ATOMIC ARTEFACTS Mini Instruments Scint Meter 5.40 Mini Instruments 6.20 Mini Assay
|
Spica 6 Civil Defense Transistor Radio, 1959
Overall this little radio, which came my way as
part of a collection of Cold War memorabilia from a fellow enthusiast, now
sadly passed, is in excellent condition. Minor leakage from a battery at some
point in its very long life, cleaned up easily, having done only superficial
damage to one of the battery contacts. What Happened To It? All that really needs to be said about this Spica radio and its ilk has been repeated many times if you look through the Radio & Audio section of dustygizmos. It is of its time and in most respects similar to countless other small battery powered receivers.
The Spica brand is long gone. Internet searches have mostly drawn a blank, as to the company’s history and relatively small product range. On the other hand there’s plenty of background on Conelrad on the web and it makes for interesting reading should you be so disposed. The bones of it are that before the Key Station System was implemented, by President Harry S. Truman in 1951, the public was alerted to emergencies by radio and TV stations interrupting normal programmes. It was an ad-hoc arrangement that had been successfully used during the Pearl Harbour attack in 1941 and to issue tornado warnings in 1948,. But it was clunky and largely uncoordinated system. and the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) was put in charge of setting up Conelrad, and establish a national network of secure phone lines and relay stations to distribute emergency messages.
Around the world a multitude of
Civil Defence and public emergency warning systems have been developed. The current
flavour of the month, now adopted by many countries, and recently, if somewhat belatedly, trialled in the UK, is to take
advantage of the fact that pretty well everyone these days has a mobile phone
of some description, and therefore able to receive text alert messages. Given the current circumstances you would be well advised
to keep your phone battery charged... Dusty Data First Seen: 1959 Original Price: $10? Value Today: £15 - £20 (1023) Features: 6-transistor AM-only superhetrotrodyne receiver, twin 3.5mm mono
earphone jack sockets, aerial socket, leather carry case Power req. 4 x Type 915 1.5 volt cells Dimensions: 125 x 85 x 35mm Weight: 338g Made (assembled) in: Japan Hen's Teeth (10 rarest) 7 Nuclear Enterprises PDR3 Dose Ratemeter, 1981
What Happened To It? If recent events are anything to go by the spectre of nuclear war
has not gone away, but there has always been a steady demand for
industrial-strength radiation measuring equipment like the PDR3. Whilst it
still works, is a bit of a clunky one-trick pony. Modern instruments are
generally a lot smaller and, thanks to advances in digital electronics, usually
have a lot more in the way of bells and whistles. Yes, it might come in handy
in the aftermath of a nuclear exchange, provided you’re still in one piece and
can find a source of D cells but the truth is, these days it’s pretty much
redundant, and mostly only of interest to collectors of vintage electronics and
cold war ephemera. That’s not to say it isn’t an interesting and – to some,
including me – a rather good-looking object and although its not especially
rare, it’s the sort of thing that might fetch £30 to £50 on ebay. As an added
bonus if the balloon goes up and you are still in one piece, it may be one of
the few instruments left that still work. That is thanks to the older
electronic components it uses, which are less susceptible to damage from a
powerful electromagnetic pulse (EMP). The high-density microchips in modern
devices, which tend to be in housed in thin plastic cases, will probably be
zapped in the first few microseconds following a nuclear blast. If you have
been tempted to buy a Geiger Counter in the last few months, in preparation for
WW3, then here’s an important safety tip; keep it inside an earthed metal box,
and if you’re really worried get a vintage instrument as well, just in
case. DUSTY DATA First Seen: 1981 Original Price: £? Value Today: £50 (0422) Features: Compensated Geiger Müller tube,
Energy response (80keV – 3 MeV), dose rate range 0.5mrad/h – 50rad/h, air dose
rate 0 – 4 rad, battery check, LED alarm indicator, audio alarm, alarm
mute/reset, 100 hr battery life, 3-way
locking switch Off/On/Batt check Power req.
2 x 1.5 volt D cells Dimensions: 240x x 122 x 1111mm Weight:
1.2kg Made (assembled) in: England Hen's Teeth (10 rarest) 7 Mini Instruments Mk1 MiniAlarm 7-10/G
The problem is radioactivity is invisible, odourless and
you can’t feel the effects it has on living tissue, at least not until it’s too
late. Fortunately most types of ionising radiation (not to be confused with
electromagnetic radiation from the likes of cellphones and microwave ovens) are
fairly easy to detect and measure with instruments like Dosimeters and Geiger
Counters. With a little tweaking the latter can be turned into the nuclear
equivalent of a smoke detector, known in the trade as a Radiation Area Alarm
Monitor. But simply making a loud noise when radiation levels exceed a safe
limit is not enough. Unlike a domestic smoke detector the nuclear equivalent
must be able to clearly and reliably inform those who rely on it that it is
working properly; a winking LED or bleeper to indicate that the battery is
failing just doesn’t cut the radioactive mustard.
What Happened To It? The need for Radiation Area Alarm Monitors hasn’t gone away and
there are many different types on the market, including, confusingly, the
MiniAlarm 7-10. Although the current twenty first century version shares the
same model designation it is an entirely new product, but with a lot of similarities,
including the job they are both designed to do. The Mk 2 was introduced in the
early noughties and based on the electronics of Mini Instruments latest range
of Geiger Counters and Ratemeters. The new 7-10 has a slightly larger meter, a
bleeper instead of a buzzer, there’s a backup battery for power outages and
it’s coloured yellow instead of brown. The iconic green and red indicator is
still there, as are the main functions, controls and choice of probes. Putting a price on the MiniAlarm 7-10 is next to impossible. In
theory it’s still useable and with new instruments that do essentially the same
job costing well into four figures, it could be an economical alternative in
applications outside of serious grown-up health and safety. It’s also a rare
and unusual example of seventies technology. I fear it could prove popular with
upcyclers, looking for an eye-catching base for a table lamp conversion. Whilst
practically sacrilege, it could easily be the sort of thing that fetches
eye-watering sums in trendy establishments. In the end. though, it’s worth what
anyone is willing to pay for it and in working order, or appropriately converted,
that could be anywhere between £20 and £200. DUSTY DATA First Seen: 1978 Original Price: £? Value Today: £150 (1121) Features: Alarming radiation area monitor,
analogue meter, logarithmic scale 0 – 2k CPS, illuminated green/red status
visual display, audible buzzer alarm, user-set alarm level, alarm latch, alarm
test, variable HT, remote alarm output. Fail-safe probe check, MC-70
compensated Geiger Müller tube probe Power req.
100 – 125/200-250 VAC Dimensions: 220 x 140 x 140mm Weight:
2.4Kg Made (assembled) in: England Hen's Teeth (10 rarest) 9 Mini Instruments Mini-Assay 6-20, 1974
What Happened To It? Highly specialised radioactivity assay instruments are still with
us but the trend has been towards specialised and sophisticated devices that do more than
just count radioactive particles over pre-set periods. This is made possible by
another very useful property of scintillation crystals like sodium iodide and
solid-state detection devices developed in recent years. In a regular Geiger Counter
the detection device is usually Geiger Müller tube. This produces uniform
pulses or clicks in response to all types of radioactivity (Alpha, Beta, Gamma etc). However, the flashes of light in
a scintillation crystal are proportionate to the energy of the radioactive
particle, so with a bit of digital jiggery-pokery it is possible to identify
the radioactive isotope that produced it, displaying the results in graphical
form, with the peaks indicating individual elements. Thanks to digital electronics
radioactive spectroscopy has become the most accurate and widely used method of
measuring and quantifying radioactivity. Spectral analysers can be small enough
to fit into a pocket and effectively consigned old dinosaurs like this 6-20 to
the scrap heap. Nevertheless, it is entirely probable that a few are still in use as it remains
a quick and simple way to check and compare materials. Even though the 6-20 was once an impressively expensive and exotic
piece of laboratory equipment, and in spite of it still being in mostly good
working order (assuming the original probe gets fixed) and it being rare and unusual, it is pretty much worthless to anyone in the nuclear biz. I suspect a few vintage rad-tech nuts
(like me) who would be happy to give it house room, but even the most radiation-minded enthusiasts probably wouldn’t want to
shell out more than the twenty quid I paid for this one, so it’s not something
that’s going to go up in value any time soon. But as is often the case that’s
good news for my fellow collectors, and me, and anyone inclined (or mad enough)
to join in and try and save these wonderful old instruments for posterity. DUSTY DATA First Seen: 1974 Original Price: £? Value Today: £20.00
(0321) Features: 5-digit
‘Nixie’ display, 1 – 1000 seconds interval timer, variable HT (0 – 1700 volts), display check function,
Type 43 Gamma-sensitive well probe, PET probe connectors, tilt stand, carry
handle Power req. 110-115/220-250 VAC mains Dimensions: 2115 x 145 x 140mm Weight: 3.2kg Made (assembled) in: England Hen's Teeth (10 rarest) 8 DP-75 Cold War Geiger Counter, 1980
What Happened To It? The Cold War never really ended, nor has the real or perceived
threat from thermo-nuclear weapons and 'dirty' bombs disappeared so there will
always be a steady supply of decommissioned and ex-military radioactivity
measuring and monitoring instruments. The problem with that is as they become
more sophisticated, and targeted at detecting the very high levels they become
less useful to amateurs, enthusiasts and experimenters. Many of them are
actually completely useless without the highly specialised data readers, cables
and software needed to use them. Between the late 60s and the mid 80s was a
golden age for genuinely useful old-school Geiger Counters that could be bought
cheaply and easily maintained and repaired, without specialist knowledge or
(probably classified) test equipment. The DP-75 was one of the last of that generation
of instruments and although it wasn't a classic, and a step backwards from its
predecessor - in a civilian role - it is still a lot of Geiger Counter for your
money. I wouldn't discount the possibility of significantly increasing its
sensitivity with a simple GM tube swap, though this is on the rainy day to-do
list. Even in its unmodified state it might also make a modestly successful
investment -- if the current price of DP-66's is anything to go by. Worst case,
it's still a handy survival took, at least for as long as nuclear warfare and
terrorism remain a potential threat, which looks like being a very long
time... DUSTY DATA First Seen: 1980 Original Price: £? Value Today: £150.00 (1120) Features: 2-tube Geiger counter (D01-30 &
D01-80), Beta & Gamma sensitivity 0.5 mR/h - 500R/hr (6 ranges) rotating
Beta shield, audible alarm function (5-preset levels), built-in charger for
DKP-50 type pen dosimeter, luminous & backlit meter scale, meter/reading
zero, magnetic earphone output, external DC supply sockets (10 - 27 volts) Power req.
3 x 1.5 volt D cells Dimensions: 205 x 110 x 100mm Weight:
2.1kg Made (assembled) in: Poland Hen's Teeth (10 rarest) 4 Nuclear Enterprises Ratemeter RM5/1, 1980
What Happened To It? There’s a potted history of Nuclear Enterprises in the write up for one of its close cousins, the PDM1 Doserate meter. Suffice it to say that after numerous takeovers and mergers the brand is no more. At the time this instrument first appeared NE was doing well as a major supplier of radioactivity monitoring and measuring equipment to government and the nuclear industry. But even in its heyday, in the eighties and early nineties, the RM5/1 was starting to look a tad dated, compared with what was coming onto the market from other companies around the world. Nevertheless, because they were so reliable and simple to use many of them continued to earn their keep well into the noughties and were only replaced when they became uneconomic to maintain and cheaper and more sophisticated instruments became available. In the past couple of years hundreds of them have been decommissioned and inevitably a fair few ended up on ebay.
At the time of writing (Autumn 2020) there were a dozen
or more for sale, ranging in price from £10 to £50. Buying one not listed as
working could be a gamble, however. Most are labelled as untested and sold
without probes but if you are feeling lucky, have a spare probe handy, a good
working knowledge of electronics, a circuit diagram and some basic test
equipment you should be able to track down most faults. Most parts are readily
available, and even tricky items, like the bespoke meter and transformers,
might be salvaged from cheap basket cases. DATA First Seen: 1980 Original Price: £? Value Today: £25 (1020) Features: Variable HT (0 - 1.4kV. voltage
scale on meter), logarithmically scaled meter (CPS), GM tube and Scintillation
inputs, battery check (on meter), built in ‘click’ sounder with mute, PET probe
connector, built in carry handle Power req.
2 x 1.5 volt D cells Dimensions: 240 x 115 x 120mm Weight:
1.4kg Made (assembled) in: Britain Hen's Teeth (10 rarest) 5 Dosimeter Corp. MiniRad II Rad Monitor, 1977
This MiniRad was part of a job lot of Geiger Counters
bought a while ago on ebay. It’s hard to say how much it cost me but since it
was the oldest and least sophisticated part of the package I estimate it
accounted for around £10 of the overall price. I hadn’t seen one of these
before and it was only when I tried to find out more about it that it became
apparent just how old and unusual it was; more on that shortly.
