In addition, for repeated seeking operations, pressing a foot switch on the driver’s floor up to the left where the “dead pedal” is located on modern cars would reactivate the Seek at whatever sensitivity was last selected.
Pressing the Country button had the same effect except that full sensitivity was enabled so that the very next available station would be selected. When a station was tuned, the motor stopped. It was known as the “Town & Country” radio since it used a pair of switches marked “Town” and “Country.” Pressing the Town button actuated a motor to rotate the tuning mechanism while the receiver sensitivity was reduced so that only local (stronger) signals would be received. This was a popular option on some Ford products in the 1950s. 1950s-1970sĪ common feature of modern car radios is the “seek” function which allows tuning from one station to the next at the push of a button. In 1952 Blaupunkt became the first maker to offer FM receivers. When cars switched to 12-volt batteries, the same arrangement was used, with tubes with 12-volt heaters. The receivers required more stages than the typical home receiver in order to ensure that enough gain was available to allow the AGC to mask signal fading as the car was driven. The early car radio receivers used the battery voltage (6.3 volts at the time) to run the vacuum tube filaments, and generated the required high voltage for the plate supply using a vibrator to drive a step-up transformer. In Germany Blaupunkt fitted their first radio to a Studebaker in 1932 and in the United Kingdom Crossley offered a factory fitted wireless in their 10 hp models from 1933. The Motorola prefix “motor-” was chosen because the company’s initial focus was in automotive electronics. Founders Paul Galvin and Joe Galvin came up with the name ‘Motorola’ when his company started manufacturing car radios. In 1930, the Galvin Corporation introduced one of the first commercial car radios, the Motorola model 5T71, which sold for between $110 and $130 ( 2009: $1,700) and could be installed in most popular automobiles. The Galvin brothers purchased a battery eliminator business in 1928 and the corporation’s first product was a battery eliminator that allowed vacuum tube battery-powered radios to run on standard household electric current (see also Rogers Majestic Batteryless Radio). Galvin Manufacturing was owned and operated by Paul V. The commercial introduction of the fitted car radio came in the 1930s from the Galvin Manufacturing Corporation. From the earliest days of radio, enthusiasts had adapted domestic equipment to use in their cars.