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Notable Quotes from Engineers & Scientists

Notable Quotes from Science & Engineering - RF Cafe• "640k [of RAM] ought to be enough for anybody." - Bill Gates, 1981

• "There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home." - Ken Olson, president/founder of Digital Equipment Corp., 1977

• "Heavier-than-air flying machines are impossible." - Lord Kelvin

• "Software is like entropy. It is difficult to grasp, weighs nothing, and obeys the second law of thermodynamics; i.e. it always increases." - Norm Augustine

• "Counting in octal is just like counting in decimal, if you don't use your thumbs." - Tom Lehrer

everything RF Butler Matrix Search Tool

everything RF Butler Matrix Search Tool - RF Cafeeverything RF is a product discovery platform for RF & Microwave Products/Services. We currently have more than 344,923 RF & Microwave products from over 2281 companies listed in 470 categories in our database and enable engineers to search for them using our customized parametric search tool. Highlighted here is the Butler Matrix, which is an analog beamforming network that is used to feed the phased array antenna elements and control the directions of beams. Many modern wireless technologies used phased array antennas to provide...

Amelia Earhart's Short-Wave Radio Never Failed

Amelia Earhart's Short-Wave Radio Never Failed, April 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF CafePlenty of intrigue still surrounds the July 2, 1937, disappearance of Amelia Earhart in the South Pacific on her way to completing an around-the-world flight. This article appeared two years prior to that fateful flight proclaiming the soundness (no pun intended) of her onboard radio. Back in the day, shortwave radio installations in aircraft required long wires trailing behind, particularly for long distance requirements like flying from the U.S. mainland to Hawaii. Those wires were a constant source of trouble due to destructive mechanical oscillations while waving in the airstream, airframe damage due to striking during the haul in/out procedure, and breakage. According to an article that appeared in the January 2015 edition of Smithsonian magazine, it is suspected that Earhart's antenna broke early in her flight...

Replacing Selenium with Silicon Rectifiers

Mallory - Tips for Technicians: Replacing Selenium with Silicon Rectifiers, June 1963 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeIn the midst of the transition from vacuum tubes to semiconductors, this 1963 Radio-Electronics magazine infomercial by Mallory offered guidance on modernizing old selenium rectifiers with the latest silicon versions. This process, commonplace at the time, symbolized the shift towards more efficient and compact electronic components. The article provided a detailed walkthrough for replacing these rectifiers in a standard TV voltage doubler circuit, recommending specific models such as the Mallory VB500 or pairs of 1N2095's or A500's. It also cautioned about potential increases in output voltage (B+) post-replacement, advising the possible need for a dropping resistor. Furthermore, it highlighted that unchanged B+ voltage could signal faulty filter capacitors, offering steps for their inspection and substitution if needed...

A 4G Moon Suit

Axiom Space's 4G Moon Suit - RF Cafe"In August last year Nokia and Axiom Space announced they were working to equip the latter's next-generation lunar spacesuits with 4G/LTE connectivity for the for NASA's Artemis III mission to the moon. The idea is that arming the new spacesuit, called Axiom Extravehicular Mobility Unit (AxEMU), with high-speed cellular-network capabilities means it can support HD video, telemetry data and voice transmission over multiple kilometers on the moon. This means the Artemis III crewmembers will then be able to capture real-time video and communications..."

I Married a Hobby

I Married a Hobby, August 1948 QST - RF CafeMrs. Helen McKee, XYL of W9ARK, knew exactly what she was signing up for when she agreed to marry Mr. McKee. After all, she met and got familiar with the guy over the air during some rag chewing sessions. This story is a humorous (and true) account of what life can be like for the spouses of enthusiastic Ham radio operators. We all hope for such an understanding "significant other." Melanie has certainly endured and supported a lot of my pastime endeavors over the past 4-plus years. It's a short read, so take a break and put a smile on your face...

ConductRF VITA 67 RF Coax Cable Assemblies

ConductRF Offers Full Suite of VITA 67 RF Coaxial Cable Assemblies - RF CafeAs a leading supplier of high-performance made-to-order RF coaxial cable assemblies, ConductRF is excited to announce the availability of our complete suite of VITA 67 RF coaxial cable assemblies and connectors. In line with our commitment to providing customers with superior flexibility and performance, ConductRF offers the option to select from all leading VITA 67 connector brands, ensuring optimal system compatibility and customization. VITA 67 solutions are widely used in military, aerospace, and other high-reliability applications where precision RF signal transmission...

Basic Digital Logic Course - Gates & Circuits

Basic Digital Logic Course, November 1974 Popular Electronics - RF CafeEnglish mathematician George Boole published his "Formal Logic" syllogism system of deductive reasoning in 1847. Fellow countryman Augustus De Morgan followed on Boole's work to develop the basic combinational logic rules the AND gates, OR gates, and NOT (negation) operators. What has become known as Boolean algebra and De Morgan's theorem forms the fundamental foundation of everything related to digital logic. This second in a three-part series from a 1974 issue of Popular Electronics introduces both concepts at a beginner's level. Part 3 will present flip-flops and an overview of how all the parts come together to build a simple computer...

