What can I do with this? Anyone have any ideas?

I bought this at a yard sale but can't sell it on ebay, not worth much. If anyone has any cool ideas for it let me know.

remote.JPG
50 answers
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Aug 12, 2009. 7:35 AMnocontroller says:
Gut it and put a TV-be-gone into it!
Oct 18, 2010. 11:45 PMafridave says:
Add it to your William Shatner costume
Jun 2, 2011. 7:01 AMjetbones says:
turn it into a tiny little guitar amp. And if you wire some capacitors to each button it could be quite a cool little unit. Check out cigarette box amps. Amplifiers in a cigarette box!
Nov 2, 2010. 12:49 AMDr.Bill says:
No Batteries either.
Aug 27, 2010. 11:52 PMpellepeloton says:
make a dog, cat or rodent repeller out of it. It is an old TV remote as someone told before. It works on ultrasonic frequencies which some animals can hear and find annoying. Test it with some dogs and tell us if it works?
Jun 11, 2010. 12:41 PMSasquatchKid says:
An awesome guitar amp
Apr 18, 2010. 6:35 PMdustin_srn says:
Electric Shaver?
Apr 11, 2010. 1:13 AMgmark says:
you could make a pretty rocktackular steampunk garage door opener.
Mar 14, 2010. 8:38 PMpokerella says:
I had a old remote contol like that and I painted blue put a star trak insignia on it and used it as a Fazer.
Mar 9, 2010. 10:52 AMshop dweller says:
It's a television remote, and it's from a time before infra-red LEDs were in common use. If you open the case you will find little metal tube bells (or reeds of some type) that acted kind of like a windchime. When the buttons were pushed a tiny "hammer" would "ring" them with a very high pitch that you couldn't hear. The tv was set up to activate a relay when it picked up the tone, and would respond by changing the channel or turning power on and off etc. They were also quite problematic since the rattle of keys would turn on the television set, along with other sounds that weren't supposed to (of course this led to a lot of haunted house stories). If it were me, I would leave it tact simply because of it's curiosity value. You can always build a circuit to respond to it as well as create all sorts of interesting experiments - I wonder if your dog can hear it? (remote controlled pooch - LOL!). It didn't need batteries because it's operation is strictly mechanical.  
Feb 19, 2010. 9:40 AMP821543016 says:
Give it to me or explode it
very simple yes?

Feb 3, 2010. 9:49 PM3VIL G3NIUS says:
 you could make it switch power points on and off.
Jan 27, 2010. 7:45 AMmacmccune says:
make it an ipod! :)
Dec 28, 2009. 6:58 AMcherishcherub says:
Novelty mp3 speakers:

empty it out and hide a speaker in 

then at the bottom (where the mesh is) the sound will come out

and the headphone wire/jack will come out the outher end

reply if this helps
Dec 27, 2009. 3:21 AMRetroLeatherHatter says:
Wow! I've always wondered how the first remotes worked, which came out in the 1950s, as I've heard.  That one would make a really cool  USB flash drive with, say, 20gigs of capacity!

