Find:
About Me
Blogs
- Antique Radio Blog
- Arcane Radio Trivia
- Audio Tweak
- Audioklassiks
- BuildLounge
- Classic Receivers
- Coffman Labs Blog
- Confessions of a Part-Time Audiophile
- EEVBlog
- Engineering Radio
- Glowbugs Times
- Glowbugs Web
- Guitar Fool
- Hack a Day
- HeavyDIY
- High on Solder
- Ilektronx
- MicroSyl
- Nick's Radio Corner
- Old Stock Audio
- Pragmaddux
- Radio Stuff
- Radio Time Traveller
- Richard Sears, Vintage Electronics
- Seventies Stereo
- The Paleotechnologist
- The Signal Path
- Tube Addict
- TubeSound
Friends
Resources
- 901
- Active Equalizer
- AM
- amplifier
- Antique
- antique radio
- audiophile
- Bose
- Bose 901
- Bose Active Equalizer
- Bose Equalizer
- bose equalizer repair
- bose repair
- capacitor
- capacitor replacement
- cost engineering
- Craigslist
- eBay
- Equalizer
- fried electronics
- GE
- General Electric
- grunow
- grunow 586
- grunow 589
- grunow chassis 5-U
- grunow radio restoration
- ham radio
- hf
- hi-fi
- HP
- KN0CK
- laptop
- LCD
- LF-116
- old radio
- oscilloscope
- philco
- photos
- power supply
- projects
- radio
- rca
- rebuild
- repair
- replacement
- restoration
- RTL-SDR
- RTLSDR
- SDR#
- seattle vintage radio repair
- Series 1
- series I
- series II
- series IV
- shortwave
- soldering
- Sony
- Speakers
- speaker spotter
- stereo
- stromberg-carlson
- test equipment
- transistor radio
- tube
- Tube Amp
- tube radio
- up-converter
- Upconverter
- vacuum tube
- vintage
- vintage ad
- vintage radio
- Westinghouse
- zenith
Categories
December 2025 S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Meta
Tag Archives: battery
Cool Vintage Battery
I was out over the weekend and stopped off to look at someone’s attic cleaning sale, and ended up with a few miscellaneous radio-related items I’m planning to resell. One of the more interesting items was a lot of a … Continue reading
Need 45V batteries for your old radio?
Rayovac has been making batteries for over 100 years, and their batteries were commonly found in use with many types of battery-operated tube radios. Most commonly, radios would operate on 45V batteries with a tap half-way (for 0-22.5-45V). Two in … Continue reading →