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Today in Science History

What Did de Forest Really Invent?

What Did de Forest Really Invent?, 1873-1961, September 1961 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeUpon the demise of Lee de Forest in 1961, Radio-Electronics magazine ran a series of articles on the life and times of the great inventor. If you are not familiar with the inventive path which led de Forest to his Audio vacuum tube, I advise reading some of the articles listed at the bottom of the page. Begin with "How Audions Were Built," where you will discover that early attempts at modulating and demodulating audio signals used a candle flame that responded to an electric field. It was from there that de Forest evolved the Audion. He was the first to utilize a glass housing evacuated of air, in order to prolong the life of the cathode and to eliminate noise caused by air current. Interestingly, editor Hugo Gernsback, who was a good friend of Lee's, convinced him to allow his hands to be photographed for posterity's sake...

Electronics Angle Quiz

Electronics Angle Quiz, September 1967 Popular Electronics - RF CafeDang, I swapped two answers and only scored an 80%. Haste makes waste, as the saying goes. Don't rush through this 1967 Popular Electronics magazine "Electronic Angle Quiz" like I did and you'll probably ace it with the greatest of ease - especially if you have been in the electronics realm at least since the 1980s. Generation X'ers can have a two-question handicap (might never have seen real-life example of drawing "A" or "E"). Millennials might only have ever been exposed to "C," "F," and "J." Hint: Picture "I" should be guessable based on the choice of answers, even without knowing what it is. When looking at the solution, note it says "recording" and not "playback." Bon chance...

Engineering & Tech Headlines <Archives>

• Amateur Radio Participates in World's Largest Naval Exercise

India to Reallocate Broadcasting Spectrum for 5G

2G's Staying Power

Radio Is Most-Trusted Reach Medium

Commie Brazilian Judge Threatens to Ban Musk's X

RF & Electronics Symbols for Office™

RF & Electronics Schematic & Block Diagram Symbols for Office™ r2 - RF CafeIt was a lot of work, but I finally finished a version of the "RF & Electronics Schematic & Block Diagram Symbols"" that works well with Microsoft Office™ programs Word™, Excel™, and Power Point™. This is an equivalent of the extensive set of amplifier, mixer, filter, switch, connector, waveguide, digital, analog, antenna, and other commonly used symbols for system block diagrams and schematics created for Visio™. Each of the 1,000+ symbols was exported individually from Visio in the EMF file format, then imported into Word on a Drawing Canvas. The EMF format allows an image to be scaled up or down without becoming pixelated, so all the shapes can be resized in a document and still look good. The imported symbols can also be UnGrouped into their original constituent parts for editing...

C.I.E. Chromaticity Diagram

C.I.E. Chromaticity Diagram - RF CafeChromaticity is commonly defined as the quality of color characterized by its dominant or complementary wavelength and purity taken together. This chromaticity chart plots the human tristimulus color space according to: x = X/(X + Y + Z), y = Y/(X + Y + Z). Colors along the periphery of the "horseshoe" plot (spectral locus) are pure, monochromatic, saturated colors. Less saturated colors approach the center becomes (i.e. it becomes whitish or grayish). The straight line across the bottom is called the "non-spectral line of purples." The Chromaticity Diagram software link to the right is an executable file which presents the 1931, 1960, and 1976 versions of the C.I.E. Chromaticity Diagram, in either 2-degree or 10-degree observer retina formats, and adjustable gamma...

Holes and the Service Technician

Holes and the Service Technician, April 1963 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeIt is understandable if, based on this article's title, "Holes and the Service Technician," you thought maybe it had to do with semiconductors. Silicon was beginning to overtake germanium as the substrate of choice when it appeared in a 1963 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine. Electron conduction seemed intuitive to most people involved in electronics; however, the concept of hole conduction caused a lot of head scratching. But, I digress. This article discusses how to create various types of holes in metal. It might seem like a no-brainer task, if you have ever needed to make precisely shaped and dimensioned holes in metal, you know it is not always such a simple task...

Howard W. Sams Photofact

Howard W. Sams Photofact, November 1961 Radio-Electronics - RF CafePer their homepage, "Since 1946 SAMS Technical Publishing manuals have been the standard that repair technicians have insisted upon having to provide professional repairs to their customers. Our original Quickfact manuals and Photofact® manuals have been designed to provide reliable, consistent repair data for electronics repair technicians, antique electronics restorers, and hobbyist. SAMS Technical Publishing has been the gold standard in the repair industry for TVs, VCRs, Radios, etc. Why would you settle for anything less than the original? For those models and/or chassis not covered by SAMS Photofact® manuals or Quickfact manuals, we have available OEM owners manuals and service manuals that can be ordered in both hard copy...

