah 8 лет назад +2

    That book reminds me of How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive by John Muir. The single best automotive repair manual ever written.

    • @ruftime
      @ruftime 8 лет назад

      Amen brother! I still have my original Muir book and whenever I find a used copy, pick it up and give it out to new car enthusiasts I know. Lots of great info, easy to understand!

    • @furrymessiah
      @furrymessiah 8 лет назад

      Canyon Racer It's a great guide, even if you don't own a VW.

  • @Dingomush
    @Dingomush 5 лет назад +24

    When the “Boss” says kick a ball, you kick a ball!

  • @phonedave
    @phonedave 8 лет назад +2

    +AvE thanks for the look into history. I work in telecom and some of the old switching and test equipment amazes me. The creativity needed to invent some of the electro-mechanical gear is just astounding.

  • @SeanTHirsch
    @SeanTHirsch 8 лет назад +37

    man I wish I had teachers that could explain things half as well as you can.

    • @imagineaworld
      @imagineaworld 5 лет назад +7

      Thats because your teachers dont care about you half as much as AvE. Same boat. This is why we watch him religiously. He is the magnificent uncle Bumblefuck.

  • @cameronjenkins6748
    @cameronjenkins6748 8 лет назад +2

    This video is heart-warming to me for several reasons. I'm a sucker for old electronics, so I find that thing to be beautiful. It was so nice to hear your interaction with your daughter and to hear you get so happy about electronic components.

  • @GregsGarage
    @GregsGarage 8 лет назад +42

    haven't seen you that geeked up in a long time. Good show sir.

    • @DRUCO316
      @DRUCO316 6 лет назад

      He got excited for the D

  • @josephp.polnaszek9134
    @josephp.polnaszek9134 8 лет назад +1

    Fun video. It took me back many years to when I was playing with Gonset Communicator ham radios. Those old rigs were also rock bound and finding rocks for them was getting hard to do so we would open the cam and rub some graphite pencil onto the crystal to get them to go lower in frequency and lap the crystal to get them to go up in frequency. Those were surly very intresting times in my amature radio hoby years. Oh and the mechanical filter was a 6 KHZ wide am filter. A lot of those style of filter were made by Collins radio and worked very nicely.

  • @godfreypoon5148
    @godfreypoon5148 8 лет назад +19

    The best way to sound cool on a radio is to *FUCKING SPEAK CLEARLY*.

  • @blu_falcon6321
    @blu_falcon6321 5 лет назад +17

    I know that smell. US Army aviation test sets smell like that.

  • @92RADLO
    @92RADLO 8 лет назад +7

    Making a coffee and putting this on the big screen. AvE is my favourite TV show lol

  • @charlieg9559
    @charlieg9559 8 лет назад +1

    I really enjoy how much you genuinely enjoy discovering the inner workings of the things you take apart. All the other stuff aside, watching you go through that radio gave me joy.

  • @jimspeed1388
    @jimspeed1388 8 лет назад +9

    I used to love having my daughter working with me in the garage I had her mig welding at 7 years old she 18 on the 4th july and a beauty therapist now guess she didn't want to be a diesel fitter then.

  • @boomerschmaltz
    @boomerschmaltz 7 лет назад +1

    I believe that the spring in the Buss fuse pulls the contacts apart when pixie resistance melts the fuse's low temp metal. A work of art! Thanks for a great demolition, er, dismantling!

    • @cccmmm1234
      @cccmmm1234 2 года назад

      Yup when the solder blob melts it pops apart

  • @theoneandonlymattp
    @theoneandonlymattp 7 лет назад +17

    You should start a new channel where you've got your little as an assistant teaching her, I know mine would love to sit down and watch, she does now!

  • @DrathVader
    @DrathVader 8 лет назад +1

    I have always assumed that crystal oscillators contain pixies that are bashing against each other in a regular time intervals. Today I have finally understood (more or less) how they actually work. Thanks, AvE.

  • @Hermanhusband
    @Hermanhusband 7 лет назад +19

    Luckiest man in world! Take your daughter to work day and You are a softie! That's why you are a great person!

