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Today in Science History

Solid-State LSA Microwave Diodes

Solid-State LSA Microwave Diodes, February 1969 Electronics World - RF CafePrior to the advent in 1963 of high frequency solid state devices like Gunn diodes, working at or above a couple GHz - even at low power - required the use of cavity oscillators such as klystrons and magnetrons. They were bulky, expensive, and electrically very inefficient. This 1969 Electronics World magazine article outlines the theory of bulk oscillators as developed by Dr. John A. Copeland, of Bell Labs, and points out the peculiarities of the LSA (limited space-charge accumulation) mode that makes it possible to obtain 20 milliwatts of power at 88 GHz. Use of gallium arsenide (GaAs) enabled designers to construct receiver circuits into the mm-wave region without the need for klystrons, thereby reducing cost, size, and power requirements...

Twisted Graphene and Tungsten Delenide Spintronics

Twisted Graphene and Tungsten Delenide Layers Unlock Spintronics"Researchers have engineered a pioneering material that harnesses unique spin-related properties by twisting layers of graphene and tungsten selenide. This innovative technique in the field of spintronics could revolutionize the development of advanced electronic devices, enhancing the integration of magnetic memories into processors and overcoming current limitations in handling spin currents. In conjunction with research staff from the Charles University of Prague and the CFM (CSIC-UPV/EHU) center in San Sebastian, CIC nanoGUNE's Nanodevices group has designed a new complex material..."

IEEE: A Brief Overview and Historical Context

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE): A Brief Overview and Historical Context - RF CafeThe Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) traces its origins to the late 19th century with the establishment of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers (AIEE) in 1884, a time when the United States was rapidly industrializing, and electricity was emerging as a transformative technology. The AIEE was founded by some of the most notable figures in electrical science and engineering, including Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell, and others, as a professional organization dedicated to advancing electrical engineering and promoting the exchange of technical knowledge. The AIEE focused on the burgeoning fields of telegraphy, electric power... (be sure to read about the IEEE logo's meaning)

LadyBug LBSF09A 1 MHz to 9 GHz Power Sensor

LadyBug LBSF09A 1 MHz to 9 GHz True RMS Power Sensor - RF CafeLadyBug Technologies' new LBSF09A is a true RMS, high sensitivity, high accuracy RF & microwave power sensor has frequency coverage from 1 MHz to 9 GHz and an 83 dB dynamic range making ideal for EMC applications, general purpose average power and scalar measurements. The sensor features a fast measurement speed, a broad dynamic range, and the widest set of options for programmatic and embedded applications in the industry. The sensor is useful in research & development, manufacturing & service applications including radar, satellite, and telecommunications. LadyBug's PMA-12 Power Meter Software is included with each sensor. The software provides full control of the sensor's functions from basic setup to triggering, logging, offset tables, and more. The software package also includes an Interactive IO program with...

New Release: Espresso Engineering Workbook™

Espresso Engineering Workbook™ for Excel (version 10.18.2024) - RF CafeThe newest addition to RF Cafe's spreadsheet (Excel) based engineering and science calculator - Espresso Engineering Workbook™ (click to download) is a collection of surface area and volume calculators for many geometric solids. RF Cafe Espresso Engineering Workbook™ is provided at no cost, compliments of my generous sponsors. All of the original calculators from years ago are included, but with a vastly expanded and improved user interface. Error-trapped user input cells help prevent entry of invalid values. An extensive use of Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) functions now do most of the heavy lifting with calculations, and facilitates a wide user-selectable choice of units for voltage, frequency, speed, temperature, power...

Seeing is Believing in Cathode Research

Seeing is Believing in Cathode Research, January 1962 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeTwo somewhat clichéd sayings come to mind when reading this 1962 Radio-Electronics magazine article on cathode emission research: "A picture is worth a thousand words," and "settled science" is only a temporary thing. Author Dr. Aurelius Sandor was in on the early (1930's) research of cathode rays, having been a (younger) contemporary of Hans Geiger, of the eponymously named counter fame. Basic assumptions and practices applied by researchers for two decades inhibited investigations into alternate means of generating, controlling, and displaying fine detail of millimicron features. The techniques presented here...

Hans Geiger: A Short Biography

Hans Geiger: A Short Biography (Wikipedia image) - RF CafeHans Wilhelm Geiger, born on September 30, 1882, in Neustadt an der Weinstraße, Germany, is best known for inventing the Geiger counter, a pivotal device in the field of nuclear physics for detecting ionizing radiation. He grew up in an intellectually stimulating environment, as his father, Wilhelm Ludwig Geiger, was a prominent philologist and professor at the University of Erlangen, where he specialized in Indo-European languages. His mother, Hedwig Geiger (née Höhler), also came from a well-educated family, and together his parents fostered a household where academic inquiry was highly valued. Geiger's childhood was marked by a strong sense of discipline and a keen interest in scientific exploration. He attended secondary school in Erlangen, where his father had taken a professorship, and developed an early passion for mathematics and physics. This passion guided...

Engineering & Tech Headlines <Archives>

• FCC to Refund Rural 5G Connectivity Program

• NC Flood Victim Quartz Supplier to Recover in 3 months

• Huawei Explores Use of 5G RedCap

• Is Intel Too Big to Fail?

ARRL Club Grants Will Be Awarded in November

Tips for Technicians

Tips for Technicians, February 1969 Electronics World - RF CafeAkin to how the National Company ran a long series (a couple hundred altogether) of infomercial type ads in the ARRL's QST magazine from the 1930s through the 1950s, Mallory had its "Tips for Technicians" run in Electronics World (and maybe other electronics magazines of the era). Being a major capacitor manufacturer, its ads featured brief tutorials on various types of capacitors, their characteristics, and how they should be used in circuits - both for new design and when replacing capacitors in existing equipment...