ARRL Expands Publications Archive

ARRL Expands Publications Archive - RF Cafe"ARRL® has expanded member access to its rich archive of publications. The ARRL Periodicals Archive and Search now includes content from two more popular ARRL magazines: QEX — A Forum for Communications Experimenters, which features technical articles and columns of interest to radio amateurs and communications professionals; and NCJ - the National Contest Journal, which covers information, scores, and advice from the world of competitive radiosport and the contributions of top contesters. Before accessing the archive, members should ensure they are first logged..."

Get Your Custom-Designed RF Cafe Gear!

Custom-Designed RF-Themed Cups, T-Shirts, Mouse Pads, Clocks (Cafe Press) - RF CafeThis assortment of custom-designed themes by RF Cafe includes T-Shirts, Mouse Pads, Clocks, Tote Bags, Coffee Mugs and Steins, Purses, Sweatshirts, Baseball Caps, and more, all sporting my amazingly clever "RF Engineers - We Are the World's Matchmakers" Smith chart design. These would make excellent gifts for husbands, wives, kids, significant others, and for handing out at company events or as rewards for excellent service. My graphic has been ripped off by other people and used on their products, so please be sure to purchase only official RF Cafe gear. I only make a couple bucks on each sale - the rest goes to Cafe Press. It's a great way to help support RF Cafe. Thanks...

World's Highest-Performance Superconducting Wire

World’s Highest-Performance Superconducting Wire Segment - RF Cafe"Pulsed laser deposition, in which a laser beam ablates a material that is deposited as a film on a substrate, was used to fabricate the HTS wires. New research reveals that the large-scale, cost-effective implementation of high-temperature superconducting wire is increasingly feasible. The future of our energy systems could be shaped by high-temperature superconducting (HTS) wires. These advanced materials, capable of transmitting electricity without resistance at higher temperatures than conventional superconductors, have the potential to transform the electric grid and make commercial nuclear fusion a reality. Yet these large-scale applications won’t happen until HTS wires..."

Automatic Antenna Switching

Automatic Antenna Switching, April 1945 QST - RF CafeIn this article from a vintage issue of QST magazine, the author describes the automatic antenna switching system which was developed for controlling the forty-odd receiving antennas at the FCC's Grand Island Monitoring Station (Nebraska). With this system it required only a matter of seconds for the operator to select any desired antenna by simply pushing a couple of buttons on the control panel. A similar system could easily be designed for a lesser number of antennas either for a test range or an amateur radio operation. Of course modern-day antenna switching equipment does the job handily and at a good price...

News Briefs

News Briefs, June 1967 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeHere is what dominated the electronics industry news cycle in 1967, per this June 19767 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine's "News Briefs" column. A major concern of the Electronic Industries Association was a serious lack of electronic service technicians, with no program in place to attract and train a future workforce. The supply of newly available technicians from military service was drying up since those entering the field after World War II and the Korean War were already either engaged in the profession or had left it. The FCC was dealing with a large increase in "pirate" radio stations broadcasting on licensed bands. It also passed a rule requiring type certification on transmitters, and dope being smuggled inside electronic equipment ("dope scopes") was experiencing an uptick...

Hybrid Bonding in 3D Chip Fab

Hybrid Bonding in 3D Chip Fab - RF Cafe"Chip makers continue to claw for every spare nanometer to continue scaling down circuits, but a technology involving things that are much bigger - hundreds or thousands of nanometers across - could be just as significant over the next five years. Called hybrid bonding, that technology stacks two or more chips atop one another in the same package. That allows chipmakers to increase the number of transistors in their processors and memories despite a general slowdown in the shrinking of transistors, which once drove Moore's Law. At the IEEE Electronic Components..."

RF & Electronics Symbols for Visio

RF Electronics Wireless Analog Block Diagrams Symbols Shapes for Visio - RF CafeWith more than 1000 custom-built symbols, this has got to be the most comprehensive set of Visio Symbols available for RF, analog, and digital system and schematic drawings! Every object has been built to fit proportionally on the provided A-, B- and C-size drawing page templates (or can use your own). Symbols are provided for equipment racks and test equipment, system block diagrams, conceptual drawings, and schematics. Unlike previous versions, these are NOT Stencils, but instead are all contained on tabbed pages within a single Visio document. That puts everything in front of you in its full glory. Just copy and paste what you need on your drawing...

Engineering & Tech Headlines

• NAB Concerned over Proposed FM Broadcast Station Class

Intel Pilots Apprenticeships in Arizona

• FCC Sets Foreign Content Broadcast Disclosure Rules Date

UK Among Top Countries for Broadband Reliability

• The Cause of Verizon's Big Outage

Radio-Electronics Puzzler

R-E Puzzler, May 1967 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeHere is another "R-E Puzzler," this one from the May 1967 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine. It is a uniquely formatted type of crossword puzzle, where all of the common vertically connected letters are provided by the creator. All the words to be filled in go horizontally. All of the clues and words are related to electronics and/or physics. A couple of the words require familiarity with some of the technology of the era, like vacuum tubes and peculiarities of CRT type televisions. You will probably be able to guess everything based on the letters provided. Personally, I prefer the traditional crossword puzzle format because it is more of a challenge; however, these "Puzzlers" are a good relief for a Friday afternoon whilst waiting for the weekend to begin.

