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Recent Developments in Electronics 

Recent Developments in Electronics, October 1968 Electronics World - RF CafeThe "Recent Developments in Electronics" column in a 1968 issue of Electronics World magazine featured among other topics, a six-foot McDonnell-Douglas DC-10 jet model tested inside a charged wire enclosure generating controlled electromagnetic fields to evaluate communications and navigation antennas across flight attitudes on the 179-foot tri-jet led to modern anechoic chambers for 5G and aircraft testing. An all-solid-state bright radar display provided daylight air traffic control to enhance monitoring and safety to replace dim scopes. A nuclear reactor attained criticality with 211 fuel elements for 600 kW thermal power in a 66-lb flight unit convertible for moon/orbit craft, inspiring RTGs in Voyager and Perseverance rover...

Trends in EMC and Compliance Engineering

Trends in EMC and Compliance Engineering - RF CafeNot sure what the image has to do with the subject, but... "Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) and compliance engineering are critical fields in ensuring that electronic devices operate without causing or being affected by electromagnetic interference (EMI). As technology advances, new challenges and opportunities arise in EMC and compliance engineering. This article explores emerging technologies, innovations in EMC testing, and potential future challenges in the field. Emerging Technologies..."

Mac's Radio Service Shop: A Windy Subject

Mac's Radio Service Shop: A Windy Subject, March 1953 Radio & Television News - RF CafeIt is a pretty good bet that most multi-element TV aerials you find on rooftops and even on ancient towers were decommissioned years ago. They have been replaced either with cable (whether via CATV or Internet) or satellite dishes. A few hold-outs still use them for local over-the-air broadcast stations and/or even FM radio reception. There was a time, though, that photographs taken looking across a vast expanse of house roofs showing an endless array of antennas and guy wires was a sign of 'modern' living. Most were erected by Harry Homeowner types or minimally qualified service technicians, and were well-known for toppling, twisting, bending or un-aligning when stiff winds were imposed upon them. This story-lesson from the March 1953 edition "Mac's Radio Service Shop...

Werbel 2-Way Power Splitter for 0.45-7.5 GHz

Werbel Microwave WM2PD-0.45-7.5-S 2-Way Power Splitter for 450 MHz to 7.5 GHz - RF CafeWerbel Microwave began as a consulting firm, specializing in RF components design, with the ability to rapidly spin low volume prototypes, and has quickly grown into a major designer and manufacturer with volume production capacities. Our WM2PD-0.45-7.5-S is a 2-way in-line power splitter covering the continuous bandwidth of 450 MHz to 7.5 GHz in an enclosure measuring 5.75 x 2.80 x 0.55 inches with versatile mounting options. The device is RoHS compliant. This part has versatile mounting options. Through holes allow for mounting to chassis on the broad side. Threaded holes on the connector edges allow for through-panel mounting. No worries with Werbel...

Television in Space

Television in Space, August 1965 Electronics World - RF CafeA mere five years had elapsed from the time Echo, a gas-filled metallized plastic sphere that passively reflected radio signals back to Earth, was launched and the time that 35 television cameras had been launched into space. The Space Race was at a fever pitch. Although the Ruskies beat us in being the first to launch both an active satellite (Sputnik) and a man (Yuri Gagarin) into space, America's deep pool of intellectual resources, consisting of both native scientists and many of the world's top scientists who chose to flourish in freedom here rather than oppression behind the Iron Curtain, fostered the advantage that in short order established the United States as the leading super power both in space and on terra firma. TIROS satellites began providing real-time visual data on the Earth's weather in 1960. Not only were cameras transmitting images of the Earth...

Coaxial Connectors

Coaxial Connectors, October 1968 Electronics World - RF CafeIn his 1968 Electronics World magazine article, Amphenol RF Division VP Tore Anderson emphasizes that selecting coaxial connectors is as crucial as choosing the cable itself for optimal RF transmission system performance, maintaining constant impedance despite dielectric transitions and withstanding power without disrupting VSWR. Engineers often prioritize familiarity over suitability, leading to problematic adapters and system degradation, while even manufacturers misuse inexpensive types for high-power applications, risking damage. Connectors are classified by cable size, coupling methods (bayonet, threaded, push-on)...

