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A History of Fixed-Value Resistor Development

A History of Fixed-Value Resistor Electronic Components - RF Cafe WebsiteFixed-value resistors are among the simplest-looking components in electronics, but their development reflects nearly the entire history of electrical science, telecommunications, electric lighting, industrial power, radio, military electronics, printed circuits, hybrid microelectronics, and surface-mount manufacturing. Partly out of curiosity of how extensive, comprehensive, and accurate an AI-generated report on topics of science and engineering, I instructed ChatGPT to generate the following thesis titled History of Fixed-Value Resistor Electronic Components. Most useful AI interactions, I have found, require more than one input...

Understanding Updated FM Tuner Specs

Understanding Updated FM Tuner Specs, March 1973 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteSince we seem to be on a roll of FM radio theme articles printed in vintage electronics magazine, here is one from a 1973 issue of Popular Electronics magazine. The author never explicitly tells us the date when the Institute of High Fidelity (IHF) updated its FM tuner specifications, and neither does he mention groundbreaking work of IHF's Julian Hirsch, who is largely responsible for both the initial and updated standards. If you read magazine stereo equipment reviews in the 1960s and 1970s, then you probably recall the name. Anyway, this article discusses the improved specifications made possible by more sophisticated circuits made possible by semiconductors and miniaturized...

A Few Winning Words on Hi-Fi

A Few Winning Words on Hi-Fi, July 1963 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteComics in modern magazines are a rather rare phenomenon for some reason, but they were fairly regular features up until a couple decades ago. This set of comics from the July 1963 edition of Popular Electronics magazine deals with high fidelity (Hi-Fi) stereo equipment, which was considered somewhat exotic and high-end for many people's budgets in the day. Inexplicably (not), that is about the time that increases in hearing losses among younger people were first being noticed in audiograms. I listened to my share of loud music beginning in the late 1960s, and operated many model airplane engines and lawnmower type engines my whole life, and still, at 68 years...

After Class: Ground, Ground, and Grounded

After Class: Ground, Ground, and Grounded, August 1959 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe Website"Ground is ground the world around." That's a saying that I have often heard Ham radio operators say aloud and in writing. In a general sense, it's true, but on a local level grounds can vary widely from location to location, even within a few hundred feet. It is true both for direct current and low frequencies and for frequencies in to the GHz regions. It has to do with the conductivity of the soil and/or rock in the area as well as the amount of moisture and other elements in the ground. Antenna guys like to run conductive (usually copper) "radials" out from the mounting pole or tower in order to create a sufficient local reference ground, and electric power distribution engineers often need to salt...

Many Thanks to ConductRF for Continued Support!

ConductRF coaxial cables & connectors - RF Cafe WebsiteConductRF is continually innovating and developing advanced solutions for RF cable assembly and various RF through millimeterwave interconnect requirements. ConductRF offers both its own brand of high-quality RF cable and connector components, along with a curated selection from leading manufacturers, enabling engineers to optimize performance while maintaining supply chain flexibility. Please be sure to visit their Updates section at the ConductRF Blog and sign up for their monthly news releases. 

Westinghouse Tubes Contest w/Mickey Mantel

Westinghouse Tubes Contest, April 1954 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsiteOther than vaguely recognizing the name, do Millennials know who Mickey Mantel was? Maybe hard-core Yankees fans of all ages still know. My having been born in 1958, the kids in my neighborhood watched "The Mick" playing on TV, witnessing real-time some of his final 536 career home runs being hit. When this two-page Westinghouse advertisement appeared in a 1954 issue of Radio & Television News magazine, he was only beginning in his forth season in Major League Baseball (MLB), which ran through 1968. The promotion was for a contest where servicemen who bought Westinghouse vacuum tubes submitted a witty response for the comic showing a housewife asked...

How Did Dilbert Get His Name?

How Did Dilbert Get His Name? (Dilbert the Pilot) - RF Cafe WebsiteDo you know how engineering whipping boy Dilbert came to be called by that name? Per Scott Adams, while working at Pacific Bell he ran an informal name-the-comic-strip-engineer contest from his cubicle. A guy named Mike Goodwin suggested Dilbert. "I ended the contest immediately and declared Mike the winner," says Adams. It sounded perfect. Years after the comic strip had become syndicated, Mike commented that he believes the name idea might have come from seeing his father's old WWII aviator comics with "Dilbert the Pilot." DtP was a screw-up, invented by Navy artist Robert Osborn, whose purpose in life was to illustrate the wrong way of doing things so that...

