First one to ID this gets absolutely nothing...:)
Easy. These are the pulse actuators that prime the flux capacitor.
They look like genuine Mr Fusion parts and not the doc's protos.
guessing maybe vacuum caps or a specialty tube. i can't see the backside if there's another set of contacts or have reference to the actual size of them.
I tend to agree with Niel. vacuum variable capacitors ?
At first I was thinking what DGD was saying (spark gap triggers) but looking
at the shafts, I would say caps.
boB
IIiiiiii'm gonna go in another direction, and suggest some kind of magnetic actuator - a piston.
Yep me to as the shafts have holes in the end for a pin and they do not seem to be turned the same (Indicating they can turn)
Quote from: boB on March 12, 2013, 04:03:06 PM
I tend to agree with Niel. vacuum variable capacitors ?
At first I was thinking what DGD was saying (spark gap triggers) but looking
at the shafts, I would say caps.
boB
VVC is the correct answer. Neil & boB will receive nothing for their efforts as promised. No salesman will call and no vinyl discs were harmed in order to bring you this tooney lunes presentation.
VVC? I can see how this mistake occurs. These first appeared about 1985 in various devices. Initially purpose unknown, testing showed a variable capacitance based on a vacuum contained actuator.
It was only later discovered that this was in fact an ionic chamber with inertial damping, purpose unknown. When a Caltech intern, late for a review meeting with his professor, had the device on the front seat of his 1978 Porsche 911s, he was surprised to notice the device 'alive and profusely discharging energy like a miniature lightening storm', when he exceeded the speed limit to 88mph.
Dgd
It's unfortunate that you posted these images.
If we're lucky, they've not been propagated across the internet yet and you can take them down. If Dr Emilio Lizardo sees these, then it's practically unavoidable that a new oscillation overthruster will be built, and we all know how that will end.
Please take these images down, and get these two remaining units to the nearest outpost of the Blue Blaze Irregulars, so they can be secured properly.
We're talking major baby bangs here, red lectroids , , bad news.
Formulating theories on n-dimensional non-euclidean geometry may get you in trouble with the Barsoomians. You have all been warned.
Quote from: onanparts on March 13, 2013, 07:09:58 PM
Formulating theories on n-dimensional non-euclidean geometry may get you in trouble with the Barsoomians. You have all been warned.
Let's just not go there.
I need to go drop off the
laundry.
Pick up a spare continua device after you are done with that laundry. Thanks!
hey boB, being we get nothing here's your pat on the back and you can give one to me. 8)
Quote from: niel on March 14, 2013, 12:21:35 AM
hey boB, being we get nothing here's your pat on the back and you can give one to me. 8)
And here's yours, Niel... 8) 8) 8) 8) 8) 8) 8) 8)
Lets make this one a little more difficult. Guessing the function is not going to be enough. Looking for model and manufacturer. Perhaps a clue? boB & Robin are indirectly connected somehow.
ah a new challenge. i guess boB and robin and all the guys at midnite are disqualified from answering?
although i never saw the insides of any outback stuff and the pic is darkish i'll guess an mx60.
Quote from: niel on April 14, 2013, 02:18:37 AM
ah a new challenge. i guess boB and robin and all the guys at midnite are disqualified from answering?
although i never saw the insides of any outback stuff and the pic is darkish i'll guess an mx60.
Not manufactured by Outback or any company owned/operated by bob/Robin. Heavy on the "indirectly connected" angle. Pic taken with a bright light on the backside of board. A better shot here.
ok i'm stumped as i could guess at the function, but i couldn't say what the make and model is off hand. one possibility may be an equalizer, but i'm not sold on even that. now it's hard to tell, but if it has many inputs as the arrows could indicate then it could be a mixer.
I have stared at this PCB for a while but I do not know what it is. I can only guess a few things.
It is single sided and uses what looks like XR 4136 quad or the XR dual op-amps ? 1970's or
1980's vintage audio product of some sort I would guess. I definitely recognize those DPST
pushbutton switches though. Alps ?
Internal power supply with power switch just left of center on the front panel.
Eight --8-- pushbutton switches on the front ? Hmmm... Audio pre-amp select switches ??
Phase linear or Carver pre-amp ? Or, if not that indirectly related, I'm not sure.
This is a good one ! This is a great game !
boB
Quote from: boB on April 14, 2013, 03:01:05 AM
I have stared at this PCB for a while but I do not know what it is. I can only guess a few things.
It is single sided and uses what looks like XR 4136 quad or the XR dual op-amps ? 1970's or
1980's vintage audio product of some sort I would guess. I definitely recognize those DPST
pushbutton switches though. Alps ?
Internal power supply with power switch just left of center on the front panel.
Eight --8-- pushbutton switches on the front ? Hmmm... Audio pre-amp select switches ??
Phase linear or Carver pre-amp ? Or, if not that indirectly related, I'm not sure.
This is a good one ! This is a great game !
boB
Dang! boB you are GOOD! Now that you have correctly identified a Pre-amp made by the "other" Bob, extra credit if you determine the model.
Quote from: onanparts on April 14, 2013, 03:05:09 AM
Dang! boB you are GOOD! Now that you have correctly identified a Pre-amp made by the "other" Bob, extra credit if you determine the model.
OK, wild guess. I would have to lean in the direction of slightly newer than phase linear so that would
be Carver Corporation.
I was not real familiar with Carver Corp. products except for the mag amp cube so I'll guess, Holographic preamp ?
boB
Quote from: boB on April 14, 2013, 03:43:47 AM
Quote from: onanparts on April 14, 2013, 03:05:09 AM
Dang! boB you are GOOD! Now that you have correctly identified a Pre-amp made by the "other" Bob, extra credit if you determine the model.
OK, wild guess. I would have to lean in the direction of slightly newer than phase linear so that would
be Carver Corporation.
I was not real familiar with Carver Corp. products except for the mag amp cube so I'll guess, Holographic preamp ?
boB
Ka-Ching!!!!!
boB nails it. Carver C-1 Holographic preamp. 8)
Quote from: onanparts on April 14, 2013, 03:59:46 AM
Ka-Ching!!!!!
boB nails it. Carver C-1 Holographic preamp. 8)
WoW !! I am VERY surprised I could whiddle it down to that particular product !
Just like hypnosis or something. That was a VERY lucky guess ! And, it looks
like that board was upside down with the knobs on top ?
Whoa ...!
boB
Quote from: boB on April 14, 2013, 04:53:21 AM
Quote from: onanparts on April 14, 2013, 03:59:46 AM
Ka-Ching!!!!!
boB nails it. Carver C-1 Holographic preamp. 8)
WoW !! I am VERY surprised I could whiddle it down to that particular product !
Just like hypnosis or something. That was a VERY lucky guess ! And, it looks
like that board was upside down with the knobs on top ?
Whoa ...!
boB
Must be some kind of channeling? My C-1 is at this time driving a SA 500-SR. 8)
A few more close up pics of the C-1.
And another...
And again
One more...
I see a date code of 8337 so that was at least at the end of 1983 and maybe
1984 that unit was made.
Quote from: boB on April 14, 2013, 05:36:01 AM
I see a date code of 8337 so that was at least at the end of 1983 and maybe
1984 that unit was made.
Stereo Review did a write up on it back in January 1982 so that's about the right time frame.
Day-am!
That's exactly what I was going to guess,
and it would have been a guess, and it would have been based solely on the single sided board and switches.
What is it they are doing?
Quote from: onanparts on April 18, 2013, 11:26:52 PM
What is it they are doing?
Sort of looks like they are making alternators ? Or some kind of car part ?
boB
The new MN military wind turbine production line, each turbine hand made, is that boB standing half way back on the right side?
And a half empty bottle of coke at front right side?
dgd
Quote from: boB on April 19, 2013, 01:38:26 AM
Quote from: onanparts on April 18, 2013, 11:26:52 PM
What is it they are doing?
Sort of looks like they are making alternators ? Or some kind of car part ?
boB
Onan factory WWII. Making........Gensets/Alternators/Armatures. boB does it again! 8)
Not so easy on this one. Clearly some type of map, but for what?
Still thinking on this one ! It's a hard one ! I'd say it was a football play but the line marks are the wrong
numbers unless maybe it's metric.
boB
Quote from: boB on April 25, 2013, 09:11:38 PM
Still thinking on this one ! It's a hard one ! I'd say it was a football play but the line marks are the wrong
numbers unless maybe it's metric.
boB
Hint: Christmas tree lights are involved.
It looks like a SnowMAn outline....??
Lit landing direction for Santa's reindeer and sleigh.. :-)
dgd
it may be a capacitor of an transformer setup.
Path for the Mainstreet Electrical parade at Disneyland ?
PS... Did you know that Disney used to use Trace SW inverters on those parade floats to power them ??
Close......take your time.
Quote from: boB on October 12, 2013, 03:00:07 PM
Path for the Mainstreet Electrical parade at Disneyland ?
PS... Did you know that Disney used to use Trace SW inverters on those parade floats to power them ??
Mickey and Trace? :)
OK, time to give it up! A ProSolo Autocross course map. All the dots represent pylons or traffic cones that define the course. Top center, two cars line up and stage for a drag style start for the first 200-300 feet then one car veers to the left side, the other to the right side and both navigate through the pylons as fast as possible. Laser lights at the start and finish just like the drags but with a lot of twists instead of just a 1/4 mile long straightaway.
After the finish the cars swap sides and do it all over again.
BUT, if you knock a cone over it's a 2 second penalty! Go off course, outside the defined path, it's a 10 second penalty! Low to medium speed precision racing...lots of fun! :) All kinds of car compete. Run what ya brung is the theme. Ex Cop car complete with spotlight? Sure! 700HP Nissan GT-R AWD? Yup. Corvettes, Miata's, Mustangs etc.
In car video from a local event. Not me driving...:)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MCYHv6BX7og
MAN ! I should've guessed that one !
I probably would have said motocross though.
OK, on to the next riddle !
boB
OK, a little bit easier this time. ;)
At first glance, it reminds me of something I would see in a pharmacy...
Hmmm....
boB way off! ;D In all fairness I showed this latest "what is it" to someone with 35 years in a related field and they were baffled. Time for a hint? OK, it's a "Micrometer" but what is it used for measuring?
So how did they use it? Not like any micrometer I have used...
Quote from: onanparts on December 03, 2013, 03:19:49 PM
boB way off! ;D In all fairness I showed this latest "what is it" to someone with 35 years in a related field and they were baffled. Time for a hint? OK, it's a "Micrometer" but what is it used for measuring?
It's vaguely like a fiber analyzer - take sheep wool, alpaca fleece, cotton fibre etc....
Quote from: RossW on December 03, 2013, 06:30:00 PM
Quote from: onanparts on December 03, 2013, 03:19:49 PM
boB way off! ;D In all fairness I showed this latest "what is it" to someone with 35 years in a related field and they were baffled. Time for a hint? OK, it's a "Micrometer" but what is it used for measuring?
It's vaguely like a fiber analyzer - take sheep wool, alpaca fleece, cotton fibre etc....
Way off base. Another hint: Everybody reading or seeing this has many of what the current "what is it" is used for. Dozens of them at a minimum. They are used by you every day possibly.......weekly or monthly in some cases. Billions of them in use worldwide. :)
Hm maybe an Egg sizing device? Grasping at straws here :)
Sock measuring device :o
A strapping machine or a 'banding ' device?.
OK... I am going to guess based on its shape AND what YOU might use it for once in a while that WE might use everyday...
A piston ring measurement device.
Or maybe to measure the piston diameter itself .
boB
Quote from: boB on December 03, 2013, 10:04:45 PM
OK... I am going to guess based on its shape AND what YOU might use it for once in a while that WE might use everyday...
A piston ring measurement device.
Or maybe to measure the piston diameter itself .
boB
BINGO on the first guess! boB does it again! :)
So, is the idea to measure the ring closed and open ?
I've never seen one of these before but never really thought about it much.
That could be handy for all sorts of engine overhaul work for cars AND generators.
boB
Quote from: boB on December 04, 2013, 02:35:12 AM
So, is the idea to measure the ring closed and open ?
I've never seen one of these before but never really thought about it much.
That could be handy for all sorts of engine overhaul work for cars AND generators.
boB
A ring mic is used to check the ring gap. Depending on the application there is a minimum and maximum gap spec. .010-.020 for example.
Turn the big knob and the band closes or compress's the ring. Not a very common tool. Any competition engine built correctly will have each and every piston compression ring gapped to a very specific spec and matched for the cylinder it will be installed in. It's also very handy when rebuilding any engine to make sure the gaps are all within specs quickly.
Now I suppose you want to see pics of the "ring grinder" I have that removes small amounts of material from the ends of a ring to increase the gap? Old school is clamp the ring in a vise and carefully file the ends, install in cylinder without the piston and check gap with a feeler gauge. But hey, power tools are always more fun! ;D
OK, No hints on this one! ;D
looks like an armature.
Definitely a stator of some sort - I think...
for a small motor?
Double keyed shaft, I think I've seen that before.....exiter for miller welder...powered by Onan of course......bobcat....no trailblazer?
Quote from: tecnodave on December 05, 2013, 08:46:31 PM
Double keyed shaft, I think I've seen that before.....exiter for miller welder...powered by Onan of course......bobcat....no trailblazer?
Very Very close! It's a rotating rectifier exciter for an Onan J series genset in these pics. Good job Tecnodave!
Clearly it's time for a good challenge........ :)
Awh, you took all the knobs off...??
It's a hi-fi receiver/amp of some sort. Stereo power amp on the bottom half and receiver
on the top half.
boB
Quote from: boB on December 06, 2013, 02:30:56 AM
It's a hi-fi receiver/amp of some sort. Stereo power amp on the bottom half and receiver
on the top half.
boB
That's the easy part boB! Who made it? And what model? :) 1 Hint: late 60's vintage.
