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A lot of RF Cafe visitors might not be familiar
with some of the electronic waveforms presented in this
Oscilloscope Quiz by Popular Electronics magazine's ultimate quizmaster, Robert
Balin. The shapes are recognizable to anyone who has done a lot of design, troubleshooting,
testing, or alignments on analog circuits. Electronics repairmen were intimately
familiar with these - and much more complex - waveforms. Modulation of the z-axis
is especially cool as it varies the intensity of the waveform. I always roll my
eyes when, back in the day, a laboratory or medical facility in movies or on TV
had an oscilloscope display with a Lissajous pattern writhing on the display...
"SpaceX is putting its longstanding focus
of sending humans to Mars on the backburner to prioritize
establishing a settlement on the Moon, founder Elon Musk said Sunday. The South
Africa-born billionaire's space company has found massive success as a NASA contractor,
but critics have for years panned Musk's Mars colonization plans as overambitious.
The move also puts Musk in alignment with U.S. President Trump's shift away from
Mars. "For those unaware, SpaceX has already shifted focus to building a self-growing
city on the Moon, as we can potentially achieve that in less than 10 years, whereas
Mars would take 20+ years. Difficulties in reaching Mars include the fact that "it
is only possible to travel to Mars when the planets align every 26 months..."
Life for the blind has always been fraught
with obstacles that we who can see will never be able to fully appreciate. Society
has come a long way in accommodating the special needs of those with no or severely
reduced eyesight. Recent news stories report of experiments with electronic implants
that use implants set into the eye and couple somehow with the retina to send image
information to the person's brain. While in no way close to being able to be called
sight, it has at least allowed the guy or girl with training to detect and avoid
obstacles based on changes in scenery shading. We are probably a century away from
true bionic vision, incremental improvements will thankfully improve
the lives of our thusly challenged brethren. This article from a 1947 edition of
Radio News reports on efforts made by the New York Institute for the Educations
of the Blind to make amateur radio...
everythingRF, a long-time supporter of this
website, is now, in addition to publishing e-books, putting out an
e-zine which provides
some insightful content, interesting products and expert interviews within the RF &
Microwave industry. Vol. 4, now available, includes articles on Next Gen Adjustable
Q-Band Gain Equalizers, Earth to Orbit:The Important Role of Antennas in NTN, Benefits
for Phased Array Systems Through SM Components, as well as product features, upcoming
industry events, and more.
Download it now.
Have you ever heard of a
"globar" resistor? They have been around since the early days
of radio and were used, among other things, to protect vacuum tube heater elements
from burning up due to high inrush current when first turned on. Globars have a
negative temperature coefficient (NTC) of resistance so that, opposite of standard
carbon and metal film type resistors, they exhibit a higher resistance when cold
than when hot. Mac and Barney discuss their use in this episode of "Mac's Radio
Service Shop." You might be more familiar with the name "thermistor" for such devices,
but globars are unique elements in that their construction from non-inductive ceramic
material makes them useful at high power levels and high frequencies. Globar appears
to now be owned by Kanthal (aka Kanthal Globar). Interestingly, Keysight Technologies...
Louis Garner was the semiconductor guru
for Popular Electronics magazine in the 1960s when he wrote this article
attempting to
demystify the proliferation of over 2,000 transistor types. He devised a "transistor
tree," tracing evolution from the obsolete point-contact transistor - unstable with
high gain but noisy - to advanced designs balancing cost, frequency, power, and
reliability. It covers pnp and npn basics, then details processes: grown-junction
(inexpensive, good high-frequency); meltback diffused (similar, better response);
alloyed-junction (popular for power); surface-barrier family (SB, SBDT, MA, MADT;
excellent high-frequency, low voltage); post-alloy-diffused...
"Gentlemen,
ei*π
+ 1 = 0 is surely true, it is absolutely paradoxical; we cannot understand
it, and we don't know what it means. But we have proved it, and therefore we know
it must be truth." - Benjamin Peirce
(not to be confused with Captain Benjamin Franklin "Hawkeye" Pierce), 19th century Harvard mathematician.
ei*π
+ 1 = 0 i, BTW, is known as
Euler's identity
- engineers live by it.