Please Thank Werbel Microwave for Continued Support!

Werbel MicrowaveWerbel Microwave is a manufacturer of RF directional and bidirectional couplers (6 dB to 50 dB) and RF power dividers / combiners (2- to 16-way) with select models operating up to 26.5 GHz and 100 W of CW power (3 kW peak). All are RoHS and REACH compliant and are designed and manufactured in our Whippany, NJ, location. Custom products and private label service available. Please take a couple minutes to visit their website and see how Werbel Microwave can help you today.

Charles Babbage: A Short Biography

Charles Babbage: A Short Biography - RF CafeCharles Babbage, born on December 26, 1791, in London, England, was one of the foremost mathematicians and inventors of the 19th century, best known for his pioneering work on the concept of a programmable computer. He was the son of Benjamin Babbage, a banker, and Betsy Plumleigh Teape, who hailed from a relatively affluent family. His upbringing was comfortable, allowing him access to an education that would later foster his intellectual pursuits. His father's wealth enabled Charles to attend some of the finest schools of the time, although his formal education started somewhat later than usual due to early childhood illness. Babbage's schooling began at a local academy in Alphington and later at the King Edward VI Grammar School in Totnes, Devon. He was a highly curious child...

Preventing Another Europa Clipper Transistor Panic

Preventing Another Europa Clipper Transistor Panic"Yesterday, NASA successfully launched the Europa Clipper, the largest spacecraft the agency has ever built for a planetary mission. Clipper is now successfully on its multi-year journey to Europa, bristling with equipment to study the Jovian moon's potential to support life - but just a few months ago, the mission was almost doomed. In July, researchers at NASA found out that a group of Europa Clipper's transistors would fail under Jupiter's extreme radiation levels. They spent months testing devices, updating their flight trajectories, and ultimately adding a warning “canary box” to monitor the effects of radiation as..."

Printed-Circuit Technology

Printed-Circuit Technology, October 1969 Electronics World - RF CafeThe October issue of Electronics World magazine included many articles written by printed circuit board (PCB) industry leaders regarding the state of the art. Multi-layer PCB technology was still in its infancy at the time, with most prototype and production boards being 1- or 2-sided. As with the switch from vacuum tubes to transistors, there were hold-outs who resisted the change to PCBs - for good reason in some cases. A list of advantages and disadvantages is presented both for and against, respectively, use of printed circuit boards. One of the biggest advantages to point-to-point wiring (i.e., in the PCB disadvantage list) was that circuit modifications in production was more easily accommodated, unless the change was simply...

FM Antennas for Better Listening

FM Antennas for Better Listening, February 1962 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeAlong with the advent of FM (frequency modulation) radio came an entirely new variety of antenna shapes and configurations, compared to primarily a simple long, straight wire for AM (amplitude modulation) radio antennas. Amateur radio operators (Hams) of course had been designing, tuning, and using such antennas (as FM) for decades, but the average radio listener was facing a whole new world of options for getting the most out of his receiver. It is not that AM radio cannot benefit by similar antenna configurations, it is just that the relatively long wavelength of AM station frequencies (540 to 1,700 kHz) compared to FM station frequencies (88 to 108 MHz) represents a two-order-of-magnitude...

Beyond Moore's Law: Revolutionary Hot Carrier Transistors

Beyond Moore's Law: Revolutionary Hot Carrier Transistors - RF Cafe"Researchers have developed a novel graphene-germanium hot-emitter transistor using a new hot carrier generation mechanism, achieving unprecedented performance. This advancement opens new possibilities for low-power, high-performance multifunctional devices. Transistors, the fundamental components of integrated circuits, encounter increasing difficulties as their size continues to shrink. To boost circuit performance, it has become essential to develop transistors that operate on innovative principles. Hot carrier transistors, which harness the extra kinetic energy of charge carriers, offer the potential to enhance transistor speed and functionality..."

Electronics-Themed Comics

Electronics-Themed Comics, August 1969 Electronics World - RF CafeWhen this was originally published, it was Labor Day in the USA, so most people were off work (which seems antithetical to the "labor" part of the holiday name). For those unfortunate enough to be at work, here is a bit of vintage electronic comic relief from a 1969 Electronics World magazine for your office-bound condition. Actually, during my years of working for someone else, I used to work the holidays (except Christmas) if I could get another day off instead. With very few managers around, those of us at work would enjoy what we termed "IPV," or "In-Plant-Vacation." Very little work got done on those days, and lunches and break-times were pretty long. I was always surprised the scheme never caught on more widely...

AMP2074P-2KW, 1.0–2.5 GHz, 2 kW Pulse SSPA

Exodus AMP2074P-2KW, 1.0–2.5 GHz, 2 kW Pulse SSPA - RF CafeExodus Advanced Communications, is a multinational RF communication equipment and engineering service company serving both commercial and government entities and their affiliates worldwide. We are pleased to announce the model AMP2083P-2KW solid state pulse amplifier (SSPA) is designed for Pulse/HIRF, EMC/EMI Mil-Std 461/464 and radar applications in the C-band, 4.0-8.0 GHz frequency band. Providing superb pulse fidelity and up to 100 μsec pulse widths. Duty cycles to 6% with a minimum 63 dB gain. Available monitoring parameters for Forward/Reflected power in watts & dBm, VSWR, voltage, current, temperature sensing for outstanding reliability and ruggedness in a compact...