MEMS Enables Next-Gen 5G/6G RF Front-End

MEMS Technology to Enable Next-Generation 5G and 6G RF Front-End - RF cafe"Nanusens is a MEMS-within-CMOS solutions provider that was founded in 2014 and is headquartered in Paignton, England. It leverages the research and expertise developed by the founders' previous company, Baolab Microsystems. Nanusens specializes in developing innovative single-chip solutions based on MEMS and CMOS technology, resulting in significant reduction in size and cost to support next-generation 5G and 6G devices. Innovative Technology Developed by Nanusens Until now, MEMS sensors are all created using expensive proprietary processes to build the MEMS sensor structure on the top of a CMOS wafer..."

Please Thank IPP for Their Long-Time Support!

Innovative Power ProductsInnovative Power Products has been designing and manufacturing RF and Microwave passive components since 2005. We use the latest design tools available to build our baluns, 90-degree couplers, directional couplers, combiners/dividers, single-ended transformers, resistors, terminations, and custom products. Applications in military, medical, industrial, and commercial markets are serviced around the world. Products listed on the website link to detailed mechanical drawings, electrical specifications, and performance data. If you cannot find a product that meets your requirements on our website, contact us to speak with one of our experienced design engineers about your project.

World's Toughest R/C Job - Guidance in Outer Space

World's Toughest R/C Job - Guidance in Outer Space, May 1967 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeSpaceX and Blue Origin have been in the news for the last decade for their efforts (some successful, some not) to autonomously land a spacecraft vertically under its own power. Love it or hate it, NASA has been doing that for nearly six decades. Granted, it was on celestial bodies with lower gravitational acceleration than on Earth, but the earliest craft (Surveyor 1, 1966) had relatively crude electronics aboard, including a Doppler radar, flight computer, and video camera. The now legendary Apollo Guidance Computer has been written about extensively, and is a testimony to the brilliance of the scientists, engineers, managers, operators, and technicians who built and flew it. Articles like this one in the May 1967 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine...

Field-Effect Transistors

Field-Effect Transistors, October 1966 QST - RF CafeThe concept of a field effect transistor (FET) has been around in theory for a long time, but manufacturable devices arrived in designers' labs not until the early 1960s. This article from the October 1966 edition of QST magazine gives a good introduction to the physics of a basic FET as well as the junction FET (JFET) and the insulated gate FET (IGFET), all of which are still in widespread use today. What you learn about them here is applicable today. In fact, I swear some of the drawings are the same ones that appeared in my college semiconductor physics text books (admittedly from the late 1980s, so not too much of a surprise)...

Anatech Electronics August 2024 Newsletter

Anatech Electronics August 2024 Newsletter - RF CafeSam Benzacar, of Anatech Electronics, an RF and microwave filter company, has published his August 2024 newsletter that, along with timely news items, features his short op-ed entitled "Fixed-Wireless Access Is Finally Available, and People Love It." His description perfectly describes the experience I have had with Verizon 5G FWA Internet service since February of this year. My cost is $45/month, with a fixed price guarantee of four years. Download speeds are in the 50-60 Mbps realm, and upload is 6-7 Mbps. That fulfills my needs since I don't watch videos, TV, or use other bandwidth-hogging services. If there have been any outages, I haven't noticed, even when electric service is down during a storm. The asymmetrical data rates Sam mentions have always been a mystery to me - why is that necessary...

Promote Your Company on RF Cafe

Sponsor RF Cafe for as Little as $40 per Month - RF CafeBanner Ads are rotated in all locations on the page! RF Cafe typically receives 8,000-15,000 visits each weekday. RF Cafe is a favorite of engineers, technicians, hobbyists, and students all over the world. With more than 17,000 pages in the Google search index, RF Cafe returns in favorable positions on many types of key searches, both for text and images. Your Banner Ads are displayed on average0,000 times per year! New content is added on a daily basis, which keeps the major search engines interested enough to spider it multiple times each day. Items added on the homepage often can be found in a Google search within a few hours of being posted. If you need your company news to be seen, RF Cafe is the place to be...

Comsat: Communication in the Space Age

Comsat: Communication in the Space Age, May 1967 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeWhenever an article about Comsat pops up, I take the time to read it. Back in the early 1990s, shortly after graduating from UVM with a BSEE, I got hired at the Comsat headquarters location in Germantown, MD. Living in Hagerstown, just south of the Pennsylvania border, meant a 45 mile drive each way, which with the awful northern D.C. traffic on I-70 meant about an hour to hour and a half. Those three years at Comsat were an intense experience in RF/analog circuit and system design. In fact, I put in so many overtime hours that it was the equivalent of about four years. My projects included a rack-mounted RF modem card for Inmarsat Earth stations and a couple S-band and C-band up and down converter chassis. It was good experience...

