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  2. Heathkit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heathkit

    In electronic kits: Allied Radio, an electronic parts supply house, had its KnightKits, Lafayette Radio offered some kits, Radio Shack made a few forays into this market with its Archerkit line, Dynaco made its audio products available in kit form (Dynakits), as did H. H. Scott, Inc., Fisher, and Eico; and later such companies as Southwest ...

  3. KIT (AM) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KIT_(AM)

    KIT was first licensed, as KFEC, on October 2, 1922, to the Meier and Frank Company department store in Portland, Oregon.Meier and Frank was for many years the largest department store west of the Mississippi, so owning and operating a radio station located at the department store building was viewed as an appropriate public service and promotional venture for the store.

  4. Crystal radio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_radio

    Type 'C' Form 'A' twin detector crystal radio set, manufactured by British Thomson Houston Ltd. in 1924, kept at the Museum of the radio - Monteceneri (Switzerland) Early radio telegraphy used spark gap and arc transmitters as well as high-frequency alternators running at radio frequencies. The coherer was the first means of detecting a radio ...

  5. Lafayette Radio Electronics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lafayette_Radio_Electronics

    Early Lafayette Radio stores were located in Jamaica, N.Y. and Manhattan in the mid-1950s. The electronics kits were produced in the Jamaica facility. [1] Lafayette advertised heavily in major U.S. consumer electronics magazines of the 1960s and 1970s, particularly Audio, High Fidelity, Popular Electronics, Popular Mechanics, and Stereo Review ...

  6. List of software-defined radios - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../List_of_software-defined_radios

    Kit 7.5 MHz ext No 48 kHz 0/1 USB Yes Yes Yes SoftRock Lite II [105] Kit 1.891 – 1.795 MHz, 3.57 – 3.474 MHz, 7.104 – 7.008 MHz, 10.173 – 10.077 MHz, 14.095 – 13.999 MHz (also purchasable in other tunings) ext No 96 kHz 0/1 USB Yes Yes Yes SoftRock RX Ensemble II LF [106] Kit or Pre-built 180 kHz – 3.0 MHz ext No

  7. Sinclair Radionics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinclair_Radionics

    Sinclair's final 1960s radio kit was the 1967 "Micromatic", billed as "the world's smallest radio" like Sinclair's earlier radios. The "Micromatic" was a reasonable success and was sold until 1971. In May 1971 Sinclair Radionics made £85,000 profit on £563,000 turnover; the following year profit increased to £97,000 on turnover of £761,000.

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