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This installment of the multi-month series
of articles on antenna principles covers
directional arrays for 300 MHz and higher. Keep in mind that
in 1947 when this appeared in Radio-Craft magazine, wavelengths of a meter
or less were considered to be at the upper end of the operational range. Parabolic
reflector antennas were the domain primarily of ground-based installations due to
the physical size and weight being prohibitive in airborne platforms, and even then
they were rarely used at the time. Most ground and airborne installations were composed
of dipole antennas with various configurations of reflector and director elements
for desired gain and directivity characteristics. Special...
Echo 1 launched in August of 1960,
finally allowing America to participate in the Space Race, which until then was
roundly being won by the USSR. Electronics magazines of the day were filled with
prognostications of the future of
space communications. Electronics World dedicated most of their
November issue to satellite Earth stations and advancements being made in ultra
sensitive receivers and powerful transmitters. Since the earliest satellites were
literally metallic balls for reflecting radio signals, it was necessary to optimize
both ends of the communications path since there were no circuits onboard the satellite
to perform signal processing and re-transmission. Bell Labs, of course, was at the
forefront...
As with many relatively new technologies,
the
exuberance over radio peaked quickly once the benefits of communications
over long distances without the need for wires was realized by the public. After
a couple decades a lot of "authorities" began pontificating about how all the useful
applications of radio waves had been discovered and that any new innovation would
be merely incremental improvements in existing technology. Novel circuits for minimizing
static over the radio or maybe building more powerful transmitters for longer range
were the only concepts within reach of their limited imaginations. Similar phenomena
occurred for those who thought airplanes would always have...
The Klondike / Yukon Gold Rush is generally
credited with opening up the Alaskan territory to exploration and habitation. Gold
was first reported in August of 1896, just three decades prior to this advertisement
in a 1931 issue of QST magazine by the
De Forest Radio Company extolling its domination of the region
with radio communications stations. Company founder Lee De Forest was very
successful in exploiting the virtues of his famous Audion amplifier tube. A back-handed
swipe is taken at Government installations that used "whatever tubes the Government
has...
Fixed-value resistors are among the simplest-looking
components in electronics, but their development reflects nearly the entire history
of electrical science, telecommunications, electric lighting, industrial power,
radio, military electronics, printed circuits, hybrid microelectronics, and surface-mount
manufacturing. Partly out of curiosity of how extensive, comprehensive, and accurate
an AI-generated report on topics of science and engineering, I instructed ChatGPT
to generate the following thesis titled
History of Fixed-Value Resistor Electronic Components. Most useful AI interactions,
I have found, require more than one input...
Since we seem to be on a roll of FM radio
theme articles printed in vintage electronics magazine, here is one from a 1973
issue of Popular Electronics magazine. The author never explicitly tells
us the date when the Institute of High Fidelity (IHF) updated its
FM tuner specifications, and neither does he mention groundbreaking
work of IHF's Julian Hirsch, who is largely responsible for both the initial and
updated standards. If you read magazine stereo equipment reviews in the 1960s and
1970s, then you probably recall the name. Anyway, this article discusses the improved
specifications made possible by more sophisticated circuits made possible by semiconductors
and miniaturized...
Comics in modern magazines are a rather
rare phenomenon for some reason, but they were fairly regular features up until
a couple decades ago. This set of
comics from the July 1963 edition of Popular Electronics
magazine deals with high fidelity (Hi-Fi) stereo equipment, which was considered
somewhat exotic and high-end for many people's budgets in the day. Inexplicably
(not), that is about the time that increases in hearing losses among younger people
were first being noticed in audiograms. I listened to my share of loud music beginning
in the late 1960s, and operated many model airplane engines and lawnmower type engines
my whole life, and still, at 68 years...
"Ground is ground the world around." That's a saying that I
have often heard Ham radio operators say aloud and in writing. In a general sense,
it's true, but on a local level grounds can vary widely from location to location,
even within a few hundred feet. It is true both for direct current and low frequencies
and for frequencies in to the GHz regions. It has to do with the conductivity of
the soil and/or rock in the area as well as the amount of moisture and other elements
in the ground. Antenna guys like to run conductive (usually copper) "radials" out
from the mounting pole or tower in order to create a sufficient local reference
ground, and electric power distribution engineers often need to salt...
