Substrata Communications
Benjamin Franklin is credited with many inventions;
scientific experiments and discoveries; writings on science, government, and fiction;
skills as an orator and diplomat; printer of books and newspapers; business endeavors;
and for being the nation's first Postmaster General. Although we all are familiar
with his forays into things electrical in nature like flying kites in lightning
storms, this article from a 1968 issue of Popular Electronics introduces
us to what might have been the earliest "wireless" communications demonstration.
The scheme involved the equivalent of the old lab gag of charging up a large-valued
electrolytic capacitor and then tossing it to someone, resulting in a surprising
shock. As with many of you, I have been both the victim and purveyor of said mischief...
Resistive? Inductive? or Capacitive? Quiz
Here is a different type of quiz from
Popular Electronics magazine's master quiz-maker, Robert P. Balin.
In this October 1960 challenge, rather than the typical format where you need to
match a word or another picture with a picture, this one requires you to consider
each description and decide whether it best describes an inductive,
capacitive, or reactive circuit. I confess to messing up on question 20, because
I couldn't remember whether a lagging power factor referred to voltage lagging current
or current lagging voltage. Hint: It refers to current lagging voltage. Another
hint: Remember the ELI the ICE man mnemonic...
POPULAR ELEComics - Comics with an Electronics Theme
Always a good way to end a busy week, here
is a collection of
electronics-themed comics that appeared in a 1967 issue of
Popular Electronics magazine. A few of the artists you will recognize if you
are a regular reader. Some drawing styles are immediately identifiable, such as
those by Dave Harbaugh (of "Hobnobbing with Harbaugh" fame). Others, at least to
me, are not quite so familiar. Frank Tabor, George White, Stan Fine, and JAS (I'm
sure I know those initials, but can't place them) are amongst the others. I
have to admit to not really knowing what the gag is in the comic with the guy in
his pajamas. The party guy is cutting a wire to his ear buds...
Technical Headlines Crossword Puzzle for August 11, 2019
This RF Cafe
Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle contains at least 10
words from headlines posted on the homepage during the week of August 5 through
August 9, 2019 (marked with an asterisk*). These custom-made engineering and science-themed
crossword puzzles are done weekly for the brain-exercising benefit and pleasure
of RF Cafe visitors who are fellow cruciverbalists. Every word and clue - without
exception - in these RF Cafe puzzles has been personally entered into a very large
database that encompasses engineering, science, physical, astronomy, mathematics,
chemistry, etc. Let me know if you would like a custom crossword puzzle built for
your company, school, club, etc. (no charge)...
Who Killed the Signal?
If you're a newcomer to the game, it
may seem that radio theory already has enough mystery without adding more. True,
the technical journals - even QST, sometimes - do make it a mysterious subject with
their textbook language and complex notations. Radio isn't really any more mysterious
or complex than many a detective story - at least not after you've read the
last page and know "whodunit." The difference lies in the method of presentation.
There may be some utility, then, in the idea of presenting radio fundamentals in
the manner of detective fiction. That's what this is - a series of radio lessons
in the guise of a detective-mystery yarn. Instead of human characters we'll
use another kind - but we'll try to make the characterizations true and the
background and incident realistic. Our purpose is to divert...
Geniac Problem Solving Computer
I remember seeing advertisements for the
"Geniac Electric Brain" in technical magazines like Popular
Electronics, Mechanix Illustrated, Popular Science, etc.,
back in the 1960s and 70s. Even then it seemed like a hokey attempt to pitch a mechanical
gizmo as an honest-to-goodness computer. Personal computers were still a decade
or more away and only multi-million-dollar mainframe computers were available, so
the opportunity for Joe Sixpack to own a "problem solving" computer was a real temptation.
No, I never bought one; my first computer was a second-hand Timex Sinclair 1000
with a membrane keyboard and a cassette tape deck as a program storage device. Anyway,
when I found this article in a 1966 issue of Popular Electronics, I figured
maybe other people of my vintage would enjoy reading about its inner workings...
Generators, Electricity - Basic Navy Training Courses
In keeping with a very common practice of
using water flowing through a garden hose as a teaching aid analogy for newcomers,
the title of this chapter of the NAVPER 10622 Basic Navy Training Courses, "Generators - Electrical Pumps," is likening electrical generators
to water pumps. It is an apt analogy, but whereas a water pump can cause water pressure
and flow of a physical substance already on-hand, electrical "pumps," aka generators,
literally creates its "flow" from thin air (even a vacuum with no air). An electrical
generator exploits the phenomenon discovered by (or at least credited to) Michael
Faraday whereby a conductor moving through a magnetic field - or a magnetic field
moving past a conductor...