Scott.....but stumped as to the model
tecno
Quote from: tecnodave on December 06, 2013, 07:19:43 AM
Scott.....but stumped as to the model
tecno
Negative on the Scott......
A Fisher?
A closer look.....
Marantz.........Long before Sony destroyed them?
Heathkit ?
Nope on Marantz or Heathkit....
Spectro...
;D
Quote from: Rybren on December 07, 2013, 10:13:55 AM
Spectro...
;D
Nope, not a Spectro. We didn't make a receiver, only a FM tuner.
I still don't know what this is though.
How about Pioneer ?
boB
Quote from: boB on December 07, 2013, 06:49:56 PM
Quote from: Rybren on December 07, 2013, 10:13:55 AM
Spectro...
;D
Nope, not a Spectro. We didn't make a receiver, only a FM tuner.
I still don't know what this is though.
How about Pioneer ?
boB
Not Pioneer. Pic here of the original box. I was the first one to open it up about 6 years ago since the unit left the factory in....1969. 8)
Hmmmm....maybe a face shot will help?
Harmon-Kardon but which model ?
Sansui!!
Quote from: mtdoc on December 10, 2013, 12:46:47 AM
Sansui!!
Halfway there! Sansui is the correct manufacturer. Now how about the model?
2000
Quote from: mtdoc on December 10, 2013, 02:26:29 AM
2000
Face shot does it every time! Have to be more conservative in that area...... ;D
Boxes a bit beat up when I got the system. I think it was actually about 10 years ago everything unopened. :) Unboxed it all and fired it up! Worked great and enjoyed it for several years before letting it go to make room for more junk.... :)
No hints on this one..................... ;D
Jeez- at least you could give us a high def photo so we can make out the numbers on those chips! >:( :P
Maybe a bank of comparators in an ADC of some sort? Just a WAG....
Quote from: mtdoc on December 11, 2013, 08:55:54 PM
Jeez- at least you could give us a high def photo so we can make out the numbers on those chips! >:( :P
Maybe a bank of comparators in an ADC of some sort? Just a WAG....
Ahhh...but that would make it easy! ;D
Aw all plug in chips, prototype or limited production? Just a guess?
Quote from: tecnodave on December 12, 2013, 01:30:50 AM
Aw all plug in chips, prototype or limited production? Just a guess?
Not a prototype. Were on the market for a number of years.
The name Franklin keeps coming to mind. Probably wrong but best guess.
Quote from: TomW on December 12, 2013, 07:04:32 PM
The name Franklin keeps coming to mind. Probably wrong but best guess.
No Franklin associated as far as I can tell....
Well, I see this board is from 1972 looks like...
Some 7400 quad nand gates and wood have to look in my old TI data book for some of those
other IC's... Might be a small array of memory.
A CRT terminal or video game (Pong) maybe ?
boB
Quote from: boB on December 16, 2013, 02:36:37 AM
Well, I see this board is from 1972 looks like...
Some 7400 quad nand gates and wood have to look in my old TI data book for some of those
other IC's... Might be a small array of memory.
A CRT terminal or video game (Pong) maybe ?
boB
boB, 1972 is correct vintage. :) Your nose is leading you in the right direction....but it's not CRT or a video game... :)
Very close..but off just slightly. A hint: Some are still in use today doing exactly what they were designed for. Certainly not obsolete by any means.
An early digital clock?
Quote from: onanparts on December 16, 2013, 06:30:28 PM
Not a clock.....
Poker-machine control board? While I've never seen this particular board, it is ringing vague bells in terms of what it has on board!
Quote from: RossW on December 16, 2013, 07:47:12 PM
Quote from: onanparts on December 16, 2013, 06:30:28 PM
Not a clock.....
Poker-machine control board? While I've never seen this particular board, it is ringing vague bells in terms of what it has on board!
Negative.
Pinball machine control board
Quote from: dgd on December 16, 2013, 08:16:24 PM
Pinball machine control board
Nope. But you are on the right track......just need to find the right station.... :)
boB has one of these in his car......I expect a "correct" answer from somebody soon with that clue! ;D
Quote from: onanparts on December 18, 2013, 07:42:21 PM
boB has one of these in his car......I expect a "correct" answer from somebody soon with that clue! ;D
An old fuel injection control circuit ?
boB
Quote from: boB on December 18, 2013, 08:38:57 PM
Quote from: onanparts on December 18, 2013, 07:42:21 PM
boB has one of these in his car......I expect a "correct" answer from somebody soon with that clue! ;D
An old fuel injection control circuit ?
boB
_ . _ _ _
Quote from: onanparts on December 18, 2013, 09:08:18 PM
Quote from: boB on December 18, 2013, 08:38:57 PM
Quote from: onanparts on December 18, 2013, 07:42:21 PM
boB has one of these in his car......I expect a "correct" answer from somebody soon with that clue! ;D
An old fuel injection control circuit ?
boB
_ . _ _ _
_.. ._ ._. _. !
Quote from: boB on December 19, 2013, 01:19:50 AM
_.. ._ ._. _. !
.-.. --- .-.. !
(Yeah, I know it should be .... .. .... .. !!)
Nixie tubes? You betcha! But, "what is it?" still remains unknown....
Quote from: onanparts on December 20, 2013, 08:45:18 PM
Nixie tubes? You betcha! But, "what is it?" still remains unknown....
6-digit Display/counter board out of an old pinball? (I think we decided it was a pinball machine, yes?)
Quote from: RossW on December 20, 2013, 08:48:26 PM
Quote from: onanparts on December 20, 2013, 08:45:18 PM
Nixie tubes? You betcha! But, "what is it?" still remains unknown....
6-digit Display/counter board out of an old pinball? (I think we decided it was a pinball machine, yes?)
Negative on pinball, remember boB has one in his car. Don't think a pinball machine would fit unless he's driving a van! :)
Originally or use now? Digital readout of two meter frequency?
Quote from: onanparts on December 20, 2013, 09:01:45 PM
Quote from: RossW on December 20, 2013, 08:48:26 PM
Quote from: onanparts on December 20, 2013, 08:45:18 PM
Nixie tubes? You betcha! But, "what is it?" still remains unknown....
6-digit Display/counter board out of an old pinball? (I think we decided it was a pinball machine, yes?)
Negative on pinball, remember boB has one in his car. Don't think a pinball machine would fit unless he's driving a van! :)
AHA ! Tachometer !!
Or, Spedometer at 94 km/Hr ? I know you wouldn't take a picture at 94 MPH, right ?
boB
Quote from: boB on December 20, 2013, 09:13:26 PM
Quote from: onanparts on December 20, 2013, 09:01:45 PM
Quote from: RossW on December 20, 2013, 08:48:26 PM
Quote from: onanparts on December 20, 2013, 08:45:18 PM
Nixie tubes? You betcha! But, "what is it?" still remains unknown....
6-digit Display/counter board out of an old pinball? (I think we decided it was a pinball machine, yes?)
Negative on pinball, remember boB has one in his car. Don't think a pinball machine would fit unless he's driving a van! :)
AHA ! Tachometer !!
Or, Spedometer at 94 km/Hr ? I know you wouldn't take a picture at 94 MPH, right ?
boB
Take a pic at only 94MPH? No way boB! That would be LAME! Nothing under 100MPH! That was the top of 4th gear. By the time I hit redline in 5th BOTH hands were FIRMLY on the steering wheel! :)
Door bell solenoids?
Quote from: onanparts on March 12, 2013, 04:30:34 AM
First one to ID this gets absolutely nothing...:)
Quote from: tecnodave on December 20, 2013, 09:13:09 PM
Originally or use now? Digital readout of two meter frequency?
Gotta give it to tecnodave. Digital display but for HF. Close enough! Heathkit SB-650.
Quote from: onanparts on December 21, 2013, 02:46:19 AM
Quote from: tecnodave on December 20, 2013, 09:13:09 PM
Originally or use now? Digital readout of two meter frequency?
Gotta give it to tecnodave. Digital display but for HF. Close enough! Heathkit SB-650.
What frequency is that ? 9.4 MHz ?
boB
I was thinking 146.34/146.94! Common two meter repeater frequency around here!
Credit to rossw for coming up with display/counter. Tecnodave got it spot on with frequency counter though.
On the readout what you see pictured is with no input to the counter. A switch was added by previous owner that shows the 94.xxxx in one position and 00.000.0 in the other.
Have not connected it to any of my Heathkits yet to confirm it actually functions properly. Should get around to that soon!
Ready for another? Here ya go!
Man! That's a good one !
RF Generator!
But made by who ?
Made by Booton!
Quote from: tecnodave on December 22, 2013, 12:01:15 AM
RF Generator!
But made by who ?
Some people spend way too much time looking under the hoods of test instruments! :)
RF generator is correct! Booton is incorrect......
Guilty............late 60's. Heathkit.....I remember that round port in back but there have been too many test gear to remember all.
Quote from: tecnodave on December 22, 2013, 04:16:20 AM
Guilty............late 60's. Heathkit.....I remember that round port in back but there have been too many test gear to remember all.
Strike 2....... :-[
The only other one I remember having back then was the Eico, but they are about obsolete as dinosaurs!
Quote from: tecnodave on December 22, 2013, 02:25:21 PM
The only other one I remember having back then was the Eico, but they are about obsolete as dinosaurs!
Awwwww.....strike 3 :( and the answer is.....
And I did have a B&K generator but that was back then!
Oh well..next puzzle?
so for us non hammy types ,....what did it do? ???
Generates Radio Frequency signals for testing and tuning receivers. I tuned two way radios including HF and VHF for bush planes, marine, early car phones , and land mobile two way such as law enforcement with this type of equipment back in the 60's and 70's
Booton was the industry standard for commercial, but amateurs and hobbyists often used the ones pictured. The B&K was made for for tuning early TV receivers but hobbyists adopted them for all sorts of developmental designs and repairs.
Next up is a...................?
Thought for sure something with vacuum tubes would get boB's attention....... ???
Ok you got us all stumped but I will venture a WAG, a modulation amplifier for an AM ham transmitter
td
Quote from: tecnodave on December 31, 2013, 01:28:09 AM
Ok you got us all stumped but I will venture a WAG, a modulation amplifier for an AM ham transmitter
td
No go on the WAG.... :)
I would have to guess it is some kind of impedance measuring instrument.
Maybe a Wheatstone bridge ?
Looks kind of like an oscillator board with the 2 tubes on it ?
boB
But what is that copper tube on right side, to a pressure Guage.....and another copper tube on left side panel...oh the mystery!
td
Quote from: tecnodave on January 01, 2014, 02:27:32 PM
But what is that copper tube on right side, to a pressure Guage.....and another copper tube on left side panel...oh the mystery!
td
Oh yeah... that ! I saw that and just "assumed" that it "might" be a method of connecting
the UUT (Unit Under Test)... But I can't really tell if it is connected to anything or not besides
coming into and out of the front of the box.
boB
With that compression connector I gotta bet that is a pressure Guage ......but with the tubes and tuning coil? no pressure transducer? This one is a stumper!
td
Have to give this one to boB! :) His "measuring instrument" and "UUT" unit under test comments/guess's are both right in the ballpark so I gotta give it up! This "instrument" was used for measuring and tuning/diagnostics of automobile/truck engines way back when.
I was going to originally guess a Gonculator. http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=gonculator
I would never have guessed the REAL product this was but sort of close I guess.
Why does it look like high frequency stuff though ? What exactly does this
unit do ?
Looks cool !
boB
I think that is probably an oscillator to produce AC to test the condenser (capicator) across the points.
td
Quote from: tecnodave on January 03, 2014, 11:04:33 PM
I think that is probably an oscillator to produce AC to test the condenser (capicator) across the points.
td
And probably also feeds the white coil at the bottom for the spark plug tester.
Not a charge controller! But then it all depends on how you look at it..... :)
Sonic shake table
Quote from: tecnodave on January 08, 2014, 03:31:15 AM
Sonic shake table
I really like that guess !
I was going to say it was a speaker but sure looks like a very weird one if it were a speaker...
And too many mounting holes around the perimeter.
boB
Quote from: boB on January 08, 2014, 03:45:53 PM
Quote from: tecnodave on January 08, 2014, 03:31:15 AM
Sonic shake table
I really like that guess !
I was going to say it was a speaker but sure looks like a very weird one if it were a speaker...
And too many mounting holes around the perimeter.
boB
This should be a fun one. A clue: Some type of "Record" is involved.
boB, please check your PM's. :) Note: PM is unrelated to this thread. ;D
I am going to guess that it is a rocket engine.
Quote from: phxmark on January 14, 2014, 10:20:06 AM
I am going to guess that it is a rocket engine.
Bingo!!!
Extra credit if you can determine "what rocket engine" ? Remember, a "record" is involved. :)
Is it off a Titan IV rocket?
Quote from: phxmark on January 14, 2014, 05:24:10 PM
Is it off a Titan IV rocket?
Negative. Single pilot and it has landing gear. :)
U2 spy plane?
Quote from: Westbranch on January 14, 2014, 08:55:50 PM
U2 spy plane?
Nope! Next clue. The record it holds is unique and still stands today, decades after it was set. ;D
Apollo Landing craft?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Apollo_17_LM_Ascent_Stage.jpg
North American X-15 Rocket Plane.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:North_American_X-15_Nozzle.jpg
Well done phxmark!
If I may, I have one.
Hint: It is somewhat related to the last one....
Apologies for the poor resolution phone pic... ::)
Looks like maybe an old missile control PCB from 1960s maybe ?
boB
You have the right decade and the right industry (aerospace) - but not from a missle...