Selecting the Proper Fuse

Selecting the Proper Fuse, August 1965 Electronics World - RF CafeArthur Steele is probably enjoying retirement from Littelfuse by now. In 1965 he had an article published offering guidelines on how to select the proper type fuse for protecting the circuit at hand. The correct choice is seldom a simple matter of adding a margin of some amount onto the known maximum current draw, especially if you are designing for a commercial or defense electronics project. Applied voltage, expected current surges, operational temperature and mechanical stress (vibration & shock, etc.), applicable design regulations (UL, Mil-Spec, etc.), serviceability, and available space are among the factors that need consideration. Do you need a fast-blow, medium-blow, or slow-blow fuse for that circuit? You'll have...

Anatech Microwave Intros 3 Models for January

Anatech Microwave Intros 3 New Models for January 2026 - RF CafeAnatech Microwave Company (AMC) 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 models have been added to the product line in November, including a 20 dB directional coupler with an insertion loss of 0.5 dB over a 2-18 GHz range, a 1 dB attenuator for 1 kW peak pulse at up to 4 GHz, and an 8-way power divider with 3° phase balance over 0.5-150 MHz. Custom RF power filter and directional couplers designs can be designed...

Directional Coupler Crossword Puzzle

Directional Coupler Crossword Puzzle for May 3, 2015 - RF CafeThis week's crossword puzzle has a "directional coupler" theme in that many of the words are related to the devices. All of the other words are, as usual, pulled from a custom-built dictionary containing only terms pertaining to engineering, mechanics, astronomy, mathematics, chemistry, and names of companies that make components for the aforementioned fields. Even Dilbert characters appear sometimes. You will not, however, find names of numbnut Hollywierd celebs or TV shows here...

RFGraph System Modeling Software

RFGraph - RF CafeLongtime RF Cafe visitor Steve M. sent me a note about his new RFGraph system modeling software. It is an online cascade calculator with a drag-and-drop user interface. Standard or custom components can be placed on the drawing grid, and all system parameters -- gain, NF, IP, P1dB, etc., can be viewed at any point in the chain. Your design is stored in the cloud and can be easily shared with other users or exported to PDF for inclusion in presentations and white papers. A Basic account with limited capability is free, and a full-featured Pro account is a mere $9.99/month or $99/year.

Zeppelin Radio Equipment: Pre-Hindenburg Disaster

Zeppelin Radio Equipment, July 1936 Radio-Craft - RF CafeMay 6, 1937, is the date of the Hindenburg disaster at the Naval Air Station in Lakehurst, New Jersey, and is the RF Cafe logo theme for that Day in History . While looking through the July 1936 edition of Radio-Craft magazine, I saw this news article reporting on preparations being made in the onboard radio and direction finding equipment for Hindenburg's maiden voyage from its home base in Frankfurt, Germany to North America. No one at the time of this article suspected such a terrible fate was looming les than a year later. Theories abound regarding the cause of the fatal fire, but there is no doubt that a combination of highly flammable hydrogen gas and an also highly flammable graphite dope...

Designs for Log-Periodic FM and TV Antennas

Designs for Log-Periodic FM and TV Antennas, December 1967 Electronics World - RF CafeLog-periodic dipole array (LPDA) antennas have been a favorite of homeowners and hobbyists since they were first invented back in the late 1950s by Dwight Isbell and Raymond DuHamel at the University of Illinois. In this 1967 Electronics World magazine article, Harold D. Pruett, an assistant physics professor at Colorado State University, outlines DIY zig-zag designs for FM and TV reception, costing under $5 in materials. The FM-only and VHF TV-FM antennas provide 10-12 dB gain, 5° beamwidths, and over 20 dB front-to-back ratios, enhancing signal-to-noise by focusing on transmitters and rejecting noise, multipath distortion, FM stereo hiss, and TV "snow" or ghosts...

