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Temwell Filters - RF Cafe

Electronics Themed Comics, Oct 1945 & Apr 1946

Electronics Themed Comics, October 1945 & April 1946 Radio News - RF CafeAre you having a rough week? If so - and even if not - take a few minutes to get a laugh from these electronics-themed comics from the pages of vintage Radio News magazines. Beginning sometime in the late 1930s and early 1940s, single-panel topical comics began appearing frequently in many hobby and even professional magazines. Sure, comics showed up in magazine before that time, but they generally did not necessarily have to do with the main subject of the publication. The Saturday Evening Post, for example, had many single-panel comics, but they were on any random theme. The Saturday Evening Post, for example, had many single-panel comics, but they were on any random theme. I can't go without commenting on the April 1946 comic since it reminds me of a situation...

Switches - A Guide to Selection & Application

A Guide to Selection & Application, September 1967 Electronics World - RF CafeArthur Hackman's 1967 Electronics World magazine article provides a systematic guide for selecting mechanical and manual switches, beginning with specifying the required function through poles (circuits controlled) and throws (positions connected, excluding "off"). Voltage and current ratings must not be exceeded to prevent contact welding or catastrophic dielectric failure. Mechanically actuated switches include pressure-sensitive types (with defined proof and burst pressures), temperature-sensitive switches, and various limit switches (plunger, lever, roller), which require consideration of mounting and environmental sealing for harsh conditions. Manually...

Acoustics Anagram

Acoustics Anagram, October 1961 Electronics World - RF CafeIsn't an anagram a word game where letters of one word are rearranged to spell another word or series of words? For instance, an anagram for "microwave" is "warm voice," one for "resistance" is "ancestries," and for "vector" is "covert." If so, then this puzzle is misnamed; it is really a crossword puzzle. Maybe back in 1961 the word anagram included this type of puzzle. Regardless of the naming error, I did learn a new word: "inertance," which means "the effect of inertia in an acoustic system, an impeding of the transmission of sound through...

Transient Electronics - Poof, They're Gone

Transient Electronics: Devices that Degrade and Disappear - RF Cafe"Electronics have long been defined by their permanence. Even when their useful life ends, their materials persist in landfills for years or decades. Transient electronics embrace impermanence with devices that are deliberately engineered to function for a set period of time and then disappear, dissolving into safe byproducts when exposed to water, heat, or light. Advances in electronics technology moving at a faster pace than ever before, and, thus, older electronics become obsolete or undesirable quickly. While there are obvious benefits to developments in electronic..."

Mechanical Bandpass Filters for I.F. Ranges

Mechanical Bandpass Filters for I.F. Ranges, February 1953 QST - RF CafeMagnetostriction is a term not seen very often these days. It describes the physical shape change that takes place in certain ferrous materials when subject to a magnetic field, and is responsible for most of the familiar "hum" that comes from transformers. The effect is used in mechanical filters as transducers between the electronic circuit and the mechanically resonant disks that define filter bandpass characteristics. Elemental cobalt exhibits the highest room temperature magnetostriction (units are "microstrains"). Nickel, with about half the value as cobalt, is cheaper and more abundant and is therefor more commonly used in modern magnetorestrictive transducers. Way back in the 1980s while...

New Espresso Engineering Workbook™ Release!

Espresso Engineering Workbook™ for Excel - RF CafeRF Cafe's spreadsheet-based engineering and science calculator, Espresso Engineering Workbook™, is a collection of electrical engineering and physics calculators for commonly needed design and problem solving work. A Transformer Calculator worksheet has just been added, making for a total of 45 calculators. It is an excellent tool for engineers, technicians, hobbyists, and students. Equally excellent is that Espresso Engineering Workbook™ is provided at no cost, compliments of my generous sponsors...