Making Picture Tubes

Picture Tubes, May 1955 Popular Electronics - RF CafeBy the time most of us who even remember cathode ray tubes (CRTs) were first introduced to them, the technology and manufacturing processes had been pretty much perfected - especially for the standard 525-line (or 625-line outside the U.S.) resolution type. The National Television System Committee (NTSC) published a standard for black and white (B&W) television in 1941 and then for color in 1953. This "Picture Tubes" article in a 1955 issue of Popular Electronics provides a look inside a CRT manufacturing plant at General Electric. For some reason the photos in the magazine were very poor quality (maybe for secrecy). If you want one of the best explanations I have ever seen on how a TV picture scan is implemented, check out this video entitled What is 525-Line Analog Video? If you don't understand raster scanning after watching it, you never will. You might be surprised to learn that there were not actually 525 lines of picture information...

News Briefs

News Briefs, March 1962 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeThe March 1962 "News Briefs" feature in Radio-Electronics magazine was chock full of interesting developments. Space flight was a big deal in the day, not that it isn't today, but the difference is everything about it was new then. Fundamental technology was in the process of being developed, and then continual improvements would be made during the ensuing decades until we get to where we are today with a permanent presence of men in orbit, interplanetary science probes, space-borne telescopes, Earth environment sensors, and space weapons, and thousands of active communications satellites. The sky is awash with manmade objects. In other news, satellite TV was quickly gaining in capability (including live transmissions and, gasp, "Living Color" per NBC)...

Direct Conversion vs. Heterodyne vs. Superheterodyne

Direct Conversion vs. Heterodyne vs. Superheterodyne - RF CafeThe distinction between direct conversion, heterodyne, and superheterodyne receivers represents a significant evolution in radio technology. Each type of receiver plays a crucial role in the development of modern communications, and their invention marks important milestones in the history of radio engineering. To understand these differences, we will explore the invention history, technical descriptions, and practical implementations of each type, including their inventors, patents, and notable applications. A direct conversion receiver (also known as a "zero-IF receiver") represents the simplest type of radio architecture. It was first conceptualized in the early 20th century as a way to simplify radio designs by eliminating the intermediate frequency (IF) stage...

Taming Transients

Taming Transients, July 1963 Electronics World - RF CafeDealing with the problem of lightning strikes was of concern long before electronic equipment needed to be protected from its effects. Fires that were the result of lightning have always been a problem in nature, but they were really catastrophic to civilization once cities crowded with close-quartered wooden buildings became the norm. Benjamin Franklin observed that when the many lightning-induced fires of Philadelphia were sparked (pun intended), it was almost always the tallest structures in the area that were hit. Those fire often spread to neighboring buildings and burned down entire city blocks. It was a devastating and frequency...

Next-Gen Electronics Fail at Lower Temps

How Next-Gen Electronics Fail at Lower Temperatures - RF Cafe"By observing spintronic magnetic tunnel junctions in real-time, researchers found these devices fail at unexpectedly low temperatures, offering valuable insights for improving future electronic designs. Next-Generation Electronics Degradation A new study led by researchers at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities is providing new insights into how next-generation electronics, including memory components in computers, breakdown or degrade over time. Understanding the reasons for degradation could help improve efficiency of data storage solutions. The research is published in ACS Nano, a peer-reviewed scientific journal and is featured on the cover..."

Arthur C. Clarke: A Biography

Arthur C. Clarke: A Biography - RF CafeArthur C. Clarke's writings and contributions to science are vast and influential, intertwining his imaginative narratives with profound scientific concepts. Clarke is credited with proposing the idea of geostationary satellites in a paper he published in the October 1945 issue of Wireless World magazine. Titled "Extra-Terrestrial Relays: Can Rocket Stations Give Worldwide Radio Coverage?," he described the concept of using a network of geostationary satellites to provide global radio coverage. Geostationary satellites are satellites that orbit the Earth at the same rate as the Earth rotates, so they appear to stay in the same place in the sky relative to a fixed point on the Earth's surface. This makes them ideal for telecommunications and broadcasting, as they can provide constant coverage of a particular area without the need for multiple satellites or complicated ground infrastructure...

What's Your EQ?

What's Your EQ?, July 1961 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeHere we go with three new "What's Your EQ?" challenges from the July 1961 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine. Readers submit the problems, which typically involve creating a circuit to perform a specified function, or determining how a given circuit works. The first of these is more of a puzzle, since the author shows you how to go about arriving at the answer. Since incandescent light bulbs are not overly familiar to a lot of people these days, it might be to the advantage of pre-Millennials who grew up using them and are acquainted with their properties. The second is an old-fashioned Black Box challenge that some readers will solve without much...

HAPS Aircraft for Stratospheric Comms

SoftBank Trials HAPS Aircraft for Stratospheric Communications - RF Cafe"Japanese operator SoftBank announced that the Sunglaider, its large-scale solar-powered uncrewed aircraft system (UAS) designed for High Altitude Platform Station (HAPS) stratospheric telecommunications, was utilized in a field trial conducted by AeroVironment and the U.S. DoD in New Mexico, the U.S. During the trial, carried out in early August, Sunglider succeeded in achieving stratospheric flight, the Japanese operator said. With a wingspan of 78 meters and the capability to carry payloads weighing up to 75kg, the Sunglider is larger than other publicly announced HAPS UAS..."

Electronics Diagram Quiz

Electronics Diagram Quiz, August 1966 Popular Electronics - RF CafeMonday (any day, for that matter) is a good day for Carl and Jerry stories, Mac's Electronics Service Shop sagas, Hobnobbing with Harbaugh, electronics-themed comics, electronics quizzes, and other forms of nerd entertainment. Here is another of Robert P. Balin's great challenges titled, "Diagram Quiz," this one from a 1966 issue of Popular Electronics magazine. Most RF Cafe visitors will easily identify eight or nine of the ten diagrams. Relatively few will be familiar with the Rieke diagram (hint: power amplifier designers will know about it). The Biasing diagram is a bit misnamed IMHO, and could cause confusion...

