In the 60s, I had an FM "transmitter" which looked like a black ice cube purchased from an old Lafayette store in Tampa . It had 5 wires sticking out of it: 2 DC power, 2 for the signal and 1 for the transmitter "tower" that was about 1 inch long. The frequency of the signal was determined by cutting the "tower" to the appropriate length (or soldering more wire to it).I clipped off the "tower" about a millimeter at a time until I found the empty frequency I wanted, hooked up my homade "board" and a 9v battery to it and placed it in a plastic bag on the top of my house in Tampa. I put on a Beach Boys album and drove around the neighborhood doing amateur "signal strength readings" on the car radio.The dang signal went out a radius of 1.5-2 miles before it faded out. I coupled it with a little AM xmtr (which required a longer antenna on a fishpole sticking up from the second-story window) and started broadcasting to the neighborhood with homemade reverb, dual time tone, generic jingles and anything that sounded like a Top 40 station of the day.Well, I'm getting wordy, but it was so much FUN back then (no computers). I just wonder if anyone else remembers those "ice cube" FM "transmitters" - or even Lafayette for that matter.