Raytheon Bonded Electronic Technician Ad

Raytheon Bonded Electronic Technician Ad, January 1946 Radio News - RF CafeThere was a time when having a career in any field of electricity or electronics work was an enviable mark of a person's technical prowess that conveyed a degree of respect. The whole controlling of electrons thing boggled the minds of most people, whether it meant wiring homes and buildings for lights, receptacles, and motors, or designing "all wave" radio sets for listening to the evening broadcast of "The Lone Ranger." Today, with nearly everyone alive having grown up with such conveniences, the "wow factor" is pretty much gone, except maybe with those of us who still chose to engage. If an electronics appliance...

Money in Radio Gadgets

Money in Radio Gadgets, February 1933 Radio-Craft - RF CafeSubstitute "cellphone" for "radio" in this title ("Money in Radio Gadgets"), and editorial by Hugo Gernsback and it would fit right in with today's market of wondrous gadgetry. Prescient as always, Mr. Gernsback describes in this 1933 issue of Radio-Craft magazine, among other things, what we now refer to as energy harnessing to power ancillary devices and props. He also recommends a scheme for causing "dancing dolls" on the surface of a table vibrated and mobilized by the sonic waves of a large speaker - a lot like the way years later vibrating football games were made (remember them?) where the men danced randomly across the painted metal playing field. It sounded like a pair of electric...

Light's 180-Year-Old Magnetic Secret

Light's 180-Year-Old Magnetic Secret - RF Cafe"Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have found that the magnetic component of light plays a direct part in the Faraday Effect, overturning a 180-year belief that only light's electric field was involved. Their work shows that light can exert magnetic influence on matter, not simply illuminate it. This insight could support advances in optics, spintronics, and emerging quantum technologies. The team's findings, published in Nature's Scientific Reports, show that the magnetic portion of light, not only its electric one, has a meaningful and measurable influence on how light interacts with materials. This result contradicts..."

A Passive RF Limiter

A Passive RF Limiter, December 1966 QST Article - RF CafeThis passive RF 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...

Electronic Crosswords

Electronic Crosswords, October 1963 Electronics World - RF CafeThis 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...

Avalanche Transistor Circuits

Avalanche Transistor Circuits, September 1967 Electronics World - RF CafeAvalanche breakdown in semiconductors, initially viewed by engineers as a destructive limitation, was later discovered to be nondestructive when peak power was controlled through external circuitry. This 1967 Electronics World magazine article explains how avalanche transistors evolved from being considered problematic to becoming valuable components for high-speed pulse generation. Early adoption was hindered by inconsistent performance between transistors, requiring careful selection for reliability. Improved fabrication techniques reduced surface leakage currents, enabling modern avalanche transistors to operate at high collector voltages...

Sound Broadcasting from Airplanes

Sound Broadcasting from Airplanes, September 1947 Radio News - RF CafeUntil maybe 30 to 40 years ago, there was still a certain amount of awe associated with new applications of technology. It seems anymore people are so accustomed to new and amazing things - usually at affordable prices - that the wonder is gone. Advancements are expected. The world is moving so fast that it is difficult to absorb and fully appreciate all the work being done. In 1947 when this "Sound Broadcasting from Airplanes" article appeared in Radio News magazine, both airplanes and electronics were still relatively new to a lot of people, especially in more rural areas, so a whiz-bang scheme like broadcasting messages from an airplane was a big deal to many. It was an area of science that had not yet been explored to a large degree. BTW, the spell checker flagged a new word (for me, anyway): genemotor which, as it turns out, is the generic name for the line of dynamos, generators, engines, and motors manufactured by Pioneer Gen-E-Motor Corporation of Chicago, Illinois...

China EUV - Rise of the "Silicon Curtain"

China EUV Breakthrough and the Rise of the "Silicon Curtain" - RF Cafe"Inside a secure facility overseen by the Central Science and Technology Commission, Chinese engineers have activated an Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machine - a technology the U.S. spent years attempting to block. A recent Reuters investigation confirms the EUV prototype is now operational in Shenzhen. This development is not just a technical milestone; it is a seismic structural realignment that effectively marks the end of the unified global semiconductor market. Lack of access to the leading edge technology of ASML's EUV lithography machines. Strict 'small yard, high fence' restrictions would keep China several generations behind in technology..."