Triad RF Promotes Charles Jobbers to Managing Director

Triad RF Systems Announces the Promotion of Charles Jobbers to Managing Director - RF CafeTriad RF Systems is proud to announce the promotion of Charles Jobbers to Managing Director, a role that reflects both his outstanding leadership and his commitment to innovation within the company. Charles' promotion comes at a time when Triad is poised for continued growth as part of the COMROD family of companies, driven by a relentless focus on advancing RF technologies and maintaining the highest standards of quality and manufacturing. Reflecting on his new role, Charles shared his vision for the future of Triad RF Systems: "As the new Managing Director of Triad RF Systems, I am extremely proud to reflect on our journey of growth and innovation to date. Our success is rooted in our total commitment to advancing RF technologies, quality, and manufacturing...

RF & Electronics Symbols for Office™

RF & Electronics Schematic & Block Diagram Symbols for Office™ r2 - RF CafeIt was a lot of work, but I finally finished a version of the "RF & Electronics Schematic & Block Diagram Symbols"" that works well with Microsoft Office™ programs Word™, Excel™, and Power Point™. This is an equivalent of the extensive set of amplifier, mixer, filter, switch, connector, waveguide, digital, analog, antenna, and other commonly used symbols for system block diagrams and schematics created for Visio™. Each of the 1,000+ symbols was exported individually from Visio in the EMF file format, then imported into Word on a Drawing Canvas. The EMF format allows an image to be scaled up or down without becoming pixelated, so all the shapes can be resized in a document and still look good. The imported symbols can also be UnGrouped into their original constituent parts for editing...

TV Monocle Gives Extra Eye to Wearer

TV Monocle Gives Extra Eye to Wearer, September 1962 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeRF Cafe visitor Richard Diehl wrote to ask that I post this "TV Monocle Gives Extra Eye to Wearer" article from a 1962 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine. Come to find out, Mr. Diehl is the publisher of the LabGuy's World website, which contains a vast amount of information on vintage video tape equipment - which explains his interest in this article. The Electrocular, designed by Hughes Aircraft Company, is an early version of today's helmet-mounted display. As opposed to modern systems which present the image directly on the display using an LCD substrate, the Electrocular projected the image from a television-type CRT onto a glass plate in front of the user's eye. I'm not so sure I would have wanted a device generating 3,000 volts for the electron beam accelerator potential sitting next to my head, over top of my ear. A cellphone's radiation might be safer...

Experimental Laser Engines

Experimental Laser Engines, June 1969 Electronics World - RF CafeIn 1969 when this article appeared in Electronics World magazine, laser technology was still in the realm of rare earth elements and bulky gas chambers with monster power supplies. Efficiencies for conversion of input line AC power to output laser light power was measured in the low single digits. Real science was a long, long way from the predictions of science fiction in terms of size and capability of lasers. Although laser technology has made much better progress than futurists' visions of flying cars and nuclear fusion power generation, we are just now deploying the first serious laser weapons. Semiconductor-based lasers have enabled incredible advances in local communications...

Transistor Transition

Transistor Transition (Hugo Gernsback Editorial), February 1953 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeHugo Gernsback was well-known not just for his technical prowess, but for an uncanny ability to predict future developments in electronics, transportation, and production methods. Barely three years had passed since Messrs. Bardeen, Shockley, and Brattain, announced their invention of the transistor when this editorial titled, "Transistor Transition" appeared in Radio-Electronics magazine. Gernsback mentions the concept of "appliqued circuits" (i.e., printed circuits) and "roll-up display" transistor picture tubes (i.e., flexible displays), and "pocket radios" that can be held up to the ear. Production prices for transistors at the time were about $8 apiece, which is the inflation-adjusted equivalent of $95 in 2024...

Withwave Cryogenic Low Noise Amplifier

Withwave Cryogenic Low Noise Amplifier - RF CafeWithwave is a leading designer and developer of a broad range of RF, microwave, and millimeter-wave test solutions and subsystems with a focus on electromagnetic field analysis and signal processing. Withwave's Cryogenic Low Noise Amplifier using InP HEMT(High Electron Mobility Transistor) technology offers high gain and low noise figure characteristics (NF: 0.04-0.05 dB) for C-Band (4-8 GHz) applications such as quantum computing and space communications. This LNA is tested and verified using Withwave's 4 K cryogenic measurement system...

Thanks Again to LadyBug Technologies for Continued Support!

LadyBug Technologies RF Power Sensors - RF CafeLadyBug Technologies was founded in 2004 by two microwave engineers with a passion for quality microwave test instrumentation. Our employees offer many years experience in the design and manufacture of the worlds best vector network analyzers, spectrum analyzers, power meters and associated components. The management team has additional experience in optical power testing, military radar and a variety of programming environments including LabVIEW, VEE and other languages often used in programmatic systems. Extensive experience in a broad spectrum of demanding measurement applications. You can be assured that our Power Sensors are designed, built, tested and calibrated without compromise.

