Topic: A Level nostalgia and thoughts on batteries
Nostalgia and long past youth. I suddenly remembered taking my A Level Physics Practical exam; the written part was done at school, but for the practical we had to go to the Imperial College Examination Halls just behind the South Kensington Science Museum.
We were each allocated two of a number of experiments set out in a laboratory there, and I was happy to get an electrical experiment. There was something under cover of an upturned box, and I had to find out what it was with a couple of bits of electrical equipment in the open. There was a voltmeter and I think one of those beautiful wooden boxes with resistors brought up to brass strips on top - you fitted a tapered brass key to short out two strips and hence the resistance inside. No rotary switches then. It was obvious from measurements that there was a 2 v accumulator inside with a series resistance.
Everyone knows what a car battery is, generally a 6 cell overall 12 V lead/acid battery. If you go back to your youth you may remember the line up for a bettery wireless set: A big box 120V carbon/zinc battery tapped at 30V intervals, for HT+ or plate power rail; a slim 9V battery tapped at 1.5V intervals for Grid bias: and a glass single cell 2V lead/acid battery "accumulator" with screw terminals for the radio valve filaments.
This accumulator was fitted with a handle as it had to be taken regularly to a (often) bicycle shop to be recharged. The shop may have had DC 250 V instead of AC mains, and its charging station might be a panel with a number of incandescent light bulbs for current limiting.
Ah, it was a lifetime ago.
PS, on reflection, the resistance may not have been a resistance box, as the current through such a precision instrument from the accumulator could be destructive. And the battery may have been one of those enormous cylindrical carbon/zinc cells used for bell circuits. But then, I wouldn't have been able to introduce chat about the lead/acid accumulator in wireless sets. But again, use of a lead/acid cell would have the advantage of a low series source resistance, making the experiment easier to set up.