Bell Telephone Laboratories Scientific Quality Control

Bell Telephone Laboratories Ad, June 1946 Radio News - RF CafeRemember when you could hold a telephone conversation without having to allow a moment of time at the end of a sentence before responding in order to keep from "stepping on" the person on the other end? It used to be only overseas phone calls or maybe communicating to astronauts on the moon suffered such inconveniences, but talking to someone across town was like having a face-to-face discussion. More often than not - or so at least it seems - there is a noticeable delay between the time someone actually stops talking on the transmitter end and the time the audio stops at the receiver end. People who have never known otherwise accommodate the delay with no appreciation for how good phone calls used to be. This promotion by Bell Telephone Labs which appeared in a 1946 issue of Radio News magazine extolls the virtues of its "scientific quality control" innovation that produced repeatable...

Mysterious Short Waves

Mysterious Short Waves, March 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF CafeIn 1935, not much was yet known about the ionosphere. Its existence was first theorized in 1902 by Arthur Kennelly and Oliver Heaviside, and Edward Appleton proved its presence in 1924 by conducting a series of broadcast experiments, but no direct measurements were possible until rocket-borne instruments could be launched. An Aerobee-Hi sounding rocket was launched in 1956 as part of the International Geophysical Year (IGY) project that made the first actual detection of ionized particles in what is now referred to as the D-layer. It is therefore forgivable that Hugo Gernsback, normally spot-on in his theories and postulations regarding RF propagation, incorrectly suggested in this editorial that based on observed time...

Gunn Oscillators

Gunn Oscillators, September 1967 Electronics World - RF CafeThis 1967 Electronics World magazine article highlights a potential revolution in microwave technology through new semiconductor devices that could miniaturize and drastically reduce the cost of microwave sources. The focus is on two promising devices: the Read p-n junction diode and the Gunn bulk gallium arsenide oscillator. The Gunn device, discovered accidentally by Dr. J.B. Gunn at IBM, operates on a radical principle - a bulk semiconductor material oscillates at microwave frequencies without external tuned circuitry when a threshold voltage is applied. Key to the Gunn effect is the unique property of gallium arsenide, which features a second conduction band. Electrons entering this high-energy, low-mobility band create "domains" that drift slowly from cathode to anode, causing current...

Radar Scores SAC Bombing Test

Radar Scores SAC Bombing Test, December 1956 Popular Electronics - RF CafeMost people have heard of the incredibly accurate Norden bombsight that was credited for revolutionizing accuracy of heavy bombers like B-17s, B-25s, and B-29s. It was an electromechanical device that took bombardier inputs of altitude, airspeed, heading, and wind speed and direction, then calculated the impact point of the bomb. An accuracy of 75 feet was claimed under ideal conditions - provided by a mechanical computing device. By 1956 when this article was published, the Norden had been replaced by radar-integrated bombing systems. Additionally, ground-based radar measurement systems were...

FCC Bans Foreign-Made Drones, Drone Parts

FCC Bans Foreign-Made Drones, Drone Parts - RF Cafe"On Monday, December 22, 2025, the FCC released DA 25-1086, which adds foreign-made drones and some components to security risk list. What the decision actually means: "If you already own a DJI or other foreign-made drone, you can still fly it. Stores can still sell previously approved models while inventory lasts. New foreign-made drones and key components can no longer get FCC approval. In practical terms, future DJI models are now cut off from the U.S. market. There are no true low-cost, one-for-one replacements available today..."

