This has nothing to do with radio astronomy. I have been a ham radio operator for many years. I have never owned a nice new expensive piece of ham gear. Throughout the years I have built my own radios or fixed up old used equipment. One of my first transmitters was built from a article that appeared in September 1964 Electronics Illustrated. The article was titled The Scrounger. The premise was that you could build this Morse code 10 watt transmitter for $5 or less depending on what parts you could "scrounge" from you "junk box". This page presents the original article that I scanned from a recently acquired copy of the old magazine. There are also a couple of pictures of my Scrounger as it exists today.
Click the magazine picture below for the article in pdf form.
I somehow managed to hold on to my Scrounger over the years, though the power supply did not make the trip through time. I built my Scrounger many years after the article appeared, probably about 1972. My original version looked something like the one in Electronics Illustrate which was built on an inverted square pie tin. At some point I must have decided I wanted something "fancy" so I transferred the electronics to an old TV UHF converter box. I kept the separate power supply on a pie tin. I don't know why I did this. It was dangerous to have the high voltage connected from one chassis to the other, especially the way I did it with a used octal socket. It is really a wonder that I survived those high voltage years. I received many high voltage shocks!
Below are pictures of what has survived all these years and a move to Hawaii. The original 6V6GT is gone. I hope I find in one of my junk boxes some day, but I can probably get another on ebay. I no longer have the KE4Y call. I am now KH6SKY. That toilet paper tube really hasn't held up well after 35 years. I upgraded to a used a surplus meter military from Olson electronics (remember them?), instead of the neon bulb.
The inside view is a bit scary. Behind the meter is a homemade shunt so that the meter would indicate plate current. It was wound from enameled wire stolen from an old transformer.