On Sat, 15 Nov 2008 14:06:51 +1030
Matthew Smith <matt@email-addr-hidden> wrote:
> Quoth James Cameron at 2008-11-15 13:30...
>
> > What you describe reminds me of a very low frequency RF oscillator with
> > an audio tone added in. I'd like to see a photograph of the wiggly
> > line, as I suspect it is not a simple sine wave,
>
> Here are the photos so far, per Plutek's request:
> <http://www.flickr.com/photos/msmiffy/sets/72157609086659400/>
>
> I might pull the rotor off completely once I've put penetrating oil on
> all the rusty bits - then I'll get a close-up of the entire rotor.
>
> I'm pretty sure that the way that the line is marked would mean that the
> tone would run as a sweep between the lower and upper frequencies - and
> 25 times per second at that. Should be an interesting noise -
> especially once it's been fed into a synth ;-)
>
> > Does it start slowly?
> That I can't tell as I haven't powered it yet. Think I might replace
> the capacitor first - don't know what will happen if I energise a 40
> year old capacitor, but don't want my office full of shrapnel.
>
> Rotor spins very freely so I'd guess that it would get to full speed
> quite quickly.
>
> Cheers
>
> M
>
Fascinating bit of kit. I'd be inclined to try to keep it as complete
and original as possible. I doubt you'd have a problem with the
capacitor. I know someone with a WW2 communications set that still has
almost all it's 'dry' caps, and only half the electrolytics have been
changed.
-- Will J Godfrey http://www.musically.me.uk _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@email-addr-hidden http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-userReceived on Sat Nov 15 16:15:02 2008
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