Innovative Power Products (IPP) is Relocating

Innovative Power Products 30Innovative Power Products (IPP) is Relocating Effective January 19th! - RF CafeEffective January 19, Innovative Power Products (IPP), an RF Cafe advertiser, will be relocating our operations from Holbrook, NY to a new facility at 90 Davids Drive, Hauppauge, NY 11788. This important step for IPP will allow us to better support our customers, giving us more capacity in a newly-renovated manufacturing location. All shipping, receiving, and in-person visits will transition to the new site. Our team, ownership, and commitment to quality and service, phone numbers, emails, and primary points of contact all remain the same!

The Clapp Oscillator - and How!

The Clapp Oscillator - and How!, February 1953 QST - RF CafeJames Kilton Clapp in 1948 first published details on an oscillator that used positive feedback obtained from an LC (capacitive & inductive) voltage divider to initiate and sustain oscillations. Thus was born the now familiar Clapp oscillator. It had an advantage over both the Colpitts and Hartley oscillators because the feedback, not being dependent on a simple capacitive or inductive voltage division, respectively, made it more reliable as a variable frequency oscillator (VFO). This article does a nice job of explaining the operation of the Clapp oscillator. Just as the Colpitts and Hartley oscillators handily provide an easy mnemonic for being based...

2026 is ARRL's Year of the Club

2026 is ARRL's Year of the Club - RF CafeARRL The National Association for Amateur Radio® is launching a year-long celebration that puts the spotlight squarely where it belongs -- on radio clubs. Beginning January 1, 2026, ARRL officially recognizes the Year of the Club, an initiative designated by the ARRL Board of Directors to honor the vital role clubs play in sustaining, growing, and energizing amateur radio. Radio clubs are the backbone of ARRL and of the Amateur Radio Service itself. For countless hams, a club is the first welcoming doorway into the hobby -- a place to learn, to operate...

Magnetic Ceramics: Ferrites Magnetic Materials for RF

Magnetic Ceramics: Ferrites, February 1953 QST - RF CafeMagnetic ceramics have been with us for a long time - probably forever as far as most people that use them these days are concerned. When this article was published in 1953, ferrites for use at RF frequencies were a new, breakthrough phenomenon. Take a look at inductors used in vintage radio equipment and you will find either air or solid iron as the permeable filler elements in most instances. Whereas iron might have a permeability of 100-150, the new magnetic ceramics exhibited permeabilities up to 4,000 at 1 MHz, and even higher for lower frequencies. Modern alloys and compounds provide permeabilities of more than 50,000 for special applications. Such high values allow physical size and weight of inductors and transformers...

Radio-Operated Airplanes

Radio Operated Airplane, January 1946 Radio News - RF CafeWhen I first saw this article from a 1946 edition of Radio News, I did a double-take on the author's name, thinking it was written by long-time model aviation author and magazine editor William "Bill" Winter. It was actually done by a fellow named Winters, not Winter. An enthusiastic radio control (R/C) evangelist in his day, Bill Winter wrote many pieces for electronics magazines such as Popular Electronics. As I have noted in the past, hobbyists in the electronics realm, as well as in the fields of aircraft and rocket design, contribute mightily to the state of the art. Such is also the case in many other arts and sciences. Here we have a report of some of the earliest radio controlled flying "drones," as we call them today. They are a far cry from the...

New Incentive Regulations for Hams

New Incentive Regulations for Hams - What Happens Now?, December 1967 Electronics World - RF CafeThis 1967 Electronics World magazine article detailed the FCC's at-the-time incentive licensing program that established a strict hierarchy where exclusive frequency blocks were reserved solely for Advanced and Extra Class operators, creating clear privileges based on examination proficiency. This system mandated Morse code testing at 13 wpm for General class and beyond, with the explicit goal of pushing hams toward technical excellence by restricting prime DX and phone segments. Today's licensing structure retains a modified version of class-based frequency assignments, but the distinctions are far less restrictive. While some band segments remain allocated to specific license classes like Technician, General, and Extra, the partitions are more permissive and designed for operational convenience rather...