"Scientists have shown that
twisting a crystal at the nanoscale can turn it into a tiny, reversible diode,
hinting at a new era of shape-engineered electronics. Researchers at the RIKEN Center
for Emergent Matter Science, working with collaborators, have created a new technique
for building three-dimensional nanoscale devices directly from single crystals.
The approach uses a focused ion beam instrument to precisely carve materials at
extremely small scales. Using this method, the team shaped tiny helical structures
from a topological magnetic material made of cobalt, tin, and sulfur, known by its
chemical formula Co3Sn2S2..."
I am constantly amazed when reading stories
about how easily Adolph Hitler rose to power in Germany by encouraging and exploiting
resentment of his countrymen over being forced, among other concessions outlined
in the Treaty of Versailles, to disarm militarily and make reparations for atrocities
committed in World War I. Part of the Nazi (National Socialist) party success
was extensive use of propaganda via print, radio, and the relatively new technology
of television. Government exercised complete control over the mainstream media (i.e.,
not "underground") by dictating content that promoted the proclaimed virtues of
Nazism and the Aryan race and the vices of just about every other form of government
and race. At the height of Hitler's reign of terror during the Third Reich era,
radio and television sets were only permitted to use crystals
tuned to state-sponsored...
Manmade electrical noise (QRM) and natural
electrical noise (QRN) has been the nemesis of communications
- both wired and wireless - since the first signals were sent. While it is true
that over the last century the amount of "background" noise has increased significantly,
the ability of modern circuits to deal with (reject) it and/or accommodate (error
correction) it has pretty much kept up with the advancement. You might be tempted
to think that "back in the good old days" such problems did not exist, but operators
were plagued by poorly designed and inadequately filtered transmitters as well as
really deficient electrical service installation that spewed noise from transformers,
inadequately grounded transmission lines, lousy connections...
Please take a few moments to visit the
everythingRF website to see how they can assist you with your
project. everythingRF is a product discovery platform for RF and microwave products
and services. They currently have 354,801 products from more than 2478 companies
across 485 categories in their database and enable engineers to search for them
using their customized parametric search tool. Amplifiers, test equipment, power
couplers and dividers, coaxial connectors, waveguide, antennas, filters, mixers,
power supplies, and everything else. Please visit everythingRF today to see how
they can help you.
The debate about upgrading electronics service
shop equipment
from vacuum tube to solid-state instruments was raging in the late 1960s, when
this Mac's Service Shop story appeared in Electronics World magazine. Barney
is querying Mac regarding FET-based VOM performance specifications he is considering
to replace a VTVM. He covets the Hewlett-Packard 217A square-wave generator, delivering
clean 1 Hz-10 MHz waves with 5-ns rise time and scope triggering, justifying its
$300-$400 cost for precise scope testing. An electronic counter for 5 Hz-10 MHz
frequencies, with four- or six-digit readouts and line- or crystal-gated accuracy..
A lot of people like to demean engineers
and scientists for their propensity to want to
conduct experiments and obtain measured, empirical data rather
than "winging it" and being satisfied with "intuitive" knowledge or the contemporarily
popular term "gut." If mankind had not adopted scientific methods and ventured beyond
the "cradle of civilization" on the African continent, we would all still be living
in grass huts, hurling rocks at prey, making clicking sounds for communication,
and foraging for berries. Quantifying and categorizing all things in nature helps
inventors create new and improved implements that help make life better. Early on
it was mostly individuals like Archimedes, Euler, Newton, and Edison who built the
pool of knowledge that fed and evolved into corporations, governments, and universities
doing the vast majority of the work. Bell Laboratories...
"A new metasurface lets scientists flip
between ultra-stable light vortices, paving the way for tougher, smarter wireless
communication. Scientists have developed a new optical device capable of producing
two different types of vortex-shaped light patterns: electric and magnetic. These
unusual light structures, called
skyrmions, are known for their exceptional stability and resistance to interference.
Because they hold their shape so reliably, they are strong candidates for carrying
information in future wireless communication systems. 'Our device not only generates
more than one vortex pattern in free-space-propagating..."
