19 set spare parts
2 Attachment(s)
In 1992 I bought a 1934 car from a barn in which were stored about 40 of the same sort of vintage. The seller had another barn full of spare parts and I took the opportunity to stock up.
Among the items was a tin with useful, difficult to get hold of, bearings and this has sat on my shelf ever since and has yielded up many useful bits for the cars. Recently I succumbed to the "green disease" and bought a Lynx I MkIII* and was introduced to the No19 set therein. Needing a bearing today I went to the tin and noticed that it is a spare parts tin for a No19 set. Serendipity strikes again. I note from the Lynx workshop manual that a spare parts tin for the No19 set should be carried but I already have one and it is not the same as this one. Is this one a base spares tin? Also I notice that listed in the inside of the lid are the contents and they have two identification numbers: the second is headed "W.D. No" and the first is headed "EKC No". Am I correct in interpreting this to refer to E K Cole, the manufacturers of EKCO radios? |
I believe you are correct. EK Cole was a manufacturer of the 19 set so it makes sense they also made spares available.
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Spare parts tin 5c is certainly the correct and standard one, what does your other example look like?
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It's interesting that there are no spare brushes for the supply unit listed and the flick clamping screws have been reduced from four to two, I suspect this may be a later issue of the case.
Chris. |
Spares box
2 Attachment(s)
The spares box that came with the Lynx is as illustrated below. It is for valves and in the legend, centre bottom, someone has handwritten "Transistor". If this is original it definitely dates the box to well after WWII.
Alastair |
That's the spare valve case, obviously! Normally, vehicles carried both spare valve case and spare parts case.
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Quote:
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Vibrator
Are the transistorised vibrators still available? That would solve an ongoing problem with period car radios.
Alastair |
The vibrator wasn't transistorized, the whole power supply was.
There are drop in solid state replacements available for common vibrators. Check out this site: http://www.royalsignals.org.uk/vibs/index.html |
Thanks
Thanks a lot Bruce. That is really helpful.
Alastair |
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