tag 标签: heathkit

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  • 热度 10
    2012-6-1 17:14
    1842 次阅读|
    0 个评论
    Last September, I wrote a story on Heathkit, the purveyor of electronic kits so beloved by generations of old-timers. In that article, I relayed that it was getting back into the kit business . After a couple of decades away from kits, selling only educational products, their web site announced (as it still does today) that kits were coming back. That news elicited lot of enthusiasm for the new products, as well as a ton of nostalgia for their kits of yore. Many readers shared stories of how Heath's products got them started in electronics. Now, sadly, according to the American Radio Relay League (ARRL) Heathkit is closing shop. Heath wasn't the only company pushing electronic kits back in the day; however, they were by far the most well-known, and their assembly manuals were second to none. Even a non-techie could build a TV or other device by following the meticulous instructions. This often created a "sense" of electronics; a sort of digital (meaning, in-the-fingers, not binary) familiarity with the mysteries behind a front panel. Alas, I fear that sort of shadetree-mechanic-like competence is in general fading today. Systems are so complex, and the electronics so inaccessible (think SMT and gigantic IC packages) that the average Joe has lost all sense of how things work. That's not to say homebrewing is history. A lot of companies provide kits even today. Others offer boards and other components that an eager experimenter can use with relative ease. Think Arduino. Or www.sparkfun.com , or www.parallax.com , www.elenco.com , and, no doubt, scores of others. Then there's Club Jameco , which markets kits created by individual engineers ( though the web site is pretty unimpressive ). I encourage readers to post their favorite contemporary sources of home experimenters' kits and the like. As I write this, Heathkit's site lists the most superficial of information about kits they had planned to offer. Under audio components the site reads: "For those that want the pure sound from tubes with the latest technology." Tubes! What an anachronism! But what fun. It's true that some audiophiles prefer what's called the "warm" sound of vacuum tube amplifiers over semiconductor versions. Too much rock-n-roll decades ago left my hearing unable to detect any difference. But tube projects were easy to build, generally using point-to-point wiring with a process node closer to an inch or so compared with today's 22 nm geometry. One could troubleshoot these systems with just a VOM, though the 300V plate supply was painful and daunting. For many of us Heath's announcement almost a year ago of rebuilding their kit business was a hopeful sign; alas, it's not to be.  
  • 热度 13
    2011-9-7 22:11
    3138 次阅读|
    2 个评论
    Reader George Farmer informed me that Heathkit will once again begin selling electronics kits. Heathkit was once widely known as a – or perhaps the – purveyor of electronics kits of all sorts. Though the company got its start in the aviation business, the tsunami of cheap surplus electronic components after World War II pushed the company into the kit business. Today they are remembered mostly for their ham radio products and test equipment, but the company also had kits for a lot of other devices. TVs were very popular, as were their broad line of hi-fi gear. They even had retail stores; I often hitchhiked to their store here in Rockville, Maryland. The company's catalog occupied me late into the nights as I lusted after so many of their products. My first Heathkit was a pair of walkie talkies, each of which probably had a dozen or so transistors. That was around sixth grade; I was despondent when the finally-assembled units didn't work. Days of checking uncovered the problems and the units finally became operational. But, as usual, I found the building much more fun than the using. I assembled a Heathkit stereo, and an audio frequency generator. The latter used a very cool light bulb wired between the cathodes and suppressor grids to stabilize the circuit. A simple tube-based regenerative receiver taught me a lot about radio basics. People used to actually fix failed electronics back in the 60s, and I built a Heathkit color bar generator for my TV repair work. In eighth grade I desperately wanted a Heathkit VTVM (vacuum tube voltmeter) and saved an entire summer's worth of lawnmowing money—$29 – for the kit. But then my dad gave me a very old tube-based Devry oscilloscope/VTVM combo. By high school I had purchased and built a transistorized Heathkit scope that had triggered sweep. A crummy design, the DC biases drifted randomly and constantly, but I loved that scope. Being young and chronically short of money I never built any of their ham gear, but one friend did have the SB-101 SSB transceiver, which likely introduced many hams to single sideband. It resembled a fabulously-more expensive Collins radio, and worked amazingly well. The company even had a computer kit, long before the PC revolution. The EC-1 had 9 vacuum tube op-amps, with critical terminals brought to binding posts on the front panel. "Programming" meant wiring components (resistors, capacitors, etc) to the posts. A typical application was the solution of differential equations. The whole notion was beyond me at the time, but the thing looked very cool. The company did enter the PC business, and had a long and checkered history thereafter, being purchased, sold, diced and sliced many times. By 1992 they had abandoned the kit business, and lived on as an educational company, trading on their expertise developed via the kit assembly manuals, which were widely praised for being brilliantly clear. Indeed, many folks with no electronics background built the kits, since the step-by-step instructions guided one with great clarity. The kits petered out, victims of surface-mount technology (SMT) and a declining interest in building stuff. But I have hopes the latter is in decline. DIY events like Maker Faire seem to be rekindling the spirit of home brew innovation. I became an engineer because I like to make stuff, and one hopes that Heathkit's reemergence into kits will spur young folks' interest in this amazingly rewarding career.