You can buy a pretty good metal detector
today for a hundred dollars that will find coins buried many inches deep and larger
metallic items even deeper, and you even get discriminator functions to filter out
unwanted objects like tin cans. They weigh just a couple pounds and can be used
with one arm. Compare that to early
metal detectors that had huge induction coils on a frame so heavy
that shoulder straps were needed just to lug them around. Some models came on wheels
for pushing or pulling like a cart. You could plan to spend a few hundred dollars
(a thousand or more in today's dollars) for one. Even then, they were not as sophisticated
as the $50 models sold in Walmart now. In classic fashion, teen electronics hobbyists
Carl and Jerry use their technical prowess to design and build their own metal detector
and then unintentionally using it to convince...
This might be one of the earliest printed
instances of Harold A. Wheeler's simplified formulas for the
three basic inductor forms. Wheeler is credited with having devised the first
automatic volume control (AVC) using diode envelope detection. We all use them on
a regular basis, but for most the origin was never known or has long since been
forgotten (I fall into the latter category). I did some research on Wheeler's
inductance formulas a few months ago while working on what is now titled "RF Cafe
Espresso Engineering Workbook™," so it was sort of déjà vu when this blurb appeared
in a 1932 edition of Radio-Craft magazine...
The leading website for the PCB industry.
PCB Directory is the largest directory of
Printed Circuit Board (PCB)
Manufacturers, Assembly houses, and Design Services on the Internet. We have listed
the leading printed circuit board manufacturers around the world and made them searchable
by their capabilities - Number of laminates used, Board thicknesses supported, Number
of layers supported, Types of substrates (FR-4, Rogers, flexible, rigid), Geographical
location (U.S., China), kinds of services (manufacturing, fabrication, assembly,
prototype), and more. Fast turn-around on quotations for PCB fabrication and assembly.
Don't let the title fool you. This "Ultrafax" system developed by RCA in the late 1940s was essentially
the first attempt at video on demand, or streaming video. Rather than piping the
signal over cable or local broadcast frequency towers, a microwave link was used.
While initial system equipment space and financial requirements meant only corporations,
universities, and governments could procure an Ultrafax, engineers who developed
the system envisioned an eventual culmination of equivalent systems in every home.
Even at the end of the last century it was still not possible for program providers
to personalize broadcasts to individuals. It wasn't until broadband Internet came
on the scene in the 2000s that such services were possible. Now, a decade later,
people watch any video they want on cellphones while riding in a car...
Maxwell's inception of the theory of electromagnetic
radiation is compared here to if Christopher Columbus had conceptualized the existence
of America and mapped its features based solely on observations of how the known
oceans and land masses interacted. I have always been amazed at the ability of people
who formulate entirely new theories of science, finance, medicine, etc., and manage
to detail and support their ideas with hard data and mathematics. Einstein did so
with relativity, Dalton did so with atomic structure, Darwin did so with evolution,
Pasteur did so with germ theory; the list is long. There are lots of geniuses out
there, but a relative few change the world...
"A research team affiliated with UNIST has
introduced a novel, high-performance, and thermally stable polymer-based non-volatile
analog switch. This next-generation device is as
thin and flexible as vinyl, yet capable of withstanding high temperatures. Professor
Myungsoo Kim and his team from the Department of Electrical Engineering at UNIST,
in collaboration with Professor Minju Kim from Dankook University, have developed
this robust, flexible radio-frequency (RF) switch. Such technology could enable
reliable 5G and 6G wireless communication in demanding environments -- such as wearable
devices and the Internet of Things (IoT)..."
Werbel Microwave began as a consulting firm,
specializing in RF components design, with the ability to rapidly spin low volume
prototypes. Our
WM4PD-0.5-18-S is a wideband 4-way in-line power splitter covering 500 MHz
to 18 GHz with excellent return loss, low insertion loss, and high isolation
performance. The device covers several military radios letter octave bands in one
product, delivering much value to the program. Aluminum enclosure measures 6.25
x 2.98 x 0.50", includes four through-mounting holes, and has durable, stainless
steel SMA female connectors. One device covers the upper UHF band, as well as L,
S, C, X and Ku bands...
