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Transistors: Types & Techniques

Transistors: Types & Techniques, November 1962 Popular Electronics - RF CafeLouis Garner was the semiconductor guru for Popular Electronics magazine in the 1960s when he wrote this article attempting to demystify the proliferation of over 2,000 transistor types. He devised a "transistor tree," tracing evolution from the obsolete point-contact transistor - unstable with high gain but noisy - to advanced designs balancing cost, frequency, power, and reliability. It covers pnp and npn basics, then details processes: grown-junction (inexpensive, good high-frequency); meltback diffused (similar, better response); alloyed-junction (popular for power); surface-barrier family (SB, SBDT, MA, MADT; excellent high-frequency, low voltage); post-alloy-diffused...

Notable Quote: Benjamin Peirce

Notable Quote: Benjamin Peirce - RF Cafe"Gentlemen, ei*π + 1 = 0 is surely true, it is absolutely paradoxical; we cannot understand it, and we don't know what it means. But we have proved it, and therefore we know it must be truth." - Benjamin Peirce (not to be confused with Captain Benjamin Franklin "Hawkeye" Pierce), 19th century Harvard mathematician. ei*π + 1 = 0 i, BTW, is known as Euler's identity - engineers live by it.

Twisting Crystal Changes Electricity Flow

Twisting a Crystal at the Nanoscale Changes How Electricity Flows - RF Cafe"Scientists have shown that twisting a crystal at the nanoscale can turn it into a tiny, reversible diode, hinting at a new era of shape-engineered electronics. Researchers at the RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science, working with collaborators, have created a new technique for building three-dimensional nanoscale devices directly from single crystals. The approach uses a focused ion beam instrument to precisely carve materials at extremely small scales. Using this method, the team shaped tiny helical structures from a topological magnetic material made of cobalt, tin, and sulfur, known by its chemical formula Co3Sn2S2..."

Hitler Takes up Television

Hitler Takes Up Television, January 1935 Radio-Craft - RF CafeI am constantly amazed when reading stories about how easily Adolph Hitler rose to power in Germany by encouraging and exploiting resentment of his countrymen over being forced, among other concessions outlined in the Treaty of Versailles, to disarm militarily and make reparations for atrocities committed in World War I. Part of the Nazi (National Socialist) party success was extensive use of propaganda via print, radio, and the relatively new technology of television. Government exercised complete control over the mainstream media (i.e., not "underground") by dictating content that promoted the proclaimed virtues of Nazism and the Aryan race and the vices of just about every other form of government and race. At the height of Hitler's reign of terror during the Third Reich era, radio and television sets were only permitted to use crystals tuned to state-sponsored...

More About "Man-Made" Static 

More About "Man-Made" Static, May 1930 Radio-Craft - RF CafeManmade electrical noise (QRM) and natural electrical noise (QRN) has been the nemesis of communications - both wired and wireless - since the first signals were sent. While it is true that over the last century the amount of "background" noise has increased significantly, the ability of modern circuits to deal with (reject) it and/or accommodate (error correction) it has pretty much kept up with the advancement. You might be tempted to think that "back in the good old days" such problems did not exist, but operators were plagued by poorly designed and inadequately filtered transmitters as well as really deficient electrical service installation that spewed noise from transformers, inadequately grounded transmission lines, lousy connections...

Thanks Once Again to everythingRF for Long-Time Support!

everything RF Searchable Database - RF CafePlease take a few moments to visit the everythingRF website to see how they can assist you with your project. everythingRF is a product discovery platform for RF and microwave products and services. They currently have 354,801 products from more than 2478 companies across 485 categories in their database and enable engineers to search for them using their customized parametric search tool. Amplifiers, test equipment, power couplers and dividers, coaxial connectors, waveguide, antennas, filters, mixers, power supplies, and everything else. Please visit everythingRF today to see how they can help you.

