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Home Built Seismograph
This project was started on a dare by a friend of mine. We went to a local sale here at work (UC Riverside) which had a bunch of chart recorders. Well, I said that someday I should buy one of them and try building size or seismograph. As it turns out, it was my birthday in my dear friend Paul Lowe bought me one.
Well, now I was committed. I came up with some pretty strange stuff. Wires hanging from the garage, weights everywhere.
It dawned on me the to use the power of the Internet. I got hold of a group through a news site called the PSN. (Public Seismic network). After I did this, tons of information came following down on top of me. This is where I was introduced to a unit called the Lehman.
Being into electronics and lazy at the same time, I did not want to wind a coil and used something called a Hall Effect Transducer.
It worked fairly well with the circuit I built. Going back to the sale on campus again, I was astonished to find 3 PS -1 portable seismographs built by Kinemetrics. I called a friend of mine here at the University and we went over and bought two of them.
Kinemetrics was wonderful and sent me a complete set of instructions on the PS -1. Kudos to them!
Twenty-five dollars apiece! I was in heaven! One small problem was that the drum was missing and that it was setup to use smoked paper.
With a little work and help from my next-door neighbor John Allen, we made new drums out of five inch Plexiglas. The stylis is ink fed now and works great. Jerry Sorrels from here at work found a place that sold low frequency Geo phones. So now I have both a short period and long period system. It has since been outfitted with a coil pickup and has happily picked up quakes from all over the place. Now with the Kinemetrics satellite clocked, I know right when they arrive.
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