ConductRF is continually innovating and
developing advanced solutions for RF cable assembly and various RF through millimeterwave
interconnect requirements. ConductRF offers both its own brand of high-quality RF
cable and connector components, along with a curated selection from leading manufacturers,
enabling engineers to optimize performance while maintaining supply chain flexibility.
Please be sure to visit their Updates section at the
ConductRF Blog and
sign up for their monthly news releases.
Other than vaguely recognizing the name,
do Millennials know who
Mickey Mantel was? Maybe hard-core Yankees fans of all ages still
know. My having been born in 1958, the kids in my neighborhood watched "The Mick"
playing on TV, witnessing real-time some of his final 536 career home runs being
hit. When this two-page Westinghouse advertisement appeared in a 1954 issue of Radio &
Television News magazine, he was only beginning in his forth season in Major League
Baseball (MLB), which ran through 1968. The promotion was for a contest where servicemen
who bought Westinghouse vacuum tubes submitted a witty response for the comic showing
a housewife asked...
Do you know how engineering whipping boy
Dilbert
came to be called by that name? Per Scott Adams, while working at Pacific Bell he
ran an informal name-the-comic-strip-engineer contest from his cubicle. A guy named
Mike Goodwin suggested Dilbert. "I ended the contest immediately and declared Mike
the winner," says Adams. It sounded perfect. Years after the comic strip had become
syndicated, Mike commented that he believes the name idea might have come from seeing
his father's old WWII aviator comics with "Dilbert the Pilot." DtP was a screw-up,
invented by Navy artist Robert Osborn, whose purpose in life was to illustrate the
wrong way of doing things so that...
My new
Online RF Systems
Cascade Calculator handles up to eight stages. All input stage parameters,
Gain, Noise Figure, OIP2, OIP3, and OP1dB, are limited to ±200. P[input] has a lower
limit of -174 dBm (GTB in 1 Hz bandwidth). IP2, IP3, and P1dB values are
all reference to the stage output. AI provided most of the PHP code after many iterations
of instructions, but it is amazing what it came up with - and with very few lines
of code...
Those of us who have been around for six
or more decades have lived through two evolutions of video display types - raster
scanned
cathode ray tubes (CRTs) and digitally pixelated light-emitting
diode (LED) and liquid crystal (LCD) displays. Unlike with the latter display types
that improved in color depth, picture resolution and display size, the former had
effectively a fixed resolution of horizontal lines (525 vertical steps - only 484
visible, actually, due to blanking). That meant for CRTs, designers needed to find
ways to make images appear in-focus while also looking continuous on larger screens.
Doing so involved cleverly adjusting the size and spacing of fluorescent...
Multiple path transmission, diffraction
around obstacles, absorption by foliage, and reflection from moving objects have
always been challenges to the wireless system designer and/or user. Whether it concerns
communications between a WiFi router and a notebook computer, a cellphone and a
tower, an FM radio with a broadcast station, or deep space probe with an earth station,
all of the aforementioned mechanisms must be dealt with to some degree. Although
in a different way, even
transmissions within a waveguide or coaxial cable deal with those
same issues - reflections and the resulting standing waves have the same effect
as multipath in terms of vectorially additive versions of the same...
Those of you who are not particularly interested
in vintage electronic equipment will please indulge those of us who
are. I post these articles occasionally to remind people of from whence we have
come. Whether you are an amateur radio operator or just a cellphone user, appreciation
is due to the pioneers who took the metaphorical arrows for us so that we may enjoy
the micro-size, low cost, high quality communications available today. The full-height
equipment racks in the photos were standard fare in the 1930s for long distance
(DX) shortwave operators - often only for CW (Morse code). "User serviceable parts
inside' was the rule rather than the exception. As much as I like waxing...
Anritsu announced the launch of its new
Tensor Vector Network Analyzer (VNA) at IMS 2026. The Tensor VNA represents
a major advancement in RF and microwave network analysis, delivering modern, scalable
architecture designed to support the most complete and demanding measurements like
amplifiers, filters, frequency convertors, and other advanced VNA measurements.