Mac's Service Shop: Solid-State Service Instruments

Mac's Service Shop: Solid-State Service Instruments, June 1968 Electronics World - RF CafeThe debate about upgrading electronics service shop equipment from vacuum tube to solid-state instruments was raging in the late 1960s, when this Mac's Service Shop story appeared in Electronics World magazine. Barney is querying Mac regarding FET-based VOM performance specifications he is considering to replace a VTVM. He covets the Hewlett-Packard 217A square-wave generator, delivering clean 1 Hz-10 MHz waves with 5-ns rise time and scope triggering, justifying its $300-$400 cost for precise scope testing. An electronic counter for 5 Hz-10 MHz frequencies, with four- or six-digit readouts and line- or crystal-gated accuracy..

Bell Labs Ad: Test Tube for Sound

Test Tube for Sound Bell Labs Advertisement, December 1947 Radio News - RF CafeA lot of people like to demean engineers and scientists for their propensity to want to conduct experiments and obtain measured, empirical data rather than "winging it" and being satisfied with "intuitive" knowledge or the contemporarily popular term "gut." If mankind had not adopted scientific methods and ventured beyond the "cradle of civilization" on the African continent, we would all still be living in grass huts, hurling rocks at prey, making clicking sounds for communication, and foraging for berries. Quantifying and categorizing all things in nature helps inventors create new and improved implements that help make life better. Early on it was mostly individuals like Archimedes, Euler, Newton, and Edison who built the pool of knowledge that fed and evolved into corporations, governments, and universities doing the vast majority of the work. Bell Laboratories...

Donut-Shaped Light for More Reliable Wireless

Donut-Shaped Light Could Make Wireless Signals Far More Reliable - RF Cafe"A new metasurface lets scientists flip between ultra-stable light vortices, paving the way for tougher, smarter wireless communication. Scientists have developed a new optical device capable of producing two different types of vortex-shaped light patterns: electric and magnetic. These unusual light structures, called skyrmions, are known for their exceptional stability and resistance to interference. Because they hold their shape so reliably, they are strong candidates for carrying information in future wireless communication systems. 'Our device not only generates more than one vortex pattern in free-space-propagating..."

Carl & Jerry: Gold Is Where You Find It

Carl and Jerry: Gold Is Where You Find It, April 1956 Popular Electronics - RF CafeYou can buy a pretty good metal detector today for a hundred dollars that will find coins buried many inches deep and larger metallic items even deeper, and you even get discriminator functions to filter out unwanted objects like tin cans. They weigh just a couple pounds and can be used with one arm. Compare that to early metal detectors that had huge induction coils on a frame so heavy that shoulder straps were needed just to lug them around. Some models came on wheels for pushing or pulling like a cart. You could plan to spend a few hundred dollars (a thousand or more in today's dollars) for one. Even then, they were not as sophisticated as the $50 models sold in Walmart now. In classic fashion, teen electronics hobbyists Carl and Jerry use their technical prowess to design and build their own metal detector and then unintentionally using it to convince...

Simplified Coil Calculation

Simplified Coil Calculation, May 1932 Radio-Craft - RF CafeThis might be one of the earliest printed instances of Harold A. Wheeler's simplified formulas for the three basic inductor forms. Wheeler is credited with having devised the first automatic volume control (AVC) using diode envelope detection. We all use them on a regular basis, but for most the origin was never known or has long since been forgotten (I fall into the latter category). I did some research on Wheeler's inductance formulas a few months ago while working on what is now titled "RF Cafe Espresso Engineering Workbook™," so it was sort of déjà vu when this blurb appeared in a 1932 edition of Radio-Craft magazine...

Thanks to PCB Directory for Continued Support!

PCB  Directory - RF CafeThe leading website for the PCB industry. PCB Directory is the largest directory of Printed Circuit Board (PCB) Manufacturers, Assembly houses, and Design Services on the Internet. We have listed the leading printed circuit board manufacturers around the world and made them searchable by their capabilities - Number of laminates used, Board thicknesses supported, Number of layers supported, Types of substrates (FR-4, Rogers, flexible, rigid), Geographical location (U.S., China), kinds of services (manufacturing, fabrication, assembly, prototype), and more. Fast turn-around on quotations for PCB fabrication and assembly.