This week's
Wireless Engineering crossword puzzle contains the usual collection
of only words and clues related to RF, microwave, and mm-wave engineering, optics,
mathematics, chemistry, physics, and other technical subjects. As always, this crossword
contains no names of politicians, mountain ranges, exotic foods or plants, movie
stars, or anything of the sort unless it/he/she is related to this puzzle's technology
theme (e.g., Reginald Denny or the Tunguska event in Siberia). The technically inclined
cruciverbalists amongst us will appreciate the effort. Enjoy!
Providing full solution service is our motto,
not just selling goods. RF &
Connector Technology has persistently pursued a management policy stressing
quality assurance system and technological advancement. From your very first contact,
you will be supported by competent RF specialists; all of them have several years
of field experience in this industry allowing them to suggest a fundamental solution
and troubleshooting approach. Coaxial RF connectors, cable assemblies, antennas,
terminations, attenuators, couplers, dividers, and more. Practically, we put priority
on process inspection at each step of workflow as well as during final inspection
in order to actualize "Zero Defects."
"Essayons," that's the motto of the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers. It means "Let us try," in French. In 1968, when this
G.I. Engineers editorial appeared in Electronics World magazine, it
noted that about 38,000 engineers, or roughly roughly 6% of the nation's total,
served in the U.S. Armed Forces, far more technically skilled than in World War
II or Korea. Despite surpluses in bachelor's-degree holders, advanced-degree shortages
persisted, with over 15 thousand master's and PhD positions unfilled - by fewer
than 8,500 qualified personnel, forcing underqualified assignments. Utilization
varied: Air Force effectively deployed 14,000 engineers in R&D and civil roles;
Navy specialist programs covered ship, ordnance, aeronautical, and Civil Engineer
Corps (Seabees)...
Here is a handy-dandy baker's dozen worth
of "kinks," otherwise known as
tricks, shortcuts, or clever ideas, that could prove useful while
working in the lab at work or in your shop at home. One suggestion is to place a
sheet of tracing paper over your schematic while wiring a circuit and draw each
connection as it is completed, rather than mark up the original drawing. That was
definitely good for a time when making a spare copy of a magazine page or assembly
instruction from a kit was not as simple a matter as it is today...
"Apple has published a patent application
describing a method to detect user gestures on wireless earbuds by measuring changes
in RF antenna impedance, potentially reducing the need for dedicated touch-sensing
hardware. The filing, titled 'Gesture
Detection Based on Antenna Impedance Measurements,' published on January 8,
2026 as US 20260010234, describes using antennas already present for wireless communication
as dual-purpose components that can also detect user input..."
|
 • FCC to
Exempt Amateurs from Foreign Adversary Reporting
• Continuing
Your Professional Education in 2026
• India Reaches
400M 5G Subscribers
in 3 Years
• EIB Backs
Europe's 1st Gallium Production Investment
• 2026 a
Pivotal Year for 6G Standardization
• New
60-Meter Frequencies for Hams
 ');
//-->
 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.
Before comprehensive coaxial and optical
cable or even microwave relay networks were available for commercial use, an experimental
aircraft-based system was tested for broadcasting educational television and other
messaging data. The "Stratovision"
platform essentially provided a couple 20,000-foot-high antennas with a footprint
covering hundreds of miles. This 1945 Radio-Craft magazine article entitled
,"Stratovision" was one of the earliest to report on plans to provide a coast-to-coast
nationwide matrix of coverage as shown in the accompanying illustration. Two outfitted
airplanes would be in the air within each region at all times to ensure redundancy
and high quality service. Boeing B-29 Superfortress airplanes (the Enola Gay was
a B-29) were used at least in part because they provided a human-friendly environment
at high altitudes for long period of time...
Although the original purpose of this note
was just to announce a couple post-WWI era
U.S.