What Happened To It? There’s very little on the web about the
Dosimeter Corporation of Cincinnati, Ohio apart from some patents filed in the
mid to late 1980s and references to the company’s apparent disappearance at
some point in the nineties. By the way, the date of 1977 for this MiniRad II is
based on markings on the PC board, and that’s backed up by the use of mainly
discrete components on the circuit board, which are typical of the time.
During what appears to have been a fairly short period of operation the
Dosimeter Corporation made a variety of instruments, including a version of the classic US Civil Defense CDV-700 and passive pen-type
dosimeters. It seems likely that the company was merged or taken over in the
early to mid 90s, possibly by the Bendix Corporation’s, which had busy military
and instrumentation divisions. But this is all guesswork so as usual feel free
to put me right on the origins and history of this enigmatic company.
Incidentally, the MiniRad name seems to have been appropriated by several
companies, none of whom, as far as I can see, have any connection with the
Dosimeter Corporation. Geiger Counters and dosimeters are still with
us and thanks to digital chippery and solid-state displays, are a good deal
smaller, smarter and cheaper these days. I wouldn’t mind betting this one cost
several hundred dollars when new but if the number of appearances of this model
in Google Images is anything to go by (precisely none…) comparatively few were
sold, or survived. Indeed this may be the only one. Clearly that makes it very
rare and extremely valuable, at least it should. In the real world
relatively few vintage gadgets become sought after collectibles, and it is even
more unusual for specialised devices like this to make the cut, at least
not ones made as recently the late seventies. Whilst collecting old Geiger
counters is never going to make anyone wealthy it is -- at the moment -- a relatively
cheap way to get into an interesting hobby. What’s more, those of us who do get involved may have the last
laugh come the next nuclear conflict or radioactive incident, assuming of
course we keep our collections, and ourselves, in bombproof shelters… DUSTY DATA First Seen: 1977? Original Price: £? Value Today: £30.00 (1219) Features: Geiger Müller tube sensor,
Gamma & X-Ray sensitivity, Hi/Lo range, moving coil meter display, scale 0
– 5mR/hr & 0 – 500 cpm, independent scale calibration presets, battery
check function, built-in sounder, headphone socket, belt and lanyard clip Power req: 1 x 9 volt PP3 Dimensions: 120 x 66 x 28mm Weight: 245g Made (assembled) in: USA Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 9 Ludlum Model 2 Survey Meter, 1979
Next to that is another
small switch for controlling the meter response. It's handy in
a changing radiation field. In Slow mode it damps the meter's needle so a full scale reading
takes around 11, seconds (in Fast mode full scale takes 3 seconds). The only other controls are a recessed
preset for the variable HT probe supply and a reset button, for zeroing the
meter when in ‘slow’ mode. The handle also deserves a mention; the cradle on
top can accommodate a very wide range of probe types, from pancakes and
‘friskers’ with big handles, to slim tube-based models. Power comes from two
standard 1.5-volt D cells, which last for around 600 hours and live in a
compartment accessed by a hinged cover immediately behind the range selector
knob. For the record this Model 2, one of two in my collection, is currently
connected to a custom B/SBT-ll pancake probe; it’s a good all-rounder and
sensitive to Alpha, Beta, Gamma and X-Ray radiation. Many other probes, from
Ludlum and others are also available, to suit just about any application.
What Happened To It? Don Ludlum established Ludlum Instruments Inc,
based in Sweetwater Texas, in1962. He was an engineer with a lot of experience
in radiation detection, having worked for five years for Eberline, another big
name in the industry. He hit the ground running and the Model 1 was launched a
few months after the company was founded, whilst working from the kitchen of
his home. Don remained hands-on with the rapidly expanding company until his
death in 2015. Ludlum is still very much a family concern, with 8 divisions
dealing with almost all areas of radiation detection and measurement, employing
nearly 500 people. Ludlum Geiger Counters are available new in the
UK dealers but very few ever make it onto the second user market for the simple
reason that they are rugged, reliable and remain genuinely useful, even when
several decades old. The odd one from a UK seller appears on ebay from time to
time, usually for a stupid amount of money, but there’s no shortage of quite
reasonably priced Model 2s on ebay US selling for between £150 and £300,
usually with a decent probe. The problem though, is shipping and import taxes,
which can easily add more than £100 to the final price. Of course it’s possible
that one day one might turn up at a car boot sale or a vintage tech fair for a
fiver but I really wouldn’t hold your breath. If you want one – and you would
be mad not to – and you are thinking of planning a holiday to the US sometime
soon here’s a hypothetical scenario. Forget bringing back the usual tourist
tat. Track down a couple of cheap Model 2s while you are there and stuff them
your luggage. Flog the spare when you get back and you could be part way to
paying for your trip. Don’t say I suggested it though -- I didn’t, it was that
research bloke down the pub -- and be aware you might have some explaining to
do at UK customs… DUSTY DATA First Seen: 1979 Original Price: £1000.00 Value Today: £250.00 (0419) Features: moving
coil meter display, range 0 – 5k CPM & 0 – 50mR/Hr, 3 switchable scales x
.1, x1 & x10 with individual calibration pots, externally adjustable probe
HT supply (400 - 1500 volts), multiple
probe type compatibility, built-in speaker with switchable mute, switchable
response (3/11 secs), integral carry handle/probe cradle, TNC probe connector
(originally BNC, MHV or C-type) Power req.
2 x 1.5 volt D cells Dimensions:
200 x 175 x 85mm Weight: 1.4kg (ex probe & batteries) Made (assembled) in: USA Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 5 Victoreen 471 Wide Range Survey Meter, 1981
This 471 came to me courtesy of fellow Geiger
Counter enthusiast Carl Schieferstein in exchange for some related bits and
pieces. It had recently been decommissioned by a Government agency, apparently
because it was faulty. In spite of being the best part of 40 years old it
appeared to be in excellent condition, inside and out. The first challenge was
to find some way of powering it but using any sort of electronic power supply
simply pegged the meter, undoubtedly because of the noise issue. The next
attempt involved assembling a ‘brick’ of PP3s, a tricky customer, as it would
almost certainly deliver an unwelcome shock if handled carelessly. This yielded
some possibly encouraging results with the unit responding to a low level
source, suggesting there still some life in it. There were small movements of
the meter when the source was moved in front of the Ion Chamber window but I
suspect that it is still faulty in several respects and almost certainly needs
calibration, but due to more pressing matters that was about as far as I took
it. It is something I will return to, but it will have to wait until I have
figured out a cheaper and/or easier way to power it up. What Happened To It? Ion Chamber based survey meters are still in
widespread use but modern units tend to be a lot smaller and more specialised,
lacking the versatility of the 471. Other even more effective means of
detecting and measuring high levels of radioactivity have also been developed
over the past 40 years, some of them providing more detailed information about
the nature of the source and its potential for harm. The US based Victoreen Instrument Company
should be familiar to those interested in vintage Geiger Counters being one the
most innovative and prolific manufacturers of radiation detecting and measuring
instruments. They’re also one of the companies responsible for the famous and
still quite numerous CDV range of Geiger Counters, Survey meters and so on, for
the US Civil Defense corps, during the Cold War years. Self-taught engineer and
inventor John A Victoreen founded the company in the 1920s. His long-standing
interest in radiation measurement resulted in a vast range of instruments over
the years and Victoreen was also heavily involved in the Manhattan Project and
the subsequent nuclear weapons testing programme after WW2. The Victoreen
Company passed through several hands during the past 40 years, most recently by
the Sheller-Globe Corporation. However, the name has recently disappeared from
view following a merger with Radiation Medical -- a leading light in medical
instruments and X-Ray equipment -- shortly after it was also acquired by
Sheller-Globe. Collecting radiation detecting and measuring
instruments is very much a niche hobby, though there is still plenty of
interest in the US. Americans have the advantage of a long and unique nuclear
history, and a lot of naturally occurring sources of radioactivity to detect.
The 714 is just about old enough to qualify as vintage but being somewhat
specialist in nature relatively few of them come on to the open market. When
they do asking prices on ebay can range from a few pounds to several hundred
for examples in pristine condition and full working order, though I doubt that
many, if any have actually sold for that much. If this one ever achieves full
working order it might make up to £50 or so. However, if the fault turns out to
involve the pre-amp module, or one of the custom components it will probably be
almost impossible or uneconomical to source parts but it will still make an
impressive doorstop and scary Halloween prop. DUSTY DATA First Seen: 1981 Original Price: £1000? Value Today: £10 - 50 (0319) Features Ionisation
Chamber type high radiation dose meter, sensitive to Alpha (above 3.4MeV), Beta
(above 70keV) & Gamma & X-Rays (above 6keV), RF shielded moving coil
meter & electronics, Rate measurement: 0-1, 3, 10, 30, 100 and 300 mR/h and R/hr;
Integration measurement: 0-1, 3, 10, 30, 100, and 300 mR, response time: < 8
secs on 1mR/hr, 3 secs 3 on 3mR.hr range, < 1sec on other ranges Power req. 2 x 1.5v D cells, 4 x
22.5v 505 batteries Dimensions: 290
x 195 x 120mm Weight: 2.0kg Made (assembled) in: USA Hen's Teeth (10 rarest) 7 The Snooper Model108
Geiger Counter, 1952
What happened To It? It’s difficult to say
how popular Uranium prospecting actually was. It seems the 'Rush' didn’t last very long
and as it later turned out, some of those involved met a nasty end, due to
exposure and inhalation of radioactive dust.
However, judging by the number of adverts in 1950s editions
of magazines like Popular Mechanics (see above) there was no shortage of reasonably priced
equipment on offer. The budget Geiger Counters of the day would have been
fairly fragile and some of them appeared to be quite poorly made so the
survival rate is low. The fact that this one made it, and in such good
condition, is unusual. I doubt that more than a handful of them come on to the
market every year, and I have yet to see another complete outfit so cheap. The
chances of any of them turning up in the UK is very small. Uranium prospecting
is not and has never been a popular pastime on this side of the pond, even
though there are significant deposits and mines in Cornwall and a lot of ‘hot’
rocks in Scotland. Collecting vintage Geiger Counters is never going excite much
interest in the UK but for a few of us old instruments like this are really
quite exciting – and yes, you are probably right, we don’t get out very often… DUSTY DATA First Seen: 1952
(Manual) Original Price: $24.95 Value Today: £100.00 (0119) Features Pump type
HV circuitry, type 1B86 glass encapsulated Geiger Müller detection tube, 1 x
Sylvania IU5 diode-pentode valve, high impedance headphones Power req.
1 x 1.5v D cell, 1 x
22.5v M505 ‘hearing aid’ battery Dimensions (ex strap): 135
x 80 x 44mm Weight: 425g Made (assembled) in: USA Hen's Teeth (10 rarest) 8 Thorn Radiacmeter NATO 6665-99-119-8766, 1975
The detection device was quite unusual too. It’s an Ion
Chamber, similar to the detectors used in the classic US Civil Defense CDV-715
& 717 Survey Meters, and a distant relative of the sensors found in most domestic
smoke detectors.
When the Beta Shield selector knob is
turned to the ‘Cal’ position the window aligns with small radioactive Beta
‘check source’. The reading on the meter can be adjusted to a nominal setting using the
Calibration knob. Next to that is the rotary on/off and battery test switch.
The silver nut-shaped object between the two switches is a moisture indicator.
The white pad in the middle changes colour if the unit’s innards become damp.
On the underside there’s a screw cover for the battery compartment. It takes
one 6-volt lithium battery (V28PXL) and one 1.3 volt button cell (V625PX).
There’s also a mounting point for a wrist strap, which also helps remove the
unit from its tight-fitting padded carry case.
I detected this one ebay whilst doing one of my occasional trawls
for vintage Geiger Counters. It was a Buy It Now sale (£35, including postage)
and honestly described – and as I had never seen one in the flesh before I felt
it my duty to snap it up. It was, as promised, in excellent condition but
untested and sold as seen, for parts or repairs. I wasn’t too surprised to
discover that it wasn’t working. The lack of a circuit diagram has been a
problem but after some poking around the innards with a multimeter I am fairly
certain that the problem lies with the Ion chamber. So far I have been unable
to find a suitable replacement and being a specialist component it is unlikely
that I ever will but I live in hope. My guess is the gas in the chamber has
leaked; data on the device is non-existent and I can’t even tell who made it.
It’s theoretically possible that a determined experimenter could get it going
again but even if it could be made to work, finding a legal radioactive source
‘lively’ enough to test it could prove challenging… What Happened To It? Back in their heyday Thorn Electronics (later Thorn EMI) were best
known for making more consumer friendly products like TVs and radios under
brand names that included Ferguson, Ultra, HMV, Radio Rentals and so on.