RCA "Ultrafax" System 

RCA "Ultrafax" System, January 1949 Radio & Television News - RF CafeDon't let the title fool you. This "Ultrafax" system developed by RCA in the late 1940s was essentially the first attempt at video on demand, or streaming video. Rather than piping the signal over cable or local broadcast frequency towers, a microwave link was used. While initial system equipment space and financial requirements meant only corporations, universities, and governments could procure an Ultrafax, engineers who developed the system envisioned an eventual culmination of equivalent systems in every home. Even at the end of the last century it was still not possible for program providers to personalize broadcasts to individuals. It wasn't until broadband Internet came on the scene in the 2000s that such services were possible. Now, a decade later, people watch any video they want on cellphones while riding in a car...

Men Who Have Made Radio: James Clerk Maxwell

Men Who Have Made Radio: J. C. Maxwell, May 1930 Radio-Craft - RF CafeMaxwell's inception of the theory of electromagnetic radiation is compared here to if Christopher Columbus had conceptualized the existence of America and mapped its features based solely on observations of how the known oceans and land masses interacted. I have always been amazed at the ability of people who formulate entirely new theories of science, finance, medicine, etc., and manage to detail and support their ideas with hard data and mathematics. Einstein did so with relativity, Dalton did so with atomic structure, Darwin did so with evolution, Pasteur did so with germ theory; the list is long. There are lots of geniuses out there, but a relative few change the world...

Flexible RF Switch for 6G Communication

Flexible RF Switch for 6G Communication - RF Cafe"A research team affiliated with UNIST has introduced a novel, high-performance, and thermally stable polymer-based non-volatile analog switch. This next-generation device is as thin and flexible as vinyl, yet capable of withstanding high temperatures. Professor Myungsoo Kim and his team from the Department of Electrical Engineering at UNIST, in collaboration with Professor Minju Kim from Dankook University, have developed this robust, flexible radio-frequency (RF) switch. Such technology could enable reliable 5G and 6G wireless communication in demanding environments -- such as wearable devices and the Internet of Things (IoT)..."

Werbel 4-Way Power Divider for 0.5-18 GHz

Werbel Microwave WM4PD-0.5-18-S 4-Way Power Divider for 0.5-18 GHz - RF CafeWerbel Microwave began as a consulting firm, specializing in RF components design, with the ability to rapidly spin low volume prototypes. Our WM4PD-0.5-18-S is a wideband 4-way in-line power splitter covering 500 MHz to 18 GHz with excellent return loss, low insertion loss, and high isolation performance. The device covers several military radios letter octave bands in one product, delivering much value to the program. Aluminum enclosure measures 6.25 x 2.98 x 0.50", includes four through-mounting holes, and has durable, stainless steel SMA female connectors. One device covers the upper UHF band, as well as L, S, C, X and Ku bands...

Wireless Engineering Crossword Puzzle

Wireless Engineering Crossword Puzzle for August 30, 2015 - RF CafeThis week's Wireless Engineering crossword puzzle contains the usual collection of only words and clues related to RF, microwave, and mm-wave engineering, optics, mathematics, chemistry, physics, and other technical subjects. As always, this crossword contains no names of politicians, mountain ranges, exotic foods or plants, movie stars, or anything of the sort unless it/he/she is related to this puzzle's technology theme (e.g., Reginald Denny or the Tunguska event in Siberia). The technically inclined cruciverbalists amongst us will appreciate the effort. Enjoy!

Please Thank RF & Connector Technology for Their Support

RF & Connector Technology - RF CafeProviding full solution service is our motto, not just selling goods. RF & Connector Technology has persistently pursued a management policy stressing quality assurance system and technological advancement. From your very first contact, you will be supported by competent RF specialists; all of them have several years of field experience in this industry allowing them to suggest a fundamental solution and troubleshooting approach. Coaxial RF connectors, cable assemblies, antennas, terminations, attenuators, couplers, dividers, and more. Practically, we put priority on process inspection at each step of workflow as well as during final inspection in order to actualize "Zero Defects."

