Welcome Guest! Be sure you know and follow the Phorum Rules before posting. Thank you and Enjoy! (January 12) x

Thread Closed
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Carbide Battery Radio from 1930's
#1

Hi, can anyone give me any information on a Carbide Battery Radio from the 1930's? As a child my mother said that her family had a Carbide Battery Radio. They lived in the South, in Appalachia. I asked her what type of radio it was and she stated something like Carbide Light on the miners cap. I cannot locate any information on this type of radio or any pictures. On the 1930 US Federal Census, her grandfather, stated the family had no radio, so they must have acquired the radio after April 1930. Any help appreciated. Thank you, bigdog
#2

It occurs to me that an early maker of radio batteries was the Union Carbide and Carbon Company. I think they used the name Eveready then; I know they did later, because in the 1950s my Dad worked for them making radio batteries at their plant in Charlotte, NC. Could your mother have remembered the name "carbide" from the battery and mixed it up with the "carbide" of a miner's lamp?

A carbide miner's lamp does not operate on electricity. Instead it uses a chemical reaction between water and calcium carbide to produce acetylene gas, which burns with a very bright flame. The process is described on this web site.

http://www.showcaves.com/english/explain...Lamps.html

Early cars, before around 1915, used carbide headlamps. You would often see a brass cylinder mounted on the running board. This cylinder had two chambers. The driver would put calcium carbide pellets in the lower chamber and water in the upper one. Water would drip slowly into the carbide compartment, and a hose would carry the resulting acetylene to the headlamps. It is hard to see how this process could run a radio.

John Honeycutt
#3

Hi , thank you for your reply, and the information. My mother could very well have gotten the two mixed up; ie the carbide miners cap and the carbide radio. It was shortly before she died and she was talking about her childhood and the things around the homeplace. She lived on top of a mountain, in Anderson CO, TN, near a mining camp and her grandfather, and uncles cut timber for the mines. She talked alot about the battery radio they had, and of listening to President Roosevelt's chats, Grand Old Oprey, and Fibber McGee and Molly shows. I know in April 1930 they did not own a radio, but must have purchased it sometime later in the middle or near the end of 1930. She really loved that old radio, and I have been trying to research and find out the type of radio she might have had. I know it had to have been at a cost they could have afforded and most likely a table top radio. I don't believe it was one they had put together themselves. Thank you, bigdog
#4

Bigdog,

Sorry to hear of your mother's passing. How great to have heard those stories while you still could.

As you can see from the Philco gallery, there were a lot of radios made for battery power only back then. I wish you luck tracking down one like your mother would have had.

There might have been electric miner's lamps back then, too. Maybe there were some that used a battery like the large, low voltage A battery of a radio.

John Honeycutt
#5

Hi, thank you for your reply. Our mother passed some years back but it was very interesting to listen to her stories of her childhood and of listening to the family radio. Most of the old folks have passed on so I doubt I will ever learn the radio model that my great-grandfather had. But my mothers love of and interest in the old radio has sparked our familys interest in old radios. I am trying to research the area mining camp stores to see what kinds or brands of radios they carried in that time period and perhaps I will be able to locate the radio model sold in that particular store in that time period, well hopefully anyway. Thank you, bigdog




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
PT 6 chassis screws size???
Hello bridKarl, that sounds right or maybe 8/32 . Sincerely Richardradiorich — 01:00 AM
PT 6 chassis screws size???
Have this done except for missing chassis screws. It looks like 1 inch 6/32 sheet metal screw may work but can anyone s...bridkarl — 10:32 PM
Philco model 38 code 121 not receiving signal.
Hello Stormlord, Well done on rewinding that coil it turned fairly good for your first one. Sincerely Richardradiorich — 09:12 PM
Philco model 38 code 121 not receiving signal.
Well here it is. It ain't pretty, but hopefully it'll work. I checked it with my DMM on continuity and it keeps and r...Stormlord5500 — 08:56 PM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
Yes, 57 is an electrolytic cap that should be 12 mfd 400 volts according to the parts list from the Phorum library schem...RodB — 06:01 PM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
Looks like if I am reading it correctly it looks like the silver capacitor#57 that appears to be a replacement is of a l...osanders0311 — 05:09 PM
Philco model 38 code 121 not receiving signal.
Thanks Arran. Yeah this plastic is pretty thin. It's a little thinner than the original stuff. It kinda reminds me of p...Stormlord5500 — 04:37 PM
Testing a speaker and output transformer Trutone A2-G
The equivalent of one short turn is basically the same as that of a shorted load. If it is the primary's turn, then the ...morzh — 03:53 PM
Testing a speaker and output transformer Trutone A2-G
I've never had an output transformer become shorted, the failure mode is usually an open primary, or in a center tapped ...Arran — 03:52 PM
Philco model 38 code 121 not receiving signal.
As long as the plastic sheeting isn't too thick, I think that the thickness of photographic film would be just about rig...Arran — 03:19 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 770 online users. [Complete List]
» 1 Member(s) | 769 Guest(s)
Avatar

>