  • @Dominico97
    @Dominico97 7 лет назад +3

    My god, your daughter is so cute. You're an awesome dad. It's so nice to see someone teaching children about the wonder of tech and learning how things work together.

  • @drteknical6571
    @drteknical6571 8 лет назад +13

    4 channels, 4 crystals for TX and 4 for RX. put that crystal back in!

  • @srpacific
    @srpacific 6 лет назад +1

    Jim Spilsbury was a legend on the BC coast...not just some guy making radios in East Van! You've got to read his books. He started the radio company during the second world war and even owned an airline...

  • @htomerif
    @htomerif 7 лет назад +19

    That looks suspiciously like a red-painted less militarized AN/PRC-77.

    • @gonashfreeman1325
      @gonashfreeman1325 5 лет назад

      htomerif little small for a 77. Think this later version.

  • @tylerhorsman
    @tylerhorsman 8 лет назад

    Dude, so much nostalgia! I'm a child of the 80s, dad worked logging camps in Bella Bella, Rivers Inlet, had many a radio phone call with him as a kid, even up into the early nineties. Great vid.

  • @yapuzle9193
    @yapuzle9193 7 лет назад +5

    aaww buddy I friggin love your chanel, your sense of humour is first class

  • @roberthorwat6747
    @roberthorwat6747 8 лет назад

    These tear downs are great! It ain't what you do it's the way that you 'splain it that keeps me wanting more AvE electronics stuff. I'm no expert, but I do massively appreciate the steady pace and thoughtful care you take in explaining things and the encouragement you give. Bloody priceless as far as I'm concerned. If it's fucked anyway there is nothing to lose, and the occasional success despite my inept incompetence is priceless.

  • @xjet
    @xjet 8 лет назад +16

    It's not thread... it's Litz wire. Cotton thread with a thin copper coating.

  • @Chris.Davies
    @Chris.Davies 8 лет назад

    In the 70s, my Dad was a doctor with a 3-channel radio telephone in the car. It connected to an answering service in town. We used to called "Fifty Five to Seekers". They'd reply "Go Ahead Double Five" and we could then ask them to put us through to a telephone number. It wasn't duplex, and we'd call "over" each time we finished talking.
    This was the coolest thing EVER, all those years ago. And it was line of sight, so I could call home from the ski field. :)

  • @123brummer
    @123brummer 8 лет назад +59

    Please, send this to BigCliveDotCom for further analysis ;-) Great vidjeo (as always) Thumbs up

    • @milano007100
      @milano007100 8 лет назад +10

      he will find a way to hurt himself with it

    • @PentaYOOO
      @PentaYOOO 8 лет назад +8

      +milano007100 You make it sound like that's a bad thing

    • @gramursowanfaborden5820
      @gramursowanfaborden5820 8 лет назад +33

      and replace everything with warm white LEDs

    • @viciousslayer
      @viciousslayer 8 лет назад +19

      he's like the bob ross of leds

    • @JordyValentine
      @JordyValentine 8 лет назад +4

      god damn he love's those warm whites haha

  • @wealthyblackman2655
    @wealthyblackman2655 3 года назад

    Wow. Excellent explanation of crystals in radio wavelengths. Nobody, nobody has ever attempted to explain the magic crystals of radios. This is very informative.

  • @arcadeuk
    @arcadeuk 8 лет назад +9

    It was really funny watching how excited you were getting dismantling all of that :)

  • @gregburns6636
    @gregburns6636 3 года назад +1

    These were still used in 1999 in Nunavut when I was in Pond Inlet at the north end of Baffin Island. We would travel across the sea ice to southern Bylot Island and stay at a hunters cabin and chat with other folks around.

  • @Nexfero
    @Nexfero 8 лет назад +6

    That hand drawn circuit board layout is really a lost art form 7:31

  • @TSWaterman
    @TSWaterman 8 лет назад

    Horowitz & Hill !! Sitting right here on the shelf behind me, leftover from my electrical enginerding days in Berkeley, building particle detectors. Brings back the memories. Thanks

  • @avva4090
    @avva4090 8 лет назад +17

    Just in case anyone was interested in the textbook, I don't know what edition he was using, but the 3rd edition is available in PDF format here: www.pdf-archive.com/2016/03/02/the-art-of-electronics-3rd-edition/the-art-of-electronics-3rd-edition.pdf

    • @loren481
      @loren481 7 лет назад

      You are the best! Thank you!