G.I. Engineers

G.I. Engineers, June 1968 Electronics World - RF Cafe"Essayons," that's the motto of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. It means "Let us try," in French. In 1968, when this G.I. Engineers editorial appeared in Electronics World magazine, it noted that about 38,000 engineers, or roughly roughly 6% of the nation's total, served in the U.S. Armed Forces, far more technically skilled than in World War II or Korea. Despite surpluses in bachelor's-degree holders, advanced-degree shortages persisted, with over 15 thousand master's and PhD positions unfilled - by fewer than 8,500 qualified personnel, forcing underqualified assignments. Utilization varied: Air Force effectively deployed 14,000 engineers in R&D and civil roles; Navy specialist programs covered ship, ordnance, aeronautical, and Civil Engineer Corps (Seabees)...

$5 for Best Short-Wave Kinks

$5.00 for Best Short Wave Kink, November 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF CafeHere is a handy-dandy baker's dozen worth of "kinks," otherwise known as tricks, shortcuts, or clever ideas, that could prove useful while working in the lab at work or in your shop at home. One suggestion is to place a sheet of tracing paper over your schematic while wiring a circuit and draw each connection as it is completed, rather than mark up the original drawing. That was definitely good for a time when making a spare copy of a magazine page or assembly instruction from a kit was not as simple a matter as it is today...

Antenna Impedance Change Gesture Detection

Antenna Impedance Change Gesture Detection - RF Cafe"Apple has published a patent application describing a method to detect user gestures on wireless earbuds by measuring changes in RF antenna impedance, potentially reducing the need for dedicated touch-sensing hardware. The filing, titled 'Gesture Detection Based on Antenna Impedance Measurements,' published on January 8, 2026 as US 20260010234, describes using antennas already present for wireless communication as dual-purpose components that can also detect user input..."

Engineering Magazines & Editors Crossword Puzzle

Engineering Magazines & Editors Crossword Puzzle for August 2, 2015 - RF CafeThis week's crossword puzzle has the theme of electronics and engineering magazines and their editors. I have to plead guilty at not knowing who the editor-in-chief (EiC) of many of the publications were. After so often reading the names of the many authors and technical editors and contributing editors, etc., getting printed every month, keeping track is difficult. You should recognize all the magazine names since they are our industry's primary publications. Apologies to Microwaves & RF magazine (Nancy K. Friedrich, EiC), and to High Frequency Electronics (Scott Spencer, EiC), for not including them in the puzzle. The fact is, though, that the more words I insert at the outset, the more difficult it is...

Exodus AMP20097, 4.0–8.0 GHz, 2 kW SSPA

Exodus AMP20097, 4.0–8.0 GHz, 2 kW Pulse Solid State C-Band Amplifier - RF CafeExodus Advanced Communications, is a multinational RF communication equipment and engineering service company serving both commercial and government entities and their affiliates worldwide. Exodus' AMP20097 Pulse Amplifier is designed for Pulse/HIRF, EMC/EMI Mil-Std 461/464, and radar applications. Providing superb pulse fidelity and up to 100 μsec pulse widths to 10 kW peak power. Duty cycles to 10% with a minimum gain of 63 dB. Available monitoring parameters for forward and reflected power in watts and dBm, VSWR, voltage, current, and temperature sensing for outstanding reliability and ruggedness in a compact 7U chassis...

V.L.F. Loop Antenna

V.L.F. Loop Antenna, January 1963 Electronics World - RF CafeIf you have been searching for a do-it-yourself VLF loop antenna that can be resonated from approximately 14 to 25 kHz, then look no more. This article from a 1963 edition of Electronics World presents a relatively simple to build job that reportedly provides excellent reception. At these frequencies a wavelength is measured in miles, which makes even a simple dipole antenna impractical, so the multi-turn loop is the only alternative. It is the same principle that allows the little ferrite-core antenna inside your AM radio to work so well when the shortest wavelength in the commercial AM broadcast band is nearly 600 feet...

