Model 118 "Royal Scintillator" (ca. mid 1950s) |
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Of
the various survey instruments produced by Precision Radiation Instruments,
this was the top of the line. In
general, the “Royal” was similar to the Model 115 “Super Scintillator”
- both units were designed for
airborne or vehicle surveys. However, the Royal scintillator was bigger and
came with more features. The case was real leather and it had a protective
cloth cover. The
probe was connected to the meter by a 12 foot cable, there were four time
constants, and it came with an output jack that allowed the output to be fed
to an external strip chart recorder. The
larger (2.25”) crystal size of the “Royal,” gave it several times the
sensitivity of the “Super.” Without a doubt however, the most unique thing about the “Royal” was the fact that it could operate as a scaler, not just a ratemeter. All the user had to do was switch the unit to the scaler mode and it would perform a one minute count. As the counts were recorded, the needle moved across the meter until the count time was up. The final resting position of the needle indicated the accumulated count. Neat! |
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The earliest references I have found to the "Royal Scintillator" date from 1954. And since the only circuit diagram I have for it is also dated 1954, I am guessing that it probably first went into production that year. Range: 0 - 0.01, 0 – 0.025, 0 – 0.05, 0 – 0.1, 0 – 0.25, and 0 – 1.0 mR/h Batteries: five 67.5 volt, two 22.5 volt, and fourteen 1.5 volt. Dimensions: 13” x 17” x 5” Weight:
25 pounds Price: $1995.00 in 1954. For some reason, maybe it was just a part of being in LA, Precision Radiation Instruments was also in the music business. While none of the PRI-owned labels (Craftsman, Tops, etc) were household names, they did produce records for some reasonably well known entertainers such as Mel Torme and Lena Horne. One PRI 33 1/3 record worth mentioning: "If the Bomb Falls," a primer on surviving a nuclear attack. References Operation and Maintenance Manual for the Precision Model 118 "Royal Scintillator." No date. Precision Instruments
catalog, form 1001B, 1954 copyright; AEC Radiation Measuring
Instruments, RIB-8 (supplement 2) |
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Last updated:
02/26/08
Copyright 1999, Oak Ridge Associated Universities