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safe2174170 artist:cannibalus119 oc947450 oc only687728 oc:electra23 pony1602329 unicorn537855 book43557 circuit25 circuit board62 electronics77 female1802528 goggles18417 lamp3875 magic96618 mare740923 microscope88 oscilloscope19 pliers54 screwdriver521 soldering iron64 solo1425953 tape2402 tape recorder38 tesla coil35 tools328 transistor41 vacuum tubes13

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gallagher117
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can't have nice things
@BigBuggyBastage  
Right, right. What I was going on about with the PCBs is that all the traces are 45 degree (or whatever you want to call it). Did they do that (restrict themselves to 45/90 degree traces) before CAD stuff? I know some stuff was hand-drawn, very organic (my boss refers to “rubylith”).
 
That and the green soldermask.
 
The All-American Five, I’ve never dealt with personally, but I love/hate them from what I know.
 
On the one hand, they were live-chassis, weren’t they? (correction, some early ones were, apparently).
 
On the other hand, circuits designed by people who knew what they were doing, optimized until there’s nothing left to squeeze out? Yessss…
BigBuggyBastage
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Go fsck yourself
Add some fluorescent fixtures and a few duplex outlets, it looks almost exactly like my bench! :D]
 
Seriously, I ♥ this, so friggin’ much.
 
 
@gallagher117  
I have some Heathkit and HP instruments with PCBs from the late-1950s through early-1960s. Granted, the masks were hand-cut, and the material isn’t exactly high-quality FR4, but it gets the job done. Depending on the year, who made it, and what the instrument does, they can be all-tube, some tubes plus silicon (or selenium [yuck!]) rectifiers for their B+ supply, or something crazy in between.
 
Heh, a rather sick side-joke kinda slipped into my mind: the PCBs could mean both “printed circuit boards” and “polychlorinated biphenyls”, because I’m fairly sure at least one of my instruments has both! lol
 
Consumer-grade PCBs really took off in later All-American Five radios - anything the manufacturers could do to save a penny, they jumped on. I just checked with my Beitman guides, and it looks like PCBs were in at least a few popular models as far back as 1955, perhaps further.
gallagher117
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can't have nice things
Vacuum Tubes?
really?
We got Integrated Circuits…
[…]
 
If you’re going to complain about anachronisms, get it right.  
ICs? I see none here. Vacuum tubes are at least somewhat consistent with analog oscilloscopes using circular CRTs.
 
Her cutie mark is an NPN BJT, but those were used at the same time as vacuum tubes (e.g. Kenwood hybrid transceivers).
 
I don’t know the history of green solder resist.
 
The only thing that stands out to me is the PCBs, which look a little too modern, but I’m not sure about that.