The first thing that you need for a coherer is a pair of double binding-posts. Mount these about an inch and three-quarters apart on a wooden base, six inches long and four inches wide as shown in Figure 233.
Fig. 233.—A Coherer and a Decoherer.
Get a piece of glass tubing about an inch and one-half long and about one-eighth of an inch inside diameter. You will also need some brass rod which will just slide into the tube tightly. Cut off two pieces of the brass rod each one and three-quarters inches long and slip these through the upper holes in the binding-posts and into the glass tube as shown in Figure 234. Before putting the second rod in place, however, you must put some nickel and silver filings in the tube, so that when the rods are pushed almost together, with only a distance of about one-sixteenth of an inch between them, the filings will about half fill the space.
The filings must be very carefully prepared, and in order to make them, first use a coarse-grained file on the edge of a five-cent piece. Do not use the fine dust and powder, but only the fairly coarse filings. Mix a few silver filings from a ten-cent piece with the nickel in such proportion that the mixture is 90% nickel and 10% silver.
Fig. 234.—Details of the Coherer.
You will have to experiment considerably to find out just the right amount of filings to place in the tube, and how far apart to place the brass rods or plugs.
Remove the gong from an old electric bell and mount the bell on the base as shown in Figure 233. It should be in such a position that the bell hammer will touch the coherer very lightly when the bell is ringing.
The two binding-posts, tube rods, and filings constitute the coherer. The bell is the decoherer.