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Innovative Power Products (IPP) Directional Couplers - RF Cafe

Mac's Service Shop: Buying and Using a Pocket Calculator

Mac's Service Shop: Buying and Using a Pocket Calculator, May 1974 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteDo you remember your first calculator - electronic, that is (slide rules and abacuses don't count - actually they do, right?)? Mine was acquired sometime in the fall of 1976 during my first attempt at secondary education at Anne Arundel Community College in Maryland, where eventually, in 1987, I was awarded an Associate's degree in Engineering (which constituted the first two years of my eventual BSEE at UVM in 1989, on whose notable alumni list I am not). My name is not in AACC's list of notable alumni, either. But I digress. My calculator was a Texas Instruments model SR-50 that had a small red LED display. It cost about $100 ($445 in today's inflated money...

Fundamentals of Color TV: The NTSC System

Fundamentals of Color TV: The NTSC System, April 1954 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsiteYou genius types might not be able to relate to the rest of us who read articles like this one entitled "Fundamentals of Color TV: The NTSC System" and are in awe of minds that conjure such things as the NTSC System and then build, refine, and perfect working hardware. Making the system backward-compatible with existing black and white (B&W) signals added to the complexity and cleverness of the solution - akin but more sophisticated than compatibility of stereo with original mono radio transmissions. When catchy marketing slogans like the familiar (to old folks) RCA television advertisement claim of "Before you see the color ... Your ColorTrak System grabs it, aligns it, defines it, sharpens it, tones it ... and locks the color on track," what it actually means is that a very smart bunch of engineers and scientists spent a lot of time and money designing...

SF Circuits: Military-Grade PCB Manufacturing

San Francisco Circuits -- Military-Grade PCB Manufacturing: Meeting the Highest Standards for Reliability - RF Cafe WebsiteSan Francisco Circuits, a leading printed circuit board fabrication and assembly supplier serving commercial and defense markets, describes how Military-grade printed circuit boards (PCBs) are designed for environments where failure is not an option. Standards like MIL-PRF-31032, MIL-PRF-55110, and MIL-PRF-50884 define stringent requirements for materials, fabrication, testing, and traceability, ensuring boards perform reliably in extreme conditions. These specifications guide engineers and manufacturers in creating PCBs that withstand temperature extremes, vibration, shock, and humidity far beyond commercial standards. MIL-PRF-31032 serves as the modern umbrella specification, covering rigid, flexible...

Coaxial Connectors Quiz

Quiz #79: Coaxial Connectors Quiz - RF CafeWelcome to the RF Coaxial Connectors Quiz, an essential module for any engineer or radio hobbyist focused on maintaining interconnect integrity across their signal chain. Whether you are standardizing your station hardware, troubleshooting high-frequency signal leakage, or verifying the physical port interfaces for your test bench equipment, a thorough understanding of coaxial connector characteristics - from the rugged reliability of the Type N to the precision of the SMA - is vital. This assessment challenges your proficiency in connector selection, exploring the differences in mating mechanisms, cutoff frequencies, constant-impedance geometries, and the practical environmental...

Calls Home from Auto by Short Wave

Calls Home from Auto by Short Wave, August 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteThis could be one of the earliest reports of mobile communications between a private automobile and a home base station. Using a personally designed and installed 5-meter transceiver both at home and in his car, Mr. Wallace is able to talk to his 12-year-old son on the way from work. My guess is that in 1935 there were not too many traffic jams, even in Long Beach, California, so it is doubtful that was the cause for his announced expected later-than-normal arrival home. The article states the automobile power supply needed to produce 300 mA of current at 525 V, which is ~160 W per Ohm's law, which seems unlikely considering car batteries were 6 V at the time, and that would work out to ~26 A. My question is whether little Billy possessed a license permitting him to talk back to dear old dad from the home station...