    • @KillerKimZ
      @KillerKimZ 7 лет назад +3

      Lord_Avvakum thanks... very useful assist for understanding pixie wrangling

    • @FyreFiend
      @FyreFiend 7 лет назад +2

      No longer :(

    • @mysss29
      @mysss29 7 лет назад +2

      it really is quite incredibly easy to steal books online. you can even do it by accident! the future is weird.

    • @pirateman1966
      @pirateman1966 6 лет назад +1

      I bought mine for $87. I love the authors and the wonderful job they did on this work of art. I support people like that, not steal from them.

  • @Joshualt43
    @Joshualt43 8 лет назад

    Man, I get more excited about your new videos then most... but especially BOLTR!!!

  • @strangersound
    @strangersound 8 лет назад +7

    "I'm talking to you Wikipedia editors!" LOL! - Great video Ave. Super cool device, loads of Ave lingo, cameo by Chickadee...what more can you ask for? 10-4! :)

    • @extrastuff9463
      @extrastuff9463 8 лет назад

      Footage of a ball being kicked at the end obviously!

  • @MerchantOfDeath15
    @MerchantOfDeath15 8 лет назад +2

    Haha! I remember my first radio call at 18! I screwed up sooo bad on the "cool factor".... "can I uhm...can I get a copy for so and so?........over...."

  • @raysills
    @raysills 8 лет назад +50

    There are about 1000 amateur radio operators out there cringing on how you mangled the inside of that radio. Most of them would like to fix it and put it back on the air. And quite a few might pay good money for a portable radio like that.

    • @whyattrmellon5269
      @whyattrmellon5269 8 лет назад +2

      +AvE I only watch your video's when I've been drinking. does this make me a bad person?

  • @MrKelenek
    @MrKelenek 8 лет назад +3

    As a French Canadian it warms my heart that speak to your daughter in both English and French :-) The more Language she speaks the better it is for her ! :-D

  • @shanevmax34
    @shanevmax34 8 лет назад +3

  • @sacasanova
    @sacasanova 7 лет назад +1

    You are the only person, outside of my family, I have ever heard reference the red green show. It warms my heart like the sound of a 454 or the glow of a 300 watt incandescent light bulb to hear you reference the comedy of Steve Smith. Might be because I live in Florida. Keep up with the tear downs, by far one of the best things out there for a former pixy wrangler to be watching.

  • @derek3398
    @derek3398 8 лет назад +68

    That imaginary language you speak with your daughter is cute hahah

    • @camlearmonth6373
      @camlearmonth6373 8 лет назад +50

      "Imaginary" it's French.

    • @a.lampman2165
      @a.lampman2165 8 лет назад +17

      When Derek said "imaginary", that was an example of what we call "wishful thinking".

    • @wupme
      @wupme 7 лет назад +34

      French is an imaginary language

    • @mysss29
      @mysss29 7 лет назад +6

      probablement il joque ;)

    • @mysss29
      @mysss29 7 лет назад +2

      but it is incredibly cute xD

  • @FoolishPursuitForce
    @FoolishPursuitForce 8 лет назад +1

    You sounded exactly like Steve1989 MREinfo when commenting about the smell of the unit. Pure gold.

  • @SteveBrace
    @SteveBrace 8 лет назад +52

    +AvE No moar Chickadee... Too cute for the RUclipss xD

    • @alcyr5655
      @alcyr5655 8 лет назад +43

      She's definitely has the cute factor. And you never know the out come. You can never turn your back on them in the shop. You cant turn your back on them for a second. 6 yr old daughter had gopher cheeks, told her to spit it out. She just shook her head NO. She started coughing out electrical connectors, raced her to ER, x-rays showed she didn't swallow any. 8 yr old boy, proud to run garage door opener for the old man. Old Craftsmen garage door opener came down on his trike. He's laughing as the motor gets ripped off his mounts. Now at 22 the daughter, wants to do all the work on her van, I was always told, if I need your help I'll ask. Start them early, they will definitely entertain you.

