Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
This commit is contained in:
154
hpr_transcripts/hpr2614.txt
Normal file
154
hpr_transcripts/hpr2614.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,154 @@
|
||||
Episode: 2614
|
||||
Title: HPR2614: My 1948 Truetone D1835 Tube Radio
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2614/hpr2614.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:34:45
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
This is HPR Episode 2614 entitled, My 1948 Truton D1835 Dube Radio.
|
||||
It is hosted by John Culp and is about 11 minutes long and carries a clean flag.
|
||||
The summer is, I talk about my new, 1948 D1835 Dube Powered Radio.
|
||||
This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
|
||||
University Access to All Knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
|
||||
Hey everybody, this is John Culp and Lafayette Louisiana recording another episode of
|
||||
Hacker Public Radio.
|
||||
And this morning I'm in our new house that I've mentioned a few times in previous podcasts.
|
||||
And taking this opportunity to talk about something I've hinted at in the last couple
|
||||
of episodes.
|
||||
And that is a new radio that I got now new as a relative term.
|
||||
It's new to me.
|
||||
It's actually very old in terms of when it was built.
|
||||
What I bought is a Truton.
|
||||
What is the model?
|
||||
I think I've got the model number maybe in the YouTube video that I posted of it, but
|
||||
I'm going to put some pictures in a link to like a photo album on Flickr in the show
|
||||
notes that has some pictures of the exterior and the insides and stuff like that.
|
||||
But it's a Truton radio that I've determined is from 1948.
|
||||
It's very large.
|
||||
It's about three feet tall and two feet wide, maybe a foot deep.
|
||||
It's like a console kind of radio.
|
||||
It's got a large cabinet.
|
||||
And the power on the inside is tubes.
|
||||
Of course this is way most electronics back then were done was by tubes.
|
||||
This is a tube radio and I picked this up at an estate sale.
|
||||
And it worked and the wife gave the green light.
|
||||
She loved it.
|
||||
It thought it would be perfect.
|
||||
This is another one of those things that we decided.
|
||||
We just bought this house that's a 1950s era house and it'd be cool to have some things
|
||||
in it that are from that time period.
|
||||
And this radio seemed to fit just fine.
|
||||
And so we bought it and when I got it home I discovered not only did it work, but also
|
||||
it's got a really surprising feature, at least from something of that time.
|
||||
It was surprising to me anyway.
|
||||
And that is it's got an auxiliary input.
|
||||
So it doesn't just let you play AM and FM radio, which it does, although maybe I just
|
||||
need a better antenna, but I can't seem to get many stations on this thing.
|
||||
Although the one station it does get really really well is an awesome oldie station, AM 1330.
|
||||
And it's funny it's tagline is the greatest hits of all time.
|
||||
Of course the greatest hits of all time for them means the greatest hits of the top
|
||||
40 from the 1960s through the 80s.
|
||||
So the the music the time period of the music is not exactly appropriate for the radio,
|
||||
but it somehow it seems very quaint coming out of this radio.
|
||||
And it actually sounds pretty good.
|
||||
So it but anyway I found that there is an RCA input.
|
||||
So I found amongst my mini audio cables, if you guys are like me, you probably have
|
||||
a box full of cables and adapters and all kind of stuff like that.
|
||||
And I found a cable that goes from RCA to 3.5 millimeter mini plug, which of course is
|
||||
what you can plug into a phone.
|
||||
And I plugged that cable into the back and then plugged the mini plug into my phone and
|
||||
played with the selector switch that changes between AM and FM.
|
||||
And I found that it has a third setting for auxiliary.
|
||||
One part of the problem is that somebody I think refurbished this thing and I put that
|
||||
in air quotes because they it looks like they took it apart and then painted the entire
|
||||
cabinet black where it probably originally was some kind of dark wood finish.
|
||||
At least the pictures I found of comparable models online were a natural wood finish and
|
||||
not paint.
|
||||
But they also painted over any indications on the case as to what selector you're on.
|
||||
And so you kind of have to either remember which position each thing is in or else just
|
||||
kind of played by air each time.
|
||||
But I plugged my phone in, started playing something and then played with the selector until
|
||||
low and behold I heard the sound that was coming out of my phone coming from the speaker
|
||||
of the radio.
|
||||
And so in that respect it's very versatile.
|
||||
It would be a very trivial matter to convert this into a Bluetooth enabled 1940s radio
|
||||
because you just get a Bluetooth adapter plug it into the RCA input and there you go.
|
||||
I haven't done that yet because I've got a couple like three or four other Bluetooth devices
|
||||
in the house and I don't want to get device confusion going here but we might get there
|
||||
at some point.
|
||||
Right now the wife and I really like the radio station that it gets and so we've just
|
||||
been playing the radio while we clean the house and move furniture around and do stuff
|
||||
like that and we're both really enjoying it.