50 Miles Up - Ionospheric Research

50 Miles Up WAC Corporal, May 1946 Popular Science - RF Cafe WebsitePrior to the International Geophysical Year (aka IGY, which ended up running for a year and a half), spanning from July 1, 1957, through December 31, 1958, not a lot was known about the upper atmosphere. May 1946, when this article appeared in Popular Science magazine, was less than a year after the end of World War II. During the war a lot was learned about long distance wireless (radio) communications between and across continents and ship to shore. Scientists theorized about the phenomenon of charged particles at high altitudes which, being electrically conductive, could reflect electromagnetic signals so that over the horizon signals could be exchanged. Coincidence with sunspot activity and aurorae had already been established, but more knowledge was needed. Rocket...

Bell Telephone Laboratories Solar Battery

Bell Telephone Laboratories Solar Battery, April 1954 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsiteThis photo of Bell Telephone Labs' three scientists, G.L. Pearson, D.M. Chapin, and C.S. Fuller, inventors of the "Bell Solar Battery," reminds me of the very familiar shot of John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley huddled over their point contact transistor in December of 1948. The "battery" terminology is an interesting choice since we normally think of a battery as a charge storage device, but in fact a battery is fundamentally a charge creation device. A secondary battery may be recharged by reversing the depleted chemical (or other) process that generated the initial charge, but it first created the potential via a basic charge separation process. What we today refer to as a solar cell is a form of primary battery that is not rechargeable. Just as some chemical batteries (cells) are reactivated by replenishing the electrolyte, the solar cell is replenished by photons giving up their energy to the semiconductor substrate...

The Saga of the Vacuum Tube

The Saga of the Vacuum Tube, April 1946 Radio News - RF Cafe WebsiteHere is the final installation of a 22 part series entitled "The Saga of the Vacuum Tube," by Gerald Tyne, that appeared in Radio News magazine in 1946. Part 1 was printed in March 1943. The collective contents, which covered the development of the vacuum tube from its conception to the end of World War I, could have been published as a stand-alone book. Author Gerald F. J. Tyne presented the series to trace the development which took place up to the end of World War I along a particular branch of the network of roads which led to the modern radio tube. He traced the evolution from studies of the interactions between heat and electricity as pursued by the early philosophers and by the physicists who followed them (Lee de Forest, et al). These limitations have been...

RF Cafe's Fresnel Zone Calculator

Fresnel Zone Calculator - RF Cafe WebsiteThere are many online Fresnel Zone calculators. Most do the basic calculation for the maximum radius of the Fresnel Zone for a given frequency and separation between antennas. Some allow you to enter an obstacle's distance from one of the antennas, and its height, then lets you know if the obstacle falls within the Fresnel Zone. Very few plot the shape of the Fresnel Zone, and even less include an obstacle positioned on the plot. Most rare are calculators which take the curvature of the Earth into account. RF Cafe's new online Fresnel Zone calculator handles all those parameters. Check it out...

Understanding Super-Modulation

Understanding Super-Modulation, February 1950 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteA few weeks ago I posted a two-part article on the Taylor super-modulation principle published in Radio & Television News magazine in 1948. It was a newly announced technology at the time and was written by its inventor, Robert Taylor. This piece entitled "Understanding Super-Modulation" appeared a couple years later by another author, John McCord, where he describes how it works , how to tune super-modulation circuits, and how it compares to other modulation methods - all conveniently in "Ham language." Super-modulation is a form of amplitude modulation (AM) that makes use of carrier and/or sideband suppression to achieve greater efficiency. A panadaptor - aka pan-adapter, aka panadapter, aka radio spectrum scope, aka panoramic adapter...

Mac's Radio Service Shop: Barney Turns Inventor

Mac's Radio Service Shop: Barney Turns Inventor, February 1950 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteIt has been a long time since I heard this saying: "Well, they always say that if you want to find out the best and easiest way of doing something, just put a lazy man at the job." Mac McGregor offered that line to his service shop technician Barney - in jest of course - when Barney explains his million dollar invention idea for a fool-proof vacuum tube tester that can be used by just about anyone. Mac's Radio Service Shop creator John Frye often used the monthly techno-drama to introduce some good ideas for new inventions and/or new methods for troubleshooting problems. Somewhere along the line I think I have seen an advertisement for a tube tester that used the automation concept dreamed up by Barney...