Devices like the Radiacmeter were built in relative secrecy in small isolated
units often located within larger TV manufacturing plants. Throughout its production run, from 1975 to 1980 Thorn was a large
and powerful company and as well as a wide variety of electronic widgets it
also made such diverse things as gas cookers and lighting products. However,
piece by piece its many divisions were either crippled by overseas competition,
sold off or quietly folded. Today there little left; Thorn Automation,
responsible for the Radiacmeter and various other items of military hardware,
was dissolved in 2009. The demand for personal and portable radiation monitors hasn’t
gone away, though and in 1982 Plessey took over the government contracts to
manufacture and supply the UK’s Civil Defence and armed forces with devices
like the PDRM-82. It was simpler and cheaper than the Radiacmeter to make, and
a lot lighter. More than 80,000 of them
were made in the 80s and 90s, until it too was replaced by small, lighter and
cheaper kit. Collecting vintage military hardware has always been popular but
items like this, which don’t go bang, look cool or dangerous or do weird things
are often overlooked, That’s due in part to their somewhat specialist nature,
and the simple fact that not many of them were made, or have escaped into the
consumer marketplace. The few references I have found suggest that it is quite
rare but, as is often the case, rarity doesn’t always translate into riches.
The £35.00 I paid for it was about right; maybe on a good day another vintage
Geiger Counter enthusiast – itself a very rare persuasion -- might be part with
£50.00 for it, but that’s about it. It has future potential, though. Cold War
memorabilia is gaining in popularity so if you ever come across one these
little green boxes don’t pass it by, especially if reasonably priced and in
good shape. One last thing, if anyone out there has a spare Ion Chamber, NATO
Part No. 6665-99-119-6936, that they don’t need, please get in touch. DUSTY DATA First Seen: 1975 Original Price: £? Value Today: £35.00 (1218) Features Low pressure sealed Ion Chamber
detection device (Beta & Gamma sensitive), moving coil meter display
(logarithmic scale, 0 – 1000 rad/hour), rotating Gamma shield, built-in check
source, battery test function, calibration control, humidity detector, wrist
strap, protective carry bag Power req.
1 x V28PXL 6-volt
battery, 1 x V625PX 1.3-volt button cell Dimensions:
165 x 117 x 55mm Weight: 1.2kg Made (assembled) in: UK Hen's Teeth (10 rarest) 9 Mini Instruments Scintillation Meter 5.40, 1982
Most people would call it a Geiger Counter, though technically
it’s known as a Rate Meter. By definition Geiger Counters detect radioactivity
using a device called a Geiger Müller (GM) tube. However, one of the Type
5.40’s most interesting features is that it has the facility to use a wide
range of detectors, including both GM tubes and Scintillation probes, of which
more in a moment.
Speaking of which. The UK’s Atomic Weapons
Establishment (AWE) previously owned this Type 5.40. When new it was almost
certainly equipped with a Scintillation type probe. These are based around a
large crystal of sodium iodide. It has the useful property of emitting a brief
but very weak flash of light (a scintillation) when struck by radioactive
particles. The light flashes are captured and amplified by a device called a photo
multiplier (or solid-state detector, also built into the probe body), and the
output is displayed on the meter as counts per second (CPS). Incidentally
Geiger Müller tubes detect radioactive particles when they interact with
charged particles of pressurised gas inside a sealed glass or metal tube.
Although they work in very different ways both types generally require a high
voltage (HV or HT) supply, typically between 300 and 1200 volts. At some point
the AWE carried out some modifications to this instrument, which included
installing a power adaptor circuit to replace the internal batteries, so that
it could run from an external 24-volt supply. Additionally the preset
potentiometer, which adjusts the HT voltage applied to the detector, was moved
from the circuit board to the outside of the case. Presumably this was to make
it more accessible, and therefore easier to switch between different types of
probe.
With so much work needing to be done the only
way to proceed was to strip it down to its bare bones, though the first job was
to check to see if it was working. Luckily it was, first time and I tested it
using a number of GM tubes and a scintillation probe operating at between 450
and 900-volts. With everything removed from the case it was rubbed down, primed
and resprayed with the same grey-black metal hammer finish paint that it came
with. Case fittings were cleaned and replaced and the add-on adaptor board
removed. The wiring also had to be returned to its original state and the now
virtually obsolete BNC probe socket was replaced with a modern TNC socket. A
red LED that had been added to show the power adaptor was working was replaced
with a lower power type and repurposed as an ‘event’ flasher, to coincide with
the clicks; this can be useful when the speaker is muted. A new switchable
power socket was fitted, so it could be powered by battery or an external
adaptor, and a battery holder (for 8x AA cells) was fitted to the back panel. The biggest challenge was finding a replacement
probe and probe holder. Fortunately I had a suitable Russian Geiger tube to
hand and it fitted nicely into an aluminium housing, fitted with a TNC socket.
The probe holder was much harder to replace though I eventually found that
microphone holders (used on mike stands) made a pretty good substitute. I was
able to reproduce the side panel labelling by scanning the originals (which
were in very poor condition), touching up the images on the PC before printing
them out on transparent OHP film and spraying the back with silvery grey car
paint. After so much time and TLC it is now as good as new. Better in fact,
thanks to the more accessible AWE voltage adjustment mod, which I retained, and
it should be good for another 40 years at least What Happened To It? Mini Instruments was founded in the early
1960s, in the Essex town of Burnham-On-Crouch. There is surprisingly little
about the company’s early days on the web but from the get-go it appears they
made Geiger Counters, originally in plain grey-black metal boxes like the Type
5.40. In the late 80s they switched to the custom yellow metal cases that they
use to this day. Although the innards of modern Mini Monitors are a bit more
sophisticated the basic design attributes of accuracy and simplicity of use are
still clearly in evidence. The company was bought out by the US-based Thermo
Fisher Scientific Corporation, a world leader in scientific instrumentation,
healthcare and research. Although the Mini Monitor range is now only a tiny part
of a global operation there remains a steady demand for these rock-solid
instruments, which are now assembled in Germany. For some reason collecting vintage radiation
monitors has yet to take off. Whilst this is good news for me and the small
handful of fellow aficionados, being such a specialised field, with relatively
few products making it onto the second-hand market, bargains tend to be few and
far between. It also has to be said that even if when work they’re of little
interest to most people, at the moment. Everything changes when there’s a
serious nuclear accident or some rogue state proves it is capable of building atomic
weapons. Even though most people have little idea of how to use a Geiger Counter,
let alone how to interpret readings, prices – even for old instruments – tend
to rise quite quickly. A few weeks later, when the fuss has died down, prices
fall back to where they were, or less, if the event produced a glut of
instruments. In short unless you can accurately predict when the next spike
will occur they’re not much of an investment. On the other hand if you are
interested in a much overlooked and little understood branch of science and
technology, and want to learn more about your environment (and you might be surprised how many
everyday objects are radioactive – including you…) then it’s a fascinating
subject that’s well worth exploring. DUSTY DATA First seen: 1980 Original Price: £900 Value Today: £350 - £500, depending on probe type (0817) Features: Variable HT (350 1500 volts DC),
logarithmic meter display (CPS), internal speaker, sound mute, interchangeable
probes, battery check, probe cradle, carry handle Power req. 8 x 1.5 volt AA cells, 12 – 18 volts DC
via AC adaptor Dimensions: 165 x 115 x 155mm Weight: 1.8kg Made (assembled) in: Burnham On Crouch, England Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 8 SCG0012 Contamination Meter No. 1 Mk 2, 1955
It was either very good, or
it cost so much that the MOD couldn’t afford to replace it completely because it remained in
service for around 30 years, until the early 1980s. To say it was
over-engineered would be an understatement. At around 5.5kg in its canvas
haversack it must have been a nightmare to cart around, especially if the user
was also wearing a full NBC (nuclear, biological, chemical) protection suit. On
the plus side, if the balloon went up the user could be fairly certain that
when they flicked the On switch, even if they were being bombarded, nuked,
soaked, frozen, or baked, there was a fair chance that it would work..
Nerdy Fact: the meter featured here is the
Mk 2 version; you can tell that because it has rubber covered sockets for the
cable connecting the main unit to the probe. The Mk 1 had screw-fit connectors,
which turned out to be a bit unreliable. Otherwise the Mk1 and Mk 2 designs are
virtually identical.
In the 1970s and 80s ads
for decommissioned Contamination Meters appeared regularly in the Exchange and
Mart and classified sections of electronic magazines. Prices were typically in
the £20 to £50 range, which was quite a lot back then, well out of my reach but
it went on my wish list. Forty odd years later and I’ve managed to cross it off
with this one, which turned up on ebay. They can sell for anything between £10
and £100, depending on condition and whether or not they work (few do) and I
often have a punt on ones with low starting prices. I placed my
customary £10 bid with no great expectations. The email informing
me that I had won was a surprise, and a very pleasant one at that because I was
the only bidder. More good luck, because of the weight the meter was collection
only; the seller lived just 10 miles away so no expensive shipping charges. It got even better. It
hadn’t been fiddled with and the condition, inside and out was excellent. It
came with the Vibrator Power Module (many have just the 150 volt battery
holder), a set of instructions and the original canvas haversack. The power
unit works but unfortunately the rest of it is as dead as a doornail. Normally
this can be a problem for me. I dislike working on anything using valves as
they always seem to give me shocks and burns, but the design and layout of this
device makes everything really easy to get at. There’s also a wealth of
information on the web, including repair manuals, which should all help to make
it a fairly straightforward job. However, all of the advice starts by
suggesting that the many waxed paper capacitors it uses should be replaced.
That makes sense because after 40 plus years most will have failed. The few I
have tested so far were all way out of spec. As soon as that’s done I can see
what else needs to be changed. Fortunately I was able to check the GM tube, which
can be difficult to replace, and that’s in good order but sadly the complete
overhaul it probably needs will have to take its turn on the rainy day to-do
list. What Happened To It? Although Contamination
Meter No.1 was in service for several decades -- until well past its sensible
use-by date -- since the 1970s the MOD and Civil Defence has been steadily
updating their inventories of radiation monitors with smaller, lighter and even
more reliable instruments. The Plessey PDRM-82 from the early 1980s is a good
example of the newer semiconductor based devices that replaced it. Whilst they
may be more functional there is no denying the Meter No. 1 was a class act, and
really looked the part. Collecting vintage Geiger counters is a fairly specialist hobby so if you fancy having a crack at it you are not going to encounter much in the way of competition. The downside is that the really interesting items, that are worth collecting, tend to be few and far between. There’s no marketplace as such, but ebay is an obvious place to look and you can sometimes get lucky when, thanks to the seller’s lack of knowledge, they are wrongly or inaccurately described. Antique markets are another occasional source and again, stall holders often have little idea of what they are selling and prices can be very reasonable. Contamination Meter No. 1 is an exception, though and there’s little doubt what it does and rock-bottom prices are rare. On the other hand the chances of finding an original one in working order is next to zero, which always helps when negotiating a price. It’s not a big deal, though, even in non-operational condition they’re a sight to behold and if the worst comes to the worst they make great doorstops and exercise weights… DUSTY DATA First seen: 1953 Original Price:
£? Value Today:
£50.00 (0617) Features: Gamma detection range 0 – 10 mR/hr,
variable HT, remote hand-held probe with 2M waterproof connecting cable, 50mm
meter display, headphone socket, CV2247 GM detection tube, 5 x cold cathode
valves (CV575 in probe, main unit: CV509, CV138, CV286 & CV284), battery
test function, colour change humidity sensors, folding carry handles Power req. 2 x 150 volt batteries, 4 x AA cells using
Power Unit Vibrator module (6665-11029) or mains power unit (6665-110028) Dimensions: 260 x 248 x 117mm Weight: 5.4kg Made (assembled) in:
England Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 7 DP-66M Cold War Geiger Counter, 1970
We’ve already covered
several Western instruments, like the iconic American CDV-700 and the British
PDRM-82, so it’s about time we had a look at what they were using (or rather,
hoping never to use...) on the other side of the Iron Curtain. This is a DP-66,
a Polish made derivative of the Russian DP-5V, and widely used in Warsaw Pact
countries. In many ways the DP-5V was
the Soviet equivalent of the CDV-700, however, it was nowhere near as good and
nowadays is only of interest to collectors of Cold War memorabilia but the
DP-66 is another kettle of fish and a vast improvement on the DP-5V. It was
very well made with modern – for the time -- electronic components and unlike
its predecessor, used readily obtainable batteries. Even though it dates from
the late sixties they are still very useable and sensitive enough to detect low
levels of natural and man-made radioactivity. Many were made and stockpiled and
a lot of them have survived. What’s more, compared with Western instruments of
the same period, they’re relatively inexpensive.