Modelithics COMPLETE+3D v24.3 for HFSS

Modelithics COMPLETE+3D Library v24.3 for Ansys HFSS - RF CafeModelithics® is excited to announce the release of the Modelithics COMPLETE+3D Library v24.3 for Ansys HFSS™. The release is compatible with Ansys HFSS 2024 R2 and is backward compatible with previous Modelithics library releases. Included are new models for non-linear varactor diodes from Infineon and MACOM. In addition, Modelithics is also introducing 3D Brick EM Models™ for resistors. Modelithics v24.3 for HFSS includes 4 3D Brick EM Models for KOA and Vishay resistors as well as 1 Kemet C0201 capacitor. These components coupled with their circuit simulation counterparts represent almost 2,300 components...

Navigating Without GPS

Navigating Without GPS - RF Cafe"Researchers from Sandia National Laboratories of the U.S. have used silicon photonics to perform the quantum sensing technique atom interferometry, an ultra-precise way of measuring acceleration, which could enable a kind of quantum compass for navigation when GPS signals are unavailable. 'Accurate navigation becomes a challenge in real-world scenarios when GPS signals are unavailable,' says Sandia scientist Jongmin Lee. In a war zone, these challenges pose national security risks, as electronic warfare units can jam or spoof satellite signals to disrupt troop movements..."

Active Filters

Active Filters, April 1969 Electronics World - RF CafeWhen I first began designing circuits in the 1990s using active filters, the upper frequency was limited to a few tens of kHz because of the gain-bandwidth product of the available amplifiers. That made them useful in baseband circuits, but that was about it. There were also issues with the noise figure and intercept points and intermodulation product levels. Today, you can get fully integrated and programmable active filters which operate at tens of MHz and beyond, and with much better RF-type specifications. That makes them useful in low intermediate frequency (IF) circuits as well as at baseband. BTW, this article is one of about ten dealing with filter types in the April 1969 issue of Electronics World magazine...

Van Nostrand's Dictionary of Physics and Electronics

D. Van Nostrand Company International Dictionary of Physics and Electronics, September 1961 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeI bought the 5th edition of Van Nostrand's Scientific Encyclopedia back around 1980. The book is four inches thick and is so heavy that it is cumbersome to read. It changed to two volumes at the 6th edition, and the current 10th edition is three volumes. According to Wikipedia, David Van Nostrand was born in 1811, and began his publishing company in 1848. Master Van Nostrand had assumed soil temperature long before this advertisement for his "International Dictionary of Physics and Electronics" appeared in a 1961 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine. In fact the term "electronics" had not yet been coined (c1901). It looks like it could easily be four inches thick. FYI, here are definitions for the example words given in the ad: cybotaxis - a transient orientation of molecules in a liquid revealed by X-ray diffraction; ylem - primordial substance from which all matter is formed...

Electric Bandages Speed Healing by 30%

Electric Bandages Speed Wound Healing by 30% - RF Cafe"Chronic wounds are open wounds that heal slowly, if they heal at all. For example, sores that occur in some patients with diabetes are chronic wounds. These wounds are particularly problematic because they often recur after treatment and significantly increase the risk of amputation and death. Unfortunately, the existing treatment options for chronic wounds are costly, creating additional problems for patients. Now, researchers have developed an inexpensive bandage that uses an electric field to promote healing in chronic wounds. In animal testing, wounds that were treated with these electric bandages healed 30% faster than wounds treated with conventional bandages..."

RF Cascade Workbook

RF Cascade Workbook - RF Cafe RF Cascade Workbook is the next phase in the evolution of RF Cafe's long-running series, RF Cascade Workbook. Chances are you have never used a spreadsheet quite like this (click here for screen capture). It is a full-featured RF system cascade parameter and frequency planner that includes filters and mixers for a mere $45. Built in MS Excel, using RF Cascade Workbook is a cinch and the format is entirely customizable. It is significantly easier and faster than using a multi-thousand dollar simulator when a high level system analysis is all that is needed...

MeOx Thin Film Circuits Printed at RT

Metal Oxide Thin Film Circuits Printed at Room Temperature - RF Cafe"Researchers have demonstrated a technique for printing thin metal oxide films at room temperature, and have used the technique to create transparent, flexible circuits that are both robust and able to function at high temperatures. The paper, 'Ambient Printing of Native Oxides for Ultrathin Transparent Flexible Circuit Boards,' was published August 15 in the journal Science. 'Creating metal oxides that are useful for electronics has traditionally required making use of specialized equipment that is slow, expensive, and operates at high temperatures,' says Michael Dickey, co-corresponding author of a paper on the work..."