Trade Secrets: The Courts and You

Trade Secrets: The Courts and You, June 1968 Electronics World - RF CafeThis 1968 Electronics World magazine article nails the basics of trade secrets law that still hold today: if you learn your boss's secret info - like formulas, processes, or customer lists that give them a business edge - you can't share it with a new job, even by accident, and your new employer can get sued if they know about it and use it. No signed paper needed; courts protect "real" secrets (not public stuff or your general skills) with court orders to stop use or money damages. Good faith matters - act fair, don’t copy files or exact products, and you have defenses like competing honestly. Big changes now: almost all states follow uniform rules (UTSA) plus a 2016 federal...

Electronics-Themed Comics

Electronics-Themed Comics July 1948 Radio News - RF CafeHere is a batch of electronics-themed comics that appeared in the July 1948 edition of Radio News magazine. The comic on page 122 would probably elicit cries of racism or hate speech these days, even though there is nothing racist about it. Note how prescient the comic on page 140 was. It shows how long futurists have ben contemplating the technologies that have become or are becoming common place today - of course many of them were promised to us by the end of the last century by the like of Popular Mechanics, Mechanix Illustrated, et al...

Technical Headlines - RF Cafe

• Continuing Your Professional Education in 2026

• India Reaches 400M 5G Subscribers in 3 Years

• EIB Backs Europe's 1st Gallium Production Investment

• 2026 a Pivotal Year for 6G Standardization

• New 60-Meter Frequencies for Hams

• EMC Test Lab Market Expected to Double in 10 Years

Today in Science History - RF Cafe
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.

The Yagi Antenna

The Yagi Antenna, October 1952 Radio & Television News Article - RF CafeThe Yagi–Uda antenna (usually referred to as a Yagi), is a relatively simple to construct multielement structure consisting of a combination of driven (director) and reflective (reflector) diploes. Careful phasing of the configuration results in a directional radiation pattern that is used often for long distance (DX) and direction finding work. It is also useful in a dense signal environment where there is a need to exclude received signals not emanating from a preferred source. Common (or what used to be) rooftop television antennas were of the Yagi type and served not just to pull in distant stations, but to help reject multipath signals that would cause ghost images on the screen. The concept is the 1926 brainchild of Messrs. Shintaro Uda and Hidetsugu Yagi, both of the Tohoku Imperial University, in Japan. The Yagi antenna described in this 1952 issue of Radio & Television News magazine is for VHF channels 2-13...

RF & Electronics Symbols for Office™

RF & Electronics Schematic & Block Diagram Symbols for Office™ r2 - RF CafeIt was a lot of work, but I finally finished a version of the "RF & Electronics Schematic & Block Diagram Symbols"" that works well with Microsoft Office™ programs Word™, Excel™, and Power Point™. This is an equivalent of the extensive set of amplifier, mixer, filter, switch, connector, waveguide, digital, analog, antenna, and other commonly used symbols for system block diagrams and schematics created for Visio™. Each of the 1,000+ symbols was exported individually from Visio in the EMF file format, then imported into Word on a Drawing Canvas. The EMF format allows an image to be scaled up or down without becoming pixelated, so all the shapes can be resized in a document and still look good. The imported symbols can also be UnGrouped into their original constituent parts for editing...

7031 kHz, September 1972 QST

7031 kHz, September 1972 QST - RF Cafe RF Cafe visitor Kevin A., of Roanoke, VA, sent me this article from the September 1972 edition of the American Radio Relay League's QST magazine. He was motivated to send it after reading some of the articles I posted from WWII era QSTs. We can all probably relate a story similar to the one told here. How many "Old Al" types - the antithesis of an "Elmer" - are out there who knowingly or unknowingly frustrate others from participating in an otherwise fun activity because he insists on beating up on a trivial topic ad nauseam? You can feel the angst in the author's voice while reading. Ray, are you out there? Is this story real or fictitious? It could easily be either...