This DP-66 is date-stamped 1970 and I acquired it some time ago, shortly after they were released from storage and found their way into the civilian market. It had been little used and was very well preserved. There was dirt and tarnish on exposed metal surfaces but it scrubbed up really well with liberal applications of household cleaner and Brasso. I suspect that the case had never been opened – the seals on the bolts holding it together hadn’t been touched – and inside it was as clean and dry as the day it was made. Since then it has only been opened a couple of times, but only to take photographs as it was working faultlessly when I got it, and has continued to do so ever since. With a set of fresh batteries installed it gives good readings on the low ranges (with shield in Bx1 position) from watches and clocks with luminous radium painted dial and hands. There also healthy clicks from the earpiece. It sounds like an attractive alternative to the increasingly expensive American CDV instruments, and in many ways it is but there are a few minor drawbacks. To begin with it is around 20 percent less sensitive to Beta radiation than a CDV-700 so it takes a slightly more ‘lively’ source to really get the meter moving. The probe is a bit of a handful and not well suited to a spot of undercover detection – it’s pretty clear what you are up to if you’re out hunting for radioactive antiques, glass or ceramics, waving that big black and shiny probe around. Lastly, the electronics are more complicated than its US rival. There are 8 transistors, three Geiger tubes and a few components that could prove tricky to find should it go wrong. On the plus side they have proved to be more rugged and reliable than their American counterparts, and the manual includes a good circuit diagram, but if a fault does develop it could prove challenging to fix. What Happened To It? Production of the DP-66M
continued until the early eighties and it remained in service until the late
1990s when it was presumably replaced by smaller, lighter and doubtless cheaper
and more sophisticated instruments that would be easier to maintain and store.
Even though most DP-66’s are now over 40 years old, in good working order
they’re still practical instruments for detecting and measuring radioactivity.
Clearly they’re a bit too bulky for discreet urban prospecting -- there are
plenty of pocket-sized instruments better suited to that sort of application --
but they still have a lot to offer to experimenters, hobbyists, amateur
scientists, environmentalists, rock hounds and not forgetting Doomsday
Preppers. They’re affordable too, with prices for complete boxed outfits
starting at around £60; these probably work but may need a good clean and some
TLC. £100 or so should buy a more presentable example, but if that’s above your
pay grade there’s always the bargain basement option. If you know your way
around simple electronic circuits, dead ones can sometimes turn up on ebay
selling for £30 or less, but be warned, you could be lumbered with a doorstep
if the fault is due to a hard or impossible to obtain part. DUSTY DATA First seen: 1969 Original Price: N/A Value Today: £60
(0117) Features: 3-tube Geiger counter (STS-5, DOB-50 & DOB-80), Beta
& Gamma sensitivity 0.5 mR/h – 200R/hr (6 ranges) rotating Beta shield,
built in charger for DKP-50 type pen dosimeter, luminous & backlit meter
scale, meter/reading zero, magnetic earphone output. Accessories: earphone,
mains adaptor, leather case with neck & waist straps, probe extension
handle, manual & calibration logbook, wooden storage/carry case Power req. 2 x 1.5v D cells Dimensions: Main Unit: 173 x 115 x 100mmm, Probe: 290 x 49 (max) Weight: 2.1kg (main unit & probe) Made (assembled) in: Poland Hen's Teeth (10 rarest) 4 Nuclear Enterprises PDM1 Doserate Meter, 1983
or growing an extra head, but the best known is the ubiquitous
Geiger Counter. Other method include things like Cloud Chambers and
scintillation detectors, which contain exotic crystals that produce brief
flashes of light when struck by radioactive particles. However, one of the
simplest type of detector is the Ionisation Chamber. You probably have several
of them in your home in the form of 'free air' ionisation chambers. These are
the small metal or plastic devices found in most types of domestic smoke detector. They are
open to the atmosphere and inside there's a tiny radioactive source. This emits
a stream of particles and if it senses that the flow has been interrupted, by
passing clouds of smoke or noxious gasses, an electronic circuit sets off the
alarm. Another type of ionisation chamber
can be found inside this Nuclear Enterprises PDM1 Portable Doserate Meter, it’s
around 50 times larger than the ones in most smoke detectors, and this time it
is sealed and filled with a gas at low pressure. It works the other way around to a smoke alarm and is designed to detect
radiation, rather than smoke, and instruments like this are used throughout the
nuclear power industry, in research laboratories, hospital nuclear medicine and
radiography departments and for environmental monitoring. If fact you’ll find
them wherever there’s a possibility of encountering potentially harmful levels
of X-Rays, Gamma rays and Beta particles, which are the main types of
radioactivity proven to cause long-term damage to human tissue, with prolonged
or uncontrolled exposure.
Broadly speaking dose is an
indication of how much radioactivity you are being exposed to at any one time.
Nowadays dose is measured in Sieverts but a Sievert is a helluva lot of
radioactivity and in practice it is more convenient to express it in terms of
microsieverts (uSv). Doserate is a measure of radioactive exposure over time,
in micro or milliSieverts per hour (uSv/hr). The Dose ranges on the PDM1 are 30
and 300 uSv, and for Doserate it’s 30 and 300uSv/hr and 3, 30 and 300 mSv/hr.
What the readings mean, and when it’s time to run is another matter, but be
assured that if ever your job entails using an instrument like this,
you’ll know exactly what to do when you see that needle move… There’s only one other item of
interest on the outside and that’s a sliding panel on the base. When open this
exposes a sheet of thin metalised plastic film, and behind that is another
metal film covering one end of the ionisation chamber. The purpose of the panel
is to block Beta particles, which the instrument will detect, but they skew
readings of X-Rays and Gamma rays, which is what the device is calibrated to
measure.
According to the stallholder at
the Surrey antiques fair where I bought this PDM1 (one of a pair of meters he had –
the other, a simple PDR1 rate meter will appear here soon) it was part of a lot
of instruments sold off by a company involved in the digging of the
Channel Tunnel. It sounds quite plausible and there’s no doubt that the
extracted materials would have been routinely monitored. However this one
appears to have been removed from service quite early on in its career, judging by its unusually clean appearance and a ‘Not to be used sticker’ on the meter. In other circumstances
it might have been a risky purchase but since the two meters only cost me £20,
and the film covering the ionising chamber seemed to be intact, it wasn’t a
huge gamble. The meters alone were worth the asking price. It turned out that
the PDM1 had been decommissioned for good reason, someone forgot to change the
batteries and there was a rather nasty mess inside the battery compartment.
Fortunately the damage was minimal and mostly confined to the battery
terminals, which had to be replaced. The corrosive fluid that leaked from the
batteries had dried out and cleaned up quite easily. It didn’t even stain the
thick layer of powder coat protecting the alloy case and apart from the battery
terminals the only other casualty was a foam insert meant to stop the batteries
rattling around. There was a minor problem testing
the unit as PP9 batteries are now obsolete. They are still available but very
expensive and typically sell online for over £7.00, far too much to spend on
what may have turned out to be a doorstop. Luckily they’re really easy to
replicate with a cheap 6 x AA cell battery holder costing £1.50. I still wasn’t
holding my breath; this particular instrument is well over 30 years old but I
needn’t have worried and it fired up first time, responding well to a
particularly ‘lively’ travel alarm clock with radium-painted luminous hands and
face. The readings may not be that meaningful as by now it is well out of
calibration but it definitely detects radioactivity, and long-term readings suggest that it may even be sensitive enough to respond to normal background radiation, and over time,
could let you know if there’s an unexpected increase. What Happened To It? The roots of Nuclear Enterprises
dates back to the 1950s as Netsensors, a company making instruments for the
aerospace industry but after a number of takeovers and mergers it was sold to
EMI in the mid 1960s, and became part of the Thorn EMI group in the late 70s. By then
Nuclear Enterprises was heavily involved in radioactive measurement and
instrumentation, and doing quite well by all accounts, but the division was
sold off in 1987 in a management buyout. I worked for the consumer side of
Thorns in the late 70s and I was aware that the company was
having a tough time. By the mid 80s they were selling off a lot of their
smaller subsidiaries, so it may have been a bit of a fire sale. Anyway, Nuclear
Enterprises continued in the field of nuclear detection and instrumentation and
in 2002 it was acquired by the French company FGP Sensors, at which point the
NE brand and identity seems to have disappeared from view. Back to the here and now and
technology has moved on. Modern instruments are smaller, more responsive, have
many more features and almost certainly cheaper than this old beast so it’s
probably outlived its usefulness. Nevertheless, it is entirely possible that
there are still a few PDM1s of a similar vintage still in service and provided
they’re regularly calibrated and well looked after they can go on for a very
long time. Outside of their natural homes, in the lab or in the field, they’re
not a lot of use to the average citizen and the enthusiast and collector’s
market is quite small, so don’t expect to turn a quick profit if you ever find one going
cheap at your local car boot sale. On the other hand, if you’re of a cautious
disposition, concerned about the next (and probably last, world war…) or living
next door to a flaky nuclear power station or weapons facility, it might be
worth having a working one tucked away, just in case the balloon goes up. It might be a
long wait, though, so don’t forget to remove the batteries… DUSTY DATA First seen 1983 Original Price £? Value Today £10
(1116) Features Down-pointing ionisation chamber with sliding beta shield,
(100sq cm detection area), skin & depth dose/doserate measurement, (30 –
300 uSv, 30 – 300uSv/h & 3 – 300mSv/h, 9cm analogue meter display, battery
condition indication, set zero adjustment Power req. 1 x 9v PP9 & 4 x 9v PP3 Dimensions: 245 x 125 x 170mm Weight: 1.8kg Made (assembled) in: UK Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 8 Gaertner Pioneer G-5B Geiger Counter, 1955
In the years following the Second World War and at
the start of the Cold War, America was in the grip of a desperate arms race, to
develop ever larger and more powerful nuclear bombs. This created a huge demand
for Uranium for refining and processing, mostly into the isotope Uranium 238
for use in weapons and reactors. The US Atomic Energy Commission actively encouraged
both amateur and professional prospectors to locate deposits of Uranium ore,
offering bounties of $10,000 for big finds. Gold is shiny and relatively easy
to spot, when you know where to look, but to the untrained eye Uranium ore looks
pretty much like any other rock. However, it does have one rather useful
property, it’s radioactive. Companies manufacturing Geiger Counters, and scores
of new ones, which appeared out of the woodwork, raced to sell their
instruments to the hoards of hopeful prospectors, often making fanciful claims
about vast fortunes to be made. The reality was somewhat different. Substantial
finds were few and far between and those that found and mined deposits
sometimes received dangerous and often lethal radiation doses whilst
others tried to increase the value of the ore they found by refining it using
suspect DIY methods, leading to large numbers of casualties and deaths.
The sort of compact high voltage B battery the G-5B
uses would have been quite common and widely available back in the mid 50s as
they were used in valve-based portable radios. They stopped making them years
ago but it is possible get modern repros or replicate them by connecting 9-volt
transistor radio batteries in series. However, it’s going to take a fair bit of
work to get this particular unit working again. Intact IB85 Geiger tube are
virtually unobtainable; modern 900 volt tubes might be persuaded to work, but
there are serious question marks over the valve -- not helped by the number
having rubbed off -- and the high voltage transformer. These are a common
failure point as the insulation on the windings degrades over time, especially
if the unit has been stored in a humid atmosphere for any length of time. Even a
tiny pinhole rupture in the insulation can be enough to produce a high voltage arc that
will destroy it. Otherwise it is in extraordinarily good condition for
its age. The metal case is very clean, free of any serious scratches or
corrosion and the green plastic protective shields for the Geiger tubes – on
the underside of the case – are uncracked. All of the switches work; the only
other components (two very large resistors, which can just be seen in the photo above) check out as okay, and there’s
really not much to go wrong with the spark plug. The bottom line is that it
could be restored but for the moment it’s going to have to wait its turn on my
long (and rapidly growing) list of rainy day jobs. For the record I found this one on the US ebay site
some time ago and fully expected it to be snapped up by collectors. It was
accurately titled and described, with a low starting price of $25 and free
shipping (within the US) so I was surprised to discover, just two hours before
the auction was due to end that it hadn’t attracted a single bid. I still had
no doubt that it would fetch a decent price but just in case I put on a
speculative bid of $30 and went to bed. There were no other bids and two weeks
and $45 later (shipping was another $20) it was in my very grateful hands. What Happened To It? The Uranium ‘Rush’ only lasted a few years and it
appears that relatively few Pioneer G-5Bs, or the many other basic prospecting
detectors from the same period, have survived so by rights it should be quite
collectible. However, it was part of a fairly obscure slice of US history and
the market for this kind of Atomic Age curio is currently quite small. They do
turn up on ebay every so often and occasionally, when a couple of bidders get
stuck in, they can top £50. Like prospecting for Uranium it’s not going to make
you rich but relics like this can suddenly take off, and are definitely worth
grabbing, if you ever come across one for a sensible price.
