Rare Today, Gone Tomorrow?
Government surplus radio equipment
Government surplus radio equipment that was removed from aircraft, such as B-17 and B-29 bombers, that had flown over Nazi Germany and the Empire of Japan during WWII.
Contributed by Ed Sawicki
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There are 3 comments for this item.
Of course, anyone with an SDR (software-defined radio) has that these days.
In my early 20s, I worked for Tektronix for about ten years and became intimately familiar with oscilloscopes and other lab equipment.
At the time, military aircraft generally powered their electronic equipment with 24 volts DC. Additionally, these radios used "dynamotors" to convert that 24 volts into the other voltages needed for the tube circuitry. Sometimes the dynamotors came with the radio and sometimes they were missing. If the dynamotor was included, you could build a 24-volt power supply.
If the dynamotor was missing, you'd have to build a power supply to provide the voltages needed by the tube circuitry. Fortunately, articles appeared in hobbyist magazines that helped with this.
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