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kpgraham | 2 years ago

It used to be possible to make a radio receiver out of a diaper pin and a blue razor blade. The coating on the blade acted like a crystal. You needed a cheap pair of headphones or a tiny transistor radio speaker. I made one when I was a kid, and I could clearly pick up 77 ABC in New York City from 50 miles away. Razor blades aren't blue anymore, but there must be other things that work.

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Kirby64|2 years ago

Fun fact, the blueing that creates that effect is literally just steel blue. You can accomplish the same thing by torching a razor blade until it glows then letting it cool.

userbinator|2 years ago

It still is, and I hope it remains that way for future generations too.

The first-time experience of hearing "voices from thin air" is unforgettable.

pfannkuchen|2 years ago

Did you do this before you ever used a full on radio? That seems hard to believe, so I guess you are implying that it is an experience that feels different. I wonder how so?

cxr|2 years ago

> blue razor blade

I first ran across the designs for these radios in a corner of the Old Web on a site called Bizarre Stuff You Can Name In Your Kitchen:

<http://web.archive.org/web/20040918174026/http://www.bizarre...>

cxr|2 years ago

Coming back to correct this obvious typo so that site search (and outside crawlers) will pick it up. The correct name is: Bizarre Stuff You Can Make In Your Kitchen.

BoxOfRain|2 years ago

It's a shame a lot of Europe is either killing off its AM output or already has which will render this impossible, the last transmitters other than a couple of low-power enthusiast stations including the venerable BBC Radio 4 longwave are being shut down over the next couple of years.

Definitely reckon Ofcom should open the band up to hobbyists given it's not much good for anything else.