An Ex-Ham's Opinion of "No-Code" Test

An Ex-Ham's Opinion of "No-Code" Test, March 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteI tend to be a traditionalist for most things, but do not go out of my way to make trouble for other people who don't appreciate the way things are and have been... as long as, per Thomas Jefferson, "It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg." In other words, if your actions cause me no financial or physical harm, I'm not likely to oppose your actions - unless they're illegal. Many older Hams are greatly offended at the FCC for having removed the Morse code requirement in 2005 for obtaining an amateur radio operator's license. They see it as a way to separate the wheat from the chaff, so to speak; that is to say, to maintain a barrier that keeps non-serious aspirants from gaining entry into the ranks of the elite group...

Atwater Kent Model 649 All-Wave 9 Metal Tube Superhet. Radio

Atwater Kent Model 649 All-Wave 9 Metal Tube Superhet. Radio Service Data Sheet, November 1935 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteFor more than a decade, I have been posting these Radio Service Data Sheets for radios and various other audio and visual electronics sets that appeared in vintage electronics magazines. This one for the Atwater Kent Model 649 all-wave, 9 metal tube, superheterodyne console radio set was published in the November 1935 issue of Radio Craft. "All-Wave" radios were popular at the time because they provided access to shortwave bands so listeners could tune in foreign broadband stations - often with the rudimentary built-in antenna. Short Wave Listening was actually a worldwide sport that had its own cadre of enthusiastic participants, including a dedicated magazine entitled Short Wave Listener...

Early Radar Development

Early Radar Development - RF Cafe Cool PicWe read a lot about the early radar system that was in operation at Pearl Harbor in December 1941 when the surprise attack by Japanese naval airplanes decimated the fleet with a 3-hour-long raid beginning at around 8:00 on that sleepy Sunday morning. According to "The Untold Pearl Harbor Radar Story," by C.P. West, the SCR-270B (Signal Corps radio #270, rev B) radar system had a range of 250 miles at an altitude of 50,000 feet. Westinghouse built the system in 1940 following a development contract issued by the Army Signal Corps in 1936. Historical documents report of the three systems on the island, two had been shut down and that with the remaining system, operators Joseph Lockard and George Elliot detected a formation of aircraft about 137 miles out to sea. They were told it was a squadron of B-17s and to not worry about it...

FM Beep Signals

FM Beep Signals, June 1951 Radio-Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteThis news bit from a 1951 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine reports on the FCC's declaration of illegality the practice by some FM broadcasting stations of providing a means for blanking out commercials and station identification to entities willing to pay for the special receivers and pay for a subscription. Nobody I have ever known looks forward to enduring commercials on television or radio (or Internet these days). The only way most of us could listen to music without interruption was to by a record, tape, or CD. VHS tapes and DVDs provide some relief from commercials, although even though you pay for them there are typically promotions for other movies at the beginning. Commercials on radio and television (and now the Internet) have consumed a larger part of each hour of programming with each passing year. The DVD collections we have of 1960s and 1970s Prime Time TV shows average run times of about 54-55 minutes...

How an Electronic Brain Works

How an Electronic Brain Works, June 1951 Radio-Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteThis is another example of a multi-part article of which I happen to have discovered only one of installments - Part 9. As is often the case, each article is pretty much stand-alone and does not require that you have already seen the previous sections. In 1951, computers were still mostly analog; digital circuits were just beginning to get serious research thanks to the recent advent of solid state devices. Boolean algebra, truth tables, and combinational logic were just beginning to be taught in engineering courses. ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer), first used in 1945 at the end of World War II, was the world's first general purpose digital computer, and its active elements were vacuum tubes - about 20,000 of them. As you might expect, there was a lot of excitement in the electronics, scientific, and finance world about digital computers that would be inexpensive enough that individual corporations...