Toxic Air: Our Other Import from China

Toxic Air: Our Other Import from China - RF Cafe SmorgasbordYay for us. Our pollution production levels are way down compared to what they were in the middle of the last century. Seriously, things were getting really bad. Pittsburgh was considered such a hopeless mess that famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright, whose landmark Fallingwater home sat nearby, when asked what to do about Pittsburg's terrible pollution responded, "Abandon it." Lake Erie had been declared officially dead. Love Canal dominated headlines. Los Angeles air was (and still is, BTW) unbreathable. After huge public awareness campaigns, cleanup efforts, and stricter enforcement of pollution laws, the trend halted and has reversed. That is unquestionably good news. The bad news is that as pollution control got better, companies found continuing manufacturing operations in the U.S. was unprofitable based on what people were willing to pay for their products. Steel, the literal and figurative backbone of industry, could not be mined, smelted, and processed into finished goods at a price that would encourage innovation and growth...

Measuring Inductance and Capacity

Measuring Inductance and Capacity, June 1931 Radio-Craft - RF CafeThis reactance measuring bridge circuit which appeared in a 1931 issue of Radio-Craft magazine employs a very unique element for generating an alternating current: an electromechanical buzzer which doubles as an audio source. Sure, it doesn't produce a pure sinewave, but for the method used here to determine inductance and capacitance it does not matter. Rather than attempting to measure an absolute value of inductance or capacitance, a known reactance is used as part of a balanced bridge. This is by no means a precision instrument since accuracy depends on the user's interpretation of the presence or absence of an audible "buzz" in a pair of headphones, but in an era when "real" test equipment was beyond the budgets of many (maybe most) hobbyists, the scheme was better than nothing at all...

Radio News Information Sheets

Radio News Information Sheets, March 1930 Radio News - RF CafeTo the benefit of both professionals and hobbyists, Radio News magazine published Information Sheets each month that readers could easily cut out and insert into a notebook as a handy reference. For example, one Information Sheet presents basic information on the current-producing color sensitivities of common elements like cesium, rubidium, and potassium, along with that of the human eye for comparison. Another Information Sheet has a table of resistor values useful for constructing a range-selectable voltmeter from a simple milliammeter. Also, just as today you can buy a nearly complete AM or FM radio in the form of an IC (plus a handful of external components), it was possible even in 1930 to buy a complete radio receiver for integration into a chassis either as just a radio or as part of a combination unit that might also contain a record player. Some spec sheets for a few of those are included here as well just so you can see what they looked like - including all the vacuum tubes...

Bell Telephone Laboratories

Bell Telephone Laboratories, July 1959 Electronics World - RF CafeBell Telephone Laboratories was largely responsible for designing and building a communications system that was the envy of the world. Innovation on the part of Bell engineers, manufacturing staff that produced the equipment, and technicians who serviced the systems deserve the credit as do management types who made funds and opportunity available to the aforementioned. As the number of telephone service subscribers grew and reliability became even more vital to business, law enforcement, and national defense, new methods had to be devised. In the late 1950s, Bell introduced the concept of wireless microwave links at 11 GHz (X band), which at the time X band was primarily used (at 10 GHz) by precision approach aircraft radar. This advertisement in a 1959 issue of Electronics World magazine promoted Bell's achievement...

The Vacuum Tube Voltmeter

Test Instruments Part 4: The Vacuum Tube Voltmeter - D.C. Ranges, April 1959 Popular Electronics - RF CafeWhile we're on the topic of VTVMs, Popular Electronics magazine ran a 5-part series on test equipment usage. This installment (part 4) is on the use of a vacuum tube voltmeter (VTVM) for making DC measurements. Don't pass over the article just because it refers to a vacuum tube tester since there are lessons that apply to even the most modern transistorized, computerized meter. Author Larry Klein discusses mainly the DC functions, providing both functional descriptions of the circuits and how to use them for making accurate measurements. FET-input digital multimeters (DMMs) have largely replaced VTVMs, but they can still be found in some older electronics development labs and hobby benches...