Or could be converted into a retro-style keyless entry/ alarm thingie for a 1950s/60s classic car!
Dec 27, 2009. 9:48 AMDr.Bill says:
The old 4 button 'Clickers' clicked.
The click was a kind of hammer that tapped a metal rod that produced an ultra-sonic sound that was picked-up by a circuit in the TV and did
1) On/off
2) Volume
3) Change channel up
4) Change channel down
Totally mechanical unit.
We had a Zenith B+W TV that had the 'Clicker'.
Dec 20, 2009. 5:06 PMgarrett10 says:
make a star trek communicator
Dec 7, 2009. 11:28 PMBad Maxx says:
Wow! If I'm not mistaken that was a remote to a TV. Channel up and down and Volume up and down? I'm not much help with what to do with it, but we used to have the TV that went with it... The first TV we ever had with a remote control or Clicker as my mom called it.
Nov 24, 2009. 2:59 PMsteampunked gal says:
lol take it all the little buttons out and put one big red button in it and label it self destruct but really just use it to open the fridge or something lol.
Nov 1, 2009. 2:53 PMcrak-a-bottle says:
give it to meeeeee! :D whatever it is....it looks awesome
Oct 12, 2009. 6:48 AMyeehacmh says:
Gut it and put in a flat USB Hub with 4  inputs. Insert 4 "64 MB" thumbdrives and tell people it's a StarTrek 256.
Oct 3, 2009. 5:42 PMwdlaurie says:
Hey! I just saw this same item in Entertainment Weekly's coverage of how the set designer for "Mad Men" uses authentic , vintage props for dressing the set. Cool!
Aug 16, 2009. 6:58 AMkevinhannan says:
I think you should go to a Star Trek convention with it - you'd be the coolest gizmo guy around!
Aug 18, 2009. 7:06 PMwupme says:
That was so my first thought about it "Wow looks like something Captain Kirk or Mr.Spock would have."
Aug 15, 2009. 5:32 PMOBar says:
make some kind of musical instrument?....or, better yet an rf jammer to jam the radios of those around you who play those soft rock/rap stations at top volume while you are trying to do your job!
Aug 15, 2009. 5:34 PMOBar says:
and no I'm not bitter/angry about it.
Aug 13, 2009. 2:57 PMEagleDude says:
Make a video with it.... push a button and make something explode!
Aug 10, 2009. 1:46 AMporcupinemamma says:
I see a type of communicator from the original Star Treck. I see teeth on a piece of sculpture I see a small shelf I see a type of hook ...
Aug 9, 2009. 2:53 PMmr.origami says:
you can throw it at people that annoy you?
Aug 1, 2009. 6:49 AMelguapo says:
That would make the coolest functioning remote control.
Jul 29, 2009. 8:01 AMkelseymh says:
It's a Zenith TV remote, circa 1970s. You could use the shell as the basis for a steampunk/cyberpunk/SF prop (think ST:TOS hand phaser). The internal components should be large enough that you could read off part numbers and maybe track down pieces to fab a working receiver. Scavenging components is always an option.
Jul 29, 2009. 1:22 PMrjnerd says:
Its an old enough unit, that its purely mechanical. All thats inside are four tuned metal bars. Push the button, and its basically hitting an ultrasonic tuning fork. All you need is a microphone and a frequency counter to figure out the pitches. A receiver is a microphone, and some sharp filters to sort out which bar of metal got hit. Would be a good intro to digital filtering/DSP programming to implement the decoder in the digital domain.
Aug 2, 2009. 12:04 PMshabaki says:
tho bakground noise might be factor in the fact that if one of the pitches was hit in conversaionit would change it and background noiise might blok the tones
Jul 29, 2009. 6:58 PMjeff-o says:
Seriously? That's crazy! I always thought they went from a remote on a long cord directly to infrared.
Jul 30, 2009. 5:45 AMjeff-o says:
Hmmm, maybe that's what I was remembering. All of these pre-IR remote technologies were before my time, though!
Aug 1, 2009. 5:38 PMDELETED_GuardianFox says:
It's pretty much just one step up from having a little prehistoric bird fly out of the remote, change the channel on the TV set, and then come back. Very clever.
Oct 8, 2009. 4:36 PMJCO72 says:
My parents always had the first of everything in my old neighborhood (before  I was born)  First color TV, first remote comtrolled TV... One of my brother's friends had a jangly bracelet, and he could change the channel on it by rattling his wrist.  My mom had a remote that I could turn on and off by whistling.
Jul 29, 2009. 2:41 PMorksecurity says:
Yep (just for confirmation). My grandparents had one of these, or maybe the previous generation with only two tones (one on/off, one to advance the channel).
Jul 29, 2009. 1:42 PMkelseymh says:
Now that is sweet! I've never opened one up, and had no idea it was acoustic.
Jul 29, 2009. 10:25 AMfwjs28 says:
Those were the days 'eh?
Jul 29, 2009. 6:52 AMadam 101 says:
can't see much in the picture. can you show more views?
Jul 30, 2009. 7:48 AMjocekortan says:
http://www.swordssource.comAbsolutely no clue....
Jul 29, 2009. 8:23 AMBigev says:
For the trekkie in allof us, you could make a communicator. It looks about right.
Jul 29, 2009. 3:57 PMQuiksilverRox says:
Thats what I thought
Jul 29, 2009. 1:03 PMKiteman says:
Remove the innards (discard or recycle as required) and replace them with a tone generator, or the innards of one of those key-ring toys that makes Star Wars sound effects when you press a button.
Jul 29, 2009. 8:44 AMNoumenon says:
kazoo!

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