Notice: Rep Firm Sought by Werbel Microwave

Werbel Microwave seeking Manufacturers' Representative Firm in New England Territory - RF Cafe WebsiteWerbel Microwave, who since 2014 has designed and produced high performance radio frequency components for defense, commercial, test and measurement applications, is seeking an experienced manufacturers' representative firm to cover the New England territory (CT, MA, ME, NH, RI, VT). Click thumbnail image for more detail.

We're looking for a rep firm with:

  • Established relationships in defense, aerospace, and commercial electronics OEMs in the region.
  • Complementary, non-competing RF/microwave lines.
  • A motivated, technically knowledgeable sales team.

If your firm is the right fit, we'd love to connect. Reach out via DM or email us at sales@werbelmicrowave.com

Electronics-Themed Comics

Electronics-Themed Comics, May 1952 and May 1956 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteMoods are sometimes understandably less than jovial and nerves might be shot after a challenging day at work. 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...

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.

 

The Solar Battery

Solar Battery, October 1954 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteAs with so many topics in electronics, nomenclature has changed since the time when commercializable solar cells first came on the scene. Vintage magazines usually referred to them as "solar batteries," which was really a misnomer since they do not actually store energy like a battery. In this 1954 edition of Popular Electronics magazine (the premier issue), solar-to-electricity conversion efficiency rates of 6% are heralded as wonderful, enough to cause the author to claim "...a wafer-thin slab of crystal, 4 ft. x 15 ft., either resting on or built into the roof of a house, could supply enough current to operate all the lights, stove, refrigerator, and other appliances in the house - 24 hours a day." Even with today's efficiencies in the 20-25% realm, you couldn't power much of a house on a 4x15 foot array. Maybe they meant the number would be useful if you had gas-powered lights, refrigerator (yes, they exist), and stove...

Radar & Radio Theme Crossword for November 6th

Radar & Radio Theme Crossword Puzzle for November 6th, 2022 - RF Cafe WebsiteThis week's crossword puzzle for November 6th sports a radar and radio theme. 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!

Sprague Capacitors

Sprague Capacitors, December 1954 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteAside from vacuum tubes occasionally going bad, capacitors were undoubtedly the most frequently failing components in television and radio sets. All electronics of the era (and earlier) of this 1954 issue of Radio & Television News magazine had chassis full of high voltages and high temperatures which really strained the integrity of capacitors, especially electrolytic types used in power supplies and plate circuit decoupling circuits. As if a couple hundred volts wasn't challenging enough, TV cathode ray tubes (CRTs) often had bias voltages over 10 kilovolts. Most of us over 60 years old recall at least one instance of a sizzle followed by a loud pop, followed by the television going dark when a capacitor failed. It always seemed to happen at the most intense point of a program. Of course when that kind of failure occurred you knew the set would be out of service for a while since Dad wouldn't be able to fix it by pulling out all the tubes and taking to the hardware to test them all on the automated machine. In our very low income house with five kids, everyone scrambled looking for change in pants pockets and under sofa cushions to help fund a rapid repair...

Passing the Government Examination for Amateur Operator's License

Passing the Government Examination for Amateur Operator's License, October 1931 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteDid you know that the examinations for Amateur Radio Operator licenses were originally conducted by the Commerce Department, and not the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)? The FCC was established with passage of the Communications Act of 1934, which abolished the Federal Radio Commission (FRC) and replaced it with the FCC. The "Act" combined and organized federal regulation of telephone, telegraph, and radio communications. That's right, bureaucracies were renaming and reorganizing themselves even back then in order to expand and increase control and regulatory power. After all, the more segments of society you command, the more opportunities there are for accepting graft, payola, bribes, contributions to political campaigns, etc. But, I digress. When I first wrote this (2016), I was in the process of studying for the Amateur Extra license and am immersed in review of electronics principles, regulations, procedures, band plans, etc. Unlike in 1931, today you can buy a manual that has the entire pool of 700 verbatim exam questions that are used for the test, so in theory, if you can memorize all potential questions and answer...