Radar Scores SAC Bombing Test

Radar Scores SAC Bombing Test, December 1956 Popular Electronics - RF CafeMost people have heard of the incredibly accurate Norden bombsight that was credited for revolutionizing accuracy of heavy bombers like B-17s, B-25s, and B-29s. It was an electromechanical device that took bombardier inputs of altitude, airspeed, heading, and wind speed and direction, then calculated the impact point of the bomb. An accuracy of 75 feet was claimed under ideal conditions - provided by a mechanical computing device. By 1956 when this article was published, the Norden had been replaced by radar-integrated bombing systems. Additionally, ground-based radar measurement systems were...

$5.00 for Best Short Wave Kink

$5.00 for Best Short Wave Kink, May 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF CafeIf you need a cheap, quick lightning arrestor for your antenna or just about any type of wired system, this idea from Mr. Burgess Brownson looks like a good option. He used an automotive spare plug. Voltage breakover points can be set by varying the spark gap distance. The old vacuum tube transmitters and receivers had a better of chance of surviving a lightning strike because the components were able to handle much more of a shock than our modern semiconductor sets with miniature, closely spaced components. Still, the spark plug setup is better than nothing, if for no other reason than to protect the shelter. it should suffice. This and many ...

The Aircraft Radio Serviceman

The Aircraft Radio Serviceman (Piper Cub), April 1946 Radio News - RF CafeAircraft electronics has always been on the bleeding edge of technology because of the ever-increasing need to fly in the widest range of atmospheric conditions possible. Accordingly, skills needed by avionics servicemen are amongst the highest required in any electronics field. There are still many pieces of vintage equipment in service that need to be maintained, but even 20- to 30-year-old airborne radars and navigational units require top-notch techs to troubleshoot and align. One topic in particular that plagues electronics operation even in modern airframes is that of static electricity build-up and lightning strikes. We all face those kinds of static discharge hazards in non-aviation environments, but for the most part a failure on the ground or water is not as imminently...

Technical Headlines - RF Cafe

• U.S. Cuts EV Plans as Tax Credit Ends

• Fragmented 6 GHz Policy Shapes Wi-Fi 8 Adoption

• Big 3 Have Room for 32M FWA Customers

• FCC Simplifying Broadband "Nutrition Labels"

• GSMA Pleads for Yet More 6G Spectrum

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

The RF Cafe Homepage Archive is a comprehensive collection of every item appearing daily on this website since 2008 - and many from earlier years. Many thousands of pages of unique content have been added since then.

DC Motors & Generators

DC Motors & Generators, NAVPERS 10622 - RF CafeStudies of motors usually begin with the direct current (DC) type - maybe because most students have already had hands-on experiences with motors in models (cars, boats, airplanes) and/or electricity experimenter kits. They are small, cheap, and a simple flashlight battery (the ultimate in safety) makes them run. An alternating current (AC) motor requires either a direct connection to the house current or use of a step-down transformer, which still carries with it a high risk factor. This chapter of the U.S. military's Basic Navy Training Course (NAVPERS 10622) conforms to the tradition, and follows in the next chapter with AC motors and generators. While reading through the text, I ran across the unfamiliar term "kickpipe" and wondered...

Plotting Coverage Circles for Satellite Communications

Plotting Coverage Circles For Satellite Communications, January 24, 1964 Electronics Magazine - RF CafeOne of the major advantages of the age of powerful personal computers - be they in the form of desktop systems, tablets, or smartphone apps - is that for most computation-intensive tasks there only needs to be one or maybe at most a few people smart enough to know how to do them. Everyone else who has to perform the task just needs to be able to input the proper parameters to ensure a useful output. That is a significant statement, because in the days before ubiquitous computer availability and incredible computing power, highly capable engineers, scientists, analysts, and mathematicians either had to be on staff or an expert external resource was used for difficult and/or time-intensive tasks. Over time, fewer and fewer people are needed to produce very precise and reliable results. In many ways, other than the creative intuition involved in concept, creation, and execution, a large part of the product design and planning phases have been automated...