Ok, ok - maybe a bit obscure but I couldn't help myself after the previous post.
It is the electronics board from a camera able to take a 6" X 6 " resolution photo (identify a person's face from 15 miles away!) from 80,000 feet while moving at Mach 3! Any guesses what vehicle carried it?
Quote from: mtdoc on January 19, 2014, 04:13:28 PM
Ok, ok - maybe a bit obscure but I couldn't help myself after the previous post.
It is the electronics board from a camera able to take a 6" X 6 " resolution photo (identify a person's face from 15 miles away!) from 80,000 feet while moving at Mach 3! Any guesses what vehicle carried it?
SR-71
You got it. We recently were at the Evergreen Aviation Museum in OR where they have one on display (they also a full scale mock up of the X15). It blows me away that this was built in the 1960s. My dad worked on the electronics design of the plane's inertial navigation system.
Looks like it's right out of Star Wars kinda, doesn't it ?
Quote from: boB on January 20, 2014, 02:57:26 AM
Looks like it's right out of Star Wars kinda, doesn't it ?
Yup! I was there June of 2008 about a week or two after they had just opened the new space museum across the parking lot from the air museum. They were still hanging planes from the cranes etc. No pylons blocking off the SR-71 so I was able to get up close and personal to it. :)
Quote from: boB on January 20, 2014, 02:57:26 AM
Looks like it's right out of Star Wars kinda, doesn't it ?
And done almost entirely with analog electronics!
Which reminds me, have you guys seen this:
The under belly of that last bird reminded me of the Avro Arrow for some reason...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avro_Canada_CF-105_Arrow
https://www.google.ca/search?q=avro+arrow&client=firefox-a&hs=3E0&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&tbm=isch&source=iu&imgil=KXTCD8lgXEh_UM%253A%253Bhttps%253A%252F%252Fencrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com%252Fimages%253Fq%253Dtbn%253AANd9GcS0BzpKmsubyZTLnhIh6iQicAx7NKkd4zcmd8kzNRopHRgNic5QWA%253B640%253B480%253Bt7s73skmRYABwM%253Bhttp%25253A%25252F%25252Fen.wikipedia.org%25252Fwiki%25252FAvro_Canada_CF-105_Arrow&sa=X&ei=HGbdUpGEO5aEoQSTgIH4DQ&ved=0CKcBEP4dMAs#facrc=_&imgdii=_&imgrc=KXTCD8lgXEh_UM%253A%3Bt7s73skmRYABwM%3Bhttp%253A%252F%252Fupload.wikimedia.org%252Fwikipedia%252Fen%252F6%252F6b%252FAvroArrow1.jpg%3Bhttp%253A%252F%252Fen.wikipedia.org%252Fwiki%252FAvro_Canada_CF-105_Arrow%3B640%3B480
Ahh that last one "Donated Board" is easy..
A Hypoduplicator to control an analog Gonculator Valve.
I helped design it. ::)
Tom
Nice try Tom! But you're not that old.. ;)
It's a board from the Apollo Launch Vehicle Digital Computer - from a Saturn V.
Early digital electronics porn..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDn_5yTO2bI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vZhRbzDZIDw
Perhaps someday future engineers will unearth a PCB from a Classic and marvel at the wonders of early PV energy harvesting techonology.. :D
An actual experiment from Frankenstein's bench. :) The white blob with a tube sticking out is the "what is it"?
A fire organ ?
"Tuned Cavity?
Plasma cannon?
Do I see a Geiger counter in that pic and a necked down rifle cartridge?
Hey I don't see a plunger ....???
Quote from: Halfcrazy on January 24, 2014, 05:36:22 PM
Plasma cannon?
I gotta find a forum with some unedumacated peeps!!!!
Plasma Reactor/Plasma Cannon! Around 1700 VDC on the PS side. ;D
Just talked to the mad scientist that created it and he has version 2.0 ready for me to take a look at.... :)
Quote from: onanparts on January 27, 2014, 08:42:30 PM
Quote from: Halfcrazy on January 24, 2014, 05:36:22 PM
Plasma cannon?
I gotta find a forum with some unedumacated peeps!!!!
Plasma Reactor/Plasma Cannon! Around 1700 VDC on the PS side. ;D
Just talked to the mad scientist that created it and he has version 2.0 ready for me to take a look at.... :)
Heck it was an educated guess. I saw what looked like a plasma cutter and put 2 and 2 together
This should be an easy one.....
I know "What" just not whose. Its an Antenna tuner
Quote from: Halfcrazy on February 09, 2014, 06:40:16 AM
I know "What" just not whose. Its an Antenna tuner
It is an MFJ-991B Dual Power Automatic Antenna Tuner
Split decision. :)
Antenna tuner is correct but it's an MFJ 993B. :)
Another easy one....for the old farts anyway. :)
Sewing machine bobbin winder
td
Quote from: onanparts on February 12, 2014, 01:39:41 AM
Another easy one....for the old farts anyway. :)
Movie projector. --vtMaps
Quote from: vtmaps on February 12, 2014, 04:56:31 AM
Movie projector. --vtMaps
Not a projector, but after you'd shown a film you had to rewind it back onto the original spool to send back. Rather than wasting projector time, you'd load the despooled film and the original spool onto one of these to put it back!
looks like a film projector or editor.
Not a movie projector but a film strip projector.
Too many smart folks here...... :)
It's a Keystone 8MM Projector, model K-108.
Our family used to have a Keystone 8mm projector. It looked very similar to those.
boB
Quote from: boB on February 18, 2014, 01:33:34 AM
Our family used to have a Keystone 8mm projector. It looked very similar to those.
boB
Snagged this one a few years ago at the local PC recycle place, REPC in Tukwila. Near mint condition and works great. I think I paid $10.00 for it. :)
Onanaparts - it's a classic! Haha.
And now for something a bit on the strange side. There is actually a logical explanation.....and a valid reason as to why. :) The question is "what is it that's being done here"?
My guess is marking spots to repair on the roof?
Quote from: Halfcrazy on March 04, 2014, 07:37:21 PM
My guess is marking spots to repair on the roof?
Roof was only a couple years old when pic was taken. :)
Waiting to hold down shingles over tar paper ?
Quote from: boB on March 05, 2014, 02:11:02 AM
Waiting to hold down shingles over tar paper ?
That's a finished roof. Extra credit if you can find the HF antenna. No, it's not the neighbors cable wire above my grid drop. ;D
I know, traffic cones are boring! We use the cones for racing and when new they are very soft and tear easily when hit. So they get to "cure" on the roof for a few months exposed to UV so they will last longer. :) In Autocross racing the cones define the course and do get abused! Hitting cones results in a penalty so we try to avoid it. ;D
OK, next up something a little more interesting.....
This one is kind of interesting..... :)
Quote from: onanparts on March 07, 2014, 12:14:48 PM
This one is kind of interesting..... :)
Sure that's easy ! It's a penny !
Behind it might be a crystal radio with tuning coil taps ? Tuning capacitor taps ?
Also, a coherer ? Crystal detector ? Not sure how to connect the antenna and headphones though.
Only 2 connections visible.
Quote from: boB on March 07, 2014, 02:29:21 PM
Quote from: onanparts on March 07, 2014, 12:14:48 PM
This one is kind of interesting..... :)
Sure that's easy ! It's a penny !
Behind it might be a crystal radio with tuning coil taps ? Tuning capacitor taps ?
Also, a coherer ? Crystal detector ? Not sure how to connect the antenna and headphones though.
Only 2 connections visible.
A penny is right!! Can't fool boB! ;D
Cats whisker crystal radio is good for double of nothing! :) One that fits in your shirt pocket not too common though.
Inside tapped loop antenna answers the 2 connectors for headphones question I guess !
This one should be easy!
Outback CC?
Quote from: Tons001 on March 29, 2014, 10:56:19 AM
Outback CC?
We have a winner!
Found this pic from an article by boB in Home Power Issue # 109 circa October/November 2005.
Yes, notice the Vulcan mind meld stance on that unit, too.
Nope, hand position not right ???.... and the eyes are open! ::)
This one just for fun....:)
A sales poster for an Outback Inverter I believe, though I have never seen one... :o
dancin the night away...
Quote from: Westbranch on April 03, 2014, 07:41:35 PM
A sales poster for an Outback Inverter I believe, though I have never seen one... :o
dancin the night away...
That would be incorrect but it is a logical guess. A closer look may reveal the answer. :)
Quote from: onanparts on April 04, 2014, 02:15:29 AM
Quote from: Westbranch on April 03, 2014, 07:41:35 PM
A sales poster for an Outback Inverter I believe, though I have never seen one... :o
dancin the night away...
That would be incorrect but it is a logical guess. A closer look may reveal the answer. :)
I didn't even notice the inverter... I was focused on the ePanel --vtMaps
Quote from: vtmaps on April 04, 2014, 03:37:01 AM
Quote from: onanparts on April 04, 2014, 02:15:29 AM
Quote from: Westbranch on April 03, 2014, 07:41:35 PM
A sales poster for an Outback Inverter I believe, though I have never seen one... :o
dancin the night away...
That would be incorrect but it is a logical guess. A closer look may reveal the answer. :)
I didn't even notice the inverter... I was focused on the ePanel --vtMaps
Congratulations vtmaps! You win nothing for your incurable obsessive addiction to Midnite Epanels! :) Or in other words, attention to the not so obvious. ;D
12VDC & Air. :)
Valve regulator for air brakes on a large truck?
Quote from: DMJ72 on April 27, 2014, 01:23:28 PM
Valve regulator for air brakes on a large truck?
Wayyyyy off. :)
Spark Plug cleaner?
Quote from: Halfcrazy on April 28, 2014, 09:12:46 AM
Spark Plug cleaner?
Halfcrazy shows his age and wins nothing in return! ;D
Here we go again.....Hint: Interactive. :)
Looks like some kind of security enabled device with switches to select the unlock code...
Burglar alarm ?
Garage door opener ?
Quote from: boB on May 13, 2014, 11:34:18 PM
Looks like some kind of security enabled device with switches to select the unlock code...
Burglar alarm ?
Garage door opener ?
Nope.
This unit contains a "blank" another "blank" another "blank and yet another "blank". It's function is to "blank" a stable "blank' compute and "blank" the resultant "blank" or "blank". By understanding what it does and how to use it will result in maximum satisfaction.
If the purpose of the "blank" is to "blank" the various "blanks" and a "blank" is used then the "blank" should be "blanked" or the "blank" removed to prevent the possibility of "blanking"
It's really just a bunch of fundamental "blanking" :)
Blank away..... ;D
Blank you very much !
Quote from: boB on May 15, 2014, 01:14:32 AM
Blank you very much !
You're blanking welcome!
My "blank" was made in the mid 70's, functions as designed and is still sought after not so much as a collectible but for what it does. :)
Something boB does every day has a direct connection to the "blank". He does it on the phone and in person etc. :)
Times up! It's a Glen 326-G Digital VFO.
A few details about it.
The gremlins have shrunk, back then they were troublesome dogs and now we just have bugs.
And that expression of cutting edge technology space age no longer applies :D
Quote from: dgd on May 23, 2014, 08:39:46 PM
The gremlins have shrunk, back then they were troublesome dogs and now we just have bugs.
And that expression of cutting edge technology space age no longer applies :D
I'll take space age over bugs any day! :)
Next up is one of my favorites. The brand name was/is kool. Once the cat is out of the bag some will get it, some won't have a clue.... ;D
Not even a guess?....Hmmmm...Made in Washington. A short drive from Arlington.
Quote from: onanparts on May 30, 2014, 11:53:45 PM
Not even a guess?....Hmmmm...Made in Washington. A short drive from Arlington.
A marine radio ? Northern Radio ?
Something from SGC ?
SEA Data-Marine ? (Was just SEA I think) marine and land-mobile radios.
Quote from: boB on May 31, 2014, 04:54:09 AM
Quote from: onanparts on May 30, 2014, 11:53:45 PM
Not even a guess?....Hmmmm...Made in Washington. A short drive from Arlington.
A marine radio ? Northern Radio ?
Something from SGC ?
SEA Data-Marine ? (Was just SEA I think) marine and land-mobile radios.
Not Marine, but it was manufactured on an island..... :)
OK, last teaser hint. Mick Jagger or Timothy Leary could have used this transceiver "legally" if they had a Ham ticket. :)
fm transmiter?
A transmitter for stimulating neural activity (aka Frankenstein medical apparatus for inducing circadian rythmns in victim's brain) - As old rubber lips crooned - I see a red door and want it painted BLACK
Well, ya certainly got me on this one !
And why would need a ham ticket to operate that?
td
Quote from: tecnodave on June 09, 2014, 02:08:52 AM
And why would need a ham ticket to operate that?
td
I don't know.... But LSD sounds kind of like LSB or SSB in some sort of way ?
I don't know.... But LSD sounds kind of like LSB or SSB in some sort of way ?
boB has it the closest by stepping outside the boX, and reading between the lines... :) After a quick search on Google I did discover boB was even closer than I thought. Good job boB! A big box of nothing headed your way.. :)
"Don Stoner and Pierre Goral formed a company called SGC (Stoner-Goral Communications) in 1972, which made Marine-band radios. Once again, Don’s single-sideband knowledge and savvy marketing skills helped lead marine radio out of the "Ancient Mariners" mode (AM) and into the world of SSB".
And this,
As the saying goes: "The rest is history", because Don decided to make a single-sideband radio for the enthusiast, desgined by the enthusiast! Setting up shop in the John Hancock building on Mercer Island in Washington, a tremendously well designed radio began to taken form. To begin with, the rig was designed as a Sideband ONLY transceiver from the ground up.
The what is it?
It's a Stoner PRO-10, Ten Meter SSB Ham Transceiver.
