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Circulators & Isolators Quiz

Quiz #76: Circulators & Isolators Quiz - RF CafeWelcome to the RFCafe Isolators & Circulators Quiz, a technical overview focused on non-reciprocal microwave components. These specialized devices are the primary tools used to protect sensitive signal sources from reflected power and to route signal flow in multi-stage RF systems. Whether you are isolating a high-power transmitter from a high-VSWR antenna, developing duplexers, or optimizing the signal isolation between cascaded amplifiers in a precision measurement setup, a solid grasp of circulator and isolator physics is essential. This assessment addresses the fundamental properties of ferrite-based non-reciprocal hardware, including insertion loss, port-to-port isolation, power...

What Does Your Daily Commute Cost You?

What Does Your Daily Commute Cost You? - RF Cafe SmorgasbordHow far do you commute each day for the privilege of doing your part to push back the frontiers of technical ignorance and to boldly go where no engineer - or technician - has gone before. Do you know what the cost equates for you each year? This handy-dandy infographic lays out some gruesome numbers. Those with a weak stomach probably should pass on viewing this one. Here's a hint at what you will see: See that big $795 in the thumbnail image? That's the average cost per year for commuting -- per mile! Yessiree, if you live just 10 miles from work, you're losing nearly $8,000 per year, depending on you automobile type, on gas, tires, maintenance, devaluation, and loss of your personal time (which is valuable, after all). Back in the early 1990s I drove about 45 miles each way...

Measuring Semiconductor Device Input Parameters with Vector Analysis

Measuring Semiconductor Device Input Parameters with Vector Analysis - RF Cafe WebsiteJoe Cahak, owner of Sunshine Design Engineering Services in Ramona, California, has written a white paper entitled, "Measuring Semiconductor Device Input Parameters with Vector Analysis." This article covers a recent test experience that utilized some thinking about the test fixture, the bias requirements and the device mounting and special calibration offsets needed to de-embed the test fixture response from the device response within the test fixture. The device also had to have bias on several ports simultaneously. We had to establish a "reference plane" within the fixture, from which we can use the Vector Network Analyzer's Port Extension or Phase Offset to dial out the distance from our 1 port calibration reference plane to the point of short reference within the fixture. With this phase offset compensation we can then measure...

Low-Pressure Modulation Facts

Low-Pressure Modulation Facts, July 1953 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteAuthor Howard Wright takes the opportunity here to distill the concept of modulation down to its basic operation while dispensing with the garbled mix of "graphs, formulas, charts, vectors, diagrams, and Greek letters which often enter into various discussions of modulation". Wright describes how to the uninitiated radio dial spinner, the culmination of events occurring behind the scenes in an AM reception is akin to knowing "that, to be reproduced, the picture [in a magazine] was broken down into its primary colors, if all we had to go by was the original print and the magazine?" That is a very apt comparison...

Many Thanks for Alliance Test Equipment's Support!

Allied Test Equipment Products - RF Cafe WebsiteAlliance Test Equipment sells used / refurbished test equipment and offers short- and long-term rentals. They also offer repair, maintenance and calibration. Prices discounted up to 80% off list price. Agilent/HP, Tektronix, Anritsu, Fluke, R&S and other major brands. A global organization with ability to source hard to find equipment through our network of suppliers. Alliance Test will purchase your excess test equipment in large or small lots. Blog posts offer advice on application and use of a wide range of test equipment. Please visit Allied Test Equipment today to see how they can help your project.

Mac's Radio Service Shop: A Little Lightning

Mac's Radio Service Shop: A Little Lightning, July 1948 Radio News - RF Cafe WebsiteBenjamin Franklin is famous for his kite-flying experiment whereby he "discovered" not electricity (as many people believe), but that lightning is a form of electricity (most people thought it was a jet of gas). A lesser known fact about Mr. Franklin is that he invented the lightning rod after realizing the electrical nature of lightning. His understanding of electric fields facilitated an implementation whereby hefty iron cabling interconnected a tall, pointed rod installed at the tallest point on a building and a spike driven into the ground. Lightning typically strikes the object that is the shortest distance (in terms of electrical field strength) from it because the discharge can begin at the lowest voltage. The presence of the grounded lightning rod above the highest point on a structure effectively brings that point all the way down to ground level...