Online RF System Cascade Calculator

Online RF System Cascade Calculator - RF Cafe WebsiteMy new Online RF Systems Cascade Calculator handles up to eight stages.  All input stage parameters, Gain, Noise Figure, OIP2, OIP3, and OP1dB, are limited to ±200. P[input] has a lower limit of -174 dBm (GTB in 1 Hz bandwidth). IP2, IP3, and P1dB values are all reference to the stage output. AI provided most of the PHP code after many iterations of instructions, but it is amazing what it came up with - and with very few lines of code...

Mac's Service Shop: Zenith's 1973 Color Line

Mac's Service Shop: Zenith's 1973 Color Line, March 1973 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteThose of us who have been around for six or more decades have lived through two evolutions of video display types - raster scanned cathode ray tubes (CRTs) and digitally pixelated light-emitting diode (LED) and liquid crystal (LCD) displays. Unlike with the latter display types that improved in color depth, picture resolution and display size, the former had effectively a fixed resolution of horizontal lines (525 vertical steps - only 484 visible, actually, due to blanking). That meant for CRTs, designers needed to find ways to make images appear in-focus while also looking continuous on larger screens. Doing so involved cleverly adjusting the size and spacing of fluorescent...

U.H.F. Fringe Antenna Installations

U.H.F. Fringe Antenna Installations, April 1954 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsiteMultiple path transmission, diffraction around obstacles, absorption by foliage, and reflection from moving objects have always been challenges to the wireless system designer and/or user. Whether it concerns communications between a WiFi router and a notebook computer, a cellphone and a tower, an FM radio with a broadcast station, or deep space probe with an earth station, all of the aforementioned mechanisms must be dealt with to some degree. Although in a different way, even transmissions within a waveguide or coaxial cable deal with those same issues - reflections and the resulting standing waves have the same effect as multipath in terms of vectorially additive versions of the same...

Amateur Radio Stations Circa 1935

Amateur Radio Stations circa 1935 - RF Cafe WebsiteThose of you who are not particularly interested in vintage electronic equipment will please indulge those of us who are. I post these articles occasionally to remind people of from whence we have come. Whether you are an amateur radio operator or just a cellphone user, appreciation is due to the pioneers who took the metaphorical arrows for us so that we may enjoy the micro-size, low cost, high quality communications available today. The full-height equipment racks in the photos were standard fare in the 1930s for long distance (DX) shortwave operators - often only for CW (Morse code). "User serviceable parts inside' was the rule rather than the exception. As much as I like waxing...

Anritsu's Tensor Is World's 1st AI-Enabled VNA

Anritsu Intros Tensor, World's 1st AI-Enabled Vector Network Analyzer - RF Cafe WebsiteAnritsu announced the launch of its new Tensor Vector Network Analyzer (VNA) at IMS 2026. The Tensor VNA represents a major advancement in RF and microwave network analysis, delivering modern, scalable architecture designed to support the most complete and demanding measurements like amplifiers, filters, frequency convertors, and other advanced VNA measurements. Tensor VNA sets a new benchmark in vector network analysis with its revolutionary source-per-port architecture, integrated AI intelligence, and exceptional power handling. Engineered to meet the evolving requirements for aerospace and defense, semiconductor, active and passive device measurements, signal integrity, research and development, and millimeter wave / waveguide...

Spur Web™ Mixer Spurious Product Finder

Spur Web(tm) mixer spurious chart - RF Cafe WebsiteHere is a reprint of an article I had published in Wireless Design & Development magazine in 1995. Some of the references are a bit dated, but the info is all still very useful. Waypoint Software is now RF Cafe, and TxRx Designer is now Shareware by the name of RF Workbench. With the advent of high speed personal computers, a very insightful graphical method of determining inband mixer spurious products has been largely forgotten. The Spur Web™ (my name trademark, but used widely w/o attribution) chart rapidly identifies both inband and out-of-band spurs, affording a pictorial view of where conversion system frequencies lie with respect to all spur products. A comparison...

Finco TV Antenna Ad

Finco TV Antenna, March 1953 Radio-Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteThe 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...