Electronic Crosswords

Electronic Crosswords, October 1963 Electronics World - RF Cafe WebsiteThis Electronic Crosswords puzzle appeared in the October 1963 edition of Electronics World magazine. About half the words used are related directly in some way to electronics or physics. It's a fairly small puzzle so it shouldn't take you too long to complete. My RF Cafe crosswords, by the way, have 100% of the words directly related to the sciences, from a custom lexicon I have created over 20 years of making puzzles. Enjoy...

Evolution of the Communications Receiver

Evolution of the Communications Receiver, November 1962 Electronics World - RF Cafe Website Author Maurice Johnson does a pretty nice job sizing up the evolution of communications receivers in his multi-part series in Electronics World magazine. He begins with the pre-World War II radio sets and works up through contemporary models. A major step in the evolution was going from simple heterodyne to superheterodyne frequency conversion; that was actually a WWI innovation. Heterodyne sets usually went from the radio frequency (RF) frequency directly to audio frequency (AF). Superheterodyne included an intermediate frequency (IF) prior to final conversion to audio, which permitted a fixed frequency filtering and amplification stage independent of the received frequency. Also addressed is the superregenerative circuit which greatly improved signal sensitivity. A shift from Morse code (digital) to audio communications drove improvement in detector technology, where the crude coherer type device was of no use...

Electronics-Themed Comics

Electronics-Themed Comics December 1958 Radio-Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteBeing a big appreciator of good humor, and especially technology-related humor, I made sure to scan these tech-themed comics from the pages of vintage Radio-Electronics magazines. Some of the same themes from half a century ago are still applicable today - like inventing a device that will block television commercials (see the page 132 comic). There are a couple huge differences between then and now, though. For one thing, the percentage of each hour consumed by commercials has doubled or tripled since 1958. A Prime Time TV show in 1958 like The Untouchables ran 54 out of 60 minutes (90% show / 10% commercials). Big Bang Theory, a 2014 show, had a run time of 22 out of 30 minutes (73% show / 36% commercials)...

World's Most Powerful Radio Transmitter

World's Most Powerful Radio Transmitter, February 1954 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteIn the early 1950s, the U.S. Navy built what was at the time the world's largest and most powerful radio broadcast transmitter station at the Jim Creek Naval Station on Wheeler Mountain in Washington state. Its 1.2 MW, 24.8-to-35 kHz VLF transmitter (call sign NLK) can reach anywhere in the world, even to submarines. A half wavelength at 24.8 kHz is 19,830 feet. Photos indicate that the transmitter is located in the middle of a dipole arrangement. "Catenary cables," if you are unfamiliar with the term, refers to the sagging shape assumed by both the antenna cables and the tower support cables. "Catenary" stems from the word "chain," since it is the form a chain takes when suspended at both ends and allowed to hang freely in a gravitational field. The hyperbolic cosine function describes it mathematically. It is also the root of the word "concatenate," meaning to string together...

Put PEP in Your Antenna Tuner

Put PEP in Your Antenna Tuner, October 1958 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteI like the title: "Put PEP in Your Antenna Tuner." For those not familiar with transmitter lingo, PEP is Peak Envelope Power, but of course the word "pep," as in energy, is a clever double entendre. This tuner is for the receive side of operations, so it is not a high power circuit for blasting out signals for DX'ers to hear on the other side of the world. If you aren't averse to building a vacuum tube circuit and happen have a 6AG5 in your parts box, then here's a simple antenna tuner circuit for you. Otherwise, I'm guessing there are many modern, transistorized tuners you can build instead. It appeared in a 1958 issue of Popular Electronics magazine...

Evolution in Electronics: Integrated Circuits

Evolution in Electronics: Integrated Circuits, November 1962 Electronics World - RF Cafe WebsiteSixty years ago when this "Evolution in Electronics: Integrated Circuits" article appeared in Electronics World magazine, commercially manufactured (as opposed to in laboratories and small volume production) ICs were at the very beginning of their evolutionary lifetime. It was only 14 years earlier that the transistor's invention first been announced at Bell Labs. Jack Kilby, of Texas Instruments, is credited with having built the first practical integrated circuit in 1958. The Darlington transistor IC was a relatively simple achievement since there were no passive components on the die. A 2-stage amplifier, as shown in figures 2 and 4, with on-chip resistors and capacitors was a big deal at the time...

