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In 1989 Cascone became an assistant music editor for director David Lynch on Twin Peaks and Wild At Heart. [3] Musically he has used various aliases over the years but became best known under the moniker Heavenly Music Corporation, a name taken from a track on the record (No Pussyfooting) by Brian Eno and Robert Fripp. Cascone released four ...
The term All American Five (abbreviated AA5) is a colloquial name for mass-produced, superheterodyne radio receivers that used five vacuum tubes in their design. These radio sets were designed to receive amplitude modulation (AM) broadcasts in the medium wave band, and were manufactured in the United States from the mid-1930s until the early 1960s.
The 6П7С (6P7S) is similar to Г-807, but with an 8-pin octal base. The 807 also found some use as a horizontal output tube in early TV receivers, particularly those manufactured by DuMont . The 807 design (with some " value engineering " to reduce production cost) was the basis for the first application-specific horizontal sweep tubes such ...
E.H. Scott Radio Laboratories is sometimes confused with H.H. Scott. E.H. Scott was founded in 1925 by Chicago resident Ernest H. Scott. Its first product was the World's Record Super 8, a TRF (tuned radio frequency) design with typical harness wiring with 16 gauge silvered solid core copper wire employed in an array configuration that was typical to radios at the time. This construction ...
Tubes used in AC-powered radio receivers of the early 1930s 2A3 – Directly heated power triode, used for AF output stages in 1930s–1940s audio amplifiers and radios. 2A5 – Power Pentode (Except for heater, electronically identical to types 42 and 6F6) 2A6 – Dual diode, high-mu triode (Except for heater, electronically identical to type 75)
[6] [11] Before each radio left the factory, a technician custom calibrated a set of A, B, C, and D coils for that particular radio, a process that took nearly 4 hours. [12] Each of the four main sets of coils also had bandspread modes set by moving screws that limited the frequency range to 28–29.7, 14–14.4, 7–7.3, 3.5-4 MHz ...
A Trans-Oceanic model Y600. Shown on the left is a modern shortwave radio for comparison. The Trans-Oceanic (abbreviated T/O) was a brand of portable radios produced from 1941 to 1981 by Zenith Radio. They were characterized by heavy-duty, high-quality construction and their performance as shortwave receivers. [1] [2]
V-M Corporation was founded in June 1944 by Walter Miller in Benton Harbor, Michigan. The company originally manufactured only 78 rpm record changers and labelled them simply as "A V-M Product". The brand name "Voice of Music" was suggested by a V-M engineer and first used in 1952.