The latest addition to my collection arrived today, a near-new condition boxed 2-channel Staveley Silver Star, complete with the original receipts, guarantee cards, user instructions and sales brochure (it was sold in December 1971). It fits nicely with the boxed Staveley Analogue 2-channel set I got a little earlier this year.
There were a few things that surprised me about the Silver Star, even though it is only 2-channel, it is fitted with normal 2-axis joysticks, complete with all the pots, so externally you would think it was a 4-channel set and to convert from two to four channel would only need to populate the PCB, not fit new joysticks. The Silver Star 2-channel set was dry cells by default, this one had the NiCad upgrade, but it had an external charger, the 4-channel Silver Star I also have has an internal charger (there is a transformer in the transmitter, so you plug the transmitter into the mains to charge, similar to many other transmitters of the period). The set came in two boxes, the transmitter in one, the flight pack in the other and another small box with the power supply. Three boxes where one would have sufficed, strange idea on the packaging! The 2-channel analogue came in a single box and was sold just a few months before (February 69)
The NiCads had just started to leak and there was a pin-prick size of corrosion on the PCB, lucky I got it now and not in a few months time as I think it would have got damaged.
You would think the Staveley 2-channel Analogue set was from a different manufacturer, the case and joysticks (and circuitry) are very different, but so is the packaging, the Analogue is cardboard packaging around the transmitter, the Silver Star polystyrene, the instructions are so different, only the sales invoices are the same! I think I read somewhere that there were two development teams at Staveley, headed up by Doug Spreng on digital proportional and Mike Dench on analogue proportional. I don't think the two teams could have ever spoken to each other about documentation or the presentation of the sets. Both are lovely sets however.
Staveley Silver Star and Analogue
- Mike_K
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Re: Staveley Silver Star and Analogue
Very nice find Mike
- Shaun
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Re: Staveley Silver Star and Analogue
Excellent
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Re: Staveley Silver Star and Analogue
Congrats Mike, that looks like the Mark 2 version as my original Staveley Silver Star, purchased from Roland Scott for £89! had red receiver and servos with a Staveley and not Swan on the badge. It was packaged in a cardboard tray and my example was absolutely crap in terms of reliability until replaced by the first of my FlightLinks!
It looks like an early production Swan Silver Star before they went on to develop their red and blue vinyl cased transmitters with SLM sticks as opposed to the MacGregor/Horizon versions on your set.
I think the Staveley analogue radios were out of production by the time your radio appeared which might explain the instruction and packaging differences?
It looks like an early production Swan Silver Star before they went on to develop their red and blue vinyl cased transmitters with SLM sticks as opposed to the MacGregor/Horizon versions on your set.
I think the Staveley analogue radios were out of production by the time your radio appeared which might explain the instruction and packaging differences?