    • @ifination
      @ifination 7 лет назад +2

      AvE's got a lot goin' for him, but the Chickadee is a real gift from Heaven!

  • @darylrichardson3766
    @darylrichardson3766 4 года назад +1

    I worked on boats in the early 80's repairing them so I always liked to have the Ship to shore radio on, the phone conversations were usually interesting to say the least. Of course from 9-12 I would turn it off to listen to Morningside with Peter Gzowski

  • @brianmangan2459
    @brianmangan2459 8 лет назад +11

    Those mystery blocks are radio crystals. One cell is transmit, other receive.

    • @dunxy
      @dunxy 8 лет назад +1

      The ones from his collection aren't crystals, im not sure what they are, but you can see crystals further in the unit, described by AvE as "oscillators in cans", 5 of them next to each other and one of on its lonesome to the right.I used to play with radios like these my old man bought for a few $ back in the 80's , to keep me entertained! Sure I don't know what the big cans are, just that they aren't crystals.I guess some kind of trim-pot.

    • @UberAlphaSirus
      @UberAlphaSirus 8 лет назад +5

      i think they are basically an lc circuit for the crystal to be tuned by adjusting the ferrit grub screw.

    • @howardhurtt6612
      @howardhurtt6612 8 лет назад +5

      Definitely slug-tuned IF cans. This seems to be an SSB rig (clarifier knob gives it away) operating in the 60-meter band. It would have good ground-wave performance, sensible for boonies operation.

  • @chrisblanch5730
    @chrisblanch5730 8 лет назад +1

    I just finished a big trip around AB, BC, YK & NWT and flew right by Telegraph Creek as I was between Smithers and Atlin. It sure is in the middle of nowhere!

  • @notsoserious0944
    @notsoserious0944 8 лет назад +6

    The spring pulls the link apart quickly to break the connection quickly and limit the arc formed.

  • @sethalump
    @sethalump 8 лет назад +2

    This has to be my favorite BOLTR thus far. I tore down a marine SSB antenna tuner from the same era. Good times.

  • @tulugozgur
    @tulugozgur 7 лет назад +3

    Nothing can beat a visit from chickadee!

  • @antt5112
    @antt5112 8 лет назад

    Thanks for the explanation of how the crystals were used, I couldn't quite understand how they are used to make the frequency and it makes it a lot easier to go back and have a look at how the old radios work.

  • @ThomasHaberkorn
    @ThomasHaberkorn 8 лет назад +71

    eevblog is calling

    • @sp1nrx
      @sp1nrx 8 лет назад +15

      ...but AvE's already taken it apart! What's Dave going to do?

    • @ThomasHaberkorn
      @ThomasHaberkorn 8 лет назад +1

      ;)

    • @krisztianszirtes5414
      @krisztianszirtes5414 8 лет назад +2

      +sp1nrx Maybe he will turn it on now as a next step?

    • @JordyValentine
      @JordyValentine 8 лет назад +5

      Just send some stuff from the 'wtf is this?' box instead

    • @DumbdogsWin
      @DumbdogsWin 8 лет назад +4

      I do enjoy the difference in their teardown approach.

  • @BlackWolf42-
    @BlackWolf42- 6 лет назад

    That transceiver only plays "Fight The Power" I Loved the movie reference. AvE, you never fail to astonish me.

  • @rhkips
    @rhkips 8 лет назад +4

    Shout out to Frontier Helicopters!
    I've got a whole box of slow-blow fuses with glass encasement. Funny lookin' things!

  • @ajohnson153
    @ajohnson153 8 лет назад

    I think this is the most genuinely excited that I have ever heard you get in a video. Thanks for taking us on that trip with you.

  • @MrShaun1578
    @MrShaun1578 8 лет назад +10

    those components in your wtf bag are tunable inducors

    • @MrShaun1578
      @MrShaun1578 8 лет назад

      inductors*

    • @bobralph
      @bobralph 5 лет назад +2

      More specifically tunable filters for rf and or intermediate frequency

  • @Hammerjockeyrepair
    @Hammerjockeyrepair 7 лет назад

    Tuning capacitors! Im a welder and equipment technician yet i love electronics, and love love love diagnosing and fixing ham and cb radio equipment!! friggin awesome AvE!!