Constant-Resistance Network Inductor Design

Constant-Resistance Network Inductor Design, April 1950 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsiteIn this Radio & Television News magazine article, author Jack Gallagher derives a formula for the number of turns of wire to wind on a form of given dimensions for a parallel constant-resistance network. He argues that although commonly used formulas like that of Wheeler provide the number of turns needed to achieve a desired value of inductance, it does not predict the size of cross-sectional shape of a coil form that results in an optimal configuration. His work applies to audio frequency divider networks like those used for speakers to steer specific frequency ranges to a woofer, midrange, and tweeter trio; hence the need for "constant resistance" (e.g., for standard 8 Ω or 16 Ω speakers)...

Satellite Direct-to-Device (D2D) Networks Quiz

Quiz #85: Satellite Direct-to-Device (D2D) Networks - RF Cafe WebsiteSatellite direct-to-device (D2D) networks represent the next frontier in mobile connectivity, promising to eliminate dead zones by linking ordinary cellphones directly to orbiting satellites. Companies like SpaceX with its Starlink system, AST SpaceMobile, and others are racing to deploy constellations that can serve standard smartphones without specialized hardware. The technology relies on large phased-array antennas in space, advanced beamforming, and new spectrum-sharing arrangements with terrestrial carriers. Proponents argue D2D will bring emergency communications and basic connectivity to remote areas worldwide. Critics raise serious concerns...

Out of Order: Attack of the Cookie Monster

Out of Order: Attack of the Cookie Monster - RF Cafe WebsiteDuring my electronics technician days at the Westinghouse Electric Company's Oceanic Division in Annapolis, Maryland, I spent the first couple years building printed circuit boards, wiring harnesses, and system-level assemblies for U.S. Navy sonar systems. We had some really slick stuff like towed vehicles with transducer arrays along the sides, nose cones for smart torpedoes, flow sensors, proximity fuse elements, etc. Exposure to all that, and the super-smart people that designed it, fuelled my desire to go to the trouble of earning an engineering degree. One of my tasks for a while was to build the transducer arrays, which entailed building the hundreds of tiny transducer elements. One of the phased...

Arbitrage via Microwaves

Arbitrage via Microwaves, McKay Brothers photo of microwave link - RF Cafe WebsiteWith the extreme volatility of today's stock market, I thought this might be a good time to re-post an article I wrote back in 2012 entitled "Arbitrage via Microwaves." The ±200 point daily swings of a mere 8 years ago seem paltry compared to ±1,000 of late. The original page on the IEEE Spectrum magazine website is dead now, so I had to change the hyperlink to an archived page on The Wayback Machine - a great resource for you to remember if you ever need to retrieve a webpage that has been disappeared [sic]. My piece begins: "If you have wondered why the world's stock markets behave the way they do, why the DJIA falls 150 points on one day on news of Greece leaving the euro...

Crosley TV Advertisement

Crosley TV Advertisement, April 1954 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsiteYou wouldn't know it from the lineup of Crosley Corporation radios and turntables appearing in department stores, but the company also manufactures dishwashers, ranges and freezers, clothes washers and dryers, and air conditioners. That is still a small chunk of what Crosley, based in Cincinnati, Ohio, made back in the middle of the last century, including cars and trucks, a small private airplane (the Moonbeam), television sets and even had a television broadcast station, as well as other items that were part of the mainstream of American life. Take a look at their About Crosley webpage for more insight. Amazingly, along with the extensive line of retro radios and turntables, they still also...

1st Tubeless Light Amplifier

1st Tubeless Light Amplifier, March 1955 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsiteWhat got my attention in this 1955 Radio & Television News magazine article was the "picture-on-the-wall" concept being predicted by General Electric (G-E) engineers, based on its light-amplifying phosphor invention. Determining exactly how the device works is difficult based on the information given, but it appears that the ultraviolet light source which is being amplified is projected onto the surface of the amplifying substrate, and then an exact duplicate of the image is reemitted toward the viewer. The conceptual drawing of a large screen hanging on the wall is most likely driven by a UV projector located near the ceiling, akin to how the large screen home theaters popular in the early...

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.

 

Integrated Circuits: What's Available?