One of my guesses was SGC but I thought they made marine radios ?
Stoner died just a few years ago but I thought that SGC still makes antenna tuners. Nice ones too.
Quote from: boB on June 09, 2014, 07:47:08 PM
One of my guesses was SGC but I thought they made marine radios ?
Stoner died just a few years ago but I thought that SGC still makes antenna tuners. Nice ones too.
Not sure if Don was still with SGC when he started the Stoner line of SSB rigs in the late 70's. He had a PRO-40 11 meter rig, the PRO 80-10, eighty-10 meters and the PRO-10 shown here.
Don went silent key back in 99.
Next up....?
VHF Transimtter! Transistors like Q8 and Q9 were used in land mobile radios at 150mhz in Motorola Motran and other transmitters , this one is not a Motorola though.
td
Quote from: tecnodave on June 17, 2014, 11:13:50 AM
VHF Transimtter! Transistors like Q8 and Q9 were used in land mobile radios at 150mhz in Motorola Motran and other transmitters , this one is not a Motorola though.
td
Right track, wrong station... :) Take another look...
Motorola logo on the chips but I'm pretty sure Motorola pioneered this style of R.F. Power chips and was in the 70's a major semiconductor supplier, but as I remember Motorola never Left flux on the boards, not quite their style of circuit path either. How about a medical device that uses R.F. power to induce healing in the body?
td
Ah yes, right track, wrong station, It's motorola's economy line of 150 MHz taxi cab class radio, not their top of line Motran as used in Law Enforcement, don't remember the name but I remember the product line. I bailed from communications about Adam Osborne time and went into computers when they were kits.
td
I notice a date code that makes it look like this was made (or repaired ?) in the early 1990s at least.
boB ,
Where is that date code, I don't see a Motorola service center code, but not all service was done at Motorola centers.
How do you get a four letter ham license ? Do you admit to being on the bands that long? My original ticket has a four number code (commercial RTO).
td
Quote from: tecnodave on June 18, 2014, 12:26:46 AM
Ah yes, right track, wrong station, It's motorola's economy line of 150 MHz taxi cab class radio, not their top of line Motran as used in Law Enforcement, don't remember the name but I remember the product line. I bailed from communications about Adam Osborne time and went into computers when they were kits.
td
Not Motorola or taxi cab class radio. It is however a 12VDC unit. The large pill is rated 25 Watt output and the smaller one at 30 Watts output.
Am I right that it is a VHF transmitter, it does look more ham quality construction as the rules and regs for Amateur Radio Service are vastly looser than Commercial.
I only worked in commercial and have tinkered with ham radio but never got my lisence.
td
The light just clicked! Two final amps? Not likely unless it's a dual band ham transceiver , ok 1 is 2 meter and the other 6 meter, I'm not sure that those will work on 420.
td
Quote from: tecnodave on June 18, 2014, 05:38:18 PM
The light just clicked! Two final amps? Not likely unless it's a dual band ham transceiver , ok 1 is 2 meter and the other 6 meter, I'm not sure that those will work on 420.
td
Dave has been dancing all around this thing so well that I think he deserves a big bottle of nothing! :)
VHF/UHF mobile ham amplifier. ;D
Thanks for big box of nothing
That was my specialty VHF/UHF I have seen those but no peek inside
td
This one is a "what is it used for" as the image is of the entire unit. The manufacturers tag has been zapped in the pic because it states "exactly" what it "is" used for.
This should mess with boB just a bit since it was used by the local Telco for many years.... :) Closeup of tag shown added by Telco.
Fourth E above middle C..... ;D
Awwwh! Way too easy!
It's an xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxx with a xxxx xxxxxxxxxxx to provide clearance for xxxxxxxxxx xxxx on XX xxxxx and xxxxxxxxxx!
td
It is used in Renewable Energy field among others!
td
Xx'x xx armxxxxx xxxxxxx xxthe xxxx x mixx xxxxxcutxx xx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxx commuxxxxx xxxx xx XX xxtox xxx xxxxxatxxx!
td
well I had guessed its an Armature lathe of some sort but whose? don't know...
Quote from: Westbranch on June 20, 2014, 11:10:45 AM
well I had guessed its an Armature lathe of some sort but whose? don't know...
If you subscribe to this thread check your emails, the answer will be there... Technodave posted the answer, but then went and edited it to a bunch of xxxx's. (see last post on page 5 of this thread). You're guess is pretty good :)
--vtMaps
The question was what does it do and I nailed it, but then decided it would be more fun to let you all guess just what I'd does.
Armature Lathe & Undercutter. :) Curveball clearly did not work with you peeps! Hmmmm...hafta dig deeper in my toy box. ;D
This was a freebie from the local Telco maintenance shop. It was going to get scrapped but I had to save it! ;D
The original purchase order receipt from 1990 was still in the small toolbox on the end.
TJ,
That is one of the nicest I have seen, it would have found its way to my shop if it came by.
My original answer:
It's an armature turning lathe with a mica undercutter to provide clearance for commutator bars on DC motor and generators!
Quote from: tecnodave on June 20, 2014, 01:59:05 PM
TJ,
That is one of the nicest I have seen, it would have found its way to my shop if it came by.
My original answer:
It's an armature turning lathe with a mica undercutter to provide clearance for commutator bars on DC motor and generators!
It has a good home now. I have a few armatures to clean up so it will come in handy. Pic of original invoice.
Lets try something a bit more obscure. It is related to some off grid/RE systems. :)
In some ways the right hand end looks like a set of 'points' for a motor..??? :-\
Switch controlled by fly ball governor to control motor speed or otherwise open windings,motor start switch?
td
Quote from: tecnodave on June 22, 2014, 10:43:18 PM
Switch controlled by fly ball governor to control motor speed or otherwise open windings,motor start switch?
td
The problem with old farts is it can be difficult to get anything past them. :)
"Switch controlled by fly ball governor to control motor speed" is exactly what it is!
An OSKO, Over Speed Kutoff Switch, on my 1800 RPM Onan 12.5KW genset. It is set to open at an overspeed of 2250-2300 RPM and shutdown the genset. Old school mechanical magnetic switch but very effective. It's mounted to the end of the rotor/armature and the engine speed is of course controlled by a flyball governor. :)
Dave is piling up the buckets of "nothing". Giving Westbranch an equal amount of nothing as technically it is a set of points for a motor... :)
This pic of it in the "open" position.
Here we go again. :) The "what" should be easy, the "who" not so easy. ;D
The what is easy but who?
td
Quote from: tecnodave on June 24, 2014, 01:24:51 AM
The what is easy but who?
td
Must not be "easy" enough, at least on the "what" part... :)
2 channel (stereo) Amp? :-\
love the size of those heat sinks... might even make toast
Reminiscent of a Marantz stereo amp I had back when dinosaurs roamed the earth?
Quote from: TomW on June 24, 2014, 07:32:12 PM
Reminiscent of a Marantz stereo amp I had back when dinosaurs roamed the earth?
Right book! But can ya get to the right page? :) Hint: It's a very obscure page..... ;D Another hint? Current real market value is near double of list price when it was new, or very close to it...
A pre amp?
It is a stereo amplifier with a preamp. It does look like Bob Carvers work but my Carver is a power amp only, no preamp so I can't be sure. 2230 ?
td
Marantz Integrated amp. But....which one? :)
Times up! :) Marantz 1300DC ;D
Marantz combined a 3650 Pre-Amp with the 300DC Amp to make this integrated amp. Only made two years, 1978-1979. One of my favorites and it still sounds and looks great after 35 years.... :)
These are what they merged in one case. The only thing missing is the analog meters. :(
Time for another....
looks like a modified milling machine...
looks like a tool sharpener for some kind of machining cutter
nope, its a valve grinding machine
Quote from: dbcollen on July 11, 2014, 12:24:03 PM
nope, its a valve grinding machine
Bingo! ;D
Sioux model 680. I put a stepped drill bit in the chuck to try and throw ya off..... :)
>:( it did!
The drill is why I gave my first answer..... then I looked again and realized what it really was.
Next up....??
Gotta be a 1970's stereo amplifier but what kind ?
Quote from: boB on July 13, 2014, 04:37:50 AM
Gotta be a 1970's stereo amplifier but what kind ?
Stereo amp yes, 70's...nope. Roots in the 70's :) but the burn in test was about March 20th 1990.
350 Watts/channel @ 8 ohms and 450 Watts/channel @ 4 ohms. 900 Watts mono bridged into 8 ohms and 750 Watts into 16 ohms.
Hmmmmm..... With a built in limiter ?
Quote from: boB on July 17, 2014, 11:01:57 PM
Hmmmmm..... With a built in limiter ?
???.... :) and switchable too.
Difficult to find that fine line between easy and no way....
RobKen 2123
Made here in Washington.....now the jigs up! ;D
Quote from: onanparts on July 26, 2014, 01:04:24 AM
Made here in Washington.....now the jigs up! ;D
I don't know what those 6 pin ICs are ? sure looked like 6 pins.
Quote from: boB on July 30, 2014, 04:08:07 AM
Quote from: onanparts on July 26, 2014, 01:04:24 AM
Made here in Washington.....now the jigs up! ;D
I don't know what those 6 pin ICs are ? sure looked like 6 pins.
boB, it was made by another Bob you know. Sure thought the RobKen 2123 and Made in Washington hints would have done it!
Here's an easy one. Well, maybe not so easy... I've never seen one, and I'm not really sure they exist other than in prototype. I scanned this image from Home Power in early 2012.
--vtMaps
I recognize that S.O.B..
They exist.
Quote from: Doug on August 13, 2014, 10:15:06 AM
I recognize that S.O.B..
They exist.
What happened to them?... they don't seem to exist on Midnite's web site.
I thought they would be the ultimate solution to array safety... they could defeat both series and parallel arc faults at the array. Putting arc fault in the controller does nothing to help with parallel arc faults.
--vtMaps
Which model are you looking for?
http://www.midnitesolar.com/productPhoto.php?product_ID=583&productCatName=RAPID-SHUTDOWN-SYSTEM-NEC-690.12 &productCat_ID=44&sortOrder=2&act=pc (http://www.midnitesolar.com/productPhoto.php?product_ID=583&productCatName=RAPID-SHUTDOWN-SYSTEM-NEC-690.12%20&productCat_ID=44&sortOrder=2&act=pc)
Changes in the requirements for rapid shutdown keep coming. MidNite is following these changes closely and will have products that meet these requirements.
Quote from: Doug on August 13, 2014, 11:28:14 AM
Which model are you looking for?
We may not be on the same page... the product I showed is NOT a rapid shutdown combiner. --vtMaps
All of those combiners are just a disconnecting combiner. they all have the ability to have the power supply board added and interface with the birdhouse though
Ryan
Quote from: Halfcrazy on August 13, 2014, 02:57:54 PM
All of those combiners are just a disconnecting combiner. they all have the ability to have the power supply board added and interface with the birdhouse though
The advertisement I posted was for an arc fault disconnecting combiner. I see no mention of arc fault in your current line up of combiners.
--vtMaps
Ah ok the picture looks like it is our standard MNPV6HV Disconnecting combiner in 4X
As for Arc Fault we are still actively working on it but I am not sure just how soon we will be sending stuff to UL. I thought it was real soon. I will ask Robin to jump in and give an update
Batter up! :)
Smudge pot! Used in orchards to protect crops from freeze!
td
Quote from: tecnodave on September 02, 2014, 10:47:31 AM
Smudge pot! Used in orchards to protect crops from freeze!
td
Nope!
Close, but no cigar........old school road flare.......has wick to burn kerosene?
td
A look inside.....
A catalytic heater?
Camp heater........to early to be catalytic.....wick burns kerosene.
more like tent heater... It is a much older version of a kerosene heater than the one in our bunkhouse in the '70's
Very very close. A heater yes, but me thinks you are all too young to have used one of these for it's designed application..... :)
Or at least too smart!
We used to use something similar to this to pre-heat the oil in our old Radial Engined DHC3 Beaver. During the coldest parts of winter, we'd drain the oil after a flight and then pre-heat it before the next one. We sometimes used a heater like the one in the pic. Sometimes, we'd just use the heater under the engine with a tarp or two to build a tent-like structure.
TJ
I'm from Alaska! Never seen one like that.....but we did use coleman Blazo stoves for that! Especially for our pony motor D-2!
td
smudge pot, for laying down smoke in an orchard for frost protection
-edit-
Oh, I see someone already tried that. So, that's what I need for my listeroid to keep the crankcase from turning to jello in the winter. No power to run an electric heater.
Not so easy this time. ;D Input is 115 Volts AC 50/60 Hz or 100 Hz. Output 12-30 Volts DC. :)
Except for the PWB, it looks homebuilt. variable power supply with 3 relays with swamping diodes on them.
Quote from: mike90045 on September 05, 2014, 05:30:08 PM
Except for the PWB, it looks homebuilt. variable power supply with 3 relays with swamping diodes on them.
I'll have to pass the homebuilt angle on to the manufacturer that's been in business for over 80 years. :)
That should get a chuckle out of them.
The wire bundle (it's not a harness) looks to be a mess. Automotive crimps and such. (I guess I did too much spacecraft work)
Quote from: mike90045 on September 06, 2014, 12:32:36 PM
The wire bundle (it's not a harness) looks to be a mess. Automotive crimps and such. (I guess I did too much spacecraft work)
Welding in space? Maybe...:)
Miller Weld Control for use with a Spool type Mig Gun for welding aluminum.
Up next......and no clues! :)
Quote from: onanparts on October 23, 2014, 06:55:15 PM
Up next......and no clues! :)
Hmmmm...OK, a clue or 2. If you are reading this post in this forum then the name of the manufacturer would be instantly recognizable or at least familiar. :)
And another pic.....