  • @gsilva220
    @gsilva220 8 лет назад +10

    Nice PCB. Absolutely *no* right angles on any of the trails.

  • @lonewolfmtnz
    @lonewolfmtnz 2 года назад

    Wow - does that ever take me back to the 70's flying w/ Okanogan in N BC . Belt model, all vehicles and birds- It was what was happening - saved my life more times than I want to recall.

  • @jimleonardson4268
    @jimleonardson4268 8 лет назад +4

    I read you loud and clear Alpha Victor Echo.

  • @nickwade5204
    @nickwade5204 8 лет назад

    AVE I would like to say I have learned a great deal from your videos and appreciate the work that goes into them. I am a father of a 4 year old boy and I appreciate the time you take to show chickadee how things are made I wish more parents did the same thank you and please keep up the good work

  • @Advil1024
    @Advil1024 7 лет назад +3

    I paused the video at 13:54 to grab the FCC ID for this radio and found all kinds of information. I'm kind of sad that this got the treatment it did on your bench, but as the tag inside seemed to indicate, something was already damaged in the radio that may simply have been determined to be beyond economic repair. If anybody is curious, this is a single sideband HF radio but it's not a ham radio so to speak. That is, the frequency ranges this radio typically operated at sit right between the amateur radio HF bands. It looks like less than 10,000 of these radios were ever produced and most likely not all of those were sold which makes this a pretty rare radio. I'm sure it's been thrown out now but might have been an interesting thing to have a go at with a soldering iron to see if it could be resurrected.

    • @mysss29
      @mysss29 7 лет назад

      :O

    • @commonconservative7551
      @commonconservative7551 7 лет назад +1

      .....have no fear.....you have the whole internet of things .....find a working one on e bay

    • @zachv1942
      @zachv1942 2 года назад

      I was screaming at the treatment. But someone already has a pretty good go at it.

  • @theslvrbullt
    @theslvrbullt 8 лет назад +3

    Man, I love seeing older tech get opened up. Engineers and hackers of old were pretty frickin' clever, and it's cool and inspiring to see what they did with a tight budget and limited parts. Nowadays, you can just buy a chip to make a thingamajig doamadid and just slap a battery on it. Done.
    Thanks for the tear down, commander. :)

  • @alexbirmingham2793
    @alexbirmingham2793 8 лет назад +3

    I lost it at the "these of bin and my what the f*** are these bin"

  • @custardavenger
    @custardavenger 5 лет назад +1

    The fuse is a quick blow. The spring puts tension on the fuse wire to force separation.

  • @vertigo72480_official
    @vertigo72480_official 8 лет назад +19

    My ham radio side is crying. 73s little radio.

    • @glues4wood
      @glues4wood 5 лет назад +1

      I miss my ham days, 73's KA1RPL

  • @jwsvandr
    @jwsvandr 8 лет назад

    I worked in Whitehorse from 81-93 and 02-05 as a Flight Service Specialist (radio operator) with Transport Canada. One of my jobs was to try and locate pilots who either couldn't or didn't close their flight plan. These radios were a god sent. The "OH Shit!! Sorry about That" phrase was music to the ear.

  • @wdave6944
    @wdave6944 8 лет назад +3

    ah. sigh. the good old days. a real Canukastan eh-phone.

  • @o0julek0o
    @o0julek0o 8 лет назад +1

    Every time AvE says 'Focus you FUCK!', it just makes my day.

  • @tubelilous
    @tubelilous 7 лет назад +4

    so cute.... "let's go kick a ball"

  • @TheLexiconDevils
    @TheLexiconDevils 4 года назад

    You’re constant references to The Wars have not gone unnoticed but a Radio Raheem quote shows you truly are a man of culture 👍

  • @rimmersbryggeri
    @rimmersbryggeri 8 лет назад +9

    Bet MR carlson would like to gt into this one.