Super-Power UHF Tubes

Super Power U.H.F. Tubes, October 1961 Electronics World - RF CafeJust as modern high power semiconductor amplifiers are composed of cascoded (connected in parallel) lower power amplifier units, so too a super-high-power vacuum tubes. In the case of tubes, a requisite number of triodes (typically) are arranged around the perimeter of the tube enclosure with the inputs and output connected to power dividers and combiners, respectively. Vacuum tubes are still used in high power applications, although it is rare that you will find them with glass enclosures; most are metal and/or ceramic. Over-the-air radio and television broadcasting stations are major users. Richardson Electronics is a major distributor for...

Will AI Replace Entry-Level Tech Jobs?

Will AI Replace Entry-Level Tech Jobs? - RF Cafe"'AI is not going to take your job. The person who uses AI is going to take your job.' This is an idea that has become a refrain for, among others, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, who has publicly made the prediction several times since October 2023. Meanwhile, other AI developers and stalwarts say the technology will eliminate countless entry-level jobs. These predictions have come at the same time as reports of layoffs at companies including IBM and Amazon, causing anxiety for tech workers - especially those starting their careers, whose responsibilities are often more easily automated. Early reports have borne out some of these anxieties in employment data..."

Side-Looking Radar Imagery

Radar Imagery, August 1965 Electronics World - RF CafeSide-looking airborne radar started out using a narrow beam formed by reflectors, like traditional radars, as opposed to the synthetic aperture type most often (maybe even exclusively) used today. Both types of side-looking radars rely primarily on the physical movement of the airborne platform for effective azimuthal scanning rather than steering the beam either mechanically or electronically. Modern computer-controlled synthetic radar beams can be segmented and directed off-axis for detected areas of interest as required, but the early systems simply gathered radar return data and presented it real-time, with some level of analog processing, to operators...

Oscilloscope Traces: Squarewaves

Oscilloscope Traces, November 1957 Popular Electronics - RF CafeThis is one of a multi-part series of articles that appeared in Popular Electronics magazine on using an o-scope to analyze signal waveforms. An introduction to square waves and how to accurately measure them is covered here. Frequency-compensating the o-scope probe is always an important step prior to sampling just about any waveform other than a pure sinewave, because per Fourier series analysis, every periodic waveform can be defined by a series of sinewave and various frequencies, phases, and amplitudes. The author demonstrates with a square wave being composed of the fundamental frequency and its odd harmonics. I remember being amazed to learn whilst in engineering school that...

Mac's Service Shop: Technical Writing

Mac's Service Shop: Technical Writing, September 1967 Electronics World - RF CafeIn this "Mac's Service Shop" article entitled "Technical Writing," John Frye presents a critical dialogue on technical journalism, where Mac contrasts self-aggrandizing writers with true professionals who prioritize substance over style. The article outlines the essentials of effective technical writing: originality, clarity, proper organization, and the ability to inspire action, all while avoiding the insertion of the author's personality between the reader and the subject. This critique finds a parallel in the automotive journalism of the 1970s, as with figures like "Mechanix Illustrated" magazine's Tom MacCahill...

Hams Go Video

Hams Go Video, June 1959 Popular Electronics - RF CafeIronically, an RF Cafe visitor just within the last couple days wrote about possibly getting his Amateur radio license in order to permit live broadcasting of his kite-borne video camera system (known as "Kite Aerial Video" [KAV]), or Kite Aerial Photography [KAP]). Slow scan television SSTV has long been a popular facet of Ham radio since prior to broadband Internet connections, it was the only practical method available. Older equipment was large, heavy, power hungry, and relatively expensive, but today you can buy a much improved camera for a few bucks that transmits real-time via an unlicensed 2.4 GHz wireless link. That data stream can be recorded for later use of streamed real-time to the Internet. As with so many other things, easy availability take some of the challenge out of it, but the world benefits from...