Quote from: onanparts on October 23, 2014, 06:55:15 PM
Up next......and no clues! :)
designed to last <10 years. Really, connection wires bolted to bare aluminum ? Doesn't look like 4 thermistors there. That aluminum is going to creep and deform over time, air will get under those ring terminals and oxidize the aluminum. game over.
Quote from: mike90045 on October 25, 2014, 10:47:52 AM
Quote from: onanparts on October 23, 2014, 06:55:15 PM
Up next......and no clues! :)
designed to last <10 years. Really, connection wires bolted to bare aluminum ? Doesn't look like 4 thermistors there. That aluminum is going to creep and deform over time, air will get under those ring terminals and oxidize the aluminum. game over.
How do you explain the fact that several units I own made by the same company using identical heatsinks and connections have been trouble free and exibit none of the issues you state?
These units have been in continuous use by me for 11, 14, 17 and 19 years. Each unit has the covers removed for an annual inspection. Dust blown out and all connections checked etc. Not a single bad connection or any corrosion has ever been found.
All have been subjected to numerous thermal cycles and thousands of hours of troublefree service. Less than ten years life? Not even close based on my personal experience and that of many many others.
A power supply for you organ ?
Look like the innards of an uninterpretable power supply or an inverter/charger.
Quote from: phxmark on October 27, 2014, 01:05:12 PM
Look like the innards of an uninterpretable power supply or an inverter/charger.
phxmark wins nothing! ;D
UPS is it! Made by APC, they were bought out by Schneider Electric back in 2006/2007. APC has been around since 1981. They were founded by 3 MIT Electrical Power Engineers after they ran out of grant funds to do R & D on.....Solar Power! :)
While on the grid all of my electronics have an APC Smart UPS between them and the wall outlets. My oldest still in use was made in 1995. Nothing but new batteries every 4-6 years has been required. The majority of mine were made in the late 90's in Rhode Island. 1 or 2 made in the last 10 years are offshore, Philippines.
The one pictured here is a 2008 unit made in India... :( But considering what I paid, $40 and it works + batts were replaced 2 years ago by the prior owner I can't complain too loud.
Model is a SUA2200RMXL. 2200VA/1980 Watts. 48VDC input with extended run capability using external batts. 120VAC output.
Does not compare to my Radian on any level except weight! Sucker is 130+ pounds with 40 of that the internal battery pack.
But for $40 I'll use it for something..... :)
We have a bunch of the 3000XLs in the server racks here where I work. I thought the innards looked familiar.
Quote from: phxmark on October 28, 2014, 02:11:41 PM
We have a bunch of the 3000XLs in the server racks here where I work. I thought the innards looked familiar.
Don't happen to have an extra AP9631 Network card laying around do you?.... :)
Mine has the AP9630 with no I/O ports for temp sensor/relay/contacts etc. like the 9631 does.
We are going to be replacing the UPSs at one of our datacenters with a Symetra this year, so I may be able to dig up a card.
Quote from: phxmark on October 30, 2014, 12:37:13 PM
We are going to be replacing the UPSs at one of our datacenters with a Symetra this year, so I may be able to dig up a card.
OK, sounds good. Thanks for keeping me in mind. :)
I went back to where I found the 2200XL to look for a 9631 card but no luck. But.....They had just put out a 3000XL with not 1 but 4 of the external battery packs. Checking the model tag showed it was made here! Rhode Island 2003. Struck a deal for a couple hundred bucks for everything including a step down transformer that was in the stack but from another setup as this 3000XL is 120V in and 120V out.
Batteries are tired as expected. It works fine otherwise except for one issue. Transformer buzz while inverting/on battery. Normal "Hum" that is heard from most if not all inverters/UPS units while inverting but this one is the only unit that has ever produced a sizzling bacon sound. It's not present when charging etc. Only when on battery. Does this with or without a load.
The 2200XL does not sizzle on battery, normal hum yes.
Have you come across this with any of your units? boB feel free to chime in too... :)
Video of it here: AC plugged and unplugged several times during video. No sizzle when on AC.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LD1g5G4TZDQ&feature=youtu.be
I had an APC that would buzz real loud when inverting. We solved it by peeling back the wrapping on the transformer and pouring some thinned lacquer in the windings. Quieted it right up.
Your sizzling sounds like a small corona arc somewhere. Turn off all the lights and see if you can see any glow. Can you smell any ozone when it is running?
No visible arcing/glow or ozone smells.....
I had several of the 3000XL units at work. If batteries were not loaded into the bays in the UPS itself, they would sound like an engine about to throw a rod. The best I could find out, the battery housing parts would vibrate at a resonant freq. with the transformers.
The second thing is the transformers as phxmark said. Grainger stocks electric motor lacquer in a spray can. That worked well, but the high VOC's in the can required proper ventilation.
This is one of those "what is it for" pics. :)
DC-DC Converter?
Quote from: Westbranch on November 16, 2014, 01:42:46 PM
DC-DC Converter?
DC-DC converter is correct but I knew that part would be too easy....thus the "what is it for" was specified.
There are PV inputs for the battery/batteries...... :) A clue...sort of....Alice and a bus.
Quote from: onanparts on November 16, 2014, 05:54:45 PM
Quote from: Westbranch on November 16, 2014, 01:42:46 PM
DC-DC Converter?
DC-DC converter is correct but I knew that part would be too easy....thus the "what is it for" was specified.
There are PV inputs for the battery/batteries...... :) A clue...sort of....Alice and a bus.
AhA ! With all of the conformal coating on that board, it looks like it is made for a harsh environment.
And with the Clue, I am going to guess "Alices' Restaurant" especially since it is near to Thanksgiving...
"Bus" meaning the VW microbus that is...
So....
Circuit board for one of those solar garbage compactors that normally sits in a park maybe ?
But how/where would you get one of those ?
boB
Quote from: boB on November 16, 2014, 06:08:34 PM
Quote from: onanparts on November 16, 2014, 05:54:45 PM
Quote from: Westbranch on November 16, 2014, 01:42:46 PM
DC-DC Converter?
DC-DC converter is correct but I knew that part would be too easy....thus the "what is it for" was specified.
There are PV inputs for the battery/batteries...... :) A clue...sort of....Alice and a bus.
AhA ! With all of the conformal coating on that board, it looks like it is made for a harsh environment.
And with the Clue, I am going to guess "Alices' Restaurant" especially since it is near to Thanksgiving...
"Bus" meaning the VW microbus that is...
Wrong Alice boB.....
So....
Circuit board for one of those solar garbage compactors that normally sits in a park maybe ?
Nope.
But how/where would you get one of those ?
boB
Quote from: onanparts on November 16, 2014, 06:14:56 PM
Quote from: boB on November 16, 2014, 06:08:34 PM
Quote from: onanparts on November 16, 2014, 05:54:45 PM
Quote from: Westbranch on November 16, 2014, 01:42:46 PM
DC-DC Converter?
DC-DC converter is correct but I knew that part would be too easy....thus the "what is it for" was specified.
There are PV inputs for the battery/batteries...... :) A clue...sort of....Alice and a bus.
AhA ! With all of the conformal coating on that board, it looks like it is made for a harsh environment.
And with the Clue, I am going to guess "Alices' Restaurant" especially since it is near to Thanksgiving...
"Bus" meaning the VW microbus that is...
Wrong Alice boB.....
So....
Circuit board for one of those solar garbage compactors that normally sits in a park maybe ?
Nope.
But how/where would you get one of those ?
boB
Darn !
Conformal coating, gold plate everywhere, very spiffy and good finish. Not spacecraft connectors, so maybe some sort of test gear from HP or Tek . 4 channels of something and just 1 nifty inductor visible.
This is several of the PV panels that feed the input on the....oops...forgot to mention, MPPT DC-DC converter. Somebody had to know that?
boB, indirectly you hit the nail almost on the head with the Garbage Compactor guess. Heavy on the indirect connection. You have a habit of doing that, getting close to the fire promptly that is. June 1st, can't smell and Orange are more clues. :)
It it one of the boards from a solar roadway module?
Quote from: phxmark on November 19, 2014, 04:30:04 PM
It it one of the boards from a solar roadway module?
Nope. Maybe another pic? :)
with that "Watchdog" imprint is it a MN product? definitely a CC
Quote from: Westbranch on November 20, 2014, 01:18:01 AM
with that "Watchdog" imprint is it a MN product? definitely a CC
This project is so secret even boB and Robyn don't know about it..... ;D
Another pic. This "should" give it away.....maybe? :)
Some kind of robot ?
Quote from: boB on November 25, 2014, 02:28:03 AM
Some kind of robot ?
Hmmmm....no arms/legs/wheels/servos etc. so .....nope.
Does have a camera though....and it can hear. :) Maybe a better pic? DITL test is next month.
BUMP! We are still trying to figure this on out.
Part of a cube sat? <---- This is my first choice of what it would be.
Drone payload?
Weather Balloon Payload?
Just some guesses.
well that does look like a half of a wooden clothes peg at the lower left, so maybe.... on second thought no its too big if the 'length ' of the satellite is 3 inches...
from Wiki The cube-shaped satellites are approximately four inches long, have a volume of about one quart
but maybe as per this pic
Yeah, I vote for a satellite of some sort, too.
With all that conformal coating, Capton tape (or whatever they use) ?
maybe ?
boB
Also, looking at the solar panel module, the pin with the string on it is what gets pulled to activate power to the module. I looked at other cube-sat solar modules on Goolge and they all have the same pin with the string on them.
CubeSat it is! :)
From AMSAT's site: http://www.amsat.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/FoxBrochure-6-14.pdf
Project Fox is AMSAT's answer to the satellite communities' growing interest in
CubeSats. A CubeSat is a small satellite based on a basic 4-inch (10cm) cube
shape. AMSAT is developing a family of these satellites to take advantage of
new launch opportunities that are now available for CubeSat educational and
scientific missions.
The first members of this new family are the Fox-1 satellites as shown in the
drawing below. These are currently being developed by our all-volunteer,
AMSAT engineering team. They will use 70cm for uplinks and 2 meters for
downlinks. Each satellite will be able to operate as both an FM analog repeater
and in digital data mode. The satellites are magnetically stabilized using a
permanent magnet and hysteresis rods.
Each face of the satellite has a pair of high-performance, space-rated solar
cells. These solar cells drive maximum-power-point-tracking, DC-to-DC
converters that will wring out as much power as possible from the cells. This
power is used to charge a 10 watt-hour NiCd battery. The power system can
provide a little over 2 watts continuously, even in eclipse, and quite a bit more
peak power if needed.
The antennas are spring-wire whips and the VHF one is shown in its stowed
position wrapped around the solar panel. The UHF antenna is on the opposite
face. After deployment in orbit, they will spring out in opposite directions. Each
antenna will operate as a dipole. On 70cm, the whip and the satellite body form
the dipole. On 2 meters, the whip is half of the dipole and both the satellite
body and the 70cm whip make up the other half. The whips are aligned with
the Z-axis of the satellite which is magnetically stabilized to help minimize
QSB
Although not going to the moon an orbit about 400 miles up is on the way...too the moon Alice, to the moon! As Ralph would say. My hint about Orange, June 1st and can't smell were way out in left field....."OSCAR" as in Oscar the grouch! He can't smell and was Orange his first year, then Green. June 1st is his birthday.....gotta get creative with you folks!
Here we go again.... :)
The grain, the column, and tubing makes me think of a still
Times up!
Bernie Haines working in his garage. Inventor of the Solar Pathfinder.
History: http://www.solarpathfinder.com/about/our-history
Ready for another?
Probably miles off beam, but it looks like a synchronous vibrator.
Prehistoric RF output valve (vacume tube for you younguns)?
Nope & nope.... ???
I see contacts, coils, and flex leaf. Some DC-AC vibrator/interrupter. Or maybe some tuned vibrator/FQ meter to control an wild AC source ?
The on in my dad's car was encased in lead to reduce static as it created AC for tube HV supply.
Where do you get this stuff ??!!!???
I haven't seen this before that I know of, but my guess would be part of a watt-hour meter.
Basically the innards of a utility watt-hour meter
Probably a current input and a voltage input and an output to drive a meter ?
OR, maybe there is a meter face on the bottom ?
boB
Quote from: boB on February 13, 2015, 02:29:13 AM
Where do you get this stuff ??!!!???
I haven't seen this before that I know of, but my guess would be part of a watt-hour meter.
Basically the innards of a utility watt-hour meter
Probably a current input and a voltage input and an output to drive a meter ?
OR, maybe there is a meter face on the bottom ?
boB
Watt did you say? :) Negatory on the wattmeter... :(
Found this at an antique store that was more like a museum with everything for sale and most of it oddball/unusual stuff.
Some clues: George, Parallel and a school bus. :)
Quote from: boB on February 13, 2015, 02:29:13 AM
Where do you get this stuff ??!!!???
boB
Probably just has too much time on his hands, a LOT of storage space and is single? ;D
My Wife just never lets me keep much stuff that is not actually in use at least occasionally.
Its fun to see this old stuff.
I still miss my old CP/M computer and the other perfectly good but old stuff I "recycled".
You just need to convince your wife that you are genetically disposed to collecting.... anything... and have a cousin or 2 that does the same.. ;D
Quote......... Some clues: George, Parallel and a school bus. :)
Wig-Wag light alternator ? (pre-thermal bi-metal automotive blinker) ?
Quote from: mike90045 on February 14, 2015, 01:20:29 AM
Quote......... Some clues: George, Parallel and a school bus. :)
Wig-Wag light alternator ? (pre-thermal bi-metal automotive blinker) ?
A few more clues? OK, Arlo & Ozzy. Trahere. The Rockies to the mighty redwood trees.
Times up!