Test Instruments: The Tube Tester  

Test Instruments: The Tube Tester, August 1960 Popular Electronics - RF CafeLike a fool, many years ago I donated a perfectly fine vacuum tube tester that had been given to me by an über-engineer/ham I worked with during the time (nearly 35 years ago) I was restoring my first vintage tube radio. Big mistake. It was a really nice tester: a B&K Model 650 Dyna-Quik Dynamic Mutual Conductance Tube & Transistor Tester. It was sold shortly after I had also given away as a wedding gift the Crosley floor console radio that I restored. Another bad move. Now, many moons later, I am working to restore yet another Crosley tube radio and I sure wish I had held on to it. Similar tube testers are routinely selling on eBay for $100-$200. I finally found a really nice B&K Model 650 on eBay and got it for a decent price. Mistake corrected...

Meteor Detection by Amateur Radio

Meteor Detection by Amateur Radio, July 1947 QST - RF CafeThe 1940s and 1950s was an era of much advancement in our knowledge of Earth's upper atmosphere and its affects on radio communications - both good and bad as reported by this 1947 issue of QST magazine. Industry, government, academic, and amateur groups all played major roles in conducting experiments and publishing findings for the interested community to share and build upon. Still today a huge amount of research is being carried out to better understand how the various layers of the atmosphere - from ground level to space - are affected by extraterrestrial influences. A year ago I posted an article, along with a bit of editorializing, from the July 1958 edition of Radio-Electronics entitled..."

Opportunity Mirror: Reflections on Your Future

Opportunity Mirror: Thoughtful Reflections on Your Future, May 1970 Popular Electronics - RF CafePreparing for a technician career in electronics today is not so different than it was in 1970, when this article on resume preparation appeared in Popular Electronics magazine. Sure, particular job descriptions have changed, but the basics are pretty much the same. In 1970, being able to list television and radio repair on your resume was a valuable indication of your schematic reading and troubleshooting prowess. The keywords Sams Photofacts would jump right off the page at a knowledgeable interviewer (you can still buy documentation packages from Sams Technical Publishing). Then, as now, having a two-year college electronics degree or a stint in the armed forces as an electronics technician - or both, preferably - is almost a requirement for landing a job at a defense or aerospace electronics company...

Belmont Model 678 Auto-Radio Set Radio Service Data Sheet

Belmont Model 678 Auto-Radio Set Radio Service Data Sheet, August 1940 Radio-Craft - <em>RF Cafe</em>Unlike even the vacuum tube type AM radio in the dashboard of my parents' car in the early 1960s that were self-contained units, even earlier radios designed for cars and trucks had their bulky electronics mounted under the sea or in the trunk, with a remote volume and tuning control mounted in the dashboard. That greatly complicated the installation as well as the design of the radio. This circa 1940 Belmont Model 678 Auto-Radio is a prime example. Note the unique cylindrical shape of the radio chassis, and that the remote control is a pushbutton assembly with rotating knobs for tuning and volume. Operating from a 6 volt DC car battery (12 volts came later), these radios required a "vibrator" circuit to convert DC to AC (and back to a higher level DC) in order to transform to a couple hundred volts for the plate voltage of the tubes...

Theory and Application of UHF

Theory and Application of UHF, December 1944 Radio News - RF CafeThis is part 8 of a series authored by Milton Kiver entitled, "Theory and Applications of UHF," that appeared in Radio News magazine in the mid 1940s. As you might expect it is a very extensive delve into the relatively new realm of UHF generation, transmission, propagation, and reception. You might not know that up through the 1930s, UHF circuit and practice had been relegated to the amateur radio operators because those frequencies from 300 MHz to 3 GHz were considered too unexploitable for professional use. It was not until Hams did the hard work of figuring out practical methods of building circuits and antennas and characterizing geographical and atmospheric conditions that affected propagation that suddenly industry and government decided UHF might be useful after all...