Thirsty Silicon: Hidden Costs of AI Boom

Thirsty Silicon: The Hidden Costs of Big Tech's AI Boom - RF Cafe"By now, it's no secret that utility companies are struggling to meet the unprecedented surge on North America's aging power grids, particularly due to rapidly rising demands for AI-based services from new data centers popping up across the country. New energy plants, transmission lines, and faltering coal plants are all leading to increased utility bills for ratepayers. In addition, the AI boom is creating a second, less well-known crisis: The data centers' thirst for cooling water strains the water supplies and water-related infrastructures in many areas. It turns out that data centers' steadily growing appetite for energy and water..."

R.F. Chokes at U.H.F.

R.F. Chokes at U.H.F., January 1946 Radio News - RF CafeAs radio frequencies moved up into the UHF realm of 30 MHz (through 3 GHz), designers noticed that the old methods and equations for winding inductors (aka coils and chokes) no longer performed as predicted. The culprit was stray capacitance created by the wire itself and the insulation between windings. To some extent, the length of leads running from the inductor windings to connection points (terminal strips and lugs at first and then later printed circuit boards) generated enough extra inductance to add noticeably to total inductance. New methods were developed to help mitigate the effects of these stray (aka parasitic) reactances. Much new knowledge in this area was gained through the war efforts with many radar...

Technical Headlines - RF Cafe

• India's Mobile Fraud Crackdown Takes Sinister Turn

• Technologies Shaping Modern Supply Chain

• ARRL $25,000 Student Coding Competition

• FCC Extends Amateur Radio Renewal Filing Deadline

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

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.

Tunnel Diodes

Tunnel Diodes, July 1969 Electronics World - RF CafeA decade after tunnel diodes were first invented by Nobel Laureate Leo Esaki, grand plans for the unique device never played out. Predictions included its use for computer solid state memories to replace magnetic core arrays. Tunnel diodes benefitted from the aura surrounding their exploitation of the quantum mechanical tunnelling phenomenon, which had a futuristic ring to it. Conventional diodes, having a relatively wide depletion region, require the current carriers (electrons and holes) to overcome a potential hill in traveling from the valence band to the conduction band of energies. Since high doping levels are used in the tunnel diode, a narrow depletion region is formed at the junction. This allows electrons...

The Truth About the Vertical Antenna

The Truth About the Vertical Antenna, May 1952 QST - RF CafeWhenever you see an article with "The Truth About..." in the title, the expectation is the author is going to reveal some aspect about the subject that has been kept from public knowledge by nefarious schemers, or a common misconception is going to be cleared up for the unwitting majority. This 1952 QST magazine article comes closest to the later category, although it is not really clear to me after reading it what the newly revealed "truth" is - maybe just that the effort required for using a vertical antenna at fairly long wavelengths is worth it because of low radiation angles that facilitate local area and relatively nearby communications. A lot of really good information is presented regarding vertical antenna field patterns, antenna installation, and feedline systems...

Lamps & Tubes Museum

Lampen & Röhren (Lamps & Tubes) Online Museum - RF CafeIf you like pictures of très cool-looking devices involving vacuum-filled (an oxymoron?) glass enclosures, i.e., lamps and tubes, then you will want to spend a few minutes perusing the personal collection of Giorgio Basile, of Nivelles, Belgium. Per the homepage of his Lamps & Tubes website: "My collection consists of more than 4,000 lamps and vacuum tubes. This is a wide area! In addition to well known incandescent lamps, radio tubes and cathode ray tubes, it includes, among others: arc lamps, light sources for the laboratory, transmitting tubes, camera tubes, flash lamps, microwave tubes, photocells, photomultipliers, radiation detectors, rectifiers, relays, thyratrons, vacuum gauges, X-ray tubes...