Tensor VNA sets a new benchmark in vector network analysis with its revolutionary
source-per-port architecture, integrated AI intelligence, and exceptional power
handling. Engineered to meet the evolving requirements for aerospace and defense,
semiconductor, active and passive device measurements, signal integrity, research
and development, and millimeter wave / waveguide...
Here is a reprint of an article I had published
in Wireless Design & Development magazine in 1995. Some of the references
are a bit dated, but the info is all still very useful. Waypoint Software is now
RF Cafe, and TxRx Designer is now Shareware by the name of RF Workbench. With
the advent of high speed personal computers, a very insightful graphical method
of determining inband mixer spurious products has been largely forgotten. The
Spur Web™
(my name trademark, but used widely w/o attribution) chart rapidly identifies both
inband and out-of-band spurs, affording a pictorial view of where conversion system
frequencies lie with respect to all spur products. A comparison...
The neighborhood where I grew up in the
1960s and 1970s was about 25 to 30 miles from the "big three" network television
broadcast stations (ABC, CBS, NBC) in Baltimore and Washington, D.C. That is considered
a fairly long distance in the over-the-air TV realm. Knowing what I know now, I
am somewhat surprised that those in our area were able to receive programs as well
as we did when all the homes I recall had just a single, standard multi-element
antenna on the roof. If anyone had stacked, phased array setups like this
Finco Co-Lateral TV Antenna installed, I certainly do not remember
any. Most of the antennas in Holly Hill Harbor and the surrounding communities did
not even have an antenna rotator, yet evidently were pulling in signals satisfactorily
- and without needing to be mounted on a tall...
In this Radio & Television News
magazine article, author Jack Gallagher derives a formula for the number of turns
of wire to wind on a form of given dimensions for a parallel
constant-resistance network. He argues that although commonly
used formulas like that of Wheeler provide the number of turns needed to achieve
a desired value of inductance, it does not predict the size of cross-sectional shape
of a coil form that results in an optimal configuration. His work applies to audio
frequency divider networks like those used for speakers to steer specific frequency
ranges to a woofer, midrange, and tweeter trio; hence the need for "constant resistance"
(e.g., for standard 8 Ω or 16 Ω speakers)...
Satellite direct-to-device (D2D) networks
represent the next frontier in mobile connectivity, promising to eliminate dead
zones by linking ordinary cellphones directly to orbiting satellites. Companies
like SpaceX with its Starlink system, AST SpaceMobile, and others are racing to
deploy constellations that can serve standard smartphones without specialized hardware.
The technology relies on large phased-array antennas in space, advanced beamforming,
and new spectrum-sharing arrangements with terrestrial carriers. Proponents argue
D2D will bring emergency communications and basic connectivity to remote areas worldwide.
Critics raise serious concerns...
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The RF Cafe Homepage
Archive is a comprehensive collection of every item appearing daily on this
website since 2008 - and many from earlier years. Many thousands of pages of unique
content have been added since then.
Mostly just old farts like me remember anything
about
LORAN (LOng RAnge Navigation). My familiarity with it came not from boat navigation,
but from airplane navigation. Before LORAN became totally obsolete due to GPS (phased
out in U.S. and Canada in 2010), the transmitter stations were commonly tuned in
in order to obtain positional fixes via triangulation. Whilst taking flying lessons
at Lee Airport, in Edgewater, Maryland, the ground instructor included it in the
lessons, and even the FAA Private Pilot exams had a question or two on LORAN. The
el cheapo Piper Colts that I flew were lucky to have a VOR (VHF omnidirectional
range ) receiver in it, so I never actually used LORAN. They did have direction
finders (DF), which could tune in, among other things, VHF television station channels...
Just as you will never get everyone to agree
on who was the first person to successfully fly a powered aircraft (Wright, Whitehead,
Curtiss, etc.), there will never be a consensus on
who invented the radio. Most people would probably agree that it was Guglielmo Marconi,
but this author makes a case for none other than Thomas Edison. I don't recall ever
hear anyone making that claim before, but before you dismiss the opinion, read on...
