(He DID show a wavetrap correctly, though)
When you word it like that it appears that you are disagreeing with me when I say that Fig 2B is drawn incorrectly.
Here's his text.
A wave trap is a tuned circuit that causes a specific frequency to be rejected. Two
forms are used: series tuned (Fig. 2A) and parallel tuned (Fig. 2B).
The parallel resonant form is placed in series with the antenna line (as in Fig.
2B). It provides a high impedance to its resonant frequency, so will block the offending
signal before it reaches the receiver. It provides a low impedance to frequencies removed
from resonance.
The parallel resonant form is placed in series with the antenna line
Fig 2B does not behave as the description above. It doesn't reject ONE specific trap frequency. Joe Carr's original FiG 2B circuit is a preselector and not a trap. It is not shown as being placed in series with the antenna line either. So it fails to agree with the text.
The amended version that I posted up DOES behave as the text above. It is a parallel resonant circuit placed in series with the antenna line so it fits the description. At resonance it will provide a high series impedance at 1200kHz (an open circuit at 1200kHz) and it provides a low impedance to other frequencies that are some way away from 1200kHz. So they get through to the receiver. Again, it fits the description in the text.
Fig 2A has a series tuned circuit and it works by crowbarring at 1200kHz (like a short circuit to ground) and the parallel version should work as an open circuit at 1200kHz. But it can't do this unless you amend it to a trap circuit as below.
A trap should be tuned to the frequency of the unwanted signal. If you tuned the original Fig2B circuit to the unwanted 1200kHz frequency then the unwanted 1200kHz frequency would get through to the receiver the strongest!
This isn't exactly rocket science...