    • @BobHolowenko
      @BobHolowenko 8 лет назад +1

      They are on opposite ends of the Coquihalla, so it would not be too difficult for him to hand it off...

    • @rimmersbryggeri
      @rimmersbryggeri 8 лет назад +1

      I guess it's in serious need of repair at this point too.

    • @djhaloeight
      @djhaloeight 8 лет назад

      was thinking the same thing

    • @pirateman1966
      @pirateman1966 6 лет назад

      That guy is into old tubes and smoke signals.

  • @legendaryrat
    @legendaryrat 7 лет назад

    Reminds me of when I was a kid an my Dad would bring stuff home from the junkyard for us to disassemble. I remember those odd rectangular bits with the slotted screwdriver adjustment bits built into them. We had no idea what they were for, but we were more than happy to tear them apart. I remember seeing loctite on them, which I can't make out on yours.

  • @mikeselectricstuff
    @mikeselectricstuff 8 лет назад +4

    I think the fuse spring is to make sure it opens cleanly

    • @InssiAjaton
      @InssiAjaton 6 лет назад

      mikeselectricstuff
      Basically, it pulls out a pin that is locked inside the solid block, when the block melts. The block size gives the delay time. Also, the fact that the fuse is in clear glass rather than (often ceramic tube) and in both cases filled with some sand tells that the fuse is limited to 32 V circuit use. It appears there are 3 voltage ranges for these small (glass or ceramic tube) fuses. What I have seen are 32 V, 125 V and 250 V. A system running at 9 V battery does not need more than 32 V rated fuse. Or it does not need the sand to extinguish an arc.

  • @fubarsnafu4994
    @fubarsnafu4994 7 лет назад

    My love of radio wouldn't allow me to watch the rest of the autopsy. It was as if I was watching an old friend getting the final inspection.. Au revoir.. Awesome videos! Please for the love of what’s left of RUclips.. KEEP IT COMING!!! And thank you. Love the vids

  • @AstAMoore
    @AstAMoore 8 лет назад +9

    I think I just went 10-100.

    • @CumminsDslPwr
      @CumminsDslPwr 8 лет назад +7

      That's better than 10-200.....

    • @AstAMoore
      @AstAMoore 8 лет назад +3

      10-4.

    • @strangersound
      @strangersound 8 лет назад +3

      Greatest piece of cinema ever. "Let me have a diablo sandwich, a Dr. Pepper, and make it fast, I'm in a god-damn hurry!"

  • @scratchypants1
    @scratchypants1 6 лет назад

    Holy crap - an old Splisbury! Back in the 80's and as late as 94, that was our only communication device at moose/fishing camp in northern Quebec. We had 2 channels - radio Alma for telephone, and the air base in St-Michel-des-Saints to check for our flight out (Beaver or Otter - nothing else had the balls to make it out of our lake). One phone call - and everyone good hear you - we contacted a fellow hunter who was joining us later to bring a few items: mustard, coat hangers, and placemats (we're not animals). How'd I miss this?

  • @AngusFindlay
    @AngusFindlay 8 лет назад +4

    Hey, would you like to get rid of the remains of that radio? I've been looking for one for a while - I've got a Spilsbury from the 1950s, all chock full of tubes. It doesn't work, and I think it'd be pretty cool to display the newer version on the shelf next to it!

  • @curtisa8587
    @curtisa8587 8 лет назад

    This is probably my favorite You Tube video. What did I like you ask? The honest excitement about how stuff works. I like a lot of your videos (language, attitude, curiousity), but this is my favorite. I'll probably go buy the book and read up on "Pixies" and stuff. Thanks

  • @et_2brutus640
    @et_2brutus640 8 лет назад +3

    Slow-Blow is best-blow

  • @thelastengineer2315
    @thelastengineer2315 5 лет назад

    The fuse is a surge protection fuse and the purpose of the spring which is the third part of the fuse is made of relatively high resistance material, helping to heat up the lump, and pulling it rapidly apart when it melts. The combination of lump and spring, with its relatively high thermal mass, also allows the surge to pass, but provides the protection for longer term but lesser overloads.