• Re: Wacky radio.

    From Michael Trew@21:1/5 to micky on Tue Jan 4 23:42:49 2022
    XPost: alt.home.repair, sci.electronics.repair

    On 1/2/2022 23:41, micky wrote:
    Ahother story: I got my first FM clock radio around 1972, after I got
    to NYC which had FM stations. Maybe Chicago did too by then.

    Very fancy, GE, with two alarms, digital, two speakers, and I used it 20
    or 30 years before the buttons got flaky. Took it apart and cleaned the buttons and it was good for 5 or more years. Took it apart and cleaned
    it and this time it only lasted 2 or 3 years. I can't keep doing this!
    So for probably 10 years I've been using it to listen to only one FM
    station. It turns off by itself or I turn the volume down to zero, and
    the only button that has to work is the On button.

    (It doesn't have push button frequency selection, and I found finding
    and pushing 3 numeric buttons to change stations more trouble than
    car-radio style, but they made then few if any table radios with
    car-radio buttons. Though I did see at a hamfest an AM/shortwave indoor radio from the 30's with mechancical memory for differnt frequencies.
    Came with little stubs/buttons already labeled WOR etc., and they sat on
    the 4 or 5" dial and would control where the dial stopped when you
    turned it.)

    Cross-posting to REC.ANTIQUES.RADIO+PHONO

    But then that got hard and I'd have to lean on the left, the right, up,
    down, sometimes for 30 seconds until I pressed it just right to get it
    to go on.

    But two weeks ago, and this is why I'm writing, it got easy again, just
    push on the right side of the button and it starts immediately! I
    wonder how long this will last.

    Another thing, when I got back from a long trip, it would stay on
    forever. I just turned the volume off. If a transistor radio will play
    for many hours on a little 9v battery, they must not use much. And most
    of the power they use is for the speaker driver, right?

    But after a year there was a power failure and when the power came back
    on, it would turn off after, I guess, 24 hours, or maybe at the same
    clock time every time. I don't keep track.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From micky@21:1/5 to michael.trew@att.net on Wed Jan 5 21:45:52 2022
    XPost: alt.home.repair, sci.electronics.repair

    In alt.home.repair, on Tue, 04 Jan 2022 23:42:49 -0500, Michael Trew <michael.trew@att.net> wrote:

    On 1/2/2022 23:41, micky wrote:
    Ahother story: I got my first FM clock radio around 1972, after I got
    to NYC which had FM stations. Maybe Chicago did too by then.

    Very fancy, GE, with two alarms, digital, two speakers, and I used it 20
    or 30 years before the buttons got flaky. Took it apart and cleaned the
    buttons and it was good for 5 or more years. Took it apart and cleaned
    it and this time it only lasted 2 or 3 years. I can't keep doing this!
    So for probably 10 years I've been using it to listen to only one FM
    station. It turns off by itself or I turn the volume down to zero, and
    the only button that has to work is the On button.

    (It doesn't have push button frequency selection, and I found finding
    and pushing 3 numeric buttons to change stations more trouble than
    car-radio style, but they made then few if any table radios with
    car-radio buttons. Though I did see at a hamfest an AM/shortwave indoor
    radio from the 30's with mechancical memory for differnt frequencies.
    Came with little stubs/buttons already labeled WOR etc., and they sat on
    the 4 or 5" dial and would control where the dial stopped when you
    turned it.)

    Cross-posting to REC.ANTIQUES.RADIO+PHONO

    Thanks. I didn't know about that group. I hope someone replies.

    But then that got hard and I'd have to lean on the left, the right, up,
    down, sometimes for 30 seconds until I pressed it just right to get it
    to go on.

    But two weeks ago, and this is why I'm writing, it got easy again, just
    push on the right side of the button and it starts immediately! I
    wonder how long this will last.

    Another thing, when I got back from a long trip, it would stay on
    forever. I just turned the volume off. If a transistor radio will play
    for many hours on a little 9v battery, they must not use much. And most
    of the power they use is for the speaker driver, right?

    But after a year there was a power failure and when the power came back
    on, it would turn off after, I guess, 24 hours,

    Regarding this strange change, I just noticed that I had turned one of
    the alarms, not the buzzer part but the radio. If the buzzer went off,
    I'd hear it, but not the radio if I'm listening anyhow. Maybe when
    it's just plain On, the alarm turns it on again but this time it's built
    to only stay on for 24 hours. ?? I don't know but I turned the alarm
    off.

    or maybe at the same clock time every time. I don't keep track.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rink@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 9 03:18:29 2022
    XPost: alt.home.repair, sci.electronics.repair

    Op 6-1-2022 om 3:45 schreef micky:
    In alt.home.repair, on Tue, 04 Jan 2022 23:42:49 -0500, Michael Trew <michael.trew@att.net> wrote:

    On 1/2/2022 23:41, micky wrote:
    Ahother story: I got my first FM clock radio around 1972, after I got
    to NYC which had FM stations. Maybe Chicago did too by then.


    They sure had FM in Chicago.
    Se page 21 of the FM Atlas in 1970: <https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-FM-Atlas/FM-Atlas-01-1971-1st.pdf>

    Rink

    (reading in rec.antiques.radio+phono)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)