* Update. I am obliged to members of the excellent Geiger Counter Enthusiasts forum on Yahoo for additional information and corrections to my assumption that the spark plug was for voltage regulation, and that the B battery was 45 volts, not 67.5 volts. DUSTY DATA First seen 1955 Original Price $59.95 Value Today £50.00
(0116) Features 2 x IB85 Geiger Müller detection tubes, ‘pump’ type tube
power supply (900-volt nominal), headset output, headset and check source included with outfit Power req. 1
x 67.5 volt Eveready 467, 1 x 1.5 volt filament battery Dimensions: 155
x 140 x 83mm (inc handle) Weight: 620g Made (assembled) in: USA Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 8 General Radiological Ltd Type NE
029-02, 1957
This is not a new development in response to
any terrorist threats or atomic accidents, they’ve had access to them for decades, since
before the Cold War and for at least as long as there have been nuclear
weapons, power stations and radioactive waste being carted around the country.
Here’s an example of one that apparently they used to have back in the fifties
and sixties, at least that’s the story, which I have yet to corroborate, but it
all looks and sounds very plausible.
I found this one hidden at the bottom of a pile of
Fire Brigade related items at a large open-air antique fair in Surrey. The
stallholder said the collection belonged to a retired fireman, and he believed
everything was standard service issue. It appeared to be in very good condition
and came with its original bright red carry case, shoulder strap and the high
impedance headset. The seller didn’t know if it was working or not, hence the
asking price of just £6, which I felt duty bound to haggle down to £4.00 –
bargain of the day! Unsurprisingly it was as dead as a doornail and the
most serious fault wasn’t hard to find. A leaky set of cells had rotted away the
spring steel contacts in the battery compartment. Fortunately there was
no other damage and it cleaned up easily. Connecting a bench power supply
to the unit indicated that the battery test function was okay, but the detector
circuit remained stubbornly silent. The two transistors produced some slightly
anomalous readings but there were no obvious faults. Replacing the transistors
didn’t help so the suspicion has now shifted to the high voltage transformer,
half a dozen or so long obsolete selenium rectifiers and the Geiger tube. The
big problem, though, is the lack of a circuit diagram, so it will have to join
the waiting list until I have time to re-trace the circuit, or track down a
service manual. It almost certainly is repairable but it’s going to take time. On the plus side the condition, outside and in, is extraordinarily good;
the circuit boards looks as though they was assembled yesterday, and the case
shows only very light signs of use. What Happened To It? Up to date information on the sort of radiological monitoring equipment currently used by Fire Brigades in the UK is a bit thin on the ground but in 1995, in reply to a parliamentary question on the topic, it turned out that there were only 6 units to cover the whole of London. Seemingly radioactivity was not considered to be a huge priority back then. They’ve probably upped their game by now and it would be very surprising if a lot more instruments have not been issued, but it is highly unlikely that any of these old NE 029-02s are still in circulation. General Radiological Ltd., was bought out by the Rank Organisation in the early sixties and since then seems to have vanished from sight. Although the NE 029-02 is well built it is no match for modern instruments, in terms of sensitivity and accuracy, and my guess is that they wouldn’t have remained in service for very long, probably less than 10 years. Maintenance would have been a problem; first generation semiconductors had a fairly short life expectancy Other components, like electrolytic pacitors and selenium rectifiers, degrade over time and the one thing you don’t want in a Geiger Counter, used in safety-critical applications, is unreliability.
I can find no information on how many NE 029-02s were built but I suspect it was probably in the low hundreds as the demand wouldn’t have been that great. That would make this one quite rare but sadly it doesn’t translate into big bucks; it’s a bit too weird to attract most collectors of vintage electronics, and unfortunately, in its present state it is of little practical use. Nevertheless, it’s an unusual and arguably historical example of early transistor technology and if anyone has any more information, or a circuit diagram I would be very interested to hear from them. DUSTY DATA First seen 1957 Original Price £? Value Today £25
(0715) Features Mullard
MX129/01 halogen-quenched gamma-sensitive Geiger Müller tube (0.0004 –
0.2R/hr), selectable range (0-5mR/hr & 0–0.5 mR/hr), 2 x transistor HV
generator (2 x STC TJ1), battery test function, waterproof case, headphone
output, carry case & strap supplied Power req. 3
x 1.5 volt AA cells Dimensions: 198
x 123 x 49mm Weight: 1.5kg Made (assembled) in: England Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 9 CDV-700 Civil Defence Geiger Counter 1960 - 68
These instantly recognisable instruments were first produced in the early 1960s, at
the height of the Cold War. Hundreds of thousands of them were made for the US
Civil Defense Corps, to be kept in fallout shelters and issued in the aftermath
of a nuclear attack. Several different models were made and the manufacturing
was contracted out to specialist companies, including Electo-Neutronics Inc
(ENI), Universal Atomics, Victoreen, Anton and Lionel, the latter being better
known to many Americans as a maker of toy trains. The CDV-700 (sometimes CD V-700) was the most sensitive model; it
uses a Geiger Muller tube and can easily detect low levels of background
radiation up to lethal doses. Other models, like the CDV-715 and 717 were only
capable of sensing very high levels and if you ever saw the needle move on one
of those you were probably going to die... No expense was spared in their design and
construction. They were built to last; those that survived mostly still work,
or can be easily bought back to life as the electronic circuitry is very simple
(most had just two or three transistors). They run off standard 'D', type torch
batteries that last for several weeks in continuous use. The Geiger tube is
housed in the detachable probe handle and it has a clever rotating shield that
allows the user to discriminate between Beta (nasty but doesn't travel very
far) and Gamma (really bad and gets through almost anything) radiation. It was
meant to be easy to use and came with an instruction manual that could be
understood by untrained personnel. Calibration was simple, on the side of the
unit is a 'Check Source' label containing a small piece of radioactive material
(Radium D/E or Lead 210) and when the probe is bought close to it, the meter on
the top can be adjusted to give the correct reading. Over the years the
radioactive material has decayed - the half-life of the source is around 22
years -- so they are no longer reliable but there's still enough activity
enough to give a decent reading. What Happened To It? CDV Geiger Counters, Survey Meters and
dosimeters were produced throughout the 1960s and the stocks were scrupulously
maintained - regularly tested and recalibrated -- until the mid 1990s when they
were gradually phased out. Local and Federal government bodies auctioned off
stocks and many of them ended up in private hands, schools and colleges, which
is where I come in. A few years a go I bought up a few CDV-700s, mostly 'as
new' unissued stock, which I have been steadily selling off on my
anythingradioactive web site. Sadly they are coming to an end now but you can
still find them on ebay in the US. The only problem is they are quite heavy and
the shipping costs can be prohibitive, moreover in some states the export is
banned, probably due to the radioactive check source labels. The great thing about CDV 700s is that they are
a practical gadget and (mostly) still work. You would be surprised how much
radioactivity there is out there, everything from the hands and dials on old
watches and clocks with luminous hands (radium paint was used up until the
1950s), glassware and porcelain that uses uranium tints and glazing, old gas
mantles (doped with thorium to increase brightness) and even granite kerbstones
which can contain traces of naturally occurring uranium ore. I doubt that you will see very many of them here in the UK but if you do, it's not a silly price and it still works grab yourself a little piece of Cold War history. DUSTY DATA First seen: 1960 Original Price £ unknown Value Today? £30 - 100, depending on condition Features: Single switch off x100, x10 & x1
range, detachable probe with beta shield, carry strap, water-resistant case,
three range settings, covering 0 - 0.5, 0 - 5 and 0 - 50 mR/h (millirontgens
per hour), check source label, high impedance headphone Power req. 2 or 4 D cells (depending on make) Weight: 1.5kg ex batteries Dimensions: 120 x 210 170 Made in: USA Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 7 Victoreen CDV-715 1B Survey Meter, 1965
The Victoreen CDV-715 was produced at vast expense and in
large numbers (almost 600,000 were made) throughout the mid to late 1960s, at
the height of the Cold war. They were intended for use by US Civil Defense
personnel in the aftermath of an attack, and designed to indicate if it was
safe to leave your bomb shelter. It looks a lot like the classic Geiger
Counters of the era and it does indeed measure radioactivity, but this is quite
a different beast and technically known as a Survey Meter. It’s definitely not
a Geiger Counter for the simple reason that the radiation detecting device
inside the box is an Ionisation Chamber, rather than a Geiger Muller tube, and
whereas Geiger Counters generally measure (and count) relatively low levels of
radioactivity; Survey meters like this respond only to very high, and usually
lethal doses, which is why you never want to see that needle move. Following the end of the Cold war in the l990s the US Civil
Defense scrapped most of these meters, tens of thousands of them were sent to
landfill or sold as scrap but a lot found their way onto the market through
government surplus sales. Unfortunately they are often mistakenly or
misleadingly labelled as Geiger Counters and inadvertently bought by people who
believe that they are going to protect or alert them to radioactive leaks,
contaminated food and so on. This is something the CDV-715 definitely cannot
do. There are usually quite a few of them on ebay (US) and I suspect that in a
lot of cases they are innocently described because the seller simply doesn’t
know much about it. However, there are plenty of examples of them being
deliberately mis-sold, and this happened a lot in the aftermath of the
Fukishima power plant accident in 2011; at one point they were being sold on
Amazon, with optimists asking several hundred dollars for them. Ion Chambers are one of the simplest types of radiation
detector and you almost certainly have at least one of them in your own home,
as they are a key component in most household smoke detectors. Essentially it’s
a small, enclosed metal cylinder with an insulated electrode inside. A voltage
is applied across the electrode and the body of the cylinder and when
radioactive particles enter the can the gas inside (air in the case of the
CDV-715) is ionised, generating a small current that is detected by a simple
electronic circuit. If there are enough particles, a reading will be displayed
on the meter. Basic ion chambers like this one are pretty insensitive and it takes
a lot of radioactivity to produce a reading but is possible to increase their
sensitivity by filling the chamber with specialised gasses at high pressures.
Incidentally, the ion chambers in smoke detectors work in a slightly different
way. They have a small radioactive source inside (normally a tiny pellet of
Americium 241), which emits a constant stream of alpha particles – it’s okay,
they are very weak and can’t get out. This produces a constant ionisation
current, but if smoke enters the chamber the stream is interrupted and this
triggers the alarm. The 715 is actually very easy to use. It has only two
controls, the knob in the middle has a spring-loaded circuit check position
that tells the user that the battery is okay and it is working. The next
position is for zeroing the meter using the small black knob beside the handle
(ion chambers are very sensitive to humidity) and there are three range
settings for gauging the level of radioactivity, calibrated in the now almost
defunct Roentgen units. They were built to government specification by several
companies, this one is made by scientific instrument manufacturers Victoreen,
other makers include Lionel (a well known US toy maker) and Landers Frary &
Clarke. At the time money was no object, reflected in the quality of the
materials and the high build quality. There is little to go wrong – leaky batteries
were the commonest cause of failure -- and during their service life they were
regularly checked and maintained. Many of the ones that come on to the market
are still in good condition, though they often show signs of wear and tear on
the case. What Happened To It? Survey meters are still being made though most modern
instruments are a lot more sensitive than the 715, designed for specialist
applications within the nuclear power industry and rarely end up on the open
market. This one is part of a batch of near-mint units that I purchased several
years ago. I occasionally sell them to collectors of Cold War memorabilia and
experimenters on the strict understanding that they are for decorative purposes,
conversation pieces or doorstops… The price and quality of the ones on the ebay in the US tends to be fairly variable but the real problem is that they are bulky and fairly heavy, and although they often sell for $20 - $50 the cost of shipping one to the UK can easily be as much, if not more than the purchase price. The current concern over all things nuclear also means they are sometimes intercepted and confiscated by UK Customs, even though they are most definitely not radioactive or in any way restricted for sale or use. Clearly it’s not something you will ever need and even one in working condition is no more than a novelty but you might find a use for one as a stage prop or part of a Halloween costume but be warned, it’s probably not the sort of thing you should wave around in public, unless you want to cause a panic or get arrested… DUSTY DATA First seen 1965 Original Price £n/a Value Today £25
– £50 depending on condition Features High
range ionisation chamber survey meter, 0 – 500 Roentgens/hr (4 ranges), batter
test & zero set functions, high quality moving coil meter display, carry
handle & strap Weight: 1.4kg Power req. 1
x 1.5 volt D-Cell Dimensions: 220
x 103 x 140mm Made in: USA Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 4 Victoreen CDV-717 Radiological Survey Meter, 1965
The CDV-717 is based on the CDV-715 but with one
important extra. The Ionisation Chamber, which detects the high levels of gamma
radiation that survivors are keen to avoid, lives inside a detachable box. This
can be connected to the main unit by a 6.5 metre (25 foot) long cable, so it
can be dangled outside the shelter to take readings. This is clearly a major
bonus and means you can stay reasonably safe whilst those outside are dying a
horrible death, or turning into zombies – depending which experts you talk to. Unfortunately, in the absence of a nuclear holocaust,
that is just about all the CDV-717 and its ilk is good for. Almost all Survey
Meters are designed to detect only extremely high levels of Gamma radiation.
It’s also important to say that they are not to be confused with more sensitive
instruments, like Geiger Counters, which is what they are often deliberately
(and occasionally mistakenly) called on ebay, with prices to match!