Anatech Has 3 New Filter Models for October

Anatech Electronics - 3 New Filter Models for October 2024 - RF CafeAnatech Electronics offers the industry's largest portfolio of high-performance standard and customized RF and microwave filters and filter-related products for military, commercial, aerospace and defense, and industrial applications up to 40 GHz. Three new ceramic bandpass filters have been announced for October 2024 - a 2275 MHz center frequency filter with a bandwidth of 250 MHz, a 2275 MHz center frequency filter with a bandwidth of 250 MHz, and a 6245 MHz center frequency filter with a bandwidth of 360 MHz. Custom RF power filter and directional couplers designs can be designed and produced with required connector types when a standard cannot be found, or the requirements are such that a custom approach is necessary.

The Operational Amplifier

The Operational Amplifier, July 1963 Electronics World - RF CafeWhen you read this 1963 Electronics World magazine article's title, I doubt you immediately assumed it would be about a vacuum tube circuit, or even one that uses discrete transistors to implement the circuit. Rather you most likely though it would be about an integrated circuit (IC). Operational amplifiers (opamp) are building blocks characterized (ideally) by their infinite input impedance, zero output impedance, infinite open-loop bandwidth and gain, zero input offset voltage, amongst other defined parameters. The first commercially produced integrated circuit (IC) opamp came to market in 1964 via Fairchild Semiconductor (the µA702, brainchild of Bob Widlar)...

The Nickel-Cadmium (NiCad) Battery

Nickel-Cadmium (NiCad) Battery (ChatGPT-generated content) - RF CafeNickel-cadmium (NiCad) batteries have a long and significant history in energy storage, with their invention attributed to Swedish engineer Waldemar Jungner in 1899. Jungner's work laid the foundation for an electrochemical power source based on nickel oxide hydroxide and cadmium, leading to the development of the rechargeable NiCad battery. It was a pioneering breakthrough because it represented one of the earliest forms of rechargeable energy storage systems. This battery technology found widespread use in various industries due to its robust performance and ability to be recharged multiple times. At its core, the chemistry of NiCad batteries involves the reaction between cadmium (the negative electrode) and nickel oxide hydroxide (the positive electrode), with potassium hydroxide as the electrolyte. During...

Electronics-Themed Comics

Electronics-Themed Comics, September 1969 Electronics World - RF CafeThese two tech-themed comics from the September 1969 issue of Electronics World magazine are pretty good. I especially like the one where the guy's wife entered his printed circuit board layout in an art contest. PCBs were just starting to gain momentum in production electronics as they replaced the old point-to-point wiring method. Also popular in that era was high fidelity stereo equipment. Owning a system with speakers that operated from 1 Hz through 30 to 40 kHz was major evidence of an audiophile's technical savvy, even though the human ear con only detect frequencies in the 30 Hz to 20 kHz range. Dogs can hear frequencies up into the 45 kHz range. Porpoises can hear up to 150 kHz. A ferret can hear from 16 Hz...

NextGen Thermal Performance Testing

Next Generation Thermal Performance Testing - RF CafeTotalTemp Technologies offers advanced and innovative methods for meeting and optimizing your thermal testing requirements. We specialize in benchtop thermal testing because small batches are typically the most cost-effective approach. We offer heat transfer by conduction with thermal platforms, forced convection as in traditional temperature chambers, combined systems, and thermal vacuum for Space Simulation. Thermal testing of Traveling Wave Tube Amplifiers and other devices with dramatically uneven power dissipation can easily be achieved with a dual zone thermal platform. Managing the heat produced by the electron gun side allows for the RF outputs side to be tested at various required temperatures. The Dual Zone Thermal Platforms allows the user to maintain safe controlling...

Engineering & Tech Headlines <Archives>

• Ham Radio Serving Southeast U.S. Recovery Efforts

• Radio "A Godsend for So Many" in Helene's Aftermath

• Estate Planning for Hams

• Intel's Woes Damaging U.S. Chip Indpendence

• Is Gen-Z Low Car Ownership a Threat to Radio? (they can't afford cars due to massive inflation - not because they don't want a car)

AMRAD: A Brief Overview and Historical Context

AMRAD: A Brief Overview and Historical Context - RF CafeAmrad, American Radio & Research Corporation, was based in Medford Hillside, Massachusetts and was founded in 1915 with funds from J. Pierpont Morgan. The company's first manager, Harold James Power, was an amateur radio enthusiast and built a research laboratory. In 1916, Amrad made its first broadcast to J. Pierpont Morgan Jr., who was aboard the ocean liner "Philadelphia." Amrad received orders for military radio equipment during World War I, but discontinued these orders after the war ended. To keep the company afloat, Amrad produced items such as electric egg beaters and cigar lighters. In 1919, Amrad was awarded a contract to make 400 SE1420 receivers, and it began advertising components for amateur radio enthusiasts...

Which Dry Battery for You?

Which Dry Battery for You?, June 1963 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeThis "Which Dry Battery for You" article is a follow-on from the previous month's "Dry Cell Battery Types" in Radio-Electronics magazine. It was a time long before the dominance of rechargeable lithium batteries. In 1963, battery-powered devices were nowhere near as widespread and diverse as they are nowadays. Hand tools like drills, saws, routers, planers, and screwdrivers got their power either from a wall outlet or the user's arm and hand muscles. Lawn mowers, grass and hedge trimmers, chain saws, and snow blowers were powered mostly by gasoline, although some models plugged into the wall. Those devices which did use batteries most often had no built-in...