Radio Terms Illustrated

Radio Terms Illustrated, August 1947 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteThese "Radio Term Illustrated" comics from vintage Radio-Craft magazines are some of my favorite tech-themed comics. Most were drawn by Frank Beaven in response to suggestions / requests by magazine readers. The one here from page 80 entitled "Crystal Gazing" was done by Franklin Folger. If you didn't know that it appeared in a 1947 edition, you might assume it depicts a Steam Punk themed LCD computer monitor mounted atop a Morse code straight key, but of course it is not. At the time, cathode ray tubes (CRTs) were the only form of video display, and while small like the one in the drawing (and round, unlike the drawing), they were far from flat. Little did the artist suspect that his "Crystal Gazing" idea meant to imply a type of mystic's medium for seeing...

Negative Feedback Transistor Amplifiers

Negative Feedback Transistor Amplifiers, May 1957 Radio & TV News - RF Cafe WebsiteThe big graphic with Figures 1 through 17 reminds me of the kinds of study sheets I used to make when cramming for exams in my college circuits courses. Did I ever tell you about the wise guy instructor I had for my first Circuits class at the University of Vermont? Anyway, this article provides an introductory level treatment of using negative feedback in amplifier circuits. Lots of illustration and formulas are included. Frequencies are at baseband, so you won't learn any secrets for high frequency amplifier stabilization, but then even RF and microwave circuits eventually need to convert down to baseband at some point for sampling or for use as audio or video...

QST Strays: Powder Puff Derby

Powder Puff Derby Peanuts July 6, 1975 - RF Cafe WebsitePrior to seeing this new tidbit in a 1976 issue of QST magazine, I had no idea that the wife of Peanuts comic strip creator Charles Schulz was an airplane pilot - and that is with having been a huge Peanuts fan for decades. Other than one of Snoopy's alter egos being that of a World War I flying ace, there is no other theme of airplanes in the strip, although according to this article, there was a 1975 Sunday comic strip with Peppermint Patty and Marcie flying atop Snoopy's doghouse, from California to Michigan. The Straits Area Radio Club (W8GQN) provided communications for the Powder Puff Derby, aka the Women's Air Derby, race in which Mrs. Jean Clyde Schulz took part in 1970, 1971, and 1975. It was a very long course - more than 2,000 miles as the crow flies...

SPURS Software - RF Design Magazine Software Contest

SPURS Software - RF Design Magazine Software Contest Winner (November 1992) - RF Cafe WebsiteWay...... back in 1992, RF Design magazine ran a software contest. Those were the days when most engineers and hobbyists wrote software in either Basic or Fortran. I happened to use Turbo Pascal, by Borland. At the time, I was working as an RF engineer for Comsat, in Germantown, MD. Having done a lot of frequency conversion designs in my previous work at General Electric, and even more there at Comsat, I had already written a crude program to calculate mixer spurious products, so this challenge gave me the excuse I needed to refine the user interface and add some creature comfort features like...

Time for Another Breakthrough

"It Seems to Us..." Time for Another Breakthrough, August 1976 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteAmateur radio operators - and all electromagnetic spectrum users for that matter - have always lamented crowded bands and interference (QRM and QRN). That goes for licensed and unlicensed bands. In 1976 when this editorial was printed in the ARRL's QST magazine, spectrum occupation within allocated bands was defined by commonplace analog AM and FM methods. Co-existence was generally not possible for operation within a common frequency range. Spread spectrum modulation / demodulation changed all that beginning in the 1990s, but prior to then such schemes were largely the exclusive domain of military communications, as were many other spectrum-saving methods which are commonplace today. A big part of the reason is the significant advances in digital processing hardware and software, along with declassification of some of the algorithms that eventually found their way into cellphone, WiFi, and other commercial applications. Given that many of the professional engineers...

They're Taking the Guesswork out of Scatter Communications

They're Taking the Guesswork out of Scatter Communications, September 1969 Electronics Illustrated - RF Cafe WebsiteAs with many areas of electronics communications, much of both the initial and continued research in atmospheric scattering of electromagnetic signals was/is done by amateur radio operators. The phenomenon is routinely used for accomplishing long distance communications (DX, in Ham terms) by exploiting the reflection property of ionized layers when radio signals impinge at a certain angle. The portion of the signal that returns to the transmitter location, when monitored, can provide information to the sender about the height, distance, and frequency range of the reflecting atmospheric layer. Some of the first indications of backscattering were noticed by radar operators who would receive echo returns from "phantom" targets that were really atmospheric reflections...