Air Force recruitment posters I found in The Saturday Evening Post magazines
back in the late 1940s, some info I found regarding the newest USAF logo might also
interest you. There is a plethora of old Air Force posters available for viewing
on the Internet, but I haven't seen these two, which are particularly directed toward
flight officers and the newfangled jet aircraft of the future. Operational jet-powered
fighter craft did not appear until the final year of World War II, although
Germany did have their Messerschmitt Me 262. Except maybe for the C-130, you probably
won't see any propeller-driven aircraft in today's USAF promotional material. If
you have any cause to display the USAF's new (relatively) wings symbol, be sure
to consult this entire section of regulations governing the proper...
This Radio Service Data Sheet covers the
Ford-Philco radio model FT9, 6-tube auto-radio receiver. It appeared in a 1936
issue of Radio-Craft magazine. Most - if not all - electronics servicemen
had subscriptions to these magazines because they were a ready source of not just
these service sheets, but because of the extensive articles offering advice on servicing
radios and televisions. In fact, many electronics manufacturers had a policy of
supplying service data only to bona fide shops. Thumbnail photos at the left came
from a Ford-Philco FT9 radio on eBay. A large list is included at the bottom of
the page of similar documents from vintage receiver schematics, troubleshooting
tips, and alignment procedures. They were originally published in magazines like
this one, Radio and Television News, Radio News, etc. I scan and
post them...
ABS and PVC plastic are the new bamboo for
antenna construction. Before the ready and inexpensive availability of the former
two insulative products, bamboo was the material of choice for lightweight insulative
(at least when dry) support structures. Many of the antenna construction articles
like this "Practical
Consideration and Application in a Multielement Quad" article in this 1967 issue
of QST magazine are typical of the time (and earlier) where bamboo was
used to support wire radiator elements, and serve as spacers for ladder wire and
matching-phasing networks. Author Fitz-Randolph provides a bit of theory behind
the design and includes a table of elements lengths for 10, 15, and 20 meters
(28, 21, and 14 MHz, respectively) operation. The tri-band quad antenna requires
about 550 feet of wire! An interesting exercise for someone with extra time on his
hands would be to plug the dimensions of some of these antennas into a programs
like EZNEC and see how the software results compare to the articles' claims...
At QuinStar, we're about more than millimeter-wave
technology. The people comprising QuinStar Technology pursue diverse and exciting
outside interests. Our Chief Engineer, Jim Schellenberg, is a highly skilled amateur
astronomical photographer. He captured this beautiful image of the
Orion nebula using a specially modified Canon 6D. The camera responds
to the H-alpha spectral line at 656 nm (from hydrogen gas), which is seen as red
in the photo. The camera is mounted on an 11-inch telescope that tracks the object
as the earth rotates. This image consists of nine one-minute exposures that are
"stacked" to form the image you see. This is an excellent time of the year to view
the Orion nebula. It can be seen with the naked eye...
It takes a while - and money - to accumulate
issues of the vintage electronics magazines for posting articles here on RF Cafe.
Often I can find groups for sale that comprise a full calendar year, but often they
are groups of random months and years. That makes getting a complete series of articles
like this one on "How
an Electronic Brain Works" difficult. A lot of times installments appear every
other month, so when a series has more than ten articles, it can run well over a
year. For instance Part I of "How an Electronic Brain Works" appeared in the
September 1950 issue of Radio-Electronics. The final chapter, Part XIII,
appeared in October 1951. Throughout the series, authors Edmund C. Berkeley and
Robert A. Jensen describe the workings of "Simon," their compact electronic computer
- some even call it the first "desktop computer." Here is an article (with photos)
about "Simon" in the November 1950 Scientific American magazine...
Homepage
Archives for January 2022. Items on the RF Cafe homepage come and go at a pretty
fast rate. In order to facilitate fast page loading, I keep the size reasonable - under a megabyte (ebay, Amazon, NY Times, etc., are multiple
megabytes). New items are added at the top of the content area, and within a few
days they shift off the bottom. If you recall seeing something on the homepage
but now it is gone, fret not because many years I have maintained
Homepage Archives.
As the opening sentence indicates, National
Company ran a very long series of advertisements in QST magazine that were
in a format more reminiscent of a short essay than a company promotion. This installment
for the December 1952 edition was number 224. Subjects ran the gamut from technical
innovations from the company's research and development laboratory to social and
political issues relevant to electronics technicians, hobbyists, students, and engineers.
