Antique radios, Old Time Radios
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Maynooth, Ireland (Kildare) |
Address |
St. Patrick's College
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Floor area |
unfortunately not known yet
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- Chemistry
- Typewriter, calculating and coding
- Surveying Equipment
- Wire- & tape recording
- Electricity / Magnetism
- Electric motors/generators/pumps
- Morse technology
- Measuring Instruments, Lab Equipment
- Gramophone (no electrical sound transmission)
- Electrical Applications
- Physics
- Appliances (Scales, Stamping, etc.)
Our page for National Science Museum in Maynooth, Ireland, is administrated by a Radiomuseum.org member. Please write to him about your experience with this museum, for corrections of our data or sending photos by using the Contact Form to the Museum Finder.
Location / Directions
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N53.380442° W6.595210° | N53°22.82652' W6°35.71260' | N53°22'49.5912" W6°35'42.7560" |
Maynooth is located on the R148 road between Leixlip and Kilcock, with the M4 motorway bypassing the town. Other roads connect the town to Celbridge, Clane, and Dunboyne.
Maynooth is also on the Dublin to Sligo rail line and is served by a commuter train service.
Public transit access
Maynooth Dublin Bus routes: 66, 67
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Some example model pages for sets you can see there:
Description |
The museum houses early scientific instruments, especially those of the Reverend Professor Nicholas Callan (1799-1864)
"Callan's major claim to fame is as the inventor of the induction coil. Following earlier experiments, he discovered in 1836 that, when a current sent by battery through a "primary" coil (a small number of turns of thick copper wire around a soft-iron core) was interrupted, a high voltage current was produced in an unconnected "secondary" coil (a large number of turns of fine wire). Callan sent a replica of his coil to William Sturgeon (1783-1850) in London in 1837, and it was exhibited to members of the Electrical Society there to their great amazement."
He also invented the "Maynooth Battery"
The museum houses the induction coil used On July 20 1898 by Marconi to transmit the results of the Kingstown (now Dún Laoghaire) Regatta to the Harbour Master's house (Moran House) by Radio using Morse Code. This was the first ever use of radio to report a sporting event. |
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