Admiral "Aeroscope" Midget Sets Radio Service Data Sheet

Admiral "Aeroscope" Models 161-5L, 162-5L and 163-5L Midget Sets Radio Service Data Sheet, August 1939 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteFor many years I have been scanning and posting Radio Service Data Sheets like this one featuring the Admiral "Aeroscope" 161-5L, 162-5L, and 163-5L Midget Set models which appeared in a 1939 issue of Radio-Craft magazine. There are still many people who restore and service these vintage radios, and often it can be difficult or impossible to find schematics and/or tuning information. Some websites offer to sell this information, but often what is shown here is enough to get an old radio working again since most times both schematics and alignment steps are included. I keep a running list of all data sheets to facilitate a search... 

War Advertising Council

War Advertising Council, February 1944 Popular Science - RF Cafe WebsiteI'm probably one of the few people remaining who fairly regularly recite the World War II (WWII) era slogan of "Use it up. Wear it out. Make it do, or Do without." One of the primary killers of economies has been inflation, whatever the cause - usually deficit spending by government and/or printing of fiat money. Wartime typically produces high inflation levels due to the need to produce the equipment necessary to wage a battle. Supply and demand are another cause of inflation. If the demand is greater than the supply, prices go up because owners want to maximize profits. If the need for skilled labor is greater than what is available, workers demand higher pay, and the price goes up. During WWII, as the chart to the upper left shows, inflation rates were sky high, and the government propagandists called on the citizens to "do their part" to keep prices under control by not creating a higher demand then the supply chain could accommodate...

Many Thanks to San Francisco Circuits for Continued Support!

San Francisco CircuitsSF Circuits' specialty is in the complex, advanced technology of PCB fabrication and assembly, producing high quality multi-layered PCBs from elaborate layouts. With them, you receive unparalleled technical expertise at competitive prices as well as the most progressive solutions available. Their customers request PCB production that is outside the capabilities of normal circuit board providers. Please take a moment to visit San Francisco Circuits today. "Printed Circuit Fabrication & Assembly with No Limit on Technology or Quantity."

Antenna Theory Quiz

Quiz #77: Antenna Theory Quiz - RF Cafe WebsiteWelcome to the RF Cafe Antenna Theory Quiz, a specialized assessment designed to test your knowledge of the radiating structures that define the success of any RF communications system. From fundamental dipole operation and feedpoint impedance to the critical nuances of gain, polarization, and pattern formation, a deep understanding of antenna physics is essential for any serious radio enthusiast or professional engineer. This quiz challenges you on key concepts, including the characteristics of Yagi-Uda arrays, the significance of front-to-back ratios, the dynamics of ground planes, and the practical challenges of matching networks. By evaluating your grasp of these essential antenna principles...

Mathematical Puzzles, 1981 Old Farmer's Almanac

Mathematical Puzzles, 1981 Old Farmer's Almanac - RF Cafe WebsiteEach autumn I used to anxiously await the appearance of the newest edition of The Old Farmer's Almanac on the store shelf, and such was the case with this 1981 issue. It is not that I was/am an avid farmer, just that I enjoy reading the anecdotes, tales, and interesting historical tidbits included amongst the pages along with tables of high and low tides, moon and sun rising and setting times, astronomical events, and weather patterns expected for the year that lay ahead. Most of all, I liked working the puzzles and riddles. Over the years the difficulty levels gradually got lower and lower (aka dumbed down), to the point where for the last decade or so I have not even bothered buying the OFA. Now it is full of numbnut stuff...

Electronics-Themed Comic, Popular Electronics

Electronics-Themed Comic, February 1972 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteThis is a great electronics-themed comic from a February 1972 issue of Popular Electronics. It encompasses the essence of the stereotypical salesman ruse, especially in that era when people were sure that electronics repair services were out to rip them off by selling unneeded services and replacement parts. Aspiring TV technicians who couldn't grasp the technology moved on to working as mechanics in a garage, poking tiny holes in brake lines to scare owners into paying for complete braking system rebuilds. I usually like to post multiple comics on each page, but at the moment only this one is available...