Taming Your TV Tuner

Taming Your TV Tuner, March 1967 Popular Electronics - RF CafeIf you have never seen an old-fashioned television tuner - particularly a color TV tuner - you have missed a truly impressive bit of electromechanical ingenuity. I include it here for you to marvel over, not because you are likely to need the information (although some RF Cafe visitors still use and/or service such things). Unlike a simple parallel plate capacitor tuner used by many radios, the TV tuner contains inductors, capacitors, resistors, tubes (or transistors), and many switch contacts (which provide ample opportunity for intermittent or no electrical contact when they inevitably get dirty). If a radio is a multi-band job, it nearly always has a separate switch or switch bank to select a particular band. The band...

News from the IRE 1958 Meet

News from the IRE 1958 Meet, June 1958 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeThe International Microwave Symposium (IMS) is arguably the largest single annual event for radio and microwave engineers. According to IMS2014 event officials the show in Tampa, Florida, boasted of a 7,500-visitor attendance. European Microwave Week (EuMW) runs a close second place at around 7,000. In 1958, 55,000 engineers attended the Institute of Radio Engineers (IRE - eventually became the IEEE) in New York City. IMS and EuMW would love to have numbers like anywhere near that. Maybe the large number of attendees was because dissemination of information was not nearly as instant (or eventual for that matter), and the absence of the Internet or even e-mail or online bulletin boards made face-to-face and face-to-product encounters a vital means of keeping abreast of the latest technology and regulations. Hot topics like Electronics in Space (on the verge of reality then), and what caught my attention was this: "Luminescent panels for flat-tube television were discussed by Sylvania engineers," which coincided with discussions of plasmas. Was that early large screen TV technology...

American Airlines Seeking Radiomen

American Airlines Seeking Radiomen, April 1948 Radio News - RF CafeFor someone interested in getting into aviation electronics in 1948, this career deal offered by American Airlines was an exceptional opportunity. If chosen for the program, an intense six-month training regimen would prepare the student for a career in radio, radar, navigational aids, and other systems. All living costs would be covered, along with a $120 per month stipend which, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Inflation Calculator, is the equivalent of about $1,450 ($17.4k/yr) in March of 2022. Although I don't have the numbers, my guess is that this was a much better deal than the military was offering at the time, especially considering no conscription was involved. American Airlines began service in 1936, and is one of the few carriers of the era still in operation today...

Crosley Model 1155, 11-Tube 4-Band Radio Datasheet

Crosley Model 1155, 11-Tube 4-Band Superhet Service Datasheet, May 1936 Radio-Craft - RF CafeThis is another Radio Service Data Sheet like many that appeared in Radio-Craft magazine, the May 1936 edition in this case. I post this schematic and functional description of the Crosley Model 1155, 11-Tube 4-Band Superhet radio manufacturers' publications for the benefit of the many hobbyists and archivists who might be searching for such information either in a effort to restore a radio to working condition, or to collect archival information. Unfortunately, I have never been able to locate a photograph of the Crosley Model 1155 radio...

Electron Tube Crossword Puzzle

Electron Tube Crossword Puzzle, May 1959 Electronics World - RF CafeWith even a modicum of familiarity with vacuum tube terminology, you will fairly easily complete the custom crossword puzzle. This Electron Tube Crossword Puzzle appeared in the May 1959 issue Electronics World, which was the first sporting the name change from Radio & TV News. If you are a hard-core crossword puzzle worker, then check out my weekly RF Cafe crossword puzzles that draws upon a custom dictionary of thousands of engineering, science, chemistry, and other technical words, along with words from current news items. Bon chance...

Carl & Jerry: TV Antennas

Carl & Jerry: TV Antennas, August 1955 Popular Electronics - RF CafeIn this episode of Carl & Jerry, the teens ponder a question posed by Jerry's mother upon looking down their hillside home: "[L]ook at all those TV antennas down there. Hardly two of them are alike; yet they're all intended to receive the same stations. How come there are so many different kinds?" That was all the pair needed to set them off in an investigation to determine the answer. Being avid electronics and RF hobbyists and experimenters, they discuss the principles of how antennas work, various types of transmission lines, impedance matching, antenna types, bandwidth, and other topics relevant to the challenge. As with most Carl & Jerry stories, the intent is to educate the reader. As a bonus, I posted two of the electronics-related comic panels that were in this edition of Popular Electronics...