Integrated Circuits: What's Available?, November 1965 Electronics World - RF Cafe WebsiteThe November 1965 issue of Electronics World magazine featured a set of articles reporting on the fledgling semiconductor industry. The title of this one, "Integrated Circuits: What's Available?" would require volumes to print today, but at the time the selection could be summed up with a relatively small amount of paper and ink. Author Donald Lancaster exuberantly and correctly predicted some of the many products and uses that miniaturization and capability the burgeoning technology would enable. Among them he cites desk[top] computers priced lower than mechanical adding machines, picture-on-the-wall TV, truly portable communications...

Luigi Galvani - 200th Anniversary

Luigi Galvani - 200th Anniversary, December 1937 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteAs with the article in this month's issue of Radio-Craft magazine (December 1937), the reference to a 200th anniversary is understated by 78 years for 2015. Luigi Galvani was sort of the Benjamin Franklin of biology in that just as Franklin demonstrated that lightning was a form of electricity, Galvani showed that signals sent from the brains to the appendages of animals were electrical in nature. In my high school days in the 1970s, we duplicated his experiment by making deceased frogs' legs twitch when motivated by a D cell. Today, such an exercise would likely be met with demonstrations by animal rights people (whose lives, BTW, have probably in some way...

Electronics Themed Crossword for December 11th

Electronics Themed Crossword Puzzle for December 11th, 2022 - RF Cafe WebsiteThis is your custom made Electronics Themed crossword puzzle for December 11th, 2022. All RF Cafe crossword puzzles are custom made by me, Kirt Blattenberger, and have only words and clues related to electronics, electricity, radio, radar, 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...

Electronics-Themed Comics c1956

Electronics-Themed Comics January 1956 Radio-Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteThis set of electronics-themed comics from a 1956 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine hits on a variety of topics that were big in the day. Computers were coming into the public realm rather than just being a sci-fi wonder. Home personal computers were still a couple decades away, but mainframes were being imposed on the public through accounting and merchandising venues, rather than just curiosities of research laboratories. The "large screen" 27" television cabinet was necessarily deep enough to park a car in because cathode ray tubes (CRT's) were used, not flat screen plasma, LCD, or LED displays. Look closely at the captionless hospital scene to see...

International Geophysical Year First Day Cover

International Geophysical Year First Day Cover - RF Cafe WebsiteAn avid philatelist in my teens and twenties, I collected, along with other stamp varieties, many First Day Covers, which are specially designed envelopes bearing a new stamp design and are postmarked in the city, on the day which they are formally released. Last night I finally got around to digging out my First Day Cover commemorating The International Geophysical Year (IGY), released on May 31, 1957, in Chicago, Illinois. The IGY (actually IGYaaH - IG year-and-a-half) began on July 1, 1957 and ran through December 31, 1958. It was the dawn of space / high altitude flight and there was a great need to learn as much as possible about the physics of the...

The Ear and High Fidelity

The Ear and High Fidelity, March 1959 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteJust as optimizing the transmission path between an RF transmitter and receiver helps guarantee the best possible fidelity in receiving an exact copy of the transmitted signal, so, too, does optimizing the signal path for an audio signal help guarantee a faithful replicate of the original sound. This article from the March 1959 edition of Popular Electronics magazine is a primer on the topic of understanding how the human ear perceives sound, and how to best facilitate a good match between the speaker and the ear drum. In the era, home-base hi-fi equipment was a big deal, as was building out listening areas for optimal performance. Room floor, wall and ceiling materials and...

Linear Integrated Circuits

Linear Integrated Circuits, November 1965 Electronics World - RF Cafe WebsiteHere 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...

Lafayette Chassis Model B-100 Radio Service Data Sheet

Lafayette Chassis Model B-100 (Table Model B-103; Console Models B-101, B-102) Radio Service Data Sheet, August 1941 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteThe Radio Service Data Sheets that were published in Radio-Craft magazine usually seem to have more information included than those published in other magazines, at least in the same era (1940-ish). It might have to do with how much material is provided by the manufacturer rather than a decision by the magazine editors. Either way, here are the schematics, chassis layout, and service info for the Lafayette Model B-100 through B-103. As with most radios built in the era, the woodwork and artistic design of the cabinet are exquisite. There are still people searching for such data, but fortunately the Internet is making it much easier to locate. None of the three...