The Counter as a Test Instrument

The Counter as a Test Instrument, November 1962 Electronics World - RF CafeA few years ago I was in a second-hand shop in Erie, Pennsylvania, and happened to spot a Hewlett-Packard model HP 5212A Electronic Counter stashed in a cardboard box with a bunch of other electronic stuff. It was a little dirty, but otherwise appeared to be in pretty good condition. I took it to the counter and asked the lady what she'd take for it, and we agreed on $15, provided when I plugged it in the front panel display would light up and no smoke came from the chassis. It did and it didn't, respectively. Once at home, I fired it up and ran some functional tests on it, and all seemed to be working properly. After performing some major clean-up to nearly like-new condition, I decided it should go to someone who could put it to good use, so it went up for sale here on RF Cafe. Believe it or not, the best offer received was $125. It deserved more respect than that, but the guy was a collector of vintage test equipment, so at least it went to a loving home. This 1962 "The Counter as a Test Instrument" article in Electronics World magazine article shows both the HP 5212A (300 kHz) and the HP 5243L (500 MHz) electronic counters...

Men Who Made Radio - Sir Oliver Lodge

Men Who Made Radio - Sir Oliver Lodge, December 1929, Radio-Craft - RF CafeRadio-Craft magazine ran a monthly series of short articles paying tribute to some of the shakers and movers in the field of science - this time it was Sir Oliver Lodge. "While Hertz was discovering radio waves in air, Lodge was determining the laws of the corresponding activity which takes place in electrical conductors. It was Lodge who demonstrated the possibility of radio communication, experimentally, as Marconi did its commercial value - just as Henry created the telegraph and Morse made it of practical utility." See other "Men Who Made Radio" features on...

FM Radio Quiz

FM Radio Quiz, April 1950 Radio & Televsion News - RF CafeFM (frequency modulation) radio certainly was a hot topic beginning in the middle to late 1940s. With the war out of the way, energies and resources were being redirected back to peacetime production. Major Edwin Armstrong announced his FM scheme in 1935, and as with many new inventions, it was met with skepticism by many who doubted his claim of static interference immunity. For many, it was a lack of understanding that caused the negative reaction, caused primarily by the increased level of sophistication of the transmitter and receiver circuitry. Amplitude modulation (AM) was so easy even a caveman could understand it, but adding phase relationships into the equation (literally) left many in the dust. This FM Radio Quiz from a 1950 issue of Radio & Television News magazine tests your grasp of frequency modulation principles.

Behind the U.L. Label

Behind the U.L. Label, August 1955 Popular Electronics - RF CafeThe Underwriter's Laboratory (UL) is an entity that seems to have been around forever. A lot of people - maybe most people - assume that it is a government entity. In fact, it is a non-profit organization sponsored by the National Board of Fire Underwriters. Its roots are traceable back to the Chicago World's Fair in 1893. Concern over the potential fire hazard of Edison's light bulbs was the impetus for the effort. Another aspect of the UL that a lot of people don't know is that the UL label of approval is no guarantee that the device works properly, only that is passes standards of safety as it relates to fire hazards. This article in the August 1955 edition of Popular Electronics magazine gives a brief history...

Analyzing the R-C Circuit

Analyzing the R-C Circuit, November 1953 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeWithout presenting a single equation, author Cyrus Glickstein discusses the affects of resistor-capacitor interaction in circuits, aka R-C time constants. This 1953 Radio-Electronics article is directed mostly toward a repair technician poking and probing circuits while referring to schematics during troubleshooting sessions. Being in the age of vacuum tubes without integrated circuits with built-in biasing and interstage coupling circuits, there were plenty of discrete resistors, inductors, and capacitors strewn throughout the chassis with point-to-point wiring and components soldered directly to binding posts and terminal lugs on sockets, stacked wafer switches, transformers, etc. Cold solder joints and broken wires were a fairly common occurrence...