Overall the standard of construction is extremely
high. They must have cost the US Government a very pretty penny and upwards of
100,000 of them were made, almost all by the Victoreen Company of Cleveland
Ohio. This particular one rolled off the production line in August 1965,
according to a date stamp inside the case, and it probably spent most of its
life in storage in Civil Defense depots or shelters. It is in virtually as new
condition, still in its original box, and would only have been removed for
periodic tests and calibration checks. It came into my possession in the early 90s as part of
a small consignment of CDV-700 Geiger Counters. The US seller included it as a
free sample, to see if I would be interested in buying some more of them. He
had several hundred up for grabs, with an asking price of just $5.00 each. In
retrospect I foolishly declined the offer, mostly because they are really heavy
so the cost of shipping them from the US would have been astronomical and, at
the time, there was simply no market for them. Nowadays they are being sold on
ebay (mostly misleadingly) as Geiger Counters for between £50 ands £150, but
ignoring the fact that they are next to useless for anything radiological, the
vintage parts inside the case are now worth more than a few bob to vintage tech
enthusiasts. Hindsight is a wonderful thing…
What Happened To It? When the Cold War was finally declared over, some
time in the 80s, the US Civil Defense either destroyed or sold off its vast stockpiles
of 60’s and 70s Geiger Counters and Survey Meters. Where necessary they were
replaced by smaller and more accurate and reliable, modern instruments. (That’s
open to debate and ironically, modern instruments, reliant on microchip
technology, are much less likely to survive the EMP of a nuclear blast).
However the iconic yellow CDV-700, 715 and 717 models live on and continue to
be the go-to stereotypical Geiger Counters for Hollywood movies and TV series.
I’m always amused when they ‘tick’ as none of them ever had any sort of built
in speaker. The CDV-700 model is a genuinely useful and
surprisingly sensitive instrument but the best thing you can say about these
old Survey Meters, from a practical point of view, is that they make half
decent doorstops. Tragically they also end up butchered, as table lamps, or
dissembled and used as dog bowls and ashtrays. Hopefully there will never be a
time when they can be used in anger, but I’m hanging on to mine, just in
case… DUSTY DATA First seen 1965 Original Price £
a lot! Value Today £50
(0116) Features Detachable ionisation chamber radiation sensor, remote
cable connection (6.5 metres/25 feet), 3 ranges (0-0.5, 0-5, 0-50 and 0-500 r/hr), ruggedised meter,
battery/circuit check functions, meter zero & range set controls Power req. 1
x 1.5 volt ‘D’ cell Dimensions: 220
x 160 x 115mm Weight: 2.3kg Made (assembled) in: USA Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 7 CD V-742 Pen Dosimeter & CD V-550 5b Charger, 1962
The CD V-742 is one of a range of pen dosimeters, elegantly
simple little devices that measure how much X-Ray and Gamma radiation the
wearer has been exposed to. This particular model is a high range type with a
range of 0 – 200 Roentgens; others, like the CD V-730 and 740 had ranges of 0 –
20 and 0 - 100 Roentgens respectively. These days the Roentgen has been largely
replaced by the Sievert as a measurement of radioactive dose but to put that
scale into perspective, exposure to 500 Roentgens over a period of several
hours is usually lethal. In theory one of these could come in quite
handy if you somehow managed so survive a nuclear attack but in practice if
your CD V-742 ever showed any sort of reading you were probably a goner…
Gamma radiation penetrating the tube has the effect of
dissipating the charge, causing the whisker to move up the scale in direct proportion
to the level of radioactivity. In normal use the dosimeter would be read at the
end of the day or shift, to determine how much radiation the wearer has been
exposed to, and if the reading was really high, it was time to start planning
for an early retirement… Hundreds of thousands of dosimeters and chargers were
manufactured from the mid fifties to the mid sixties for the US Civil Defence
corps and distributed to the nationwide network of shelters and control centres.
Dosimeter pens and CD V-750’s were made by several companies on money no object
contacts for the US Government, including Bendix, Jordan, Universal Atomics and
in the case of this one, the International Electronic Hardware Corporation. The
charger is sturdily made, strong enough to survive an atomic blast in fact. It
is powered by a single standard D Cell and there’s even a spare torch bulb
inside. Although they are more than 50 years old both devices appear to be in
full working order, though in the absence of any highly radioactive sources to
test it on, that has to be taken on trust… What Happened To It? The CD V-742 and 750 shown here are part of a batch I
acquired a few years ago as part of a US Government clear out of old stock.
Such is the simplicity and reliability of the design that pen dosiumeters are still being made to this day, for
use in the nuclear industry and military applications. The basic
design has hardly changed over the years, though there are many variations
on the theme, including a wrist-worn version, which until recently was standard
issued for NATO armed forces. For years old pen dosimeters and chargers like these sold on
ebay US for a few dollars and were mainly bought for their novelty value and by
collectors of Cold War ephemera. They have little or no practical use but there
was a huge spike in demand, and a tremendous price hike, following the
Fukishima accident in 2011. Sad to say they were mostly misleadingly sold as
personal radiation monitors, and purchased by people frightened by the scary news
reports coming out of Japan but it’s doubtful that a 742 would have read
anything, further than a few tens of metres away from a damaged reactor. Things
have settled down and although prices haven’t fallen back to pre-Fukishima
levels, you can find dosimeter and charger sets on ebay, often in ‘as-new’
condition for less than £30; pens on their own cost around £5.00. It’s probably
not the sort of thing you would want to go out of your way to buy, but who
knows? If they ever drop the big one prices are bound to go up and you would be
glad to have a few of them handy, for throwing at zombies and the three-headed
wolves roaming the post apocalypse wasteland… DUSTY DATA First seen 1962 Original Price £n/a Value Today £25 Features CD
V-742 quartz fibre indicator, 0 – 200 Roentgens. Illuminated press to charge
contact, zero set control, spare bulb Weight: CD
V-742 22g, CD V-750 420g Power req. CD
V-742 n/a, CD V-750 1 x D Cell Dimensions: CD
V-742 112 x 9mm, CD V-750 104 x 104 x 68mm Made in: USA Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 6 Wallac Oy RD-5 Geiger Counter, 1963
In fact there appears to have been only one of them, a company called Wallac Oy, which is now part of US-owned PerkinElmer Lifesciences. This RD-5 is one of what I believe to be a small range
of radiation monitors, produced in the 1960’s at the height of the Cold War and judging by
the almost complete lack of information regarding this, and other Wallac
products from the sixties, it appears that not many of them were made or it wasn’t around
for very long. Either way this seems to be one of the very few to have
survived, or escaped into the public domain. It deserves to be better known, though as it was a
competent and rugged instrument, designed to cover a wide range of radiological
measurements, from very low-level contamination to fry-your-brains, zombifying
fallout and at its heart is a Geiger Müller detection tube called the MX-142.
This was manufactured by Mullard (part of the Philips group), and it is quite
unusual because it is sensitive to the three main types of radioactivity, known
as Alpha, Beta and Gamma. The vast majority of Geiger Counters can detect Beta
and Gamma radiation, because of the energy and penetrating power of the
particles and waves, but Alpha radiation, by comparison, is extremely weak. So
weak, in fact, that it cannot travel more than a few centimetres through the air,
and it can be blocked by a thin sheet of paper. This makes it
rather difficult to detect, as it would be blocked by the metal or glass enclosure of
a Geiger tube, (they are sealed and contain an exotic mixture of gasses
that react to the ionising properties of radioactive particles). The solution,
used on the Mullard MX-142 and most other Alpha-sensitive GM tubes is to fit a very
thin window to the end of the tube, made from the mineral Mica. This still
blocks some Alpha radiation, but enough of it gets through to be measured. When
not in use the GM tube, which is on the end of a curly cable, stows away in a
compartment on the rear of the case.
Operationally it is very easy to use; there are only
two controls, a rotary on/off range switch and a toggle switch for selecting
the internal speaker or external headphone sockets (banana type). There is also
a pair of banana sockets for an external 3VDC power supply. The unit is powered
by two 1.5 volt D cells, which fit into two tubular compartments on the front
of the case. The speaker is mounted beneath the angled carry handle on the top
of the case. Readings are displayed on an unusual analogue meter with a 270-degree
movement. The dial is illuminated by a tiny and sadly, long-deceased bulb, a
type that apparently hasn’t been made for more than 30 years. It is housed in a
tough all-steel case and although it’s looking a bit battered now, with a few
small patches of surface rust, there is no doubt that it could survive for
another 50 years. I stumbled across this one, at a large open air antiques fair in Surrey; it was in amongst a pile of what looked like
scrap metal, in a pretty sorry state and the stall holder seemed quite happy
with the £5.00 that I offered for it. It was a gamble and there is only so
much you can check on a Geiger Counter that clearly hasn’t been used in
decades, with an old, and leaky battery stuck in the holder tube. There was also no
way to check the GM tube, apart from a visual inspection of the mica window and
if that had been broken or cracked my offer price would have fallen to 50 pence
as they are nigh-on irreplaceable. It looked a lot worse than it actually was and once
the battery had been extracted it was clear that there was only light corrosion on the battery contacts. I didn’t dare power it up, though. Any faults on the circuit board
would, like as not, have blown the delicate germanium transistors and diodes, so – and this is now routine on any early 60s gadget passing through my hands – it
was treated to a new set of electrolytic capacitors and a thorough circuit
check, looking for obvious shorts, open circuits and dry soldered joints. I was
a little disappointed that it didn’t fire up straight away but I hadn’t taken
into account the valve circuitry, which takes a few moments to get going, after
which some reassuring ticks came from the speaker. The meter remained
stubbornly inert, though but a quick dab of the soldering iron on a dry joint
on one of the meter wires got it moving again. Not surprisingly the GM tube
seems to have lost some of its youthful vigour and alpha sensitivity is mediocre but it responds well to beta and gamma sources. It is by now far beyond
accurate calibration, but it works, and that’s clearly a remarkable achievement
for such an ancient instrument, so hats off to the designers and manufacturers. It was just as well that it worked, troubleshooting
such an idiosyncratic circuit would be a nightmare. Fortunately there was the
majority of a circuit diagram folded in the bottom of the case, though the
middle part had rotted away. It was actually for an RD-7, presumably a later
model, though I was able to determine that the key parts of the two circuits
are almost dentical, but the missing portion will have to remain a
mystery unless someone out there has an intact copy. What Happened To It? I have been unable to find out anything about Wallac’s
activities in the 60s or the RD-5, beyond a few citations in scientific
publications where it had been used to take measurements. The simple controls
and rugged construction suggest that it may have been designed for the military,
which might also explain why there are so few of them around today -- in fact I have never seen another one -- so if anyone can fill
in the gaps I would be very pleased to hear from them. It’s present value is impossible to gauge; the market for vintage Geiger Counters is tiny, in fact there are probably only a couple of dozen weirdos, like me, in the world, who covet them and I doubt if any of them could be persuaded to pay more than £50 for one, even if it is in fairly good shape and semi-working order… DUSTY DATA (Manual -- partial circuit diagram) First seen 1963 Original Price £? Value Today £50 Features Alpha,
Beta, Gamma-sensitive mica window Mullard MX-142 Geiger Müller tube, ranges 0 –
10 & 0 - 200mr/h, internal speaker with headphone output sockets, external
power socket, 2 transistors (OC72 & OC74), 1 x DL-67 sub miniature pentode
valve, 6 x XC12 voltage regulators Power req. 2
x 1.5 volt D cells Dimensions: 245
x 150 x 100mm Weight: 2.7g Made (assembled) in: Finland Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 8
UPDATE I am grateful to Joel
Mellin, from Finland, for the following background information about Wallac. Wallac manufactured radiation meters from the late 1950s until the 2000s, and perhaps even after that. The name and ownership of the company has changed over the years, and manufactured radiation monitoring instruments under the Alnor OY and Rados brands.
RD5, RD6 and RD7 models were produced in large quantities, for various Finnish organisations including Defence, Civil Protection, Fire Brigades, the Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority (aka ‘STUK’), hospitals and universities, for medical use.
Technically, they are all relatively similar, although minor improvements and changes have been made to each model. Unlike successor models (e.g. Wallac RD8, and Alnor RD10), they were never sold outside Finland, which partly explains their rarity and the paucity of data in the wider world.
They occasionally come up for sale in Finland as the various organisations auctioned old stocks, and they also turn up at flea markets and yard sales etc. Joel also provided links to
Finnish websites and YouTube with more information and videos featuring Wallac instruments.
http://www.radiohistoria.fi/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1464680793 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8nc6d1fwjU4 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xPawXDuM-GY Plessey
PDRM-82 Portable Dose Rate Meter, 1982
That said, this is actually a rather interesting device and uncharacteristic of a lot of post WW 2 military hardware, which tended to be clunky, reliant on old technology and frequently unreliable. To begin with it is surprisingly small, and in stark contrast to the big, unwieldy radioactivity detecting devices issues to troops in many other countries. Most other instruments of that era, like the classic US CD V-700,relied on analogue moving coil meter displays to show radioactive levels; this one has a large 4-digit LCD display, and remember this was the early 1980s and LCDs had only been around for a relatively short time.
