Thanks to @nblr and also @fr3d I'm now deep in nostalgia about the kits by Kosmos I had as a child.
It all started with the "Elektro & co" I got for Christmas when I was ~6. I remember that my mom had to help me read the instructions, and my dad helped me shoot a dent into our kitchen bin ^^ Good memories!
Then came the "electro E 2000". One afternoon I built a foam cutter with it and cut every bit of styrofoam I could find in the house ^^
1/
Momentum hat dies geteilt.
Gina Häußge
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •Most of my adventures probably were done with the "electronic X1000" kit and its addons. I had the X1000, X1500 and X2500.
The most important memory for me with those is building a metal detector and then realising that I could hear radio on its sensor output when I held the detector write close to the radiator. It was the US military's station in AM, which means everything was in english and I didn't understand a word (yet), but I was incredibly amazed!
2/
Gina Häußge
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •After I got chemistry lessons at school I also got interested in that, so for Christmas I also got a C2000 kit!
I have to say that this didn't fully work for me sadly - I always was scared to do the experiments and do something wrong and then have no materials left over, as they got used up quickly... Not an issue with the electronic kits for sure!
Great memory was my dad showing me what happens if you put a ball of aluminum foil into HCl in a plastic cup on a block of ice ^^ 3/
Gina Häußge
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •Very exothermic reaction that led to a big hole in the ice block 😬
I'm very fond of all of these memories, and I'm extremely glad that my parents got me these precious gifts as a kid. And I try to tell them that as often as I remember (and will do so again right away).
All of this certainly helped me turn into the nerd I am today ^^
4/4
~n
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •Gina Häußge
Als Antwort auf ~n • • •I grew up in a household where I regularly had to wash my hands somewhere else than in the bathroom because the sink was occupied by a partially coated copper plate soaking in a plastic cup full of HCl and H2O2 to be turned into a PCB.
And my dad studied chemistry and loves making shit go boom.
So... when I showed interest in that stuff, THAT argument would really not have worked XD
Benno
Als Antwort auf ~n • • •But I had a text book and a very trusting pharmacist.
and your parents were right to be cautious: I am responsible that the playground in our village got a "no open fire" sign because I relocated the more exothermic experiments to the sandpit there.
The Tattooed Nonna 🫒
Als Antwort auf Benno • • •@benno never trust young kids with experiments
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Ha…
United States marine (1976-2016)
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)Gina Häußge
Als Antwort auf The Tattooed Nonna 🫒 • • •Juli Jane
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •"The most important memory for me with those is building a metal detector and then realising that I could hear radio on its sensor output when I held the detector write close to the radiator. It was the US military's station in AM,"
Damn, the exact same thing happened to me. Sure about US military station, though? For me it was "Voice of America" which was/is in English and US government, but is not military.
Gina Häußge
Als Antwort auf Juli Jane • • •Gina Häußge
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •There was also this in my home town:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Barr…
But then, I was maybe 8 or 9 at that point, so it might also have been "Voice of America" after all and I just turned that into AFN when I found that years later.
Most important: It was people talking out of my electronics kit in a language I couldn't understand a word in but was sure was English ^^
former barracks in Friedberg, Germany
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)overflo
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •Kosmos hat echt einige wirklich coole Sachen gemacht.
Gina Häußge
Als Antwort auf overflo • • •Ja, leider sind sie heutzutage auch teilweise etwas schwurbelig unterwegs, und soweit ich gesehen habe sind die heutigen Elektronikbaukästen mehr Plastik als Metall :/
Und ja, ich hatte TIERISCHES Glück mit meinen Eltern hier. Beide Funkamateure und als sie gemerkt haben, dass ich technisch interessiert bin wurde das direkt hart gefördert :) Wo das hingeführt hat, siehst du heute an mir 😂
vautee
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •Memories.
~n
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •Daniel Gibson
Als Antwort auf ~n • • •Quickly got annoyed by the color coding of resistors (I'm red-green colorblind) and lost interest
Daniel Gibson
Als Antwort auf Daniel Gibson • • •I only found kosmos.de/de/easy-elektro-game…
(and a few related kits) which seems more simplified - OTOH it at least seems to have labeled resistors
Easy Elektro - Games
www.kosmos.deGina Häußge
Als Antwort auf Daniel Gibson • • •Sophie
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •23n27
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •zeitverschreib ⁂
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • •@Gina Häußge
Wow, that brought back some memories. All I got as a child was a Philips (or Schuco?) Electronic Basis Lab.
@~n @Fred
Gina Häußge mag das.
Henning Paul DC4HP
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •schiermi
Als Antwort auf Gina Häußge • • •