The December 13, 1965 issue of Electronics
magazine was largely dedicated to assessing
Japan's status in the electronics industry. Japan, with the help of the United
States, made a remarkable recovery from defeat during World War II to have
become an emerging power in electronics. "Made in Japan" labels on products had
transformed from being the butt of jokes because of pre-war low quality products
to representing assurance of low cost, high functionality and high value products.
It still does to this day. The Japanese people have worked hard to acquire the world's
respect as smart innovators and hard workers, and have been sure to maintain manufacturing
bases within their borders. When you read this article, be prepared for a few dated
terms like a "Kita" diode...
Citizen Band (CB) radios were all the rage
during my high school years (1973-76). Previously the domain of over-the-road haulers,
by then everybody who was anybody had a 23-channel CB in his/her car or pickup truck.
My 1969 Camaro SS, of course, sported one - probably the cheapest model available.
Those were the days of C.W. McCall's "Convoy" and Cledus Maggard's "The White Knight"
lyrics. Everybody knew the words to it. Smokey and the Bandit fed the craze.
After all, there were no cellphones. Rather than learning text messaging shortcuts
like OMG, *$ (the company didn't even exist then), B4N, and IMHO, we learned to
use clever words and phrases like "10-4," "bear in the air," and "what's your 20?"
It's been a long time...
The
American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT&T) was founded as part of the
Bell Telephone System to build a nationwide wired, long distance communications
service. When this advertisement was printed in a 1917 issue of The Saturday Evening
Post magazine, many American households still did not have a telephone installed,
and most of those that did subscribed to "party line" hookups. Party lines were
a service sharing agreement whereby multiple users were connected to the same telephone
number and agreed to share the line. The upside was a discounted phone bill, but
the downside was the any other member of the "party" could listen in on your conversation.
I remember back in the 1960s when our house had a party line. My sister and I (both
preteens) would sometimes carefully pick up the phone receiver and listen in hopes
of...
Montgomery Ward (aka "Wards" or even "Monkey
Wards") had their own line of radios, electric guitars, and other products that
went by the name of "Airline." Sears, Roebuck and Company, by the way, had the "Silvertone"
series of radios, electric guitars and, other electronics products. This 2-page
radio service data sheet for the
Montgomery Ward Airline Model 04BR-1105A console type radio appeared in a 1941
issue of Radio-Craft magazine. Some of the electronics magazines of the
era ran these features to help out people who wanted to attempt troubleshooting
and aligning their own equipment. Many electronics manufacturers would sell service
data documentation only to authorized dealers and repair shops. Unlike today where...
These custom-made
engineering and science-themed crossword puzzles are done weekly for the brain-exercising
benefit and pleasure of RF Cafe visitors who are fellow cruciverbalists. The jury
is out on whether or not this type of mental challenge helps keep your gray matter
from atrophying in old age, but it certainly helps maintain your vocabulary and
cognitive skills at all ages. A database of thousands of words has been built up
over the years and contains only clues and terms associated with engineering, science,
physical, astronomy, mathematics, chemistry, etc. You will never find a word taxing
your knowledge of a numbnut soap opera star or the name of some obscure village
in the Andes mountains. You might, however, encounter the name of a movie star like
Hedy Lamarr or a geographical...
Maybe it comes from having crossed the half-century
Rubicon, but with increasing frequency I find myself seeking out vintage magazines
to learn how the world used to be. I am a realist who has no misconceptions about
how idyllic things used to be and that today is utter debauchery, but it is apparent
from a lot of the publications that we surely have changed significantly in the
last 50+ years - better in some ways, worse in others. For many years I have been
purchasing of
WWII era
QST magazines off eBay. As I have been doing for a while on my Airplanes and
Rockets website, I am going to begin scanning and posting vintage electronics magazine
advertisements and articles. A lot of the information is timeless in its application,
especially since vacuum tubes are still in widespread use in the Amateur Radio realm.
Of course electronics...
