A month or two after I made my presentation to the New Jersey Antique Radio Club on mounting mineral crystals for detectors, Marv Beeferman ask if I’d examine two detectors that he had obtained in a box lot at the Henry Ford Museum auction last year. He handed me two brass cylinders about an inch and a half in diameter. Each had a hard rubber base with two brass pins. |
The first detector contained a small piece of rock, showing the unmistakable red-orange color of zincite (zinc oxide), in contact with a second mineral sample. This is the classic perikon detector. The second mineral is probably Bornite, Cu5FeS4, but it’s hard to make a positive identification without damaging the specimen. By the way, zincite is a rare mineral except in the Franklin area of Northern New Jersey. (Local interest.) |
The second detector consisted of a piece of layered lead-grey material, held in a carefully machined clamp, in contact with a hairpin-shaped flat metallic spring. After consulting several vintage radio books andA Field Guide to Rocks and Minerals by Frederick H. Pough, I identified the mineral as Molybdenite, MoS2, an early favorite of the Telefunken Company. |