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The Weekend Observation Quiz. X Rated.

In the old T.V. series Danger UXB in episode 10 there is an AVO meter used.


Q.1. Which model is it?


Q.2. What is the location of the old power station shown?


WARNING. There are some soppy bits and some biological scenes that may offend some viewers with a weak constitution. But the series was shown on T.V. in the late 70s so can't be too shocking.


I love Judy Geeson. What a fine actress.


Clue. https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x6xjle0


Good luck,


Z.


Parents

  • ebee:

    My first multimeter was an Altai, I miss the needle meters as you could tell much more from first jerk to settled reading than with a digital loads of numbers spinning around. Bar graph on digi meters mitigates this a little bit. Happy days.

    Watching all the excitement about the first moon landing fifty years on reminds me of another bygone -  my first tape recorder captured touchdown, 3 inch spool battery operated rather than the proper mains  ones which had spools the size of a car tyre - shoppertunities advertised in weekend newspapers. again happy days.


    anyway . Back to the quiz ..............................




    Yes I agree about the usefulness of needle type analogue multimeters ebee. I still use one occasionally, especially for fault finding and some electronic work where I want a stable reading.  Altai did a large range of audio leads and other electrical, audio  and electronic items. I used to buy Altai items in bulk years ago from wholesalers in Birmingham. The catalogue was large.


    I still service old cassette tape recorders as a hobby. I like the working moving parts and sound combination. Mending them is like a big boy's Meccano hobby.


    Z.

Reply

  • ebee:

    My first multimeter was an Altai, I miss the needle meters as you could tell much more from first jerk to settled reading than with a digital loads of numbers spinning around. Bar graph on digi meters mitigates this a little bit. Happy days.

    Watching all the excitement about the first moon landing fifty years on reminds me of another bygone -  my first tape recorder captured touchdown, 3 inch spool battery operated rather than the proper mains  ones which had spools the size of a car tyre - shoppertunities advertised in weekend newspapers. again happy days.


    anyway . Back to the quiz ..............................




    Yes I agree about the usefulness of needle type analogue multimeters ebee. I still use one occasionally, especially for fault finding and some electronic work where I want a stable reading.  Altai did a large range of audio leads and other electrical, audio  and electronic items. I used to buy Altai items in bulk years ago from wholesalers in Birmingham. The catalogue was large.


    I still service old cassette tape recorders as a hobby. I like the working moving parts and sound combination. Mending them is like a big boy's Meccano hobby.


    Z.

Children
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