Carl & Jerry: Two Tough Customers

Carl & Jerry: Two Tough Customers, June 1960 Popular Electronics - RF CafeHmmm... this is the first time recall either of Carl's or Jerry's father, at least where either was present in the story. Their mothers are mentioned on occasion for providing sandwiches or uttering words of caution when embarking on a sleuthing mission. In this episode entitled "Two Tough Customers," creator and author John T. Frye have the techno-teens set out on an adventure to shop for a good deal on a fundamentally sound car - which they would own in a partnership set up by their fathers. As you would expect if you are an ardent C&J follower, their effort includes inspecting not just the mechanical integrity but also the electrical system health. Frye always used his stories as the basis for a lesson on some technical aspect of everyday life. The boys broke teenage car owners into three groups: Hot-Rodders, Show-Offs, and Mechs. They seemed to assign one trait or the other, but not a combination thereof. Personally, I was a bit of all three with my first car - a 1969 Camaro SS. While reading, see if you notice what I did about the battery measurement...

Linear Integrated Circuits

Linear Integrated Circuits, November 1965 Electronics World - RF CafeHere is a sample of what passed as big news in the electronics world in 1965 as reported in none other than Electronics World magazine. Linear integrated circuits were beginning to be designed into commercial products and a lot of effort and money was invested in promoting the newfangled technology to the public. Prices were rapidly falling as acceptance increased. The truth is the vast majority of the general public had no idea what the difference was between vacuum tube and semiconductor equipped radios, televisions, phonographs, tape recorders, etc., from a performance standpoint. What they did notice was the smaller size, lack of warm-up time, and lower power consumption (i.e., less heat). Prices were about the same at the beginning of the technology transition. Some anti-semiconductor naysayers tried to argue that at least with tube equipment you had a chance of fixing a malfunctioning unit simply by replacing a $1 tube, but failed to note that the equivalent semiconductor product almost never experienced a failure. Of course there were some crappy transistorized products, but that was the exception rather than the rule...

Electronics-Themed Comics, 1950s Radio & TV News

Electronics-Themed Comics, May 1952 and May 1956 Radio & Television News - RF CafeI don't know about the rest of the country, but this Monday morning in Erie, Pennsylvania, is cold and snowy. That means people going to work had to shovel their driveways, maybe brush snow and ice off their windows, and brave hazardous conditions on the streets on the way to the office. Moods are understandably less than jovial and nerves might be shot. For those of you who identify with this scenario, these electronics-themed comics from a couple vintage Radio & Television News magazines might help assuage your anxieties. The same goes for those who are in Southern California and managed to arrive safely from a commute on the notoriously unfriendly highways there. As with many of these old comics, you have to be privy to the mindset of the day to fully appreciate the topic. TV repair was big business and people were fascinated with the boob tube innovation rapidly consuming the attention of domestic dwellers...

Extra-Terrestrial Relays, by Arthur C. Clarke

Extra-Terrestrial Relays, by Arthur C. Clarke - RF CafeAsk and ye shall receive... at least sometimes. I posted a request for an article by science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke, of 2001: A Space Odyssey fame, describing a geostationary satellite system that was published in the October 1945 edition of Wireless World magazine. Thanks to RF Cafe visitor Terry W., from the great state of Oklahoma, it is now available for everyone to enjoy. Clarke was not just a sci-fi writer, but also an educated visionary and card-carrying member of the British Interplanetary Society, who proposed many technological solutions to issues of his day. In this instance, the challenge was developing an efficient means to distribute TV signals across Europe and the world. Clarke's calculations for the necessary number of repeater towers proved that concept impractical, so he proposed using modified surplus German V2 rockets to launch Earth-orbiting "artificial satellites," powered...

Bell Telephone Laboratories Klystron

Bell Telephone Laboratories Klystron, May 1956 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeThe Varian brothers, Russell and Sigurd, are widely credited for invention of the klystron around 1937. Credit for further developments in the klystron - from its technology to origin of the name - is a bit fuzzy based on many articles I have seen. According to a 1944 Radio News magazine article, Sperry Gyroscope Company developed the tube into commercial viability and was assigned the trademark name "klystron" based on their creation of the field of "klystronics." However, the Wikipedia entry for Stanford professor Hermann Fränkel claims the name "klystron" was suggested by him. This full-page Bell Telephone Labs promotion in a 1956 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine tells of their 60 GHz klystron design by employee G.K. Farney, but makes no mention of the device's history. Bell Labs is unquestionably responsible for untold numbers of paradigm-changing inventions, but for some reason the omission of that information - especially so close in time to the klystron's arrival on the commercial scene - bothers me a bit...

