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#1
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Hello Chris.
Hopefully, you are not on call tonight. Negotiations for aquisition of the final needed 3-link chain would be greatfully undertaken, if you run across one looking for a good home. I will have to recheck my photos of a 4-Section Horizontal Aerial for the 52-Set, but I think the two outer insulators had the split links to connect to the aerial masts as you stated. The inner three insulator assemblies were plain 3-links, being permanently fitted to the copper aerial wire sections. It will be another interesting sub-project when I get to it, and in all likelihood, will result in a subsequent discovery of a crate of NOS 4-Section Aerials complete with Reels, sitting in a barn somewhere. David |
#2
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At the very beginning of this project, I had identified the following three items from my bins of 19-Set odds and ends as also being common to the Wireless Set No. 52. I had given them all a cleaning and overhaul shortly thereafter and put them aside until needed in this project.
KEY AND PLUG ASSEMBLIES, Cdn, No. 9, Type 2 ZA/CAN 0715 MICROPHONES, Hand, No. C3 ZA/CAN 1759 RECEIVERS, HEAD GEAR, MC, Mk 1 ZA/CAN 1638 This last weekend, I realized I will be needing the Key and Plug Assemblies very soon, as I continue to work my way through the Operational Tests for the Sender, so I dug them all out and ran tests on them all to ensure they were all in good working order. They all passed nicely and I am quite pleased. David |
#3
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Hope's been abandoned - I'm on-call all week!
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Best regards, Chris. |
#4
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There goes your Beauty Sleep for the week!
Three would be perfect, Chris. I would then set the AM version aside as an interesting oddity. In truth also, I had been pondering how 80 year old Bakelite links would behave with somebody suddenly trying to wrestle those spring steel links off of them and suspected there could be casualties. I wasn’t keen on cutting the links either. Better scoot. I am on the patio at the moment overseeing Honey BBQ Chicken Breasts on the Grill with Garlic Butter Baked Potato’s and a chilled Ale. Best regards, David |
#5
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If you take a look at the photo I posted earlier of the three Insulators (Post #893), you will likely notice the middle link looks fatter than the two outer ones in each assembly.
I noticed this when I took the photo but simply chalked it up to the lighting and angle at the time I took the photo. This morning, I was finishing cleaning up the assembly I had started and when doing so, noticed the middle link was indeed a lot thicker than the other two, so dug out my callipers to confirm. Sure enough, in all the Insulator assemblies I have, the outer links averaged 0.320 inches thick while the middle ones averaged 0.394 inches. Otherwise, they are all dimensionally identical. So why the more robust middle link I wonder? David |
#6
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Best regards, Chris. |
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