As part of my 117 in 2017 project, the prompt for 13/2/17 is International Radio Day
What better item to photograph than my Dad's trusty Sharp transistor radio
In my investigations to determine just how old this device is, I turned to Google :)
I came across this information,
from this website: http://www.radiomuseum.org/r/sharp_transistor_eight_bxs_327b.html
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alternative name
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Hayakawa Electric Co.Ltd. |
Year: 1961 | Category: Broadcast Receiver - or past WW2 Tuner |
Semiconductors (the count is only for transistors) | 8: |
Main principle | Super-Heterodyne (Super in general) |
Wave bands | Broadcast and Short Wave (SW). |
Details | |
Power type and voltage | Dry Batteries / 4 x 1,5 Volt |
Loudspeaker | Permanent Magnet Dynamic (PDyn) Loudspeaker (moving coil) |
Power out | 0.2 W (unknown quality) |
from Radiomuseum.org | Model: Transistor Eight BXS-327 - Sharp; Osaka |
Material | Modern plastics (no Bakelite or Catalin) |
Shape | Very small Portable or Pocket-Set (Handheld) < 8 inch. |
Dimensions (WHD) | 152 x 90 x 40 mm / 6 x 3.5 x 1.6 inch |
Notes | Sharp Transistor Eight BXS-327 SW range is 6...18 MHz (49...16 m).
Similar to model BX-327 (SW 3.9...12 MHz). |
Net weight (2.2 lb = 1 kg) | 0.6 kg / 1 lb 5.1 oz (1.322 lb) |
Collectors' prices | |
Source of data | - - Data from my own collection |
Model page created by
Eckhard Wegner. See "Data change" for further contributors.
This radio was rarely out of his possession - it went everywhere - even in the car in the early days as it was better than a car radio, it went to work with him, and even went out in the boat fishing with him. Unfortunately, the salt water eventually deteriorated the stitching in the leather carry case that came with it, and over time the case has been lost. When my Dad passed away in 2014, I brought it home with me (amongst other stuff I just couldn't bear the thought of other people having) and it sits on my display cabinet. Every time I walk past it, I think of him and can hear the crackle of the speaker as you turned the dial to tune it in just that little bit better :) Good times and great memories are priceless!
Thank you for visiting my blog today - I hope you have a good day.
Remember, any day doing something you love makes it a good day ;-)
Doing what you like is freedom. Liking what you do is happiness.