  • 热度 10
    2011-9-7 22:09
    1781 次阅读|
    1 个评论
    Reader George Farmer notified me that Heathkit will resume selling electronics kits. Heathkit was once widely known as a – or perhaps the – purveyor of electronics kits of all sorts. Though the company got its start in the aviation business, the tsunami of cheap surplus electronic components after World War II pushed the company into the kit business. Today they are remembered mostly for their ham radio products and test equipment, but the company also had kits for a lot of other devices. TVs were very popular, as were their broad line of hi-fi gear. They even had retail stores; I often hitchhiked to their store here in Rockville, Maryland. The company's catalog occupied me late into the nights as I lusted after so many of their products. My first Heathkit was a pair of walkie talkies, each of which probably had a dozen or so transistors. That was around sixth grade; I was despondent when the finally-assembled units didn't work. Days of checking uncovered the problems and the units finally became operational. But, as usual, I found the building much more fun than the using. I assembled a Heathkit stereo, and an audio frequency generator. The latter used a very cool light bulb wired between the cathodes and suppressor grids to stabilize the circuit. A simple tube-based regenerative receiver taught me a lot about radio basics. People used to actually fix failed electronics back in the 60s, and I built a Heathkit color bar generator for my TV repair work. In eighth grade I desperately wanted a Heathkit VTVM (vacuum tube voltmeter) and saved an entire summer's worth of lawnmowing money—$29 – for the kit. But then my dad gave me a very old tube-based Devry oscilloscope/VTVM combo. By high school I had purchased and built a transistorized Heathkit scope that had triggered sweep. A crummy design, the DC biases drifted randomly and constantly, but I loved that scope. Being young and chronically short of money I never built any of their ham gear, but one friend did have the SB-101 SSB transceiver, which likely introduced many hams to single sideband. It resembled a fabulously-more expensive Collins radio, and worked amazingly well. The company even had a computer kit, long before the PC revolution. The EC-1 had 9 vacuum tube op-amps, with critical terminals brought to binding posts on the front panel. "Programming" meant wiring components (resistors, capacitors, etc) to the posts. A typical application was the solution of differential equations. The whole notion was beyond me at the time, but the thing looked very cool. The company did enter the PC business, and had a long and checkered history thereafter, being purchased, sold, diced and sliced many times. By 1992 they had abandoned the kit business, and lived on as an educational company, trading on their expertise developed via the kit assembly manuals, which were widely praised for being brilliantly clear. Indeed, many folks with no electronics background built the kits, since the step-by-step instructions guided one with great clarity. The kits petered out, victims of surface-mount technology (SMT) and a declining interest in building stuff. But I have hopes the latter is in decline. DIY events like Maker Faire seem to be rekindling the spirit of home brew innovation. I became an engineer because I like to make stuff, and one hopes that Heathkit's reemergence into kits will spur young folks' interest in this amazingly rewarding career.