WE-EMIP EMI Patch

WE-EMIP EMI Patch Tape - RF CafeI saw this ad for a new EMI tape for use in lining enclosures and sealing around edges. Per the website, applications include: "Alternative to classical shielding cabinet solution, EMC noise suppression, magnetic decoupling, SAR reduction, avoiding cavity resonances, prevention of electrostatic discharge, housing and openings between PCB's, on IC's, processors and controllers, on cables which need high flexibility and LCD/LED monitors. Frequency range from 100 Hz - 25 GHz, extremely flexible, 0.072 mm thickness, isolated and non-isolated versions, self-adhesive backing, absorber layer permeability of 100..."

Block That Ghost!

Block That Ghost!, January 1948 Radio-Craft - RF CafeIt is probably safe to say that the vast majority of cellphone users never consider that their cherished devices are fundamentally radios, and with that capability they would be merely powerful PDAs. Even less likely to be thought about is that as wireless devices, an antenna is needed to establish communications. Up until the early 2000s, most cellphones had some form of obvious antenna protruding from the case - either an extendable type or a molded stub around an internal antenna. Operational frequencies at the time were primarily in the 850 MHz, 900 MHz, 1800 MHz, and 1900 MHz bands, with 1/4 wavelengths of about 3.5 inches, 3.3 inches, 1.6 inches, and 1.5 inches, which was convenient given the physical size of phones. Always seeking to develop new features to outclass the competition...

Imaginary Numbers Are a Cinch

Imaginary Numbers Are a Cinch - Part 2, January 1968 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeWhen I was in high school, if someone placed me in a classroom where imaginary numbers (whatever they were?) were to be taught - and I was expected to learn about them - I likely would have gone into an anxiety-induced stupor. My plans were to be an electrician, and I was pretty sure electricians didn't need to know about imaginary numbers. By the time I began taking courses toward an electrical engineering degree, I quickly gained an immense appreciation for the power of complex numbers. Anyway... in this second installment of a three-part series, the author educates George (whether real or imaginary - see what I did there?) on the virtues of manipulating complex numbers when dealing with electric circuits which are not purely resistive. The title, "Imaginary Numbers Are a Cinch," omits...

Balloons Raise Shortwave Antenna

Balloons Raise Shortwave Antenna, October 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF CafeAntennas have been deployed in difficult environments using many ingenious methods over the years both by professionals and amateurs. The process typically involves first propelling a lightweight string or wire across and/or up to a supporting structure (a tower, tree, building, whatever) and then using that lead line to draw the antenna and its accompanying coaxial or twin lead cable into its final position. Sometimes simply tying a line to a rock and tossing it over a tree branch does the trick, but usually deployment requires a more powerful launch such as a a bow and arrow or even a model rocket. Many years ago R/C Modeler magazine reported on a large radio controlled airplane that towed a lead line...

Promote Your Company on RF Cafe

Sponsor RF Cafe for as Little as $40 per Month - RF CafeBanner Ads are rotated in all locations on the page! RF Cafe typically receives 8,000-15,000 visits each weekday. RF Cafe is a favorite of engineers, technicians, hobbyists, and students all over the world. With more than 17,000 pages in the Google search index, RF Cafe returns in favorable positions on many types of key searches, both for text and images. Your Banner Ads are displayed on average0,000 times per year! New content is added on a daily basis, which keeps the major search engines interested enough to spider it multiple times each day. Items added on the homepage often can be found in a Google search within a few hours of being posted. If you need your company news to be seen, RF Cafe is the place to be...

Making Circuit Components

Making Circuit Components, August 1969 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeIn this final installment of an "All About IC's" series that appeared in Radio-Electronics magazine in 1969, author Bob Hibberd discusses how passive components are fabricated in silicon as part of an integrated circuit. MOS and junction capacitors and diffusion resistors were cutting edge technology in the day. Although not discussed here, small value inductors could be made with printed metal on the die. The relatively low frequencies of IC's (a few MHz at best) meant that most inductive components had to be realized in the form of a gyrator because there was not enough area available to print a useful wire inductor. Hibberd also describes the dicing...

Electronics Moonlighters

Electronics Moonlighters, March 1966 Popular Electronics - RF CafeNote: The tax-related information presented in this 1966 Popular Electronics magazine article is almost certainly outdated and invalid. My purpose for posting it is to provide some insight into potential tax advantages available to anyone engaging in a small business. The IRS provides multiple classifications for businesses, including the simplest, Sole Proprietor, where essentially you report your business gains and losses as part of your personal income tax filings. The next step up is a Limited Liability entity where some formal paperwork is filed to isolate personal liability from business liability. From there you can incorporate and have the company be a stand-alone taxable entity that pays its employees. Each has unique advantages and disadvantages, but all permit you to deduct qualified expenses from your reportable income. Even though RF Cafe is a sole proprietorship...

Please Thank IPP for Their Long-Time Support!