Blowtorching Tubes to Life

Blowtorching Tubes to Life, January 1933 Radio-Craft - RF CafeIf this article had appeared in the New York Times in the year 2020, its author, Glenn Ellsworth, would have been labeled a 'Depression Denier!' Don't be confused by the word 'denier,' which most often prior to about 1999 was used to refer to a type of silver coin or a measure of fineness of silk cloth. Today, it is seen most often as describing one who would deny something. 'Denyer' is the alternate spelling used by some authors to avoid confusion, and since the level of spelling knowledge is so low, most people never notice. But, I digress. The reason I bring up the point is because this article was published in 1933, little more than three years after the Stock Market Crash of October 29, 1929 (aka 'Black Tuesday')...

General Electric Sealed-Ignitron Rectifiers 

General Electric Sealed-Ignitron Rectifiers, October 1944 Radio News - RF Cafe"Ignitron" sounds like a contemporary pejorative term for someone who blindly follows orders. In the 1940s, though, it was a type of steel-jacketed vacuum tube manufactured by General Electric for use in conversion from alternating alternating to direct current (AC-DC) power supplies. According to this GE document, "Ignitrons are gas-discharge, pool-type cathode tubes in which the arc is started for each conducting cycle by means of a starting or ignition electrode. The tubes are of the half-wave type in which the current is carried through the tube during only the positive part of the cycle. During the remainder or non-conducting part the residual ionization reaches very low values in comparison with the ionization present in the multi-anode type of pool tube where it is proportional to the load current carried. As a result of the so-called dark, negative half-cycle, the shielding required in half-wave tubes is greatly reduced from that in the multi-anode tube. Reduction in shielding in turn lowers the arc voltages so that tubes of this type may be efficiently applied...

Some ABCs of V.H.F. Receiver Design

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

Rectifying Without Rectifiers

Rectifying Without Rectifiers, July 1952 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeIt took a couple times reading through this "Rectifying Without Rectifiers" article to get the gist of what author H.B. Conant was talking about. He begins by pointing out the negative aspects of using nonlinear metallic rectifiers in a bridge circuit for an electric meter, then goes on to describe an improved "translator" circuit that uses - wait for it - nonlinear metallic rectifiers (or nonlinear resistors made of Thyrite material). If my interpretation is correct, basically the new and improved circuit incorporates a bias voltage that forces the nonlinear element (be it a metallic rectifier or a nonlinear resistance) to operate in a region which passes a higher current level to the meter movement when low values are being measured. One of the drawbacks mentioned of a traditional (at the time) bridge circuit was the need for separate calibration / marking of the meter's scale on the front panel, but then he says the translator meter also does not have uniform scales on all voltage ranges. I are a bit confused...

Microwave Power Diodes

Microwave Power Diodes, July 1969 Electronics World - RF CafeEveryone who is interested enough in microwave diodes to read this article surely knows* what IMPATT, GUNN, and PIN diodes are, but have you heard of Read-effect, TRAPATT, LSA, or QMD diodes? If not, it is likely because you entered the microwaves field long after 1969 when this edition of Electronics World was mailed to subscribers. Device improvement and obsolescence accounts for familiarity with the former and unfamiliarity with the latter, respectively. The article below by two Sylvania Electronic Products engineers describes the properties of various up-and-...

Broadcast Equipment - Towers 

Broadcast Equipment - Towers, October 1945 Radio-Craft - RF CafeDon Hoefler, widely credited for being the first author to use the term "Silicon Valley" in print* to refer to the rapidly building semiconductor region of the San Francisco Bay area, published a series of articles in the 1944-1945 timeframe in Radio-Craft magazine about radio and television broadcast equipment. This particular installment is part XII, covering broadcast antenna towers. At the time, commercial installations were few and far between as priority was given to scarce resources for military applications. He discusses the tradeoffs involved in various vertical antenna designs, including the tower structures: top-loading, center-loading, etc. When I first looked at the traditional tapered tower design I thought about how labor-intensive such calculations might be and sure enough, he mentions that constant-cross-section towers were gaining favor due to the relative ease of computations for predicting radiation patterns and impedance matching. Still, it required a lot of slide rule work...

Temwell Filters - RF Cafe