"Radiomanship"

"Radiomanship", September 1966 QST - RF CafeHistory keeps repeating itself. While reading this c1966 "Radiomanship" article by Mr. Paul Amis you might think it is a contemporary piece lamenting the lack of technical understanding - or even interest in the technical aspects - of amateur radio equipment. Just as with the perpetual frustration by seasoned hobbyist veterans of all fields, concern for younger participants with their short attention spans and busyness with many other forms of time-consuming distractions causes the aforementioned old-timers to loose precious sleep. ...and yet our hobbies live on, albeit maybe under different manifestations and rules. Interestingly, this might be the first time I have read in one of these vintage QST magazines about computers capable of talking - or about computers...

Mathematical Puzzles from the 1980 OFA

Mathematical Puzzles, 1980 Old Farmer's Almanac - RF CafeEach autumn I used to anxiously await the appearance of the newest edition of The Old Farmer's Almanac on the store shelf. It is not that I was/am an avid farmer, just that I enjoy reading the anecdotes, tales, and interesting historical tidbits included amongst the pages along with tables of high and low tides, moon and sun rising and setting times, astronomical events, and weather patterns expected for the year that lay ahead. Most of all, I liked working the puzzles and riddles. Over the years the difficulty levels gradually got lower and lower (aka dumbed down), to the point where for the last decade or so I have not even bothered buying the OFA. Now it is full of numbnut stuff. Because quite a few of the Mathematical Puzzles from the older editions are worthy of an engineer's cerebration, contemplation, and deliberation, I am posting the ones I own here on RF Cafe. Answers to numbers 1 through 11...

Electronics Theme Crossword Puzzle for August 20th

Electronics Theme Crossword Puzzle for August 20th, 2023 - RF CafeThis custom RF Cafe electronics-themed crossword puzzle for August 20th contains words and clues which pertain exclusively to the subjects of electronics, science, physics, mechanics, engineering, power distribution, astronomy, chemistry, etc. If you do see names of people or places, they are intimately related to the aforementioned areas of study. Being that "T" is the 20th letter of the alphabet, it is used as the first and/or last letter of many words in today's crossword puzzle - as well as in-between. Those clues are marked with an asterisk (*). As always, you will find no references to numbnut movie stars or fashion designers. Need more crossword RF Cafe puzzles? A list at the bottom of the page links to hundreds of them dating back to the year 2000. Enjoy...

4 Elements Chart Laws of Chemistry

4 Elements Chart Laws of Chemistry - RF CafeMy daughter dragged me to an estate sale last weekend, and while there I found a stack of World War II era Life magazines, many of which had some useful articles on chemistry, electronics, and other subjects pertaining to technology being used to fight the battle against Communism, Nazism, Socialism, and other "ism's." This 2-page spread entitled "CHON - Four Elements Chart the Laws of All Chemistry" appeared in the March 23, 1942 issue. Today, such a diagram would be called an infographic. It explains the relationship that Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, and Nitrogen (CHON) has with all the essential products and reactions in our everyday world. One modification to the article might be to increase the claim that only 20 out of the known 92 elements (at the time) comprise the makeup of the "vast bulk" of matter. While it doesn't explicitly name the 20, some elements like lithium (batteries), gallium, and arsenic (GaAs) now have a very large presence in the world's economy and might not have been so important in 1942...

Laser Modulators

Laser Modulators, April 1967 Electronics World - RF CafeAs reported in this 1967 Electronics World magazine piece, lasers were still the things of science fiction to most people. Real-world applications seemed to be far off in the future, but in fact, work was underway setting the stage for today's blazingly fast communications systems. The author here references attaining 5 THz optical transmission speeds through fiber and through the air. At the time, a laboratory filled with bulky prototypes chassis and optical tables were required to get those results. I can remember reading articles in the 1970s when laser power output was measured in "Gillette power," referring to the beam's ability to burn through a number of razor blades (a big deal at the time). In 2020, devices that greatly surpass 5 THz are available in consumer quality IC packages...