Vane Line Relay used by Railroads circa early to mid teens. :)
Next we have a.....?
battery charger
HV caps, some sort of 3 terminal device on a isolated heat sink. Lots of transformer connections. Constant voltage transformer ? Ferroresonant Transformer ? or simple HV DC sopply.
Quote from: mike90045 on March 16, 2015, 12:33:22 PM
HV caps, some sort of 3 terminal device on a isolated heat sink. Lots of transformer connections. Constant voltage transformer ? Ferroresonant Transformer ? or simple HV DC sopply.
Mike wins nothing! :)
24 Amp isolation transformer it is. CVT, FT an apple is an apple.....
I should have held on to this but that was many years ago and a $10 investment turned into a $200+ dollar profit.... :)
Guys, guys, guys.....I'm really surprised. Isn't it obvious? It's a pair of panametric fams...part of the tremion girdle marfle vane, critical component of the famed Retro Encabulator!
Quote from: openplanet on March 29, 2015, 06:05:01 PM
Guys, guys, guys.....I'm really surprised. Isn't it obvious? It's a pair of panametric fams...part of the tremion girdle marfle vane, critical component of the famed Retro Encabulator!
However, Inspector 54, unless uninvited, was likely to find a Potemkin Village illusion tailored to his/her uncollective and/or divided subconscious.... ???
Love the tag line. "Delux" actually means "no luxury" or "with luxury aspect excluded"...
Hey! Who stole all the Circuit Boards???? >:( boB!!!!! You bring those back!!!
Very odd.... ??? Point to point wiring? Sup wit dat? :)
found this but it's like Greek to a Forester...
QuoteONEAC Condition One Series -75 to 1000VA
The ONEAC® ConditionOne® range provides a high performance solution without battery backup. It has a built-in isolation transformer to eliminate electrical noise, ensuring attached equipment is unaffected by the electrical environment and does not degrade over time. ONEAC ConditionOne® are available in 120/230 V, 50/60 Hz, 75 - 1000 VA (single-phase) units. Optional ONEGROUND technology is available to correct ground skew problems
Underside of a tube radio ? Moulded caps, resistors, ceramic caps, rotary switch on the left side. Not a real complex rats nest, not enough for a TV, no huge power transformers, so low power radio receiver is my guess. Couple of shield cables to the back panel, maybe a tube based phono preamp
A fore runner to modern UPS? BUT they still make them...??
Quote from: mike90045 on April 08, 2015, 12:22:57 PM
Underside of a tube radio ? Moulded caps, resistors, ceramic caps, rotary switch on the left side. Not a real complex rats nest, not enough for a TV, no huge power transformers, so low power radio receiver is my guess. Couple of shield cables to the back panel, maybe a tube based phono preamp
Transformers? Did you say, transformers? :)
Hmmmm.....how about a few more pics?
The hum adjust pot gives it away as some form of an audio amplifier. I would guess either an old power amp or the amp section of an old radio or tv like a philco or rca?
Quote from: xsnrg on April 21, 2015, 08:04:20 AM
The hum adjust pot gives it away as some form of an audio amplifier. I would guess either an old power amp or the amp section of an old radio or tv like a philco or rca?
Figured somebody would spot that hum pot !
Eico HF-20 Mono Audio Amp... :)
Turning the rudder hard left we now have.....?
Don't think I have ever seen a water ski competition/exhibition where the water was brought in in front of a grandstand
4th of July Aqua Show
Used to see them at the Long Beach (Calif) waterfront, with bleachers and such. This looks to be at a racetrack with the largest doughboy pool I've seen.
Quote from: mike90045 on April 29, 2015, 09:38:48 AM
4th of July Aqua Show
Used to see them at the Long Beach (Calif) waterfront, with bleachers and such. This looks to be at a racetrack with the largest doughboy pool I've seen.
This particular event lasted much longer than a day or two. A few notable names that were there:
Ed Sullivan, Rod Serling, Victor Borge, Edward R. Murrow, Lawrence Welk, Billy Graham, Roy Rogers, Ella Fitzgerald. :)
Now here is a stumper......A test tool?
Related to solar!........well useful in solar anyway
td
Better view?
td
let me guess.... the RED one is positive ::)
WB.
Yup and the black one is negative, but what is it for?
td
makes me think of an arc tester or like that
WB
Not even remotely close
td
Something to do with testing batteries? --vtMaps
Vt
Getting close!
td
Ok it does test something about the battery but what? Hint the bar coming out the side is a probe and the plastic button on the end is an insulator...........a pointed probe and a cylinder?
td
Quote from: tecnodave on August 18, 2015, 11:03:07 AM
Ok it does test something about the battery but what? Hint the bar coming out the side is a probe and the plastic button on the end is an insulator...........a pointed probe and a cylinder?
Thanks for the hint, but I didn't need it. I've seen descriptions of these... for some reason I think maybe you wrote about them somewhere, sometime ago, in describing how to test individual cells in a flooded lead acid battery.
--vtMaps
Vt gets the cigar!
They are used to test the individual cell voltage! The pointed end is placed on the positive end and the side probe is inserted into the cell, the insulator button prevents shorting the plates so you are reading the voltage of the acid. The second cell is tested using both side probes and so on.
There will be a voltage offset on the first cell as follows:
Positive to first cell. 1.05 volt !
First cell to second cell. 2.1 volt
Second cell to third cell 2.1 volt
Third cell to negative term. 1.05 volt
Battery total. 6.3 volt
These were made by Sun Electric to use with an automovitive system. They plug into the VAT-28 generator/alternator/battery tester
I use them with a Snap-On VAT-40 analyzer.......8" high sensivity voltmeter and ammeter to evaluate batteries. These will show any variation in cell volts and used with a hydrometer provide a clear picture of battery capacity and probable life span
I bought a used set of Rolls Surette S-530 L-16 for $20. Headed to the scrap yard, they are now at full 400 ah capacity! All cells are at 1.265. Not a bad use for a tool thought obsolete! Did it with a kid in total manual mode! Doing sets every 30 minutes and walking the charge cycle at every step
Even doing the eq in bulk MPPT mode and setting the exact voltage and amperage I wanted at that moment..........I know , that is not how the kid was meant to be used but as a beta tester I will do stuff not in the books
Note, the Surette's were scrapped due to blown FET's in the C-40 controller. I bought the whole system as scrap.........Ah the power of diagnosis!
td
Here is the next victim..... :)
Bunch of IC's, lots of discrete parts, half dozen tuned slug coils in 2 groups, could be AM/FM tuner No power parts showing, so I'm sticking with tuner, no amp.
Quote from: mike90045 on September 22, 2015, 03:14:33 AM
Bunch of IC's, lots of discrete parts, half dozen tuned slug coils in 2 groups, could be AM/FM tuner No power parts showing, so I'm sticking with tuner, no amp.
I was thinking the exact same thing but knowing TJ, it's gotta be something different BUT still using a radio.
There is definitely a micro-controller in there though. Late 1980s maybe ?
boB
And a (5-digit?), 7-segment display, if that helps anyone?
That 8048 cpu brings back some coding memories from about 1980.
Is it a cpu control board from an old analogue synthesizer (Korg or whatever) ?
dgd
Quote from: boB on September 27, 2015, 06:09:04 PM
Quote from: mike90045 on September 22, 2015, 03:14:33 AM
Bunch of IC's, lots of discrete parts, half dozen tuned slug coils in 2 groups, could be AM/FM tuner No power parts showing, so I'm sticking with tuner, no amp.
I was thinking the exact same thing but knowing TJ, it's gotta be something different BUT still using a radio.
There is definitely a micro-controller in there though. Late 1980s maybe ?
boB
I can truthfully say it's not an AM/FM tuner, although it could be under certain circumstances. Right book, right chapter....wrong page. :) 5 digit display is correct. :) The original IBM PC keyboard used an 8048 microcontroller, as did some Korg and Roland synthesizers. But not a KB or Synth. boB and Mike are close enough to the fire to get their fingers very warm.....Hmmmm.....
A SIG or Air quality alert box for decoding alerts broadcast on AM/FM broadcast
I remember large industries having to have such decoding radios in the greater L.A. Basin about that time. Air quality board could issue SIG alerts requiring certain industries to shut down. Also used for very heavy power users at peak power times to command a shutdown.
td
I thought this might be a good What is it ?
(http://img_20151102_130432.jpg)
RF (or anti-RF) air vent port in a building. Can't tell what the flat gizmos are in a row down the center. Usually the RFI shielded vents have small hex mesh in them, good to the GHZ range
It looks like it has been cut. So my money is on a high current bus bar passing through the wall to a control center?
Quote from: Halfcrazy on November 03, 2015, 05:13:03 AM
It looks like it has been cut. So my money is on a high current bus bar passing through the wall to a control center?
Yes Ryan has it - was going from transformer to breakers.
Anyone want to take a guess at the volt and amp ratings for it ? Each copper conductor is about 1/4" thick by 2 inches .
Two different ratings for if it is mounted horizontally like in the photo - or if it was mounted vertically instead.
Hint - the difference in those ratings is 250amps .
Well using the old standard 1by1 is 1,000 amps I would say in the picture as shown they where rated for some where around 5-700 amps as shown
Quote from: Halfcrazy on November 03, 2015, 11:17:43 AM
Well using the old standard 1by1 is 1,000 amps I would say in the picture as shown they where rated for some where around 5-700 amps as shown
It is three phase
(//)
Related to RE. But... I think this is a real stumper. Have at it. :)
Looks like an expansion joint of some type - and the spring must be in there to keep the joint pushed tight against a flange ?. Something for solar hot water ?
the geared wheel is to adjust spring pressure I got that far
There is that slot on the other end which look like it mounts on something and the way that is formed it doesn't look like it actually carries any fluid in it.
Larry
Quote from: Halfcrazy on December 08, 2015, 08:56:00 AM
the geared wheel is to adjust spring pressure I got that far
Show off! :) On the right track, gotta give ya credit for that!
You are right Ryan - that does look geared now that I look at it again. The way that is bent and slotted at the other end it must push something like a valve ? or damper ?
speed/power governor adjustment of some sort ? The forked end and the adjustment end. Must be new, no grease on it.
Quote from: mike90045 on December 11, 2015, 06:09:58 PM
speed/power governor adjustment of some sort ? The forked end and the adjustment end. Must be new, no grease on it.
Halfcrazy opened the door and Mike stepped on through it..:) A double heaping helping of nothing for the both of you! :)
It's a governor linkage rod for a 12.5 KW onan genset.
This one designed for interstellar faster-than-light, (FTL) travel and safe for use within most worm holes. Time dilation and loop complexities are optional. It may also be part of an AAD, Antimatter Annihilation Drive but not likely as the storing of Antimatter is a real pain and very dangerous! :)
high voltage flyback transformer, and maybe a voltage doubler circuit with it.
Odd, no large caps visible, no high amp wiring. hard to figure the end use, not high enough for a CRT. Maybe for a image multiplier tube, but there are easier ways to get their HV. the coarse winding on the right looks like it could be for tesla coil, but that would be really HV. Maybe a high end photo flash, but no big cap for it.
More hints
That coarse coil looks like it might be a choke (for lightning) in a power conditioner. --vtMaps
That big coil I ~think~ is a current transformer. I also think I see what might be a spark gap inside heat shrink.
Not sure why a current transformer would be doing with a high voltage transformer though ?
Looks like maybe another sensor in there too in-between the coil and HV circuit ?
Temperature sensor ?
boB
Input power is 120 VAC @ about 1.3 Amps. Rated around 250 Amps DC or AC.
I see what looks like a magnetic plunger or solenoid that controls the spark gap?
Another hint? OK.....
Drug Addict.
Times up! It's a High Frequency Arc Starter and Stabilizer for use when TIG welding and the weld/power source does not have HF built in. :)
Next up....
Inline filter of some sort?
inline oiler for air tools
Heisenberg Compensator for a Cheronkov Star Drive. Mk V ::)
flow gauge
Quote from: mike90045 on March 12, 2016, 01:40:25 AM
flow gauge
Mike nailed it! Makes you wonder what he has for breakfast sometimes... ;D
Quote from: onanparts on March 12, 2016, 09:48:19 AM
Quote from: mike90045 on March 12, 2016, 01:40:25 AM
flow gauge
Mike nailed it! Makes you wonder what he has for breakfast sometimes... ;D
I process my own pond water into drinking water, with slow sand filter and ozonater. And worked in microelectronics lab for 30+ years. Finally got one, not even it the electronics field
Linkage arms. I use a version of them that are adjustable for the Anti-roll sway bars on my racing car. Although there are many different applications that use Heim type joints.
Here we go again.... :)
Battery charger ?
Quote from: boB on March 15, 2016, 03:46:22 AM
Battery charger ?
Tried to sneak it past boB but no go! Battery charger it is.
As boB would say " He should be charged with battery and thrown in a dry cell".
Quote from: Doug on March 15, 2016, 05:24:07 PM
As boB would say " He should be charged with battery and thrown in a dry cell".
He should be discharged slowly and then become stratified. While contemplating that, boB is disqualified from this one... :)
Looks like a valve-extender (the predecessor to card-extenders)?
Vibrator inverter
td
Quote from: tecnodave on March 16, 2016, 07:04:34 PM
Vibrator inverter
That was my first thought too, but the wires come out the bit in the top and go straight to what looks to be a socket at the bottom.
audio transducer
Shooting blanks guy's. Hint was that boB is disqualified because in his area of expertise he would have nailed it promptly. Unfair advantage.... :)
Keep shooting!
Is there a lense on the face down end?
If so, my W.A.G. is a light or sensor to sense an object in the area.
