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Pye
The Pye name first became known in 1896 making electrical
instruments, and they diversified into wireless manufacture in the early 1920's
as it became obvious that a potential market might exist. The company was run as
a family business until 1929 when it became a public company having been bought
by Charles Stanley (with financial backing). Based at Cambridge throughout its
life, during the post-war consolidation of radio manufacturers it would find
itself part of the larger Philips group.
Pye was responsible for one of the most famous and enduring
cabinet designs; that of the "rising sun" fretwork design. It can  be
seen incorporated here on the model Q from 1932. This is a 4 valve battery
portable T.R.F. receiver, housed in a solid walnut cabinet. Valve line-up was
SG215, HL2, HL2, PEN220. The receiver used a paper cone loudspeaker, and
required H.T., Grid Bias and an accumulator to operate. The cabinet featured a
ball-race turntable so that the receiver could be easily rotated in order to
pick up the strongest signal from the internal frame aerial. The speaker takes
up the whole of the front of the cabinet, in order to maximise output from the
not very powerful cone. The controls are mounted in a panel to one side of the
receiver, and a door at the back provides access for stowage of the batteries
and accumulator. The "rising sun" design was used on a series of Pye
radios during the early 1930's, and re-appeared again briefly after the WWII in
a small plastic set. The "rising sun" receivers are now very
collectable because of their obvious association with the Art Deco movement,
sunrise patterns forming a mainstay of design of that period incorporated into
objects ranging from garden gates to furniture.
Continue to the Pye
Push-Pull Output Bandspread Receiver
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