Innovative Power ProductsInnovative Power Products has been designing and manufacturing RF and Microwave passive components since 2005. We use the latest design tools available to build our baluns, 90-degree couplers, directional couplers, combiners/dividers, single-ended transformers, resistors, terminations, and custom products. Applications in military, medical, industrial, and commercial markets are serviced around the world. Products listed on the website link to detailed mechanical drawings, electrical specifications, and performance data. If you cannot find a product that meets your requirements on our website, contact us to speak with one of our experienced design engineers about your project.

Capacitor Know-How Simplifies Electronic Projects

Capacitor Know-How Simplifies Electronic Projects, July 1966 Popular Electronics - RF CafeFiltering, timing, coupling, and energy storage are the most common uses for capacitors (not to mention their use in electronic component sculptures). Metallized paper or plastic, plastic film, mica, ceramic, electrolytic, and a few other capacitor types have been around for a long time, with newer formulations of electrolytics providing higher charge storage density, lower leakage, greater stability, lower cost, wider operational temperature ranges, more robust construction, etc. We now have supercapacitors that look as much like storage batteries (and are replacing them in some applications) as they do capacitors. This 1966 Popular Electronics magazine article provides a good synopsis of many of these issues...

Farnsworth EC-260 & EK-262 Schematic & Parts List

Farnsworth Models EC-260, EK-262, EK-263, EK-264, EK-265 Schematic & Parts List, January 1947 Radio News - RF CafeMagazines usually provided at least a brief description on the circuit functionality for each of the radio models presented in schematic format. The January 1947 issue of Radio News published schematics and parts lists for six sets, including this for the Farnsworth models EC-260, EK-262, EK-263, EK-264, and EK-265, but not a word about any of them accompanied it. One thumbnail image is the SAMS Photofact from an eBay auction, and the photo thumbnail is from the RadioMuseum.org website. These are posted as part of my ongoing effort to make the information available to those who repair...

Promote Your Company on RF Cafe

Sponsor RF Cafe for as Little as $40 per Month - RF CafeBanner Ads are rotated in all locations on the page! RF Cafe typically receives 8,000-15,000 visits each weekday. RF Cafe is a favorite of engineers, technicians, hobbyists, and students all over the world. With more than 17,000 pages in the Google search index, RF Cafe returns in favorable positions on many types of key searches, both for text and images. Your Banner Ads are displayed on average0,000 times per year! New content is added on a daily basis, which keeps the major search engines interested enough to spider it multiple times each day. Items added on the homepage often can be found in a Google search within a few hours of being posted. If you need your company news to be seen, RF Cafe is the place to be...

Spin Qubits Go Trampolining with Germanium

Spin Qubits Go Trampolining with Germanium - RF CafeThis is a dumb graphic. "Researchers at QuTech developed somersaulting spin qubits for universal quantum logic. This achievement may enable efficient control of large semiconductor qubit arrays. Over twenty years after Loss and DiVincenzo's proposal for quantum computation with quantum dots, QuTech researchers have realized these concepts using germanium to facilitate spin control. This approach simplifies the electronics needed for quantum computing, demonstrating effective control over extended quantum dot arrays. Quantum Dot Qubits In 1998, Loss and DiVincenzo published the seminal work..."

Color Code Charts

Color Code Charts, October 1969 Electronics World - RF CafeIt has been over a year since I have worked on any old electronics gear, so the need for hand-dandy color code charts has not been at the top of my list for publishing. My bad. Every day there are untold thousands of people hard at work - although most wouldn't consider it work - restoring and maintaining a bit of world history. Many - probably most - of these components and markings will never be seen by the vast majority. If you do a search on the RF Cafe website, you will find many types of color code charts that were published in magazines over the decades by the likes of Electronics World, Popular Electronics, Radio & TV News, Short Wave Craft, etc...

Do You Know Your DC Circuits?

Do You Know Your DC Circuits?, May 1973 Popular Electronics - RF CafeA series of three articles appeared in 1973 issues of Popular Electronics magazine that conducted a high-level review - or introduction if you've never seen it before - of DC circuit analysis. In this first installment from the May issue, Professor Arthur Seidman, of the Pratt Institute, covers a variety of subjects starting with direct current (DC) circuit theory. Ideal current and voltage sources, units and notations, Ohm's law, Kirchhoff's law, resistors, capacitor and inductor charge and discharge curves, series and parallel circuits, power calculations, conductance, and other good stuff is covered. There is even (gasp) a bit of calculus presented...

GE C-62 Battery Superhet Radio

General Electric Model C-62 6-Tube Battery Superheterodyne Radio Service Data Sheet, June 1935 Radio-Craft - RF CafeThe General Electric C-62 radio was (is) a battery-operated tabletop model. No photos of actual radios could be found online, but the thumbnail to the left of an advertisement appears on the RadioMuseum.org website. Two 67.5 V "B" batteries provided power. You would be forgiven for believing such batteries are no longer available today since nowadays the most familiar types are 1.2 V and 1.5 V "A," "C," and "D" cells, and the 9 V "transistor radio" battery - which should be renamed the "smoke detector battery" since few pocket-type transistor radios remain. Less prominent in the retail venue but ubiquitous in electronics and power tools...