|
||||
Is there anything else to say before I fire it up?
|
||||
So I'm going to turn on the radio and it's going to be on this radio station and I promise
|
||||
Ken Fallon that I will not play more than a few seconds of music that could be copyrighted
|
||||
and make us fall afoul of any copyright laws.
|
||||
Then I'm going to demonstrate just playing an audio file from the phone.
|
||||
I've downloaded from archive.org a broadcast of a 1954 World Series game I think.
|
||||
I mean if I were a kid in the 1940s and 50s I would have been wanting to listen to
|
||||
radio baseball games on the radio.
|
||||
In fact that's what I did when I was I love radios.
|
||||
As far back as when I was six, seven, eight years old I remember having this little transistor
|
||||
radio and I loved baseball.
|
||||
We lived in middle Ohio and of course the local team for us was the Cincinnati Reds and
|
||||
the Reds had a couple of legendary broadcasters that gave just great audio broadcasts and
|
||||
I remember taking that little radio into my bed every night and turning it on and listening
|
||||
to the Reds games and so I have really fond memories of listening to baseball on the
|
||||
radio incidentally if you hear creaking sounds that's me walking around on the hardwood
|
||||
floor in the house every once in a while there will be a creak in the audio I'm sure.
|
||||
Okay, I'm going to turn on the radio now.
|
||||
Since it's a tube radio it takes a moment before the sound actually starts to happen and
|
||||
so it's hard to know exactly how far to turn the volume and power knob to get the right
|
||||
volume.
|
||||
Play it by ear.
|
||||
Here we go.
|
||||
Okay, I've turned it on and a light has illuminated the analog dial where you can see
|
||||
AM frequencies and FM frequencies and the name true tone.
|
||||
There we go.
|
||||
That's a song that's playing just on this radio station right now.
|
||||
I've actually got it turned down fairly low.
|
||||
This radio will go very loud.
|
||||
Okay, so I'm going to plug in my phone now and change the selector.
|
||||
I think I've got an on-exilery now and I'll play it I'll try to play this audio file
|
||||
from my phone.
|
||||
Where's my VLC app?
|
||||
There we go.
|
||||
Okay, I'm going to turn up the volume here and here we go, yep.
|
||||
Here's the baseball game.
|
||||
You may be interested in the fact that this is the 12th time in 49 World Series.
|
||||
That's the classic has gone the limit of seven games.
|
||||
Of course, there was a time, you remember when the Easter play passed five out of nine.
|
||||
Prior to the seven game limit, when it was necessary to win five out of nine, the series
|
||||
went to eight games four times.
|
||||
In the 11 previous series that have gone the seven game limit, the National League teams
|
||||
have won seven out of it if you decide to put any faith in previous happenings.
|
||||
Sounds like they're just doing the preliminaries for the game there, but I don't know, but you guys,
|
||||
but anybody who grew up listening to baseball on the radio and who likes baseball appreciates
|
||||
that kind of broadcast and also, man, the sound of that broadcast coming out of that radio
|
||||
is just wonderful and we're in a house that comes from the 1950s and we're starting to
|
||||
get some furniture from that area too because for one thing, it looks good and for another
|
||||
we're finding that modern furniture doesn't fit as well in a house like this as it does
|
||||
in modern houses, like it's generally too big.
|
||||
So I just bought a chair last night at Salvation Army for 20 bucks, that's probably a 1950s
|
||||
or 60s armchair and it's much smaller than the armchair is that you'll find at most furniture
|
||||
stores now and it fits these smaller rooms that have lower ceilings and stuff like that.
|
||||
Anyway, I hope you'll go look at the pictures that I've posted on my Flickr account of the radio.
|
||||
I've got a photo of the whole unit from the front and then I've got a really nice picture
|
||||
of the guts of it in the back that shows the tubes and the big wheel that turns the cord
|
||||
for the analog radio dial and a transformer and the capacitors and various stuff like that.
|
||||
And then I also turned it on its side and took a picture through the bottom where you can see
|
||||
the big speaker on the front of the case and what looks like an antenna on the side of the case,
|
||||
it looks like a long cable round, round and round and round and round and round and so I'm assuming
|
||||
that's an antenna. Probably the AM antenna, I don't really know, NY Bill or some person more
|
||||
familiar with electronics, probably be able to answer that question better than I can.
|
||||
Anyway, I hope you've enjoyed hearing about and hearing a little bit of actual playback
|
||||
from my 1948 True Tone 2 Radio. This has been John Culp in Lafayette, Louisiana. Bye, y'all.
|
||||
You've been listening to HecopublicRadio at HecopublicRadio.org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast and click on our contribute link to find out
|
||||
how easy it really is. HecopublicRadio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon
|
||||
Computer Club and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com. If you have comments on
|
||||
today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up
|
||||
episode yourself. Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
|
||||
Attribution, ShareLight, 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user