Mac's Radio Service Shop: A.C.-D.C. Bread and Butter

Mac's Radio Service Shop: A.C.-D.C. Bread and Butter, October 1952 Radio & Television News Article - RF Cafe WebsiteThis installment of Mac's Radio Service Shop, entitled "A.C.-D.C. Bread and Butter," could stand alone as a chapter in a troubleshooting manual for vacuum tube radios. John Frye's (or a trusty consultant's) knowledge of circuit operation is abundantly clear here. Recall that Mr. Frye later authored the Carl & Jerry teenage techno-sleuth series in the next decade. A couple things stood out to me. The first is the heretofore unfamiliar phrase "play hob with," which means to cause trouble for. The second is mention of a metal tuning dial indicator needle making contact with a part of the metal faceplate and thereby affecting the tuning of the radio. What that means is the needle had some level of voltage on it that could short to the chassis. It was not unusual to have very high voltages on the dial and button shafts of user-accessible controls, with only a plastic or phenolic knob or button separating the user from a potentially lethal shock. Safety grounds were not part of the supply line cord, further increasing the danger...

The Tuning Eye - How It Works

The Tuning Eye - How It Works, January 1955 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteAre you old enough to remember - or have you ever heard about - the "cat's eye" on old tube radios that was used for fine tuning of stations? The "eye" was generated by a special type of electron-ray vacuum tube like this 6E5 from RCA. A fluorescent disk at the top of the tube was caused to glow in accordance with the level of control voltage, as shown in figure 2. The electron-ray tube had to be mounted horizontally in the chassis so that the "eye" was visible from the front of the chassis. This article from the January 1955 edition of Popular Electronics magazine also describes how the electron-ray tube can be used as a voltmeter. As with most things, RCA 6E5 vacuum tubes can be found for sale on eBay. The original 1930's "Coke bottle" variety like the one in figure 3 usually cost a bit more than the newer versions with the constant diameter glass envelope...

White Noise / Its Nature, Generation

White Noise / Its Nature, Generation, and Applications, November 1962 Electronics World - RF Cafe WebsiteAuthor Lon Edwards provided a good introductory lesson on the subject of white noise. Since digital communications was not yet a major technology when the piece appeared in a 1962 issue of Electronics World magazine, pink noise, a pseudorandom version of the truly random nature of white, was not a concept well known in the electronics realm. White noise in the audio spectrum is the focus here, but the general principles apply at all frequencies. Interestingly, he states, "The word 'white' has been borrowed (inaccurately) from optics and is used to mean the long-time average energy distribution of the electrical voltages over a specified frequency spectrum." Solitron Devices (still in business), where Mr. Edwards was employed, manufactured a noise diode they called the Sounvister SD1-W, a double-diffused, silicon junction diode. An Internet search did not turn up a single instance of a surviving Sounvistor...

7031 kHz Author Ray Larson Checks In

7031 kHz, September 1972 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteIncredibly, author Ray Larson saw this post and wrote in with a little background on his motivation for the 7031 kHz article! Back in 2011 when I first posted it, I wrote, "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." Well, turns out Al is "out there..."

Belmont Model 5P19 Radio Schematic and PL

Belmont Model 5P19 Radio Schematic and Parts List, September 1947 Radio News - RF Cafe WebsiteThis schematic and parts list for the Belmont Model 5P19 vintage radio appeared in a 1947 issue of Radio News magazine. No functional description or tuning instructions were included. I have scanned and posted more than 250 of these for the benefit of the many people who restore and service these vintage radios, and often it can be difficult or impossible to find schematics and/or tuning information. The Belmont 5P19 is a "suitcase" portable radio that runs on batteries or house current. Two, 45 volt "B" batteries are needed to supply 90 volts for the plate bias. A running list of all data sheets is posted at the page bottom to facilitate a search for other radio models...

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