I don't know what Ralph Schultz's Mills converter was built for,
but I can corroborate his suspicion that it was not built to power
a radio. I can also answer the question, "Why not just have a radio
to plug into 110 volts?"
The earliest battery operated radios had A, B, and C batteries. The
A battery was like a 6-volt car battery. It ran the filaments in the
tube(s). If you played the radio every day you would typically take
the A battery down to the blacksmith shop or hardware store and have
it charged once a week or so. The B battery was the plate voltage,
typically 90 volts. The C battery was for cathode bias and was
eliminated when it was realized that the same thing was accomplished
by putting a resistor between the tube cathode and ground [after tubes
with a separate cathode were developed].
By the time the rural electrification act came through, there were
already a lot of battery operated radios out there. So, the battery
eliminator came into existence. This was a plug-in box with two
transformers in it, one for the A and one for the B, and a rectifier
and filter for the B voltage. Early radios were very expensive and the
eliminator was a very economical alternative to a new radio. Last time
I looked, the C. Crane catalog still featured a battery eliminator for
early radios.
Lee Rothrock
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