Portable Satellite Communications Link

Portable Satellite Communications Link, February 1967 Electronics World - RF Cafe WebsiteHere you are - portable satellite communications in the mid 1960s per this photo from Electronics World magazine. It has a unique "cloverleaf" ganged parabolic antenna array with phasing control. Today, we have "manpack" type systems which use compact antennas that can be quickly assembled and disassembled in any environment, along with receivers that have sensitivities much greater than the type shown here. As the name implies, they are transportable in backpack form. Software-defined radio (SDR) technology facilitates programmable modulation and frequency band operation. The Mark V AN/TSC-54 Satellite Communications Link...

Chevrolet's "Car Conservation Plan"

Chevrolet's "Car Conservation Plan", March 23, 1942 Life - RF Cafe WebsiteSome things never change, as the old saying goes. One of those things is adopting a good preventive maintenance plan for your car or truck. Oil, transmission, and cooling system fluid level and condition are tasks even the least mechanically inclined amongst us can do ourselves. So is inspecting and replacing if necessary intake and cabin air filters. Checking the condition of brakes, suspension parts, body panel integrity (corrosion and proper fastening), and other easily inspected components my not be the purview of most motorists, but friends and/or professional servicemen can take care of that for you. Admittedly, there is a large amount of not just unserviceable...

Electronics-Themed Comics

Electronics-Themed Comics July 1948 Radio News - RF Cafe WebsiteHere 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. The one that appeared on page 175 is pretty clever. Such a malady is rarely encountered with today's radios, but...

The NASA 136 Satellite Receiver Converter

The NASA 136 Satellite Receiver Converter, June 1962 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteHave you ever heard of a "nuvistor?" It didn't seem familiar to me right away until after I looked it up. Nuvistors were high mu (high gain) tubes, manufactured originally by RCA, used in sensitive receiver front ends. They came in about a dozen different varieties. This particular NASA-136 receiver for satellite reception uses a 6CW4 triode. Per Wikipedia, "Most nuvistors are basically thimble-shaped, but somewhat smaller than a thimble, and much smaller than conventional tubes of the day. Triodes and a few tetrodes were made. The tube is made entirely of metal and ceramic. Making nuvistors requires special equipment, since there is no intubation to pump gases...

Jerrold Magic Carpet Antenna

Jerrold Magic Carpet Antenna, August 1960 Electronics World - RF Cafe WebsiteGimmick or brainstorm? I'd says the Jerrold Magic Carpet Antenna is a little bit of both. Undeniably, it is a good way to conceal a full-size antenna with the general characteristics of multi-element broadband structure. The downside is that it is fixed in position and any directionality will favor some stations while shunning others. Its installation inside removes weather concerns - snow, ice, and wind - which is a major advantage. I have never seen one, but the illustration seems to show that the antenna elements are integrated into a fabric sheet (hence the "carpet" part of the name), so its geometry is fixed and should be consistent as long as the installer takes care to not distort it...

General Electric Model HJ-1205 Radio

General Electric Model HJ-1205 Radio Service Data Sheet, June 1940 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteThis Radio Service Data Sheet for the General Electric Model HJ-1205 floor console model vacuum tube radio came from the June 1940 edition of Radio-Craft magazine, published by Hugo Gernsback. Console type floor model radios had plenty of space for large speakers, more effective built-in antennas (usually mounted around the perimeter of the back of the cabinet), and more convenient tuning and sound adjustment controls. The HJ-1205 featured "feathertouch" pushbuttons. Some of the early pushbutton tuning mechanisms took a pretty heavy finger to manipulate. I post these for the sake of hobbyists and historians searching for information on...

E.F. Johnson Christmas Ad

E. F. Johnson Christmas Ad, December 1953 QST - RF Cafe Website"Merry Christmas!" Here is a 2-page advertisement run by the E.F. Johnson company in the December 1953 issue of the ARRL's QST magazine. E.F. Johnson was a major player in amateur radio, and then later Citizens Band (CB) radio. They also manufactured a large array of point-to-point commercial radio products (Land Mobile Radio Service, LMRS, and Commercial Mobile Radio Service, CMRS), as well a large line of RF connectors and adapters. The wireless automatic meter reading (AMR) industry was pretty much born out of a very capable group of engineers, technicians, assembly workers, and managers at E.F. Johnson's facility in Waseca...

Anritsu MA25211A P25 Radio Auto Test & Alignment System - RF Cafe Website
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