Otr not
I sort of thought it looks like a device to remote mount a tube. Like you unplug it in the middle and then plug it into the tube socket and plug the tube into it
Quote from: Halfcrazy on March 17, 2016, 01:38:10 PMLike you unplug it in the middle and then plug it into the tube socket and plug the tube into it
That's how it's installed....but not for remote use/purpose......
It isn't a tube rejuvenator is it?
Quote from: Doug on March 17, 2016, 03:48:38 PM
It isn't a tube rejuvenator is it?
Going to give Doug this one. CRT Booster etc. to increase the heater voltage on dim picture tubes. :)
Yep. Installed a lot of those because of my dad was a TV repairman for many years.
My uncle (Dad's brother) used to re-build picture tubes and I used to replace them in the customer's home and in the shop. Robin did that a bunch too. Only had one implode in the home that I know of !
My uncle Loyal would replace the gun assembly. Diffusion pump and flash the getter and all that.
boB
First one to say "Waveform" gets to stand in the corner! All day... :) So, "what is it" that the waveform specifically represents?
Quote from: onanparts on March 21, 2016, 01:43:00 PM
First one to say "Waveform" gets to stand in the corner! All day... :) So, "what is it" that the waveform specifically represents?
TJ, you SURE I'm not excluded from this one ? I had to check my text twice !
This MIGHT be one of your trick questions and if so might be from some strange welder of yours.
BUT it looks very reminiscent of a television (PAL or NTSC ?) vertical interval or, if not to scale, a color burst on the left side followed by a horizontal sync tip and then a line of video followed by more sync and video but I don't see more color bursts.
Or maybe it is teletext ?
boB
Quote from: boB on March 21, 2016, 03:39:06 PM
Quote from: onanparts on March 21, 2016, 01:43:00 PM
First one to say "Waveform" gets to stand in the corner! All day... :) So, "what is it" that the waveform specifically represents?
TJ, you SURE I'm not excluded from this one ? I had to check my text twice !
This MIGHT be one of your trick questions and if so might be from some strange welder of yours.
BUT it looks very reminiscent of a television (PAL or NTSC ?) vertical interval or, if not to scale, a color burst on the left side followed by a horizontal sync tip and then a line of video followed by more sync and video but I don't see more color bursts.
Or maybe it is teletext ?
boB
You are correct on the "type" of waveform, video. But the "trick" part is what does it represent? It is a legitimate waveform, and getting closer as you read this. :)
Well, since I don't see color bursts on the back porches of the horizontal lines on the right, it looks
to me like a single line of repeating info or white to black to white (or moire pattern, etc) on the left followed by video lines which I can't tell what they are except for some random-ish luminance information for the start of a displayed screen.
Might be the first few lines (less equalizing pulses) of the vertical interval of a screen.
If I had some reference for time, it might (or might not) help
boB
Quote from: boB on March 21, 2016, 04:41:57 PM
If I had some reference for time, it might (or might not) help
boB
Well, the waveform is much closer than it was when I last posted...that's a valid time reference. ;D
wow, the sync tips look a bit different from each other, text coding at the top of the frame ?
Quote from: mike90045 on March 21, 2016, 05:22:59 PM
wow, the sync tips look a bit different from each other, text coding at the top of the frame ?
I thought "text" at one point but text would be more "rectangular" because its' digital.
Looks like regular old video to me. But that video on the left shaped like triangle waves is
what is stumping me at the moment. However, the after the triangles, it goes to a gray-scale
value it looks like since the successive "video" or whatever goes below that line.
The back-porch just before the sync-tips arer is where the color burst would be, I think.
EXCEPT that the color burst is on a front porch, not a back porch. Maybe it's backwards ?
If I saw a color burst on a porch then I would say that the triangle wave and then the short piece of
gray might be a portion of a color bar reference during vertical interval but no burst and weirdly
placed porch stumps me !
Maybe it's from an old video game ? TV oscilloscope ?
boB
Is this waveform RS-170A compatible ?
They DO use a single frequency during the start of a line for a "run in clock" to
sync the data that comes up after that within the line and I suppose it could
be part of a line and the data afterwards, but that clock is supposed to be
a sine-wave not a triangle wave and the succeeding lines like like they contain
plain old video.
I know ! It's from an old Leave it to Beaver show !
If you are going back that far, it could even be the ''overnight signal'' CBC TV broadcast so you knew your TV still worked but there was nothing to watch, except for those insomniacs... ::)
RS-170? Sure, you betcha. Here is an image from the waveform. :)
Quote from: onanparts on March 22, 2016, 12:33:37 PM
RS-170? Sure, you betcha. Here is an image from the waveform. :)
OK.... So what are we missing, TJ ?
Not sure if that is anything I've seen from Leave it To Beaver though ?
I did not have quite enough information to get that full picture. And, there
was no color burst so am not sure what portion of the picture that was except
maybe the vertical interval which can not have that sometimes UNLESS, maybe
your capture was severely bandwidth limited in which case only the chrominance
or low frequency luminance would be visible. But the picture is obviously color.
boB
Okee dokee...no color with this one.. :)
And then there is this one too. :o
Another hint.... :) Or two.
Let's see if this clue nudges anybody in the right direction?
Alignment or focus and/or convergence but convergence usually used dots or crosshatch
OK, I will have to settle for an "F" on this one I think. :( :(
boB
Final clue.... :)
still obtuse
Sort of see a smith chart in the "giant asterisk" starburst thing.
(https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-A2CGdX155a8/T34ukFbxgDI/AAAAAAAAC28/icSCLmVB53o/w800-h800/scarylaser.gif)
Quote from: onanparts on March 23, 2016, 03:12:40 PM
Final clue.... :)
The bottom-left looks like a vectorscope display, suggesting several colour bars (roughly equal length lines at roughly the same angle from each other - perhaps 10 colourbars?), plus a few other pure-colour areas.
Diagram top left and middle left make me think it's something to do with a laserdisc.
Perhaps your object is a laser-disc alignment/test disc?
Well now ! With that final clue, it looks kinda like a video positioning sensor for a round-house for trains.
Of course, Ross W's idea of a laserdisc is kind of plausible but I'll go with the train concept.
At least a position sensor because of the quadrant enumerators -I, I, II, etc...
boB
Quote from: RossW on March 23, 2016, 10:06:17 PM
Quote from: onanparts on March 23, 2016, 03:12:40 PM
Final clue.... :)
Diagram top left and middle left make me think it's something to do with a laserdisc.
Perhaps your object is a laser-disc alignment/test disc?
RossW is definitely on the right track.....sorry boB, no train station. However, Morse Code is involved. It's minor, but a part of the puzzle.... ;D
Directional beacon? (Or perhaps, glideslope indicator)?
The waveforms at top-right would indicate a "on the beam", "left/low" or "right/high" type response?
It's the record that was sent on the Voyager spacecraft !
I seem to remember that it was used maybe as a legend to help decode the other things ?
The "Golden record"... That's what they call it.
boB
These images showed the "aliens" how to play the record and the video I think.
Glad I'm not the alien that had to decode it !
boB
Quote from: boB on March 25, 2016, 12:42:54 AM
These images showed the "aliens" how to play the record and the video I think.
Glad I'm not the alien that had to decode it !
boB
We gotz a winner! :) :) :)
Voyager 1 launched Sep 6th 1977. Entered Interstellar space back in 2012 and is still sending data to the DSN, Deep Space Network. This link here has kool interactive access to the pictures and recordings from the golden disc. Just move the mouser around and start clicking on areas that light up. :)
http://goldenrecord.org/#discus-aureus
JPL Voyager site: http://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/where/index.html
Quote from: boB on March 25, 2016, 12:37:11 AM
It's the record that was sent on the Voyager spacecraft !
Damnit Bob, I have two copies of that thing... I knew the pictograms were familiar, but blowed if I could place it!
That's OK Ross... You'll get the next one
And the next one is.....?
A piece of Gallium Arsenide crystal before being sliced and fashioned into a "space grade" solar panel. (I have no idea in reality)
Ralph
Obsidian flake after knapping..
Um, we had ducks that ate mercury and pooped like that on very cold mornings here? ;) ;D
I like Ralph's the best , I was believing it till i read on .
VT
shattered end of a raw Boule. The Boules are pure grown crystals, after slicing into wafers, they are doped into semiconductors.
Thanks Nige.
Ralph
Ready for another? OK, here it is. Hint: Has a nice point.
looks like shockwaves coming off something very supersonic
Quote from: dbcollen on April 15, 2016, 11:47:45 AM
looks like shockwaves coming off something very supersonic
That would be correct!!
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/armstrong/features/bosco.html
got it on my first try..... ;D
Smart like a horse, hung like Einstein. ;)
Quote from: dbcollen on April 15, 2016, 10:43:12 PM
got it on my first try..... ;D
Smart like a horse, hung like Einstein. ;)
::) ::)
Ready for another? OK, here it is.....
I must be getting old, the pics look like faded drawings on a chalk board..?
By the way, not exactly sure what it is, but it looks like it uses cassette tapes and those flat vinyl things , I will take 2. :)
I guess it is a 1970's vintage audiophile stack.
stacked hi-fi stereo components.
https://www.youtube.com/v/XTAULdznHug%26autoplay=1%26autohide=1%26showinf (https://www.youtube.com/v/XTAULdznHug%26autoplay=1%26autohide=1%26showinf)
Cute Nigel. The fuel source, instead of a gas engine, should be a steam boiler using paper money to burn.
Ralph
This is really too easy but......?
Quote from: ralph day on May 26, 2016, 08:04:29 AM
Cute Nigel. The fuel source, instead of a gas engine, should be a steam boiler using paper money to burn.
Ralph
Watch your fingers
That would be a piece of history from last century, video recorder head.
My . GOV who says were now going Green ?!!!!!
52 pick ups of garbage is now 26 of garbage & then 26 of recyclables that were on the same day before .
So bill is more @ 1/2 pickup ..
Prep & back self . Keep lips on your partners & shut .
QT
Quote from: BioPower on June 10, 2016, 12:59:46 AM
That would be a piece of history from last century, video recorder head.
Yup! And that video head is still on the job, transferring a large number of S-VHS tapes to DVD and Blueray. :)
This is so easy even a Caveman could finger it out..... :) A clue? Solar powered. 8)
Calculator ?
Quote from: ClassicCrazy on July 27, 2016, 01:34:45 AM
Calculator ?
We always knew ClassicCrazy was a Caveman! ;D Now it's confirmed!
Must have been the fancy model since it had an LED backlight for display. Or was that LED cut through the board for something else ?
Larry
And now for the RFaholics....... 8)
it's a broken camera and needs replacement. last couple pics were screwed up too.
Tron game, seen from the outside.
Some sort of rx linear?
The insides of a repeater ?
It sort of looks like the inside of a television transmitter? I see an swr bridge and a circulator etc but I don't see any indication of RX just TX
Quote from: grgdgreek on August 17, 2016, 08:18:34 AM
Some sort of rx linear?
Well actually a TX Linear but hey! Close enough. :) Slow project on the back burner. Found it this way...needs a total rewire as the "lamp cord" has gotta go!
A pair of MRF 154 RF Mosfets rated for 2MHz-100MHz. I'll be running it 1.8-30MHz. 1.2KW. :) 50VDC supply. Cabinet is a bit on the small side...might have to go bigger!
Some kind of lab power supply? Battery "conditioner" for individual cells?
Ralph
he already revealed it ralph as it is to be a solid state tx linear amplifier. i saw the balanced circuit in the negative picture and i didn't put it together as the combiner for the mosfet outputs. or was that for the input?
So, even with the answer already provided/./.I got it wrong! Says a lot for reading the posts instead of just looking at the pretty pictures ;)
Ralph
Quote from: niel on October 09, 2016, 09:30:58 PM
i saw the balanced circuit in the negative picture and i didn't put it together as the combiner for the mosfet outputs. or was that for the input?
Niel, are you referring to this? If so that's the TX/RX relays. :)
yup, that's what i meant. ah radio plumbing looks so different when in a negative light.
It's that time again... :)
Receiver/tuner?
Ralph
Looks like an old marantz tuner amplifier
it's definitely tubed and has the strings to allow for tuning indicators to follow the variable cap. could be old am/fm radio or it could be an old shortwave receiver too.
Quote from: niel on November 05, 2016, 01:13:25 AM
it's definitely tubed and has the strings to allow for tuning indicators to follow the variable cap. could be old am/fm radio or it could be an old shortwave receiver too.
Shortwave Receiver it is! Now for some extra nothing...Who made it? What era? :)
??
combined ignition points gap feeler and a screwdriver (tool) to adjust/set the Lucas points...
You Bet !!
!943 tool
I'll post more from the early days.
VT
onan, i'll take a stab at the name. hammarlund. hope i spelled it right. could be a few others too, but the time period looks like 50s to 60s leaning more to 50s. could be rme, hallicrafters, collins, allied/radio shack, lafayette, national radio, and possibly heathkit, but i doubt heathkit. there were allot of companies that made sw receivers back then. i could've named even more.
Quote from: niel on January 07, 2017, 12:59:45 PM
onan, i'll take a stab at the name. hammarlund. hope i spelled it right. could be a few others too, but the time period looks like 50s to 60s leaning more to 50s. could be rme, hallicrafters, collins, allied/radio shack, lafayette, national radio, and possibly heathkit, but i doubt heathkit. there were allot of companies that made sw receivers back then. i could've named even more.
How about a 1938 Hallicrafters Super Skyrider SX-16? :)
wow, yours is in great shape for one out of 1938. it's hard to find even those from the 50s and 60s in that good of shape. how well does it work and compare to those in use today?
Quote from: niel on January 08, 2017, 10:11:40 AM
wow, yours is in great shape for one out of 1938. it's hard to find even those from the 50s and 60s in that good of shape. how well does it work and compare to those in use today?
