The oldest tone control or EQ?
Posted: Tue Mar 31, 2009 6:55 pm
Here's something I've had since 1986, that I got off a retired radio/TV serviceman. It's a Radiart model JA. Apparently it had once been used with a vintage console radio he had (a 1929-vintage Sterling Troubadour). I had built an amplifier back then that used a number of early tubes, with a pair of 45s in push-pull for output. I used this unit successfully with it! (His radio used two 71-As but the pin-outs are the same.)




This unit was connected to a radio set by removing the two output tubes, inserting the tubes' pins through those two wafer-like devices, with the soldered sides facing up. The two leads would go from the plate of the one tube to the plate of the other.
Inside the box is a choke, a wire-wound pot and a capacitor. Full counterclockwise places the capacitor across the plates, filtering out the highs; midway seemed to take everything out of circuit; full clockwise places the choke across the plates, cutting the low end.
The leads are 3' long. Dimensions of the case: 4" wide, 3" high, 5 ⅛" deep (6" including knob).




This unit was connected to a radio set by removing the two output tubes, inserting the tubes' pins through those two wafer-like devices, with the soldered sides facing up. The two leads would go from the plate of the one tube to the plate of the other.
Inside the box is a choke, a wire-wound pot and a capacitor. Full counterclockwise places the capacitor across the plates, filtering out the highs; midway seemed to take everything out of circuit; full clockwise places the choke across the plates, cutting the low end.
The leads are 3' long. Dimensions of the case: 4" wide, 3" high, 5 ⅛" deep (6" including knob).