Light Waves to Logic Optical Computing

Light Waves to Logic Optical Computing - RF Cafe"Researchers have developed a new architecture for optical computing called diffraction casting, offering power-efficient processing by using light waves. This method promises better integration and flexibility for high-performance computing tasks and could be used in fields like AI and machine learning. As artificial intelligence and other complex applications demand ever more powerful and energy-intensive computers, optical computing emerges as a promising solution to enhance speed and power efficiency. However, its practical application has faced numerous challenges..."

AEC: A Brief Overview and Historical Context

Atomic Energy Commission, AEC: A Brief Overview and Historical Context (ChatGPT-generated content) - RF CafeThe Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) was established in 1946 as a result of the Atomic Energy Act, signed into law by President Harry S. Truman. This legislative decision marked the United States' formal entry into managing and controlling atomic energy, a rapidly advancing field that had been essential in concluding World War II through the development and use of nuclear weapons. The AEC was conceived to handle not only military applications of atomic energy but also to develop peaceful uses, such as energy production, medical research, and industrial applications. The creation of the AEC emerged from the Manhattan Project, the secret wartime effort to develop atomic bombs. The Manhattan Project brought together prominent scientists like J. Robert Oppenheimer, Enrico Fermi, and Niels Bohr. After the war, however, the question arose...

A Radioman's Wife Puts in a Good Word

A Radioman's Wife Puts in a Good Word, June 1951 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeIn the days before people were so easily offended by light-hearted poking, it was not uncommon to find magazine articles written by the wives of hobbyist husbands lamenting the habits and proclivities of their matrimonial mates. Over the years I have read many such treatises in model and full-scale airplane, electronics, and Ham radio publications. As with "A Radioman's Wife Puts in a Good Word" from a 1951 issue of Radio-Electronics, they typically start by expressing frustration of having lost their once-doting husbands to alternative loves in the form of hobbies (I once saw a boat named "The Other Woman"). Determined to win back the devotion of their sweethearts, they make a sincere attempt to learn about and be part of whatever hobby or hobbies is/are the cause of abandonment of wife and children. It usually doesn't take long for Friend Wife, as Popular Electronics' Carl Kohler addresses his better half, to decide that try as she may, engendering a sufficient...

Vintage Collins Radio Company Advertisement

Vintage Collins Radio Company Advertisement, April 1945 QST - RF CafeCollins Radio Company (later on Rockwell Collins and now Collins Aerospace) has been around since 1933. Like the vast majority of U.S. companies during the World War II era, they - management and employees - took great pride in doing their part for the war effort. Unlike today, when a relatively few people actually know someone on active duty in the armed forces, workers were very likely to have a brother, son, father, or husband in the service. Here is an advertisement that I scanned out of my copy of the April 1945 QST magazine. It mentions that many of the employees are amateur radio operators. During the war, a call went out for surplus equipment from all sources, including amateurs, so some sacrificed their personal equipment for the good...

$5.00 for Best Short Wave Kink

$5.00 For Best Short Wave Kink, April 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF CafeAre you a project builder? If so, then you probably make a point of reading hints and tips offered by fellow do-it-yourselfers. Even with the ready availability of just about anything you need already pre-manufactured, there are still times that you either just want to figure out a better way of doing something or happen to have a challenge that does not have a solution that can be purchased from a catalog or on eBay. I have posted a few DIYer features from some of the vintage electronics magazines, many of which are still relevant, or might at least give you an idea for how to accomplish your goal...

A Passive RF Limiter

A Passive RF Limiter, December 1966 QST Article - RF CafeThis passive limiter is a simple combination of cascaded "T" type resistive attenuators that are switched in and out of the circuit based on the power level in the line. The design takes a bit of thinking due to needing to retain a reasonable impedance match at the input and output throughout various stages' conduction states. Arriving at an optimal value for resistors would require a circuit simulator with a mathematically based optimizer, but, especially for amateur radio work, close is good enough. That is not to say Hams are a bunch of slackers - they're not - it's just that component and software resources are not as readily available (aka "prohibitively expensive") for doing the analysis and testing. In 1966 when this article was published, software did not even exist for people without access to university or corporate computers. For most users these days, it is cheaper to buy a limiter for 2- to 3-score dollars...

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle for March 8

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle March 8, 2020 - RF CafeAs with my hundreds of previous science and engineering-themed crossword puzzles, this one for March 8, 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.

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...

Micro-Modules

Micro-Modules, September 1958 Radio & TV News - RF Cafe"Micro" as applied to electronics is relative, depending on which decade you reference. In the 1940s, a micro-size electronic assembly might have included "peanut" vacuum tubes and even some sort of printed circuit board. That was a huge step down in size from standard size tubes with point-to-point wiring between tube sockets and solder lugs on switches, potentiometers, variable capacitors, etc. Fixed value leaded resistors, capacitors, and inductors, and transformer wires connected to those lugs as well as to many terminal strips installed specifically for making connections. Once transistors came on the scene in the 1950s, a new round of miniaturization took place based on not just a significantly smaller size of solid state transistors and diodes, but their lower voltage and current requirements meant ancillary components could be made smaller as well due to lower voltage...

After Class: Some Facts on Quartz Crystals

After Class: Special Information on Radio - Some Facts on Quartz Crystals, TV, Radar, and Nucleonics, January 1957 Popular Electronics - RF CafeAccording to a 2001 paper published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST, formerly National Bureau of Standards, NBS), "The end of the era of quartz frequency standards began in 1949 with the development at NBS of the world's first atomic frequency standard based on an ammonia absorption line at 23.87 GHz." Further, "The Bureau supported work on both technologies for the next decade, but the rapid advances in the accuracy of atomic frequency standards could not be matched by quartz devices, and the work on quartz frequency standards was stopped in 1959." This article from a 1957 edition of Popular Electronics claims that the "master of all master-clocks" resided at the U.S. Naval Observatory at the time - not quite accurate from what my research indicates ...