Being that it was a presidential election year in the U.S.,
National Company felt compelled to remind readers of their patriotic duty to
vote. Although this was the December issue, it would reach readers' mailboxes prior
to the election. Dwight D. Eisenhower ran against Adlai Stevenson. The latter won
the South and the former won everything else. Note the thinly veiled criticism at
the bottom about why amateur radio participation rate was down at the time...
As mentioned in the past, one of the many
great aspects of the Internet, and in particular having a website with its contents
easily found on a search engine, is occasionally being contacted by people mentioned
in one of the vintage magazine articles I have posted on RFCafe.com and AirplanesAndRockets.com,
and/or by people related to someone mentioned. Readers of Popular Electronics
magazine in the 1950's through 1970's (including me) looked forward to Carl Kohler's
many humorous electronics-related stories and illustrations a few times each year.
Carl's leading man was one of print media's first DIYers, and his wife suffered
his often less than successful escapades in a sporting manner. A few days ago, none
other than
Christoverre
Kohler, Mr. and Mrs. Carl and Sylvia Kohler's number two son (of four),
contacted me to provide some background on his parents. Christoverre happened upon
a couple of his father's articles on RF Cafe while doing a search. He was motivated
to write in response to the story entitled, "I Married a Superheterodyne!," where
I asked whether the Kohlers might have at one time lived in Syracuse, New York.
It was due to a mention of General Electric's famous Electronics Park (which is
no more). Christoverre set me straight on that matter, and provided some amazing
additional information on his parents. His father's talents were not limited...
Phased
vertical stacks of two or more antennas were fairly common in the television
realm - especially once color broadcasts became more dominant in the 1950s. Up to
3 dB per additional antenna is possible, but due to various non-ideal physical
parameters (summed phase angle, imperfect antenna geometry, etc.), realized gain
is typically in the 2.5 to 2.8 dB range. Higher signal to noise ratios were
needed to guarantee good color separation with the National Television System Committee
(NTSC) and stereo channel audio separation with the advent of Multichannel Television
Sound (MTS). As you might expect, companies appeared claiming to have invented physics-defying
antennas that "outperform all present antennas." This particular "Super 60"
model from All Channel Antenna Corporation further claims to outperform antennas
that use a mechanical rotator (see my Alliance U-100 Tenna-Rotor) by virtue of its
9-position electronic phase switching...
Finding information on the
Osgood Lens, invented by James R. Cravath, is challenging.
For as prominent as it was in magazines like The Saturday Evening Post
in the late 1910s and 1920s, there is not even a Wikipedia entry for the lens type
or the man according to my searches. Although not exactly the same as the Fresnel
lenses used by lighthouses since the 18th century, the concept is basically the
same. Of course the Osgood company was careful not to use the term Fresnel in their
literature for potential patent infringement reasons. Some vehicles might have been
fitted with them as a factory installed option, but they were also sold as add-on
items. According to the literature the tiered stack of prism-shaped glass directed
the headlight beam toward the road...
Back in the early 1990s, while working for
a fine Midwestern company that made automated utility meter reading (AMR) equipment,
an older gentleman was hired as a contractor to do some design work. He was an instant
hit with everyone not just because of his engineering prowess, but because of his
stories of the mechanical and analog electronic computers he worked on for the U.S.
Navy. After being commissioned as an ensign at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis,
Maryland, he spent time studying, researching, and designing massive
radar-directed gun pointing systems for battleships. Just as contraptions like
Babbage's difference engine was a marvel of contemporary engineering, so, too, were
those fantastic shipboard amalgamations of gears, switches, vacuum tubes, rheostats,
flywheels, cams, and bearings. Calculations of azimuths and elevations were made
using sum, difference, integrating, and multiplication circuits built of discrete
analog components and electronic valves...
Here are a few more
electronics-themed comics from a 1940 issue of Radio News magazine.
You can probably tell from the situations that people still considered "wireless,"
aka radio, to be a novel and wonderful - even mysterious - invention. Every type
of situation from utility to obsession to fantasy was part of the experience. Two
of the four comics from this set addresses amateur radio scenarios. Note the predilection
predicted of viewers or the newfangled (at the time) television (or televisor).