One pictured is not mine. I do have one in very close condition though. Along with the matching speaker. Works great! Soft warm sound much easier on the ears compared to modern solid state receivers. Long long overdue for recapping. Everything is original from 1938 but the old wax paper caps need to go before they "pop" on their own!
Speaker shown here is mine. :)
Time to get old school here..... :)
clothes line?
Gambrel? (device for hanging animals to eviscerate / butcher).
Spreader bar for lifting items without crushing the sides?
T
Quote from: TomW on January 13, 2017, 01:54:20 PM
Gambrel? (device for hanging animals to eviscerate / butcher).
Spreader bar for lifting items without crushing the sides?
T
Nope & Nope again.....
The draw bar for a team of horses
Fence "panel strainer" - for tensioning mesh fencing.
Quote from: RossW on January 13, 2017, 08:37:03 PM
Fence "panel strainer" - for tensioning mesh fencing.
We have a winner!!!!! :) :) :) :)
Canadian fish drying rack? ;D
when not pulling on the fencing, i'll bet it could double as a coat rack.
Heck of a key rack to have at the back door. Or a hammock hanger (one of two) for big boys.
Here's my version of it.
It's 3 lumps of decent pipe I think about 1", a piece of 1/4" plate 2" wide. Welded two pipes to the plate side-by-side, drilled, tapped, used some high-tensile (fine pitch) bolts, welded handles on, and a 3rd piece of pipe that sits "inside" the grove made by the first two.
(http://house.albury.net.au/06dec2015/IMG_2155.jpg)
In use, it doesn't damage the mesh or pull on the verticals, and lets me get lots more tension than the hook style.
(http://house.albury.net.au/10jan2016/IMG_2221.jpg)
That would hold an elephant's hammock, maybe 2 of them.
Very nice!
I have a fence project coming up....
Food for thought :-)
George
Ross;
I built a 2x4 inch lumber version off that bad boy. Worked treat and did not distort the wire or uprights. Design was in The Mother Earth News or some other homesteader type magazine. You remember those, don't you?
Great minds stink alike I guess :o
Tom
Way high tech ours was made from two pieces of hardwood bolted together!
Same car just a newer better looking model! :o ;D
Way too quiet in here! You know the drill! :)
8mm projector
Quote from: Robin on July 25, 2017, 12:24:26 AM
8mm projector
Hmmmm...close! Hint. Robin you were about 13-14 years old when it was first put in service.
Early radar, with pointer gun attachment
Air traffic control radar screen with reader for the returned image
David
I got it.
Donald Trump shooting down a North Korean missile on a virtual reality scope.
Lmao, boom boom. ;D
Out go the Lights !
VT
I think everyone with standalone power systems may be very happy to have them in the very near future.
That kim quon dong is a crazy man.
Err, sorry if I have name wrong aka "rocket man"
Giving this one to Mike & Dave. :)
SAGE: Semi-Automatic Ground Environment
https://www.extremetech.com/computing/151980-inside-ibms-67-billion-sage-the-largest-computer-ever-built
Almost a full year?! Alright, let's try some old school.....Have at it! :)
Sure is a nice one, whatever it is !
Paper tape punch ? Paper tape reader ?
I see what looks like ink squiggles, but not appearing wide enough to be a seismograph. Maybe Temp/Rh chart. some sort of chart recorder ?
boB and Mike are right on the edge.....To be specific, what was it/what is it used for? ;D
Quote from: onanparts on October 08, 2018, 02:22:42 PM
boB and Mike are right on the edge.....To be specific, what was it/what is it used for? ;D
Telephone central office billing equipment ?
Quote from: boB on October 08, 2018, 05:08:05 PM
Quote from: onanparts on October 08, 2018, 02:22:42 PM
boB and Mike are right on the edge.....To be specific, what was it/what is it used for? ;D
Telephone central office billing equipment ?
Nope! :)
It might be a city fire alarm annunciator, Gamewell or similar system.
It's got an inker and a recording paper. But the swing is pretty limited, and could be a million different things
Trouble with this one is just about any clues I offer will give it away.....
So....here goes....boB would be much worse than he is if one of these were around when he was knee high to a grasshopper. Hmmmm...maybe boB is too young to...ahh, nevermind! ;D
OK... One more guess.
It's an automatic Morse Code message sender that reads the message off the tape ?
Possibly the tape maker-puncher on the same machine it looks like.
boB
Quote from: boB on October 11, 2018, 12:43:15 AM
OK... One more guess.
It's an automatic Morse Code message sender that reads the message off the tape ?
Possibly the tape maker-puncher on the same machine it looks like.
boB
Even an abstract clue is enough to nail it! :)
boB of course wins nothing. Nothing will will be mailed. Nothing will be shipped.
YEAH !!! YiPPEEEE !
It's white board time, let's draw! :)
Muffler ?
Quote from: boB on October 17, 2018, 01:18:37 PM
Muffler ?
Smarty pants boB wins nothing! Again......as a penalty for getting 2 in a row, tomorrow you get 20 Hz.
If ya get the next one it goes to 30 Hz! Four in a row? Besides being rude, critical deployment of a multipier of unkown origins shall be improvised, input distortions, harmonics with harmonic proportions etc. Not to mention fundamentals that will not be fun! Keep in mind, 60 Hz is where you will be by next Friday if you keep showing off! :)
Next up is a ?
petri dish with contents
Carbon deposits on top of a piston.
hRalph
Quote from: ralph day on October 18, 2018, 06:37:42 AM
Carbon deposits on top of a piston.
hRalph
I like that, makes sense too
Quote from: mike90045 on October 18, 2018, 10:24:57 AM
Quote from: ralph day on October 18, 2018, 06:37:42 AM
Carbon deposits on top of a piston.
hRalph
I like that, makes sense too
No detectable carbon.....no visible petri dish type occupants....at least not in any quantities to be of concern, one would hope! :)
rough end of a silicon ingot (or some crystal ingot)
Sattelite radar picture of Antartica??
Lots of strikeouts so far....Animal, mineral or vegetable? Closest would be vegetable. But that's a stretch..... :)
A tar-like substance?
Quote from: Doug on October 19, 2018, 11:59:09 AM
A tar-like substance?
No, but it does contain something similar..... ;D
solder with flux ?
Larry
QuoteNo, but it does contain something similar..... ;D
Sounds resin-able.
Quote from: Doug on October 19, 2018, 05:24:24 PM
QuoteNo, but it does contain something similar..... ;D
Sounds resin-able.
That would be true...
Giving up so easily?
Compressed bud
Quote from: shawn_1976 on October 25, 2018, 01:59:35 PM
Compressed bud
Well....Doug was "sniffing" in the right direction..... ;)
But Shawn came up with the magic word......BUD! Shawn wins nothing! No salesman or pot shop will call! It only appears to be compressed due to the filter I used... :)
The unfiltered pic...... :o and filtered...
Time for something cool! Here ya go! :)
An AC power meter?
Yeah, looks like some kind of motorized thing. I was going to say power meter too but not sure
instructional model cut-away meter
Quote from: RossW on November 01, 2018, 02:11:56 AM
An AC power meter?
RossW wins nothing! As promised....well, figures if it's cool and electro-mechanical you folks will not be stumped easily! :) This wattmeter is from the late 1890's.
Looks like it is /was a PORTABLE testing unit of some sorts, from the look of the base.
An exercise in frustration?
Beautiful piece of billing equipment !
Just ladles, right? the "what" is what kind of ladles and what are they used for specifically??? :)
lead pouring for bullet molds. Clean metal feeds from bottom, dross stays on top
Use them to make melon balls with
I'd say a ladle for smaller quantities of metals for casting. Gold? Silver? For a bullet it would only be for one or two, not a batch.
Ralph
Internet says " This is a vintage cast iron ladle for pouring lead into a mold,it pours from the bottom of the bowl,it also has a smaller spout to pour off the junk on the top,it was made by the ROWELL MFG. CO. APPLETON,WIS. PAT. APR. 22,1918 its marked with a no. 3, 15" long, bowl is 3 1/4" wide at the top, 2 1/2" deep. "
Larry
And now back by unpopular demand, the best kind! boB is pre disqualified.......:(
A clue? Hmmmm....I removed it from a car...:)
Quote from: onanparts on July 08, 2020, 06:10:28 PM
And now back by unpopular demand, the best kind! boB is pre disqualified.......:(
A clue? Hmmmm....I removed it from a car...:)
Something to do with the heating air conditioning system of a car - maybe the fan speed controller ?
Or wiper motor controller ?
Larry
Don't think I even know what this is for ???
Quote from: ClassicCrazy on July 08, 2020, 06:55:57 PM
Quote from: onanparts on July 08, 2020, 06:10:28 PM
And now back by unpopular demand, the best kind! boB is pre disqualified.......:(
A clue? Hmmmm....I removed it from a car...:)
Something to do with the heating air conditioning system of a car - maybe the fan speed controller ?
Or wiper motor controller ?
Larry
Nope!
Edited post to include pic of the outside....
Oooooo..... I am having a thought on what it is but still not quite sure....
#3 is a switch and resistor. Which makes me think dash light dimmer, but that would be tied to headlights, not it's own switch. So maybe a intermittent windshield wiper controller?
#1 & 2 make me think of a reverb spring, so maybe it's a audio gadget. I don't know how many cars had reverb units in them.
So for nothing better, I'll go Reverb.
I started to think it is a light dimmer too.
Rear window defrost controller
Quote from: mike90045 on July 09, 2020, 01:27:00 AM
#3 is a switch and resistor. Which makes me think dash light dimmer, but that would be tied to headlights, not it's own switch. So maybe a intermittent windshield wiper controller?
#1 & 2 make me think of a reverb spring, so maybe it's a audio gadget. I don't know how many cars had reverb units in them.
So for nothing better, I'll go Reverb.
Winner! Winner! Chicken Dinner!
Audio Reverb unit out of a 1965 Plymouth Satellite I owned in the late 70's early 80's. It actually worked fairly well as I recall. Plymouth long gone but I removed the reverb and kept it for hysterical insignificance. :)
I'd have thought that road vibration would have really messed up the reverb effect, but i guess if you are parked it's OK.
Quote from: mike90045 on July 09, 2020, 02:24:46 PM
I'd have thought that road vibration would have really messed up the reverb effect, but i guess if you are parked it's OK.
Nope. Worked great on the road. The 4 small mounting springs and the foam blocks dampened anything but the nastiest bumps. Even those I don't remember being an issue.
Reverb did actually cross my mind from one of the pictures cuz it looked kind of like a reverb tank in there. I guess it was !
But what threw me was, 1) the switch. Why such a big switch to turn on and off a reverb and 2) the TO-3 transistor.
Quote from: boB on July 10, 2020, 01:20:31 AM
Reverb did actually cross my mind from one of the pictures cuz it looked kind of like a reverb tank in there. I guess it was !
But what threw me was, 1) the switch. Why such a big switch to turn on and off a reverb and 2) the TO-3 transistor.
2N176, very common in large strings of Christmas tree lights. 90 Watts maximum collector power dissipation. Nice for BIG trees....:)
And we are back! Here ya go......clue? It's reel interesting...:) BIG image so ya can zoom in...and a small one too.
Quote from: onanparts on May 23, 2021, 10:00:26 PM
And we are back! Here ya go......clue? It's reel interesting...:) BIG image so ya can zoom in...and a small one too.
Data recorder guts ?
Quote from: boB on May 24, 2021, 12:05:27 AM
Quote from: onanparts on May 23, 2021, 10:00:26 PM
And we are back! Here ya go......clue? It's reel interesting...:) BIG image so ya can zoom in...and a small one too.
Data recorder guts ?
Awwwwww....boB.........No! :)
Control module for an early reel type mower used for cutting high end golf courses? You said reel interesting.
You're on the right track! But no mowing involved....:)
A really old tape drive backup?
Quote from: Doug on May 26, 2021, 02:52:36 PM
A really old tape drive backup?
Getting warmer! But it has a floppy drive, USB ports and optical drive.....
This might spill the beans but I know a closer look at one of the boards is what ya want...:)
I was going to say this earlier but is it the insides of one of our SMT machines ?
That's what I was thinking at first but couldn't get past the "reel" part. But SMT machines do have reels of parts.
Quote from: boB on May 27, 2021, 12:07:37 AM
I was going to say this earlier but is it the insides of one of our SMT machines ?
That's what I was thinking at first but couldn't get past the "reel" part. But SMT machines do have reels of parts.
Reeeeel good of you to figure it out boB since you OWN it!!!! :)))) Doug gets demerits and or loss of atta boy points....:(
Don't have a pic of the Quad but here are some of it's Reels......
boB is exempt! No boB allowed....:(
Let's get rolling with another "easy" one.....:)
Quote from: onanparts on June 06, 2021, 06:39:42 PM
boB is exempt! No boB allowed....:(
Let's get rolling with another "easy" one.....:)
Well, I'm not sure exactly what it is. BUT it SURE is
pretty !!!!
a bank of power transistors on a heat spreader, that may attach to a heat sink underneath
not much visible in the way of IO connectors, 6 pin inline, and only 2 lugs for larger wires visible. Must be more ...
a couple big capacitors
3 big relays (where are their IO connections ? )
lots of discrete parts (transistors, chip resistors & chip caps)
Could be anything that handles some power and steering.
Motor control board for HVAC unit - heater or AC is my thoughts.
Larry
Ok, overhead shot of the board. On the left is the one in question from around 2017 if I'm reading the chip date codes correctly. The board on the right is an older version of it dated May 1994. Just a few minor changes....:)
Quote from: ClassicCrazy on June 07, 2021, 01:24:30 PM
Motor control board for HVAC unit - heater or AC is my thoughts.
Larry
Half correct! No HVAC involved.....