Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

The place to be when you have TEA. Discuss all kinds of test equipment.

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Zenith
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Zenith »

What is it? An ATU - Antenna Tuning Unit.

Stay away from model railways. It's a slippery slope. You'll end up scratch building locomotives and rolling stock from the original blueprints. I've seen it happen.
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EC8010
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by EC8010 »

Zenith wrote: Thu Feb 05, 2026 1:50 pm You'll end up scratch building locomotives and rolling stock from the original blueprints. I've seen it happen.
And that means you need a machine shop. Very useful, but expensive.
tggzzz
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by tggzzz »

EC8010 wrote: Thu Feb 05, 2026 1:49 pm Looks like a very nicely made capacitance decade box. Tinsley or Muirhead? But the decade switches would ideally have been built on a lower loss material than I see in the photograph. Clear Perspex would be a good replacement. But it would take considerable time to do the job.
It is elegant, isn't it. It is a Sullivan C8700, up to 1.11µF, 3 decade plus a rotary decade, wax covered mica 0.1%.

Quick measurements on an old Marconi TF2700 (1%) show it is working and a low dissipation factor. One knob has been broken and crudely epoxied together, but still slipped on the shaft. I've cured the slipping by crudely epoxying a pop-rivet stem into the holes.

There is no way I would do more: too little benefit, too many other things to do.
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EC8010
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by EC8010 »

Ah, forgot Sullivan. Just as good, if not better. Years ago, I (stupidly) failed to rescue a beautiful Sullivan 1nF variable capacitor. Alright, it was a bit big (about a 10" mahogany cube), but still. It had a Vernier scale and slow motion drive.

I think I've fixed the XP machine's erratic booting. It had a SATA CD drive. Not any more. It now has CD drive on parallel bus (which works just fine).
Zenith
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Zenith »

EC8010 wrote: Thu Feb 05, 2026 1:54 pm
Zenith wrote: Thu Feb 05, 2026 1:50 pm You'll end up scratch building locomotives and rolling stock from the original blueprints. I've seen it happen.
And that means you need a machine shop. Very useful, but expensive.
Not so much these days. I came across someone building a 5½" gauge locomotive in his garage. A lot of the difficult parts such as cylinders and the complicated linkages were made to his specification by an engineering works with CNC tooling. You can argue that isn't really scratch building, but even way back scratch builders would have bought in a few things, such as gears, motors and so on.
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EC8010
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by EC8010 »

That's cheating. The whole point of making a steam engine is to learn how to do the various manufacturing processes and improve your skills. I'll agree that hobbing gears is best farmed out, but the rest is all perfectly doable.

I've just scrapped the (presumed duff) SATA CD drive and it yeilded a pair of precision ground/honed 2.99mm silver steel rods that the laser sled ran on. I don't have tools for honing (too big) or precision grinding (too messy), but I can make nice low friction sleeves to use those two shafts as bearings.
tggzzz
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by tggzzz »

Zenith wrote: Thu Feb 05, 2026 1:50 pm What is it? An ATU - Antenna Tuning Unit.

Stay away from model railways. It's a slippery slope. You'll end up scratch building locomotives and rolling stock from the original blueprints. I've seen it happen.
I had a 16ft*8ft box room as a kid, 8ft high on one side, 2ft high on the other. That was, of course Not A Problem for Me. It was filled with model railway and scalextrix, at different times. I marvelled at people who scratchbuilt stock and sets. I saw one article about the Pendon museum; later, much later, I finally managed to go there https://pendonmuseum.com/ Took daughter once, and seeing someone make cauliflower inspired her to do some modelling, which I still have. Good times.

I still have the track and stock, but have no desire to resurrect it. Whenever I get urges in that direction, I play this: https://www.openttd.org/about The original 1993 game was groundbreaking, and kept me amused while commuting to Palo Alto :) It was so playable that people eventually cloned it and significantly enhanced it.
tggzzz
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by tggzzz »

EC8010 wrote: Thu Feb 05, 2026 1:54 pm
Zenith wrote: Thu Feb 05, 2026 1:50 pm You'll end up scratch building locomotives and rolling stock from the original blueprints. I've seen it happen.
And that means you need a machine shop. Very useful, but expensive.
Or a local hackspace. Much cheaper, and with a supply of knowledgeable people on tap.
tggzzz
Posts: 2258
Joined: Sat Oct 22, 2022 8:17 pm

Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by tggzzz »

Zenith wrote: Thu Feb 05, 2026 2:35 pm
EC8010 wrote: Thu Feb 05, 2026 1:54 pm
Zenith wrote: Thu Feb 05, 2026 1:50 pm You'll end up scratch building locomotives and rolling stock from the original blueprints. I've seen it happen.
And that means you need a machine shop. Very useful, but expensive.
Not so much these days. I came across someone building a 5½" gauge locomotive in his garage. A lot of the difficult parts such as cylinders and the complicated linkages were made to his specification by an engineering works with CNC tooling. You can argue that isn't really scratch building, but even way back scratch builders would have bought in a few things, such as gears, motors and so on.
My father used to have a bound set of (1920s?) magazines describing how to build a car from scratch. Naturally that included instructions on how to build the necessary tooling from scratch.
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