Frequency-to-Meter Conversion Chart for Hams

Frequency-to-Meter Conversion Chart for Hams & SWL's, June 1966 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteAs with your school and college days where once there was no longer any reason to memorize physical constants, conversion formulas, and names of people, places, and things, much of the noggin's gray matter was repurposed to remember topics of more immediate need. You can always look up what you have forgotten. While studying for your Ham radio or FCC license, being able to be able to quickly convert between wavelength and frequency is essential. Recalling on demand frequency-wavelength pairs is a real time saver on a timed exam. Even being able to perform the conversion on a calculator during the test takes up valuable time that could be better used on other tasks. This handy-dandy chart for converting...

IMS 2026 Coverage by everything RF!

everything RF IMS 2026 Event Coverage - RF Cafe WebsiteIMS 2026 (IEEE MTT-S International Microwave Symposium) is the world's premier RF and microwave conference, bringing together thousands of industry professionals from around the globe to explore the latest technologies, tools, and technical developments. IMS2026 will feature the RFIC Symposium, the new RFSA and RFTT Symposia, and conclude with the ARFTG Microwave Measurement Conference. everything RF website's medai team is providing full coverage of the event. Stop by Booth 24048 to meet the crew.

The Man Who Pinned Wings on the Navy

The Man Who Pinned Wings on the Navy, July 1961 Popular Science - Airplanes and RocketsIn 1961, the United States Navy commemorated the fiftieth anniversary of the A-1 Triad, the service's first aircraft. This milestone honored Glenn Hammond Curtiss, the father of naval aviation, who designed the versatile machine capable of operating on land, water, and air. Born in Hammondsport, New York, in 1878, Curtiss possessed an innate obsession with speed and mechanical ingenuity. Before revolutionizing aviation, he dominated motorcycle racing, famously earning the title of the fastest man on Earth. His transition to flight led to landmark achievements, including winning the Gordon Bennett trophy in France and executing the first successful U.S. intercity flight...

Today in Science History - RF Cafe Website
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Homepage Archives - RF Cafe

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.

 

Service Technicians' All-American Award Winners

Service Technicians' All-American Award Winners, February 1958 Radio & TV News - RF Cafe WebsiteIf you had a father, brother, uncle, grandfather, husband, or neighbor who was an electronics service technician in the days of yore, he might have been mentioned in this 1958 issue of Radio & TV News magazine highlighting General Electric's Service Technicians' All-American Award Winners. Rather than rewarding the independent businessmen for their technical prowess, the company assigned awards based on community services performed, thereby reflecting positively on both GE and the electronics service business as a whole. Each winner received a $500 check, which in 2020 money is the equivalent to about $4,500 in today's economy. The closest thing we have to the radio and television serviceman today is maybe the guys who install broadband cable and satellite dishes. Their level technical knowledge is not required to be anywhere near as deep...

World's Most Accurate Radar

World's Most Accurate Radar, September 1958 Radio & TV News - RF Cafe WebsiteIf you do a Google search on the Talos Defense Unit at White Sands Proving Grounds, you have to look really hard to find any mention of Radio Corporation of America (RCA) having had any part of the program. Bendix Corporation built the Talos missile. According to the sparse documentation on the development of the AN/FPS-16 monopulse radar, it was the brainchild of the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory and built by RCA in Moorestown, NJ. This 1958 Radio & TV News magazine article claims the FPS-16 was developed with a lot of input from Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) of Johns Hopkins University, but the Wikipedia webpage makes no mention of it. The FPS-16 had the highest spatial resolution of its time at 0.15° and 4.5 meters. It operated at 5400-5900 MHz...

Calculation of Potentiometer Linearity and Power Dissipation

Calculation of Potentiometer Linearity and Power Dissipation, August 1967 Electronics World - RF Cafe WebsiteHere is yet another example of where the basics in electronics never changes. There are always new people entering into the realm, so even if the subject has been covered countless times already, there is always a need to print it again. Remember that at one time you were a newbie and appreciated seeing beginners' concepts explained. The old-timers of the day probably complained about being tired of seeing the simple stuff re-hashed over and over. Most standard potentiometers (pots) are linear in operation, that is, the resistance between the moveable wiper contact and the overall resistance between the two ends is directly proportional to the percentage of travel along the length of the resistive element (printed or wirewound). One of more popular specialty pots is the logarithmically tapered type that is used in audio circuits...

