> For a number of years they had on display the world's oldest broadcast 
> transmitter, an FM transmitter from 1919 invented in The Hague by Hanso 
> Idzerda.  

Interesting as that would have predated the invention of FM by Edwin Howard 
Armstrong in 1933 (or at least what we thought was the invention). But notably, 
vacuum tube technology that existed in 1919 might be hard-pressed to be up to 
the task. I look forward to doing some more research on this topic. Thanks!

73 Eugene W2HX
Subscribe to my Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/w2hx-channel/videos



-----Original Message-----
From: cctalk <cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org> On Behalf Of Paul Koning via cctalk
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 2:47 PM
To: dave.g4...@gmail.com; cctalk@classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: LSSM is chasing this, was Re: General Data? Computer



They might also get rid of stuff, not necessarily for an obvious reason.  I saw 
a case of this recently, in the Dutch museum Boerhaave in Leiden, which is a 
national science-related museum.  For a number of years they had on display the 
world's oldest broadcast transmitter, an FM transmitter from 1919 invented in 
The Hague by Hanso Idzerda.  Some time recently it was removed from the museum 
collection.  In that case it went back to the organization it came from, the 
Picture and Sound Institute, but whether it will be displayed by them is not 
clear.  In any case, that's an example of the uncertain future of artefacts in 
museum collections.

        paul


Reply via email to