The only downside to the PDRM-82, apart from the fact
that it is virtually useless, is that the readout is calibrated in units of
radiation dose known as ‘Grays’ (Gy). It is borderline archaic and almost no
one uses Grays anymore (for the record 1 Gray is equivalent to 100 Rads, which
probably still doesn’t tell you very much…). The PDRM-82 has a working range of
0-300 centigrays (1 centigray equals 1 Rad, in case you were wondering), but
without knowing about such sciency things as absorbed radiation dose, dose
equivalents, and the ability to relate that to more widely used units of
radioactive dose and contamination, the average squaddie or civil defence
volunteer would probably have been hard pressed to say how many centigrays
means get the hell out of there. In fact the only real indication that things
are getting a bit hairy is the display, which flashes when it reaches 300
centigrays per hour. The lack of any audible or more attention grabbing warning
indicator suggests that it could be possible for an unobservant user to wander
into extremely dangerous, highly contaminated areas, without knowing a thing
about it. What Happened To It? As the stockpiles of the PDRM-82 reached the end of
their operational lives they were either scrapped or sold off, usually in
Government military surplus auctions and for 10 years prior to the Fukishima
accident you could pick them up for a few pounds, usually unused, as new and
still in their original cardboard box, along with the accompanying strap,
lanyard and instructions. I have bought and sold quite of few of them over the
years and was always careful to point out that they were pretty much useless,
though I did once manage to get one to read close to normal background levels
of radioactivity by changing the Geiger tube to a more sensitive type. It
wasn’t a practical mod, though, the microcontroller took exception to the alien
tube and the LCD display was meaningless. Given sufficient time and expertise I
suspect it may be possible to convert and reprogram it to do something useful,
but quite honestly, unless you had access to large stocks of them it simply
wouldn’t be worth the effort. PDRM-82s continue to sell on ebay for stupid amounts.
I would say £10 to £20 would be a fair price for someone collecting Cold War
memorabilia to pay but I have seen them go for more than £150. This is almost
always due to the seller suggesting it is a practical radiation measuring
instrument. Sometimes it is a genuine mistake and due to lack of knowledge, but
I suspect that more often than not the seller knows full well its capabilities
and is just trying to make a fast and dishonest buck. This also suggests that
there may be a lot of people out there checking the readouts on their PDRM-82s
every time they hear of a nuclear accident or spill somewhere in the world. On
the plus side, they are never going to be unduly alarmed as it is probably
always going to read zero... DUSTY DATA First seen 1982 Original Price £250 Value Today £20 Features High
dose survey meter, halogen quenched Geiger Muller tube detector, 4-digit LCD
display, detection range 0-300 centigrays/hour (cGy/h) in 0.1 cGylh increments,
+/-20% accuracy display flash at 300 cGy/h, self test. Power req. 3
x 1.5v C cells Dimensions: 170 x 140
x 55mm Weight: 400g Made (assembled) in: England (Poole, Doset) Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 5 Kvarts DRSB-01 Radiation Monitor, 1988
Technically it is fairly unsophisticated, basically
just a ‘ticker’ -- as they came to be known -- and that’s pretty much all it
does in response to a source of radioactivity. It is definitely not a Geiger
Counter, as they were frequently and misleadingly described, for the simple
reason that it doesn’t count anything. In fact there are no displays, just a
pair of LEDs. The green one, marked ФОН indicates normal background radiation
with the occasional flash (and accompanying tick), whilst the red one, labelled
ВНИМАНИЕ means ‘Attention’ and when you see that light up, you know it’s time
to get the hell away from whatever is making it flash and tick!
You may have noticed that the Mk1 version has two
SBM-20 tubes, and this made it very sensitive, possibly to the point where it
was producing too many false alerts, or it was just a cost-saving measure,
either way the Mk 2 only has one tube and it is unlikely that most users would
have noticed, but it was a great shame for the small band of Geiger Counter
enthusiasts in the west. During the mid 1990s a great many surplus DRSB-01’s
were being sold across Europe and the US, often for just a few pounds; the
first ones I bought cost less than £10 each. Most of those sold in the early
days were the twin-tube Mk1 version and they were bought in considerable
numbers, by experimenters and even some companies, essentially for the SBM-20
tubes. Apart from their high sensitivity and military grade build quality they
cost a fraction of the price of Geiger tubes made in the west, which tended to
be less sensitive, needed more elaborate circuitry and in many cases were
encapsulated in glass, which made them extremely fragile. Back now to the DRSB-01, and as you may be able to
see from the internal photograph, there’s not much to see. The plastic case is
simply and cheaply made and it is powered by a pair of AA cells, which can last
for several weeks. The lower half of the circuit board is responsible for
generating the 300 or so volts needed to power the GM tube (the black
cylindrical component in the bottom right hand corner is a ‘toroidial’ high
voltage transformer); the upper half is concerned with detecting pulses from
the tube, driving the two LEDs and generating the ticks from a piezo sounder.
It is a characteristically messy design, with loose wires and tacked on
components – typical of state-owned Soviet factories in the 80s and 90s – but
it works, and they were surprisingly reliable. What Happened To It? There’s not a lot of information available on the
Kvarts factory, prior to the breakup of the Soviet Union, but I am fairly
certain that they were involved in the manufacture of military equipment; later
they went on to become a leading maker of scientific instruments; their present
status is unknown. The DRSB-01 appears to have been in production until at
least 1995, by which time it was it had become rather dated and despite a
facelift, with those snazzy yellow and orange stripes on the front panel (the Mk1 has a very plain appearance)
consumer demand had long since tailed off. I bought a fair few DRSB-01s and other Russian made
instruments, like the DRSB-88, DRSB-90 and Biri-1 during the late 90s
and early noughties. Prices were incredibly low to begin with and I resold a
few of them on ebay at a small profit for £20 to £25 but as stocks started to
run out Russian suppliers put up their prices and they virtually disappeared
from view, until the Fukishima accident. Quite a few turned up on ebay,
presumably from old Soviet stockpiles, often for ridiculous amounts of money
and I remember several being snapped up for more than £100 but supplies ran out
very quickly and in the last few years they have become quite rare. It is difficult to say what sort of money they might
fetch nowadays, though one thing is certain, it is nothing like those mad post
Fukishima prices. No one would seriously consider using one as a radiation
monitor but they could have a certain novelty value and might appeal to
collectors of Soviet era technology. If nothing else they are worth at least as much as the SBM-20 tubes they contain (currently around £10 - £15 apiece), so
the Mk 1 version is the more desirable, and providing it is in good working
order £10 - 30 might be a reasonable price DUSTY DATA First seen 1988 Original Price £? Value Today £10
- £100 Features Hard
Beta/Gamma sensitive SBM-20 Geiger Müller detection, built in sounder. Dual LED
display (‘Background’ and ‘Attention’), on/off switch Power req. 2
x 1.5v AA cells Dimensions: 150
x 65 x 23mm Weight: 118g Made (assembled) in: Former
USSR Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 7 Kvarts DRSB-90 Geiger Counter, 1988
Most of these instruments were fairly basic and in truth
only capable of alerting the user to dangerously high levels of radioactivity.
This meant that that they were of little practical value though they had a
certain novelty appeal and would occasionally click and tick in response to
natural background radiation, but there were exceptions. This is one of them;
it’s the DRSB-90 and it is a true Geiger Counter in that it uses a Geiger
Müller tube for detecting beta and gamma radiation, and a circuit that ‘counts’
the clicks and displays the result on an analogue moving-coil meter. Thanks to its SBM-20 Geiger tube it is actually quite sensitive and readily responds to low
level sources, including naturally radioactive minerals like granite (you would
be surprised how lively some roadside kerbstones can be…), as well as other
everyday objects, like old (pre mid 50s) clocks, watches and compasses with
luminous, radium-painted hands and dials, antique ceramics (Red Fiestaware) and
glass (Vaseline, Depression, Uranium), doped with Uranium to give it a
characteristic lustre in sunlight. It also surprises a lot of people that salt
substitute (Lo-Salt, Nu Salt etc), contains small but detectable amounts of
radioactive Potassium K40. Operation is relatively straightforward, once you have
figured out the control labelling, which is in Russian. One of the exporters supplied sticky labels, with the functions translated into English,
but it was always a bit of a turn-off for some users. For the record there are
three slide switches; the large one is for power on/off and battery check –
shown on the meter. Next to that is a two position range switch (x1 or x10),
and below that a slide switch for muting the built in piezo sounder, which
‘chirrups’ with each detected event, and emits a continuous tone when the alarm
threshold is exceeded. There are also two buttons, one for a small light to
illuminate the meter at night and the other is for ‘dumping’ or zeroing the
meter. The latter is because it uses a simple ‘integrating’ counter circuit
that displays an accumulated reading over a period of around one minute. If the
source of radioactivity is removed the meter needle falls only very slowly, so
it is necessary to press the dump button before a new reading can be taken. It
is powered by three AA cells and these can last upwards of 200 hours with continuous
use. The meter is also labelled in Russian but it is reasonably
easy to figure out. The top scale is in microsieverts per hour (0 – 3), whilst
the lower one shows microroentgens per hour (0 – 300), both of which are widely
used and readily understood international units of radioactivity and radiation
dose. Comparisons with a modern instrument, using a calibrated check source,
shows that the DRSB-90 remains reasonably accurate, and still perfectly capable
of warning the user to step smartly away from whatever is making it chirp…
What Happened To It? When they first became available in the late eighties, the
DRSB-90 was at the high end of the price range for Russian radiation monitors.
They typically sold for £20 - £25, which wasn’t a lot, even then, for what is
still a relatively sophisticated instrument. The problem was you could pick up
cheap and cheerful ‘clickers’, like the DRSB-88 for around a fiver, and with no
immediate threat from radioactive fallout, it was no contest. They probably
didn’t sell in very large numbers and the Russian labelling on the controls and
rather old-fashioned design didn’t help. As supplies dried up the prices rose a
little but eventually they disappeared, apart from the occasional sighting on
ebay during the nineties and early noughties, where they would typically go for
£40 - £50. For the past few years, since the Fukishima accident in fact, prices
have soared and the last time I saw one on ebay it fetched almost £200! It’s clearly not a frontline collectible but
should one ever cross your path, it still works and the price is the right side
of stupid, I would grab it, because you never know when another radioactive incident
is going to send prices spiralling… DUSTY DATA (Manual) First seen 1989 Original Price £25 Value Today £80 Features SBM-20
GM tube (hard beta/gamma sensitive). 2 x LED display (orange ‘event’, red
alarm), audible bleep/alarm, 12-transistors, 1 x colortron voltage regulator,
moving coil meter, power on/off/batt test, range switch (x1/x10), meter
backlight, audio mute, meter ‘dump’, Power req. 3
x 1.5v AA cell Dimensions: 147
x 70 x 30mm Weight: 155g
Made (assembled) in: USSR Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 6 Kvarts DRSB-88 Radiation Monitor, 1989
The threat of radioactive fallout from Chernobyl accident
produced considerable public alarm and it was hoped that cheap and simple
instruments like this would give the public some reassurance that they weren’t
about to be exposed to dangerous radioactive contamination. As it turned out it
wouldn’t have done users much good, unless they were living uncomfortably close
to the exclusion zone. This was due to it’s tiny Geiger Muller tube detector,
which isn’t very sensitive and almost certainly incapable of detecting
emissions from fallout further than a few tens of kilometres from the stricken
nuclear plant. Nevertheless, it was, and still is a working radiation
monitor and will register relatively low-level sources when held against the
detection window on the side of the case. These include things like old watches
and clocks that have luminous radium painted hands and dials, ‘lively’ minerals
and old thorium doped gas mantles.
The DRSB-88 was one of several models produced by Kvarts,
which, prior to Chernobyl was mostly involved in manufacturing scientific
instruments and radiation monitors for the Soviet military It’s a very far cry
from the standard of construction of products then coming out of Hong Kong and
Japan. For example, the way the designers got around the problem of keeping
moisture out of the way of high voltage components clearly betray it
semi-agricultural Soviet origins. On a similar western or far eastern product
the first line of defence against water getting into the works would be to put
it inside a water resistant case. The Kvarts solution, which is elegantly
simple and works brilliantly, is to coat the whole thing in goopy wax. It’s
very effective, and only becomes a problem if anything goes wrong as the thick
wax makes it nigh on impossible to repair. What Happened To It? Sadly the supply of ultra cheap DRSB-88s eventually dried
up and by the early noughties the few that were still around were selling for
between £30 and £50 on ebay. By the time of the Fukishima disaster, in 2011,
the price of all radiation monitors had shot through the roof and on the odd
occasion that a DRSB-88 appeared on ebay it would fetch £100 or more. Things
have calmed down a lot since then and Geiger Counter prices have come down. Second
hand DRSB-88s come up for sale every so often but they are almost always non-working.