Little did the artist know how addictive such contraptions would be - first in the
form of TV, then the form personal computer, and finally in the form of the present
day video delivery medium of smartphones...
As with my hundreds of previous
engineering and science-themed crossword puzzles, this one for January 19, 2020,
contains only clues and terms associated with engineering, science, physical, astronomy,
mathematics, chemistry, etc., which I have built up over nearly two decades. Many
new words and company names have been added that had not even been created when
I started in the year 2002. You will never find a word taxing your knowledge of
a numbnut soap opera star or the name of some obscure village in the Andes mountains.
You might, however, encounter the name of a movie star like Hedy Lamarr or a geographical
location like Tunguska, Russia, for reasons which, if you don't already know, might
surprise you.
The old
pushbutton radio tuners were an ingenuous bit of electromechanical wizardry.
For those too young to have experienced them, operation was simple - turn the radio
tuning knob to your broadcast station, pull out the lever/button, and then push
it all the way back in. Done. The next time you pushed that button, the mechanism
would slew the dial indicator to that position, taking the tuning elements (usually
just a variable capacitor) with it. For most modern electronic radios, you program
the station button by pushing and holding it for a few seconds until a beep is heard.
My father never quite got the hang of tuning the pushbutton radio in his old Rambler
(vacuum tubes) or even his 1978 Chevy pickup truck (transistorized, but with mechanical
tuner). He was never an early - or late for that matter - adopter of new technology,
so it was not surprising. I am surprised, though, at the number of times I have
had to show a Millennial type how to program his/her late model car radio...
Back in the 1970s while taking flying lessons,
I used to enjoy watching the
Civil Air Patrol run through its exercises at
Lee Airport,
in Edgewater, Maryland. For some reason, I never bothered to look into joining.
I wish I had. A few years later while in Basic Training (BT) for the USAF at Lackland
AFB, Texas, there were a couple guys in my squadron who had been long-time members
of the CAP and guess what? They only had to spend the first two weeks in BT, just
long enough to do all the paperwork processing, take a few of the classroom sessions,
get shots, examinations, a head shave, and to have uniforms issued. Then, immediately
before leaving for technical school, they got to sew a stripe onto their shirtsleeves
as an Airman 1st Class. High school ROTC guys got to do the same thing. I don't
know if the Air Force still has that policy; you might want to check it out if you're
planning on joining...
Mostly just old farts like me remember anything
about
LORAN (LOng RAnge Navigation). My familiarity with it came not from boat navigation,
but from airplane navigation. Before LORAN became totally obsolete due to GPS (phased
out in U.S. and Canada in 2010), the transmitter stations were commonly tuned in
in order to obtain positional fixes via triangulation. Whilst taking flying lessons
at Lee Airport, in Edgewater, Maryland, the ground instructor included it in the
lessons, and even the FAA Private Pilot exams had a question or two on LORAN. The
el cheapo Piper Colts that I flew were lucky to have a VOR (VHF omnidirectional
range ) receiver in it, so I never actually used LORAN. They did have direction
finders (DF), which could tune in, among other things, VHF television station channels...
While reading this vintage
Electro-Voice hi-fi speaker promotion from a 1957 issue of Radio-Electronics
magazine, the thought occurred to me that reconstituting that practice of offering
products for sale in kit form could help solve at least three problems we have these
days: high product costs, lack of knowledge and ability by most people for building
material things and understanding how they work, and a shortage of workers willing
to do factory jobs. With inflation in the 9% and up range, and government handouts
removing the necessity of being a productive citizen by providing handouts, not
only are formerly easily procured products difficult to obtain, but the prices are
rising outrageously fast. Heathkit and other electronics products companies had
a good idea that endured up through the 1980's, until manufacturing made a mass
exodus from the U.S. to offshore venues in order to drive prices down. Americans
lost good jobs that paid a decent wage while citizens of China and other countries
did the work instead for compensation that barely paid for food, clothing, and shelter.
Many were, and many still are, virtual slaves at the mercy of Communist dictatorships... |