Promote Your Company on RF Cafe

Sponsor RF Cafe for as Little as $40 per Month - RF CafeBanner Ads are rotated in all locations on the page! RF Cafe typically receives 8,000-15,000 visits each weekday. RF Cafe is a favorite of engineers, technicians, hobbyists, and students all over the world. With more than 17,000 pages in the Google search index, RF Cafe returns in favorable positions on many types of key searches, both for text and images. Your Banner Ads are displayed on average 225,000 times per year! New content is added on a daily basis, which keeps the major search engines interested enough to spider it multiple times each day. Items added on the homepage often can be found in a Google search within a few hours of being posted. If you need your company news to be seen, RF Cafe is the place to be...

Ham Radio Theme Crossword Puzzle for July 17th

Ham Radio Theme Crossword Puzzle for July 17th, 2022 - RF CafeThis custom Ham Radio themed Crossword Puzzle for July 17th, 2022, is brought to you by RF Cafe. All RF Cafe crossword puzzles are custom made by me, Kirt Blattenberger, and have only words and clues related to RF, microwave, and mm-wave engineering, optics, mathematics, chemistry, physics, and other technical subjects. As always, this crossword contains no names of politicians, mountain ranges, exotic foods or plants, movie stars, or anything of the sort unless it/he/she is related to this puzzle's technology theme (e.g., Reginald Denny or the Tunguska event in Siberia). The technically inclined cruciverbalists amongst us will appreciate the effort. Enjoy!

Low-Noise Receiver Performance Measurements

Low-Noise Receiver Performance Measurements, March 1969 Electronics World - RF CafeI was first introduced to the concept of receiver noise figure at the start of my engineering career in 1989 at General Electric AESD in Utica, NY. During my four years in the U.S. Air Force working on airport surveillance and precision approach radars, I do not recall having ever heard the term noise figure or noise temperature. We did signal to noise and signal sensitivity measurements as part of the normal maintenance, but the terms never arose. Ditto for my courses at the UVM. We never did cascade parameter calculations for noise figure, intercept points, compression points, etc. That is primarily the realm of practicing...

World's Biggest Radio Telescope

World's Biggest Radio Telescope, June 1964 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeThe National Science Foundation's 1000-meter Arecibo radio telescope, carved into a Puerto Rico mountain valley, was commissioned on November 1, 1963. Justification in funding the colossal project was partly from the Department of Defense because of a need to characterize the Earth's upper atmosphere. Satellites and looming threats of soon to be developed ICBM traffic were of prime concern. One of the renowned uses of the Arecibo radiotelescope was when Carl Sagan's team transmitted a "we are here" message toward the M13 globular cluster in the constellation of Hercules in 1974. The amount of research and data collected over the ensuing six decades has been invaluable from both communications and astronomical perspectives. Tragically, on November 7, 2020, the dish suffered a catastrophic mechanical failure in the suspension supports, resulting in irreparable damage. Planning on the site's future is ongoing...

Mac's Service Shop: Keeping Abreast of Your Field

Mac's Service Shop: Keeping Abreast of Your Field, April 1969 Electronics World - RF CafeMac and Barney discuss with some degree of trepidation the alarmingly increasing rate at which new electronics technology is being developed and marketed. As service shop owner and technician, respectively, they needed to constantly educate themselves on new components and circuits in order to stay current and be efficient enough to turn a profit. Mac recounts his lengthy background beginning with the days of mainly battery-powered AM radios, and progressing through AC-DC, FM and all-band (shortwave) radio, B&W television and the color TV, CB radios, and a new breed of appliances with electronic controls...

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