It’s not the sort of thing collectors of vintage electronics are likely ever to
be interested in, nor does it stack up well against more recent radiation
monitors, but it could be in great demand once again,
if there is ever another nuclear accident, though if you do have one, I
wouldn’t rely on it too heavily to keep you out of danger… DUSTY DATA First seen 1989 Original Price £5 Value Today £30? Features Power req. 1
x 1.5v AA cell Dimensions: 133
x 36 x 28mm Weight: 55g Made (assembled) in: Former
USSR Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 7 Biri-1 Keychain Radiation Monitor, 1987
Everything changed following the Chernobyl disaster.
Nuclear power’s mostly benign image was tarnished forever and the lack of
information meant it was a fearful time for the Soviet people and those caught
up in the accident, which brings us to the Biri-1 keychain dosimeter. It was
one of a number of personal radiation detectors produced in the USSR in the
wake of Chernobyl and sold to concerned citizens. They were made in large
numbers, mostly by state-owned factories involved in manufacturing monitoring
equipment for the military. The Biri-1 is no larger than a slim box of matches and for its size it is surprisingly sensitive. The radiation sensor is a tiny SBM-10 Geiger Müller tube just 28mm long, able to detect both beta and gamma radioactivity. The tube is powered by a simple high voltage circuit that produces a charge of 400 volts; when a radioactive particle or ray enters the tube it ionises a mixture of gasses, generating a tiny pulse that is amplified and processed to flash a red LED on the top and a chirrup like sound that merges to a constant squeal when the radiation level rises to potentially hazardous levels. It is a really clever design; the high voltage circuit ‘pumps’ the Geiger tube to constantly top-up the charge, and this is used to create a regular low-level ‘tick’ that indicates that the device is working. The high voltage transformer doubles up as an audio transducer and a small metal plate, attached to it by a screw, acts as a baffle to amplify the sounds. Build quality is a typical of Soviet era gadgets. Outwardly
it appears fairly crude – compared with slick Japanese made devices of the
period. The on-off switch on the rear is a particularly poor design and prone
to failure, and the high voltage areas of the circuit board are coated in a
wax-like substance, which provides protection against the ingress of moisture
and stops the components moving around, but apart from the switch, it still
works well after more than 30 years. The other shortcoming is the batteries; it
comes with a pair of rechargeable button cells, which have a tendency to leak
after a few years, but the biggest problem is the mains charger. This is
a dreadful design and in addition to having a badly fitting battery cover and terminals
that corrode easily, it gets really hot, falls apart easily and is potentially
lethal. Fortunately there is a near equivalent alkaline cell (LR9) that fits
snugly into the Biri’s battery holder and can keep it powered continuously for
a week or more. What Happened To It? I first came across the Biri-1 in the late 1990s when
surplus stocks were being sold by a Russian entrepreneur for around $20 each.
Over the next few years I bought a number of them and they proved to be very
reliable. Gradually the supply dried up and they disappeared from view, though
recently a US company had a few NOS (new old stock) Biri-2s for around $40.
These were basically the same as the Biri –1 but with modified case cosmetics,
though sadly these now seem to have run out but they do still turn up
occasionally on ebay. Following in the wake of the Fukishima accident quite a few
companies have been knocking out personal radiation detectors and it has to be
said most of them are over-priced rubbish and virtually useless for meaningful
monitoring of the very low levels of radiation they are supposed to warn
against. This old Biri-1 wipes the floor with many of them and at close quarters
responds to relatively weak sources, such as uranium doped Vaseline glass,
the radium-pained luminous watch and clock hands and dials that were common
before they were banned in the 1950s and even the naturally occurring uranium
in granite kerbstones is enough to get a few chirrups. As a radiation safety
device it is of questionable value but it is certainly a conversation piece and
a handy thing to have about your person if you are into urban prospecting, rock
hunting or antique collecting. Just keep it well away from anyone undergoing radiotherapy
investigation or treatment, it will scare the pants off you both… DUSTY DATA (Manual) First seen 1987 Original Price £? Value Today £40 Features SBM-10 Geiger
Müller tube, audible clicker/alarm, LED indicator Power req. 2
x A-06A rechargeable cells (western alkaline equivalent LR9) Dimensions: 65
x 35 x 12mm Weight: 30g Made in: USSR Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 7 Staticmaster Polonium 210 Anti-Static Brush 1978
So far so ordinary, but
there’s a few things about the Staticmaster that makes it rather interesting. Firstly
it’s radioactive, that’s
right, if you look closely, just behind the bristles you can see a small
grating with some brown material deposited on the surface. This is the radioactive
element and it creates a ‘field’ of ionised particles up to an inch or two
ahead of the bristles and this has the effect of neutralising the static charge
that makes dust stick to surfaces. Here’s the second surprise,
the radioactive material used in the brush is none other than Polonium 210, the
same stuff used in the recent horrific poisoning incident that resulted in the
death of the Russian ex-KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko. Polonium 210 emits alpha
particles. These are very weak and cannot penetrate skin so they are relatively
‘safe’ in the contained environment of the brush head. It is also significant
that Polonium 210 has a half life of 139 days, which basically means that virtually
all of the radioactivity disappears within a couple of years of manufacture, as
the polonium turns into an inert isotope of lead, so these old
brushes are now completely harmless. The alpha particles emitted
by Polonium 210 become dangerous when ingested into the body in liquid form or in very fine particles in quite significant
qualities so before you ask, you would need a great many brushes, some pretty sophisticated equipment and very specialised knowledge to create anything dodgy from them.
What Happened to It? Here’s another surprise,
they’re still being made, and this is the only legal way you can obtain
Polonium 210. The brush shown here was made in 1978 by a US company called
Nuclear Products. Nowadays they are manufactured, along with a wide range of
industrial and consumer anti-static products by Amstat Industries. DUSTY DATA First seen: 1965 Original
Price
£8.00 Value Today? £2 Features:
Radioactive anti-static brush Weight: 100g Dimensions: 125 x 30 x 20 mm Made in: USA Hen’s Teeth (10
rarest): 1 P.H. Ltd Spinthariscope, 1970?
The Spinthariscope was
invented back in 1903, by William Crookes and for most of the past 100
years they have been regarded as interesting novelties and educational
toys. This one, which I believe dates from the late 60’s was designed for use
in schools, which explains its rather battered appearance. The reason you don’t see
them very often is because inside there’s a speck of radioactive material,
0.02 micrograms of Radium to be precise. It all sounds a bit scary but
the fact is, the Radium source is miniscule, less radioactive than the sensors in most household
smoke detectors, and a magnitude less than old watches and clocks with luminous
hands but anything labelled as radioactive these days worries a lot of
people… See my anythingradioactive site
for a basic guide to radioactivity and – shameless plug – lots of cheap Geiger
counters and nuclear novelties. The Radium source shoots out alpha particles, and if you know anything about radioactivity you’ll know these are the weakest sort, barely able to penetrate a sheet of paper (though you certainly wouldn't want a lof of them inside your body...), but the point is none can escape from the cannister.
Inside the tiny piece of Radium
is mounted on a small spike in the middle and beneath it there’s a coating of a
chemical that almost certainly includes Zinc Sulphide. This has a very
interesting property. When it is struck by an alpha particle it emits a brief
flash of light, and this is what you see when you look through the eyepiece. You have to use it in total darkness, and you need to allow at least five minutes to let your eyes adjust, but it’s worth the wait and you’ll see hundreds of flashes each minute as atoms disintegrate and smash into each other.
What Happened To It? Spintariscopes have rather gone out of fashion thanks largely to misinformed attitudes towards radioactivity and the inevitable health and safety concerns. Nevertheless, at least one company in the US is still making them, but does not export them outside the US (even though you would need tens of thousands of them to make a small 'dirty' bomb).
This one isn’t that special, it turned up in a box of lab equipment bought at a
boot sale a couple of years ago and the whole lot only cost me £5.00.
However, good ones are most defintiely collector's items. Original ornate wood and brass Crookes ‘pattern’ Spinthariscopes,
dating from the 1920s and 30s, are worth a small fortune and I have seen them
selling on ebay to collectors for several hundred pounds. DUSTY DATA First seen: 1903 Original
Price
£? Value Today? £25 Features:
Eyepiece with magnifying lens, 0.02ug Radium source Power req.
n/a
Weight: 0.18kg Dimensions: 68 x 60mm Made in: England Hen’s Teeth (10 rarest): 8 Kodak Pony 135 Model C, 1958
Kodak’s Pony range was mainly aimed at amateur
photographers; it’s an intermediate model, sitting between basic point and
shoot cameras, like the classic Kodak ‘Brownies’, and more advanced and capable
pro and semi-pro designs. The first Pony’s appeared in the late 1940s but this
one, the Model C dates from the mid to late 50s. It’s a tough little camera,
with a brown Bakelite body, good quality mechanics and optics. It uses 135 film
cassettes, which was the Kodak designation for 35mm film; this is loaded into a
compartment on the rear of the camera and manually threaded onto a take-up
reel. The film is advanced, one frame at a time by turning the large knob on
the right side of the top panel (looking at it from the rear), and when the
roll has been exposed, it is wound back into the cartridge by the big knob on
the left.
In its pure state Thorium is only weakly radioactive
and emits mostly Alpha particles, and on the scale of nastiness this is
considered the least harmful type, outside of the body at any rate. Alpha
radiation has very little penetrating power – particles can be stopped by a
sheet of paper and do not pass through skin – so on the face of it, its
inclusion in glass lenses doesn’t seem especially controversial. However, as
Thorium decays it creates Beta and Gamma radiation (weirdly, the production of
decay products means that the radioactivity increases over time, which is the
opposite of what you would expect). Beta and Gamma has more penetrating power
than Alpha radiation and it can cause problems, especially when there’s enough
of it, in close proximity to living tissue. Fortunately the amounts of
radioactivity given off by these and similar lenses is not generally regarded
as hazardous, under normal circumstances and with normal use. However,
radiation is tricky and highly contentious stuff so play safe and on no account
put a bag full of Thorium-doped lenses in your trouser pockets… Joking aside, if this is something you are
concerned about the clever thing to do is read up on the subject, and if you
want to check if the cameras in your collection, or plan on buying, have
radioactive lenses do your homework – there is plenty of information online --
and it could be worth your while getting hold of a Geiger Counter (sorry for the
shameless plug). My little Pony came from ebay a good few years ago
and as far as I recall it cost a couple of pounds. It is still in great
condition and I have no doubts that it is still capable of taking photographs.
I actually sought this model out, as a radioactive test source, after acquiring
one of my first Geiger Counters. It proved to be very effective, though it
needs to be in close physical contact with most instruments to get any sort of
reading, and it doesn’t register anything when held a few centimetres
away. What Happened To It? Kodak’s Pony series ran from 1949 to around 1962 and
throughout that period most models were fitted with either an Anaston or the
higher quality 4-element Anastar lenses, and almost all of them used Thoriated
glass. By the time it was being phased out Kodak had introduced the first of
its pioneering Instamatic cameras, which at the time was arguably one of the
biggest advances in photography for 50 years. Kodak obviously didn’t abandon
the 35mm format but it gradually evolved into a serious amateur and semi pro
format, with Instamatic and Instant cameras rapidly taking over the mass
market. It is not known how many Pony cameras were made but you can take it as
read that it was a heluva lot. They are really well made, and usually come with
a protective leather case so there are still plenty of them around. They’re
flea market and car boot sale regulars and because they look so ordinary, tend
not to attract much attention and typically sell anywhere from 50 pence to
£5.00, sometimes more if they’re in tip-top condition, boxed and come with
instructions. Pony cameras are not yet serious collectibles but inevitably
prices will only increase so now is as good a time as any to add one to your
collection and whilst it is not much to look at, it does have an interesting
story to tell. By the way, although there are no significant health hazards
associated with this and other cameras with radioactive lenses if you have one
then it is prudent not to let children play with it and it’s a good idea to
store it safely, preferably in a metal box.
DUSTY DATA First seen 1955 Original Price £22
($34) Value Today £10
(0315) Features 35mm
format, Thorium doped Kodak Anaston lens: 44mm, shutter: B, 1/25, 1/50, 1/100,
1/300th sec, aperture: f/3.5, 4, 5.6, 8, 11, 16, 22, presets
Ektachrome/Kodachrome Bright/Hazy/Cloudy/Cloudy Bright, shutter sync, optical
viewfinder, film advance interlock (to prevent double exposures) Power req. n/a Dimensions: 140x
65 x 85mm Weight: 510g Made (assembled) in:
Rochester, USA Hen's Teeth (10 rarest): 5 |
|
All information on this web site is provided as is without warranty of any kind. Neither dustygizmos.com nor its employees nor contributors are responsible for any loss, injury, or damage, direct or consequential, resulting from your choosing to use any of the information contained herein. |
Copyright (c) 2007 - 2024 anythingradioactive.com