LabGuy's World

Labguy's World of Vintage Video Tape Equipment: Kirt's Cogitations™ #362 - RF CafeRF Cafe website visitor Richard Diehl recently contacted me in search of the "TV Monocle Gives Extra Eye to Wearer" article in the September 1962 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine. Come to find out, Mr. Diehl is none other than the progenitor and still current publisher of the LabGuy's World website, which contains a vast amount of information on vintage video tape equipment (hence, his interest in the TV Monocle article). He is a fellow traveler along the road of website creation, having had a World Wide Web presence since October 1997 - predating RF Cafe by a year and a half! Dig this: "These pages were originally created with Netscape Composer and are now maintained solely with Microsoft Notepad..."

Many Thanks to Aegis Power Systems for Their Continued Support!

Aegis Power Systems - RF CafeAegis Power Systems is a leading supplier of AC-DC and DC-DC power supplies for custom and special applications. Aegis has been designing and building highly reliable custom power supplies since 1995. They offer a complete line of switch mode power supplies and power converters for a variety of markets including defense, industrial, aircraft, VME, and telecom. Supports military, aircraft, EV, telecom, and embedded computing applications. Design and manufacture of custom power supply solutions to meet each customer's exacting specifications. Please visit Aegis Power Systems today. Manufactured in the USA.

Promote Your Company on RF Cafe

Sponsor RF Cafe for as Little as $40 per Month - RF CafeBanner Ads are rotated in all locations on the page! RF Cafe typically receives 8,000-15,000 visits each weekday. RF Cafe is a favorite of engineers, technicians, hobbyists, and students all over the world. With more than 17,000 pages in the Google search index, RF Cafe returns in favorable positions on many types of key searches, both for text and images. Your Banner Ads are displayed on average0,000 times per year! New content is added on a daily basis, which keeps the major search engines interested enough to spider it multiple times each day. Items added on the homepage often can be found in a Google search within a few hours of being posted. If you need your company news to be seen, RF Cafe is the place to be...

News Briefs - Radar Traffic Lights

News Briefs, September 1962 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeSeptember 1962 was a big month for reporting on new developments in the electronics world. The "News Briefs" column in Radio-Electronics announced the world's first electron microscope capable of imaging individual atoms. It could not resolve electrons or protons and neutrons in the nucleus, just the outline of the entire atom. Those concentric rings around the central blob are not electrons "orbiting" the nucleus, but are a diffraction effect. Also mentioned is the requirement for UHF channels to be included on new television sets. The law abused the 10th Amendment by applying it to interstate sales - typical of the Government. Radar-controlled traffic lights...

Mystery Word

Find the Hidden Electronics Components, July 1965 Popular Electronics - RF CafeIf you like word puzzles, then maybe you'll want to give this word search with names of common electronics components hidden within a matrix of random letter a go. It appeared in the July 1965 issue of Popular Electronics magazine. Keep that in mind while searching for the Mystery Word since some might not be overly familiar to latecomers. Interestingly, in the original hard copy was missing the word for #23. I needed to look in the given solution to find it and add it to the list. Enjoy. 

The Color TV X-Ray Problem

The Color TV X-Ray Problem, November 1968 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeWhen you were a kid, did your mother warn you about sitting too close to the television because doing so would cause you to be near-sighted or otherwise "ruin" your eyes? Mine did, and I'm now very near-sighted, but it is doubtful that sitting too close to the TV is the reason. In fact, according to Linus Van Pelt's comments to his sister, Lucy, in this 1962 Peanuts comic strip, ophthalmologists tried to counter the misconception about too-close boob tube viewing. There is another strip where Linus challenges Lucy's assertion that reading in dim lighting can hurt your eyes. The real concern as it turns out, according to professional alarmists, was the massive doses of x-radiation pouring out of the front of the early color TV sets. To hear the distractors tell it, you could almost...

The Radio Month in Review - Hiram Percy Maxim SK

The Radio Month in Review, May 1936 Radio-Craft - RF CafeIn 1936, the FCC was busy regulating radio broadcasting via transcription programs (pre-recorded segments), deciding that listeners deserved to be warned at least every 15 minutes that they were not listening to a live announcer. A note on the death of ARRL founder Hiram Percy Maxim was reported to have succumbed to a throat infection, which (my conjecture) might have proven non-fatal had penicillin been in use in the day. Mr. Maxim is buried in Rose Hill Cemetery in Hagerstown, Maryland. Miniature "pocket-sized" radio transmitters and receivers were introduced for those who wore jackets with pockets large enough to hold a box the size of a 1-liter bottle of soda pop. Lawsuits were already being launched by music owners against radio broadcast stations over royalties. Dr. Compton, of Compton Effect fame, was measuring cosmic rays aboard ships, and some of the first radio-assisted blind landings were being performed in Germany...

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Innovative Power Products Passive RF Products - RF Cafe