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Very Chilled Legumes!
When you say period mic, what years are you talking about and are you talking about a fixer upper?
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Here's some Globe Scout guru stuff... http://www.w8ji.com/boatanchors.htm
Built for use with a high impedance mic. So any crystal mic will work FB but I'm betting old Leo had a D-104 in mind for it.
http://www.vintagessb.net/index.htm Get on with the guys on saturday morning. Send your pic in. Be famous.
Or a JT-30, the "poor man's D-104!" <-- That's a link.
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41rPBFHC83L.jpg
AND...if you play harp, those are the gold standard for amplifying the blues!
Strange how the old JT-30 ended up being the perfect "harmonica mic" and is still in use today. Something meant to be a cheap PA mic ends up being a legend.
There are alot of astatic mics in use. I suspect that continue for years and years.
Ahhh....yep:
http://www.wb4hfn.com/DRAKE/DrakeArt...ke_7077Mic.jpg
http://www.collins-21.com/1104c_astatic_beau_c.jpg
http://salestores.com/stores/images/...7/AST878DM.jpg
The differences being that the Astatic-branded version goes for $59.00 new and the Drake fetches upwards of $200.00 used. :shock:
Which points out what a low sales market ham radio is for most manufacturers and why the old originals bring so much $$$$ while the JT-30 was so popular among musicians playing the harmonica that when Astatic stopped making it another company started production. It looks like the JT-30 will be around for a long time to come. Along with some other old mic styles and types that have been discontinued by the original manufacturers for a long time but others brought back because of high demand.
One of my favorite mics was the Argonne AR-57 duel element. I had on on my 11 meter good buddy radio , back in the day
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