Veterans Day Tribute 2020

Veterans Day Tribute 2020 - RF CafeThe eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month - November 11th, at 11:00 am - that is when the armistice (cease fire) began in 1918, unofficially ending World War I. This music video Veteran's Day tribute is by Canadian citizen Terry Kelly. It was written after an experience he had on Veterans Day in 1999. Terry went blind at an early age, but has excelled as an athlete and a musician. "A Pittance of Time" is done in the finest Celtic tradition. Per the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs website: "World War I – known at the time as 'The Great War' - officially ended when the Treaty of Versailles was signed on June 28, 1919, in the Palace of Versailles outside the town of Versailles, France. However, fighting ceased seven months earlier when an armistice, or temporary cessation of hostilities, between the Allied nations and Germany went into effect on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month. For that reason, November 11, 1918, is generally regarded as the end of 'the war to end all wars...'"

Mac's Radio Service Shop: Intermittents Still Pursue

Mac's Radio Service Shop: Intermittents Still Pursue, February 1949 Radio & Television News - RF CafeMac McGregor, owner of Mac's Radio Service Shop, can always be counted on to provide his apprentice technician, Barney, with a lesson from his own life-long attendance at the School of Hard Knocks. Barney is your stereotypical young buck whose level of seriousness needs occasional alignment, just as do the radio and television sets he services. In this episode, I can't find where Mac actually solved the intermittent electrical condition believed to be causing the problem - weird. The "Mac's Radio Service Shop" series ran in Radio & Television News magazine for many years prior to a similar electronics story series called "Carl & Jerry" that appeared in Popular Electronics. Both were created by consummate storyteller John T. Frye.

Radio Technology Theme Crossword Puzzle for January 17th

Radio Technology Theme Crossword Puzzle for January 17th, 2021 - RF CafeThis Radio Technology Theme crossword puzzle for January 17th contains only words and clues related to engineering, mathematics, chemistry, physics, and other technical words. 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., Hedy Lamarr or the Bikini Atoll). The technically inclined cruciverbalists amongst us will appreciate the effort. Enjoy!

RCA Institutes Advertisement

RCA Institutes Advertisement, September 1968 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeI checked out the printed circuit board maze and, as implied, all those beginning paths lead to $. RCA (Radio Corporation of America), along with other companies like NRI (National Radio Institute), CIE (Cleveland Institute of Electronics, all had a unique angle. Every company attempts to pique interest in its products and/or service by creating buzzwords such as, in RCA's case, AUTOTEXT. AUTOTEXT is "a system of programmed instructions, a method of learning proved with thousands of students. This beginning source in electronics is accurately planned so that as you read a series of statements, questions, and answers, you learn almost without realizing it. It's fast! It's easy! It's fun!" Learning by osmosis. What more could an aspiring technician ask for?...

FCC's Radio Intelligence Division

Radio Intelligence, October 1944 Radio News - RF CafeAccording to an FCC document "11th Annual Report, Federal Communications Commission, Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1945," Chapter VIII - War Activities, "The Radio Intelligence Division, established in 1940 to give America wartime protection from misuse of the ether lanes by spies or other illegal operators, discovered 46 unlicensed stations during the fiscal year, investigated 1,445 complaints of suspicious transmission and of interference. These complaints were received from the general public, commercial communication companies, Government agencies, and the military. During the year, the RID furnished fixes to 283 planes which were in distress. A total of 996 requests for assistance of all types to planes was received. The RID took 85,031 bearings. A number of alerts originated totaled 25,000. This figure represents the number of instances in which an origination was made by each monitoring station equipped with long-range, high-frequency direction-finding facilities for the purpose of obtaining synchronized bearings from a net of direction...

Canada Puts Limit on R.F. Interference

Canada Puts Limit on R.F. Interference, February 1960 Electronics World - RF CafeIf you think the ISM (Industrial, Scientific, and Medical) unlicensed bands were a relatively new spectrum allocation, you might find this 1960 Electronics World news piece interesting. Individual countries generally acknowledge the ISM emissions specifications set forth by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), which created the bands in 1947. The 900 MHz, 2.4 GHz, and 5.8 GHz WiFi bands are well known to most people. 24 GHz is gaining traction as current spectrum gets more and more crowded and high bandwidth data channels are needed. Interestingly, the first few ISM bands are integer harmonics of the lowest (6.78 MHz, center of band 1). To wit: 2 * 6.78 = 13.56 MHz (band 2), 4 * 6.78 = 2 * 13.56 = 27.12 MHz (band 3), 6 * 6.78 = 2 * 13.56 = 40.68 MHz (band 4)...

Quasi-Peak Detector Measurements

Quasi-Peak Detector Measurements (Cris Schulze) - RF CafeRF Cafe visitor Cris Schulze saw the Design News article I linked to titled, "EMI Emissions Testing: Peak, Quasi-Peak, and Average Measurements," and has given permission to reprint his brief response to it (originally posted on LinkedIn). The included notebook image includes an excerpt from Wikipedia's quasi-peak detector page, and he illustrates a block diagram of the test chain with de Forest's audion circuit that provides the fast rise-time and slow fall-time that characterizes it. A table of actual test data compares quasi-peak measurements to average measurements...