All types of
sales and repair services get accused of ineptness of skill which requires more
time than necessary, overcharging for parts and/or labor, underhandedness in faking
problems and selling unnecessary replacement parts, improper customer interfacing,
sloppiness in appearance and/or work environment, failure to arrive on time for
appointments, etc. Some of the most often cited these days are auto mechanics, cellphone
repairers, home improvement contractors, lawn care, and builders. Up until about
a decade ago when cellphone repair began to dominate over computer repair, the latter
was a big source of complaints. In the 1950s and 60s, it was TV and radio repairmen
who took a lot of abuse not just from their customers...
IC designers have been striving to make the
"ideal" opamp ever since the device type was first conceived. An ideal opamp has
a certain set of well-defined properties that permit it be used in circuits defined
by neat mathematical equations without the need for compensating or limiting terms.
An example of compensation might be having an input impedance of something other
than infinite ohms that causes a voltage division effect on the input voltage, and
a limitation would be a gain-bandwidth product that prevents it from being used
in high frequency applications. Opamps appeared in electronics before semiconductors
came onto the scene, and a couple companies attempted to market prepackaged vacuum
tube opamps that plugged into a standard octal kind of socket . EE120 at the University
of Vermont introduced me to operational amplifier theory...
The first thing I learned (or re-learned)
in reading this article is that in 1967, "Hertz" had only recently been assigned
as the official unit of frequency. According to Wikipedia, International Electrotechnical
Commission (IEC) adopted it in in 1930, but it wasn't until 1960 that it was adopted
by the General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) (Conférence Générale des
Poids et Mesures). Hertz replace cycles per second (cps). The next thing that happened
was that I was reminded of how images such as the op-art tracing of antenna oscillation
that are routinely generated today...
Unlike even the vacuum tube type AM radio
in the dashboard of my parents' car in the early 1960s that were self-contained
units, even earlier radios designed for cars and trucks had their bulky electronics
mounted under the sea or in the trunk, with a remote volume and tuning control mounted
in the dashboard. That greatly complicated the installation as well as the design
of the radio. This circa 1940
Belmont Model 678 Auto-Radio is a prime example. Note the unique cylindrical
shape of the radio chassis, and that the remote control is a pushbutton assembly
with rotating knobs for tuning and volume. Operating from a 6 volt DC car battery
(12 volts came later), these radios required a "vibrator" circuit to convert DC
to AC (and back to a higher level DC) in order to transform to a couple hundred
volts for the plate voltage of the tubes...
Designing a
log periodic antenna is a piece of cake. Just punch in your computer program
or smartphone app a few parameters for frequency range, power handling, directivity,
impedance, etc., and out pops boom and element lengths, diameters, and spacings
- and probably radiation gain profiles for elevation and azimuth. That is the way
it's done today. However, when Dwight Isbell and Raymond DuHamel of the University
of Illinois came up with the log periodic concept in 1958, they did not have the
convenience of a computer or even a hand-held calculator. Slide rules and logarithm
tables were the order of the day. After trudging through the equations for building
the antenna...
It was only the first day at engineering
college and already their first familiar techno-caper was underway. Indiana's Parvoo
University was about to get an initiation into the world of
Carl Anderson and Jerry Bishop, who during their high school years together
solved many a mystery and pulled many a prank in their hometown somewhere in northern
Indiana. As with all of John Frye's tales this one mixes serious electronics topics
with a bit of fun and a life lesson. There were no 'bad guys' here as in many other
episodes, but the boys did get an unexpected introduction to Parvoo U.'s president!
Despite the story's title, the day ended well...
I know I keep saying this, but it keeps being
true so I say it again: The
basics of electricity and electronics have not changed in the last 75 or more
years, so these articles from vintage issues of electronics magazines are as applicable
today as they were back then. If you are just getting into the field of electronics,
valuable information can be found here to supplement your learning process. In fact,
I have seen examples in some of these articles where I re-learned something long-ago
forgotten, and some of the stuff is rarely, if ever, seen in contemporary writings.
Regardless, making yourself aware of the work done by pioneers in the industry is
always valuable because it gives you a sense of approaches taken that have led to
success, and sometimes... |