This one tube radio in the local county museum was built in 1922. It is a single triode regen receiver.
The controls as best I can figure out are:
Large dial in upper left is connected to the variable capacitor.
Two dials in lower left move coil positions to vary the inductance of the tuning coil.
Small knob top center is a small variable capacitor connected to the large variable capacitor
The two controls at the bottom right are for filament and plate voltage. I haven't traced it yet to see which is which.
The circular screen is apparently to watch the tube's filament glow when adjusting the filament voltage.
The tube is a UX200 triode.
The middle coil is fixed. The two outer coils each have a knob to adjust the distance between them and the center coil.
The binding posts in back are for filament and plate batteries. Headphones probably connect to the front panel posts, but with 4 connections there is more to it than that.
Anyone have information on this? I don't know if this was a kit or it was put together from parts he bought separately. The coils and gear mechanism to move them wasn't something he would have found in his local hardware store.
With controls for filament voltage, plate voltage, 2 tuning capacitors, and two inductors, it must have been a real art to adjust it for good reception.