What little I've read on the subject, ww2
vintage civilian radios were made
from what amount to tube sets (very like chipsets) of 5 tubes designed to go
together with a minimum of other components to make a reasonably good superhet
receiver.
The really are no WW2 civilian radios (very few were made). People had to
do with what they had before the war, until the surplus floodgate opened
in 1946. Hams were shut down during the war - some even "persuaded" to
sell or donate their receivers to the government (in 1941, U.S. military
electronics was a crying shame). Nearly all TV development stopped and
turned over to the government.
In general - a bad time to be a hacker.
You are thinking of the "all American five" - sets of tubes that were
made for each other. They were mostly used after 1945.
Yup, that's what I'm thinking of. I've dealt with two tube radios, one of
which
is now gone, sadly. One was a 4 tube 1945 sears radio, and one is my 1940
philco, which I *think* is a 5 tube unit that gets AM and shortwave. Last time
I had it working I was getting the BBC in London with it, and a few other
big powerful shortwave stations on the other side of the atlantic. I've since
been given a quite powerful modern receiver and it's just not as much fun.
--
Jim Strickland
jim(a)DIESPAMMERSCUMcalico.litterbox.com
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