Anaconda Copper Ad in the April 29, 1950 Saturday Evening Post

Anaconda Copper Advertisement in the April 29, 1950 Saturday Evening Post - RF CafeIt's not often that you will see a full-page ad promoting a particular element in the periodic table, but in 1950 that wasn't the case. This advertisement for Anaconda Copper Mining Company which appeared in a 1950 issue of The Saturday Evening Post magazine extolled the virtues of element number 29 - copper (Cu , from the Latin "cuprum"). Aluminum and iron were other popular topics of advertising. If you do a search on the history of Anaconda, which is today owned by the Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO), what dominates is the harm done to workers and to the environment. The short video below is one of the less vicious reports on the company's operations in Butte, Montana and in Chile. COPPER... Time's Friendly Enemy Time and copper get along well together - because of one simple reason: Copper chooses to ignore time completely. For nature has given copper the great quality of almost eternal youth - the ability to resist the slow but steady ravages of the elements, for centuries if need be...

Sangamo Electric Company

Sangamo Electric Company, May 1950 Radio & Television News - RF CafeRemember the Sunday comics feature for kids where there was a picture drawn with things wrong in it, and you had to find them all? This 1950 advertisement for the Sangamo Electric Company's line of capacitors, which appeared in Radio & Television News magazine, could server as a modern-day version for the Cancel Culture "woke" crowd that believes it has a duty to criticize and impugn everything it happens to fear, not like, or not understand. My list is at the bottom of the page if you want to compare it to yours. On other Sangamo ad post pages I have provided a bit of research on the background of "Samgamo" to try to determine whether the use of Native Americans (aka "indians" at the time) was based on a local tribe. No link has ever been found. Below the ad are a few of the items discovered...

Test Instruments Part 6: The VTVM

Test Instruments Part 6: The Vacuum Tube Voltmeter, July 1959 Popular Electronics - RF CafePrior to the advent of FET-input digital multimeters (DMMs), the vacuum tube voltmeter (VTVM) was the primary instrument for use when high input impedance was required. For the newcomer to electrical measurements, high input impedance for the measuring instrument is needed when measuring high impedance circuits so as not to load down the circuit under test and cause an erroneous result. For instance, suppose you are trying to measure the voltage across a 100 kΩ resistor that is in series with a 50 kΩ and your voltmeter has a 100 kΩ input impedance. The parallel combination of the two 100 kΩ resistances (resistor and voltmeter) is 50 kΩ. If the supply voltage is 3 volts, the voltage across the 100 kΩ resistor would actually be 2 volts, but with the voltmeter across it, the reading would be 1.5 volts. If the input impedance of the voltmeter was 10 MΩ instead, the parallel resistance across the 100 kΩ resistor would be about 99 kΩ, which would only introduce a very small error...

Vintage Heathkit DG-140 Two-Station Intercom Kit

Vintage Heathkit DG-140 Two-Station Intercom Kit - RF Cafe Cool ProductOccasionally an unbuilt vintage Heathkit item appears on eBay with really nice photos of the contents. In fact, I have a Saved Search that sends me an e-mail whenever one shows up. This morning, a Heathkit DG-140 Two-Station Intercom kit appeared on auction. The instruction booklet has a publish date of 1972, so I looked for a copy of it on the WWW but the only thing I could find was a PDF for purchase. Despite the 1972 date, it appears it was 1973 when the DG-140 was first available. The 1971 catalog still shows the previous version, the DG-141 (which you might understandably think would be the newer model number). There is a big difference in the chassis configuration from the DG-141 to the DG-140. Per the 1973 Heathkit catalog, the DG-140 was priced at $29.95 ($184.91 in 2021 money - a whopping 6.2x factor in 48 years). Heathkit products were well known for the completeness of its instruction manuals, with clearly illustrated instructions...

RF Cascade Workbook - RF Cafe