Lens-Like Antenna: Low Noise, Less Space

Lens-Like Antenna: Low Noise, Less Space, February 28, 1964 Electronics Magazine - RF CafeThis is the first article I have posted from a magazine called, simply, Electronics. It is very different from all the other vintage electronics magazines I have used in the past. Electronics is much more focused on military, space, and fundamental research. New issues were published bi-weekly by McGraw-Hill from 1930 until 1988. About half the editions (this is not one of them) had two to three times as many pages as the other half, with most of the extra pages being advertisements. The publishers must have made a fortune on advertising revenue. My guess is that the vast majority of the companies appearing in the early 1960s issues I bought on eBay do not exist anymore, having either gone out of business or having been acquired by bigger...

Bell Telephone Laboratories Invents Wire-Wrapping

Bell Telephone Laboratories, October 1953 Radio & Television News - RF CafeIf you believe this 1953 advertisement in Radio & Television News magazine, engineering at Bell Telephone Laboratories invented the wire-wrapping process. A little additional research shows that indeed it was a Bell Telephone engineering team led by Arthur Keller who developed the method and a wire-wrap tool to do the job. Field technician needed a fast, durable, and reliable electrical connection when making hundreds or thousands of splices at relay stations and while up on telephone poles. The key to making a good wire-wrap connection is sharp corners on the wrapping post so that the corner pushes through any oxidation or contaminant on the bare wire. NASA and the DoD have exacting workmanship standards to guarantee...

CB Radio wave Propagation

CB Radio-Wave Propagation, December 1963 Electronics World - RF CafeRaise your hand if you have ever owned a CB (Citizens Band) radio. Waaaaay back before everyone carried a cellphone (pre-late-1990s), the most common form of unlicensed communication was CB radio. Actually, up through the mid 1970s you were supposed to purchase a license from the FCC, although no test was required as it was for amateur radio. My first CB was a 23 channel job that I installed in my 1969 Chevy Camaro SS, during my senior year in Southern Senior High School. It was right in the middle of big CB radio craze with CW McCall's "Convoy" song topping the U.S. Billboard charts. My self-appointed 'handle' was "RC Flyer." Most people had no idea what it referred to (radio-controlled model airplanes). Now that all cellphones use internal antennas, almost nobody even thinks of them as being radios. CB radios reminded you of their true nature by requiring that a 1/4-wave vertical antenna (typically with a loading coil to keep it shorter than its 27 MHz operational frequency...

Electronics Review: Gemini Rendezvous & Space Electronics

Electronics Review: Gemini Rendezvous & Space Electronics, December 27, 1965 Electronics Magazine - RF CafeWhen I originally tagged this Electronics magazine article for posting, it was before Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry tapped into his immense cerebral power to inform us all that NASA has been faking its accomplishments in space - notably all the moon landings. Now, based on such unimpeachable authority, I'm not so sure this story should even be posted, lest it potentially perpetuate a long-running ruse. In the manner of contemporary news pieces reporting on criminal activity while avoiding legal claims of libel or character assassination, please mentally preface all of the claims here with "alleged" or "allegedly." The world's first successful spacecraft rendezvous, accomplished by Gemini 6 and Gemini 7, happened on December 15, 1965. Both astronaut crews participated in many communications experiments that included radio, visual, and laser media...

Radio Robot Plane

Radio Robot Plane, August 1945, Radio-Craft - RF CafeRadio-controlled flying drones are commonplace today - so much so that the FAA has enacted legislation to strictly limit who can fly them, where they can be flown, how big they can be, what type of payloads can be carried, how far from the pilot they can be flown, etc. - the typical kind of overreaching and overregulating that governments promulgate (especially in the last few years). Sport model airplane flying has suffered loss of freedoms because of it by getting lumped in with multirotor drones. The military, of course, has been using radio-controlled drones for decades, as highlighted in this 1945 Radio-Craft magazine article. Author Louis Bruchiss extolls the advantages of being able to guide an ordinance payload after being released from an aircraft of after being launched from the ground. Even vehicles like the German V-2 rocket with its gyroscopically stabilized guidance...

Lissajous Pattern Quiz

Lissajous Pattern Quiz, September 1963 Popular Electronics - RF CafeJules Antoine Lissajous was a French mathematician who in the days before oscilloscopes concerned himself with patterns (waveforms) that would be generated as the result of two separate functions (signals) driving both the x- and y-axes. Lissajous used mechanical vibration devices connected to mirrors to bounce light beams onto a projection surface, so his results were not merely hand-drawn plots on graph paper. He was probably as mesmerized with them as we are today when they appear. Sci-fi movies have used Lissajous patterns in the background to 'wow' the audience into thinking it is witnessing futuristic, cutting-edge technology. When troubleshooting analog circuits, it is very advantageous to have seen and recognize many different types of waveforms so that you have a better chance of picking out patterns ...

Choosing Your Crossovers

Choosing Your Crossovers, October 1957 Radio & TV News - RF CafeAudio crossover networks have the same fundamental mission as RF multiplexer filters in radio systems, which is to separate and steer specific bands of frequencies into two or more signal paths. While simple in concept, implementation in hardware can be a major challenge depending on requirements for channel separation, feedthrough, phase and group delay, amplitude equalization, distortion, and other factors. This article discusses some of the decisions used by crossover network designers when considering where to make band breaks, while leaving actual circuit design rules to other authors. I built a set of custom speakers many moons ago and went through the frustrating process of deciding where to place the breaks and which speakers to use...

Enjoy Private Messages with a Voice Scrambler

Enjoy Private Messages with a Voice Scrambler, September 1974 Popular Electronics - RF CafeOne of the best ways to learn about how something work is to build and operate it yourself. This article from a 1974 issue of Popular Electronics magazine presents a voice scrambler that exploits a simple spectral inversion technique to create a mirror image of the original voice spectrum. Spectral inversion occurs whenever the difference frequency is taken during a mixing process, so that low frequencies are translated to the high end of the band and high frequencies are translated to the lower end of the band. The result in the case of audio (voice) is garbled sounding speech. It is probably the simplest form of scrambling that is easily unscrambled, but it serves as a good learning tool ...