Cover Story: Modern Ham Shack

Cover Story: Modern Ham Shack, February 1958 Radio & TV News - RF Cafe WebsiteWorld Radio Laboratories (WRL) was a major manufacturer of amateur radio equipment in the middle of the last century. They were famous for high power transmitters like the Globe King models, which looked exactly like the big, black, rack-based units seen in older movies with Ham radio cameos. It took a couple chassis filled with big glowing vacuum tubes to pump out a kilowatt of power. Today's semiconductor-based transmitters do the job in a small fraction of the volume, with higher quality and higher reliability and with usually no periodic maintenance required. The savings in your electric bill is substantial. WRL provided a great service to the amateur radio community that constituted its customer base by encouraging anyone passing through Council Bluffs, Iowa...

Fahnestock Clip Advertisement

Fahnestock Clip Advertisement, August 1947 Radio News - RF Cafe WebsiteYou have probably seen Fahnestock clips, but did you know that's what they were called? Me neither, until I first saw the name of them on a page in a MicroMark catalog a while back. When I ran across this advertisement in a 1947 issue of Radio News magazine, it seemed like a good opportunity pass the revelation on. Model train enthusiasts must not use Fahnestock clips as much anymore for wiring their layouts since there are more modern quick-change type terminal connections available. MicroMark does not sell them anymore, but you can still get some from Newark Electronics and other online sellers. Maybe the ones sitting in my parts drawer will one day be worth big $$$ to collectors (just kidding).

Some ABCs of V.H.F. Receiver Design

Some ABCs of V.H.F. Receiver Design, January 1953 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteAuthor Edward Tilton discusses here the tradeoff between bandwidth and sensitivity in receivers, given that broadband noise power follows bandwidth in a 10 log BW fashion. Pulling in the most distant stations requires very low noise in able to get the SNR as high as possible, which requires the minimum bandwidth possible. Prior to highly stable local oscillators, operating successfully in a narrow bandwidth for voice (phone), and particularly for CW (Morse code), dictated the use of a fixed frequency crystal to keep from having to constantly re-tune the station. Nowadays, of course, what used to be considered a metrology grade oscillator can be bought for tens of dollars...

Television and FM Antennas

Television and FM Antennas, January 1948 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteThis article on the design and use of antennas for television and FM radio was printed in a 1948 issue of Radio-Craft magazine. Equations and charts are provided for calculating element lengths for half-wave antennas, including directors and reflectors. Many types of antennas - dipole, stacked dipole, folded dipole, conical, adjustable "V," cross-element - are discussed regarding siting issues (location and height above the ground), and radiation patterns. It is a pretty good primer for someone new to antennas, and makes a great supplement to the data furnished in study guides for obtaining a Ham radio license...

Fairbanks-Morse Model 81 2-Band 2 V. "Farm" Set Radio Service Data Sheet

Fairbanks-Morse Model 81 2-Band 8-Tube 2 V. "Farm" Set Radio Service Data Sheet, March 1936 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsitePrior to the Rural Electrification Act of 1936, the year this Radio Service Data Sheet appeared in Radio-Craft magazine, commercial electric service was limited primarily to urban and suburban areas. Vast expanses of rural farmland were without electric service and had to rely on individual wind and, where possible, hydro power generators for DC power. The output voltage was of course direct current since it could be stored for later use. Even through the early 1940s many farms and rural households had only the convenience of DC power by virtue of banks of lead-acid batteries. Sears, Roebuck &Co. sold wind-driven electricity generators for farm use to charge batteries in place rather than having to load them onto a wagon and truck them into town for charging. Many farms already had windmills erected to mechanically drive grist mills, saws...

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle January 12

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle January 12, 2020 - RF Cafe WebsiteAs with my hundreds of previous engineering and science-themed crossword puzzles, this one for January 12, 2020, contains only clues and terms associated with engineering, science, physical, astronomy, mathematics, chemistry, etc., which I have built up over nearly two decades. Many new words and company names have been added that had not even been created when I started in the year 2002. 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 location like Tunguska, Russia, for reasons which, if you don't already know, might surprise you.

"Frequency" vs. "Amplitude" Modulation

"Frequency" vs. "Amplitude" Modulation, August 1935 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteA momentous development that changed the field of radio communications warranted merely a half-page announcement in 1935 when frequency modulation inventor Edwin Armstrong had his article published in Radio-Craft magazine. It indisputably changed the world while causing poor Mr. Armstrong much grief while defending his right to the invention. Spread spectrum modulation / demodulation would be the next big communications advance that began with the frequency hopping (FHSS) scheme dreamed up by Hollywood actress Hedy Lamarr and pianist Antheil George during World War II. Direct sequence spread spectrum (DSSS) followed in the digital age, and since then I do not know of any fundamentally new communications technology in that time...