Mac's Radio Service Shop: New Uses
If there was another episode of
Mac's Radio Service Shop where Barney was the primary teacher
and Mac was the student, I don't remember what it was. In fact, this is about
as total of a role reversal as there can be. First, Mac admits to having chased
a presumed oscilloscope issue down the proverbial rabbit hole only to realize the
cause of the problem was totally unrelated. Then, Barney produces a nifty device
meant for recording telephone conversations and demonstrates to Mac a couple ingenious
applications he discovered that were handy for troubleshooting television sets.
When reading Mac's description of using a magnet to alter the electron beam
in a CRT, it reminded me of how cool it was on the CRT displays to run a magnet...
The Secret Keepers
RACEP (Random Access and Correlation for Extended
Performance), was an early form of frequency hopping spread spectrum (HFSS)
devised by the Martin Company (now Lockheed-Martin). It was used for secure voice
communications and worked by sampling speech in small 'slices' and then
transmitting each slice modulated onto a carrier whose frequency was determined
by a predetermined sequence of center frequencies. A receiver with a matching sequence
key would then decode the speech and, with appropriate filtering, reassemble it
into its original content. President John F. Kennedy had such systems at his disposal
whether on the road or in the Oval Office. General Electric (GE) had a different
idea it dubbed 'Phantom' that spread the signal over a very wide bandwidth.
Today, we refer to it as Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS)...
How to "Arrest" Lightning
Before the advent of electrical distribution
systems and electronics, the
hazard of lightning was primarily from fire ignition and, to a
lesser extent, bodily injury (to humans and animals). In fact, it was Benjamin Franklin's
discovery that lightning was a form of electricity that led to his subsequent invention
of the lightning rod system that, after being installed on Philadelphia's tallest
wooden structures, significantly reduced the incident of lightning-related devastating
fires which had been ravaging the city for years. Once cities began installing electric
power lines, they were to lightning what trailer homes* are to tornadoes - strong
attractors. Line protection systems were soon developed to help stop strikes which
sometimes caused electrocution to people inside homes who happened to be touching
a light switch or plumbing fixture...
Using the Varicap
You and I know them as 'varactor diodes,' but originally the semiconductor junctions
whose reverse bias determines its capacitance was called the 'Varicap.'
The new and wondrous semiconductor craze was in full swing by 1958. Scientists,
engineers, and hobbyists were burning the midnight oil (to
use a popular phrase of the day) performing experiments and designing circuits
to replace vacuum tubes and manual controls with transistors and other electrically
variable semiconductors. The Varicap had the ability to tune receiver and transmitter
oscillators and filters without the need for high tube bias voltages and large mechanically
variable multi-plate capacitors. This article from Radio-Electronics says
early Varicaps cost $4.50 apiece...
Planning to Be an Electronic Engineer?
This article from a 1955 issue of Popular
Electronics magazine describes my evolution from electrician to electronics
technician to
electronics engineer. For that matter, it describes the paths
many people I have worked with over the years have taken. My mentor at my first
job as an RF engineer after graduating with a BSEE from the University of Vermont
began as a technician in the Army, and then he went to school part-time while working
a full-time job to earn his BSEE. In my next job as an RF engineer there were at
least two guys I knew who had also taken that path. Although not by any means absolute
criteria for judging an engineer's enthusiasm, I will say that at least as a
distinct segment of RF engineering, those who are amateur radio operators and/or
those who began life as a technician...
RF Cafe Quiz: Archaic Scientific Words & Definitions
This particular quiz tests your knowledge
of archaic scientific
words & definitions. Choose the best
answer for the spirit of the quiz; i.e., the one that represents the newer term
or the abandoned definition. All RF Cafe quizzes would make perfect fodder in employment
interviews for technicians or engineers - particularly those who are fresh out of
school or are relatively new to the work world. Come to think of it, they would
make equally excellent study material for the same persons who are going to be interviewed
for a job...
Comic with an Electronics Theme, May 1955 Popular Electronics
If you are familiar with
Carl Kohler's illustrations from his numerous humorous (a
rhyme!) electronics-themed stories in Popular Electronics magazine, then
this comic from the May 1955 issue will be recognized as having come from his hand.
The 1950s through maybe the early 1980s was a big time for do-it-yourself hobbyists
of all sorts, including those who dabbled in electronics as Hams, household handymen,
kit builders, etc. In many cases high quality products could be purchased more cheaply
as kits, as evidenced by the popularity of Heathkit and similar companies. By the
mid to late 1990s, super-cheap labor - verging on slavery - in the Far East was
doing the majority of component production and product assembly, so eventually an
inversion...
Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle for August 4
This
RF Cafe Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle contains at
least 10 words from headlines posted on the homepage during the week of July 29
- August 2, 2019 (marked with an asterisk*). These custom-made engineering and science-themed
crossword puzzles are done weekly for the brain-exercising benefit and pleasure
of RF Cafe visitors who are fellow cruciverbalists. Every word and clue - without
exception - in these RF Cafe puzzles has been personally entered into a very large
database that encompasses engineering, science, physical, astronomy, mathematics,
chemistry...





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