Implausible Remarks, December 1966 Popular Electronics

Implausible Remarks, December 1966 Popular Electronics - RF CafeHere is installment #3 of the four sets of reader submissions of inane remarks (ostensibly) uttered by electronics-challenged nincompoops. One of the funniest - and even believable - is about 300-ohm twin lead antenna wire flattening out the picture with color television. If you have funny anecdotes you would like to have published, send them to me and I'll be glad to add a few seconds to your lifetime allotment of 15 minutes of fame...

Westernizing Japan

Westernizing Japan, December 13, 1965 Electronics Magazine - RF CafeHere is an editorial excerpt from a 1965 issue of Electronics magazine that could be from a contemporary news publication: "If U. S. manufacturers continue to abandon their engineering and production for Japanese products, they are headed for oblivion because they cannot compete with the purely merchandising organizations such as Sears, Roebuck & Co. and Montgomery Ward* which buy Japanese products too." Of course you could easily substitute South Korea, China, Taiwan, or any other now-prominent technology company in place of Japan. American economic "experts" assured us in the 1990s that we no longer needed to manufacture anything; rather, we would become a service and retail economy. That worked out real well, eh?...

Finco TV Antenna Ad

Finco TV Antenna, March 1953 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeThe neighborhood where I grew up in the 1960s and 1970s was about 25 to 30 miles from the "big three" network television broadcast stations (ABC, CBS, NBC) in Baltimore and Washington, D.C. That is considered a fairly long distance in the over-the-air TV realm. Knowing what I know now, I am somewhat surprised that those in our area were able to receive programs as well as we did when all the homes I recall had just a single, standard multi-element antenna on the roof. If anyone had stacked, phased array setups like this Finco Co-Lateral TV Antenna installed, I certainly do not remember any. Most of the antennas in Holly Hill Harbor and the surrounding communities did not even have an antenna rotator, yet evidently were pulling in signals satisfactorily - and without needing to be mounted on a tall tower. That said, about the time I was 16 years old and was seriously into adopting any and all technology I could afford (which wasn't much), I took it upon myself to add an Alliance Tenna-Rotor to my parents' rooftop antenna...

Klystron: Tube of the Future

Klystron: Tube of the Future, October 1944 Radio-Craft - RF CafeSo much time has passed since an average home garage mechanic could service his car or truck with standard tools - combination wrenches, screwdrivers, socket sets, timing light, and a multimeter - that asking "remember when?" is passé. That era pretty much ended in the late 1980s as computerized cars were becoming the industry norm. A good percentage of people nowadays have never and will never service their own vehicles. In the mid 1940s, the electronics world was lamenting a similar situation with diminishing ability to build and modify electronic components like coils and stacked plate capacitors because of the increasingly higher frequencies being used in communications (way up into the UHF band!). This article introduces the klystron tube, having been around for less than a decade at the time, as being one of the culprits that was enabling the disturbing trend...

Broadcasting - As I Imagined It...

Broadcasting - As I Imagined It..., February 1939 Radio-Craft - RF CafeDr. Lee DeForest might have had something like National Public Radio (est. 1970) in mind when he penned this article in 1933. In it, the famous vacuum tube amplifier inventor lamented and criticized the commercialization of broadcasts because of all the paid product announcements (aka commercials) that had been steadily increasing over the years. He also was critical of the "hit-or-miss, higgeldy-piggeldy mélange program basis" of programing; i.e., the same station playing a mix of jazz, opera, swing, syndicated story-telling, etc. The good doctor did not elaborate on where funding for such dedicated, uncorrupted broadcasts would originate if not from paying advertisers, and I do not recall ever reading about a DeForest Radio Network paid for by his vast fortune. I don't like commercials any more than the next person, but a company deserves time to pitch its products and/or services if it helps deliver...

The Cryotron Files: How the Inventor of the Microchip Put Himself in the KGB's Sights

The Cryotron Files: How the Inventor of the Microchip Put Himself in the KGB's Sights - RF Cafe

Longtime RF Cafe visitor, electrical engineer, and occasional contributor Alan H. Dewey sent me a note yesterday saying a book for which he helped provide a large amount of research data has been published by authors Iain Dey and Douglas Buck. "The Cryotron Files: How the Inventor of the Microchip Put Himself in the KGB's Sights," is an extensive delve into the background of Dr. Dudley Allen Buck, whose son, Douglas, conducted an extensive investigation into his father's mysterious death that happened to coincide with the death of his colleague and two other scientists just days after being visited by Soviet computer experts. Dr. Buck was a superconductivity researcher during his short, highly productive life. A cryotron, BTW, is a superconducting switch that would make for very low power supercomputers if it could be made practical in IC form...

Radio-Craft Incorporating Radio & Television

Radio-Craft Incorporating Radio & Television, November / December 1941 Radio-Craft - RF CafeThe announcement of the merging of Radio-Craft and Radio & Television magazines into a single publication was made on the eve of America's entrance into World War II. Knowing the visionary talents of publisher Hugo Gernsback, he probably did so at least partly due to what could be predicted as a severe contraction of the domestic electronics appliance market once the war machine gears began cranking. It turns out that he was in fact prescient, because history shows that the government did direct all critical production to military equipment. Buying a new model radio, television, washing machine, and to some extent car grew increasingly difficult from about 1942 through 1945...

Innovative Power Products (IPP) Baluns & Transformers
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