Radio Astronomy and the Jodrell Bank Radio Telescope

Radio Astronomy and the Jodrell Bank Radio Telescope, February 1958 Radio & TV News - RF Cafe WebsiteOne of the photos in this 1958 Radio & TV News magazine article on the Jodrell Bank radio telescope shows what appears to be the largest multi-conductor cable connector I have ever seen. It looks like a early Photoshopping of a DB-9 connector with a heavy metal back shell. The cable bundle is three to four inches in diameter. Rather than use slip rings to transfer the control, data, and power signals from the base to the steerable 250-foot diameter parabolic dish of the Jodrell Bank radio telescope (now called the Lovell telescope), a single massive cable does the job. The science of radio astronomy was barely three decades old at the time it was built. It was in 1931 that Karl Jansky first determined that radio signals were coming from our Milky Way galaxy. He eventually ended up working for Bell Labs in Homdel, New Jersey, where he built a radio telescope to investigate background noise in the 10-20 meter wavelength band, where Bell planned to use its microwave relay system...

Popular Electronics Editorial - The 1972 IEEE Show

Editorial IEEE Show, Popular Electronics, July 1972 - RF Cafe WebsiteBefore there was the annual International Microwave Symposium (IMS) trade show, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers' (IEEE) Microwave Theory and Techniques Society (MTT-S) hosted the show, which was widely known as the MTT-S show. Before that, the event went by a variety of names, including "Intercon," (International Convention and Exposition) as reported in this 1972 issue of Popular Electronics magazine. For the first few decades since its inception in the 1950s, New York City was the venue, often in a hotel. As with tides and solar cycles, enthusiasm and attendance waned and ebbed over the years. 1972 was one of the low years. Per the story, about half the number of people were there compared to two years prior. I could not locate a chart of attendance numbers over the years, nor the numbers to generate my own chart...

The Lincoln Vocational Technical Center - A Partial Autobio

The Lincoln Vocational Technical Center, Annapolis, Maryland, Kirt's Cogitations #317 - RF Cafe WebsiteOne day in late spring of 1973 I found myself walking around the gymnasium of Annapolis Junior High School (AJHS) trying to decide which courses I would prefer upon beginning tenth grade the following fall. It was one of the final days of ninth grade, which had been by far my least happy year in school. Living in Mayo, Maryland, I and my fellow neighborhood ninth graders should have attended Southern Senior High School (SSHS) in Harwood, Maryland, where our predecessors had gone for ninth grade, but overcrowding caused the Anne Arundel School Board wizards to decide that for at least that year, we would remain at AJHS for another term. Historically, kids from my area went to AJHS only for seventh and eighth grades and then switched to SSHS. Annapolis, being the capital city of Maryland, was significantly more urban than the rural areas to which SSHS type people were accustomed. The clientele was much more aggressive in the big city. Sure, we had our "red neck greaser" rowdies in the southern part of the county, but at least their parents would whip them if they got caught getting into trouble...

Mac's Radio Service Shop: Was Ist Los?

Mac's Radio Service Shop: Was Ist Los?, May 1958 Radio News - RF Cafe WebsiteImagine reading an article from a 1958 magazine that references the schematic for a specific radio manufactured in Germany, and then being able to download a copy of it for free on the Internet. Such is the case with this Mac's Radio Service Shop story entitled, "Was Ist Los?" Mac is describing to his sidekick Barney the difficulty in troubleshooting and repairing a Metz Transformatoren: Babyphon 56 that a serviceman had purchased while stationed overseas. The diagram is of course in German, which requires Mac to pull out a language translation dictionary. The problem was that many words unique to technical jargon were not in it. Additionally, units of measure for the capacitors and inductors were not like U.S. units. Mac noted that many capacitor values were labeled with units of "u," "n," and "p," for "micro," nano," and "pico." He mentions the "micro" prefix for the letter "u," but never calls the "n" and "p" by the now-standard terms...

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle for January 5

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle January 5, 2020 - RF Cafe WebsiteAs with my hundreds of previous engineering and science-themed crossword puzzles, this first one of the new decade, January 5, 2020, contains only clues and terms associated with engineering, science, physical, astronomy, mathematics, chemistry, etc., which I have built up over nearly two decades. Many new words and company names have been added that had not even been created when I started in the year 2002. 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 location like Tunguska, Russia...

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