Calvin & Phineas Hamming It Up®™: The Phantom QRM

Calvin & Phineas Hamming It Up®™: The Phantom QRM - RF CafeBeing a long-time fan of John T. Frye's "Carl & Jerry" technodrama™ series, I have been intending to attempt a contemporary version which has a Ham radio theme. Its purpose, as with "Carl & Jerry," is to encourage young people to adopt electronics as a hobby and even as a career, while using Amateur Radio as an enticement. Ham radio offers practical experience in electronic theory, fabrication, and operation in an environment that encourages community service, mentorship, camaraderie, and self discipline. In the U.S., there are approximately 760,000 licensed amateur radio operators; worldwide, the estimated number is around 3,000,000. The American Radio Relay League (ARRL) and the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) track these statistics. This title of the series is, for now anyway, "Calvin & Phineas Hamming It Up," and the first adventure is called, "The Phantom QRM." Call signs are fictitious, chosen to hopefully not step on someone's real call sign. The boys' names derive from my grandson's name...

Artificial Delay Lines

Artificial Delay Lines, March 1953 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeThere are probably few baseband and IF delay lines these days that are constructed from a chain of inductor-capacitor (LC) sections as described in this 1953 Radio-Electronics magazine article. SAW and MEMS devices are the more likely choice for many reasons including cost, weight, and volume savings. The preferred implementation of measured delays nowadays would be in software after sampling with an analog-to-digital converter (ADC). There are still applications for coaxial delay lines such as phase matching or adjustment between system elements, and many companies offer custom designs with delay precision in the tens of picoseconds. I once worked on part of a VHF/UFH transceiver unit that used precise lengths of coax cable as part of a signal cancellation circuit for enabling multiple radios to function in close proximity. I was not the designer...

Wireless vs. Elon Musk

Wireless vs. Elon Musk - RF Cafe"New Street Research analyst Blair Levin titled today's research note: On C-Band, Who Wins? Musk or Wireless? Right now, he's giving the edge to wireless, but it's early days. Is it time to pop the champagne? Not quite, analysts say. The wireless industry might have won the first round in the upper C-band kerfuffle, but given that Elon Musk is the challenger, nothing is a done deal. What are we talking about? Get the popcorn because this will take a minute. Earlier this week, the wireless industry, namely CTIA, cheered FCC Chairman Brendan Carr's move to launch a Notice of Inquiry (NOI)..."

Channel Master Antenna Advertisement

Channel Master Antenna Advertisement, August 1958 Radio News - RF CafeChannel Master is one of the few television and FM radio antenna companies that has survived the evolution from over-the-air (OTA) broadcasting to cable-based and then Internet-based broadcasting. Up until around the end of the last century - which is incredibly two decades ago - a large number of people still relied on rooftop and set-top antennas for program reception. Airwaves continued to get more crowded both due to additional stations being built and the ambient noise level increasing due to many other lower power devices in use. An increasing number of manmade obstacles that blocked and/or reflected signals resulted in many more low signal strength pockets and areas plagued by multipath signal variability compounded the problem...

Engineering & Tech Headlines <Archives>

• €1B European Chips Act Money for Infineon's Dresden Fab

• AM Radio Mandate Costs Low for Automakers

• Dayton Hamvention 2025 Award Winners

• FCC's Carr to Persuade Allies on new Subsea Cable Regs

• AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act up for Vote

Color TV Has a Problem

Color TV Has a Problem, May 1966 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeColor TV has reached nearly 5 million American homes, but many viewers complain about inaccurate colors due to chroma-phase differences among networks, stations, and cameras. This results in annoying hue changes, making it difficult for viewers to adjust the Hue or Tint control for accurate flesh tones. This 1966 Radio-Electronics magazine article suggests three possible solutions to this problem, emphasizing the need for precise phase agreement among all components of the color TV system. Solving this issue could encourage more people to adopt color TV technology, as the annoyance of inconsistent colors is one of the last reasons the public has found for not making color-TV ownership unanimous. Still plaguing the color TV industry is powerful x-rays emanating from the high...

China Quantum IC 1Mx Faster Than Google

China Quantum IC 1Mx Faster Than Google - RF Cafe"A research team from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), part of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, along with its partners, has made significant progress in random quantum circuit sampling using Zuchongzhi-3 - a superconducting quantum computing prototype equipped with 105 qubits and 182 couplers. Zuchongzhi-3 operates at an astonishing speed, performing computations 1015 times faster than the most powerful supercomputer available today and one million times faster than Google's latest published quantum computing results. This achievement..."

Burning out Your Circuits Without Really Trying

Burning out Your Circuits Without Really Trying, May 1970 Popular Electronics - RF CafeAcrylic wall-to-wall carpeting really came into vogue in the late 1960s to early 1970s - just in time for the arrival of miniaturized microelectronics (is that redundant or just superfluous?). Gate widths were being shrunken rapidly as the birth of the Moore's Law era was in its infancy (born in a 1965 paper written by Intel engineer and co-founder Gordon Moore). The result was copious quantities of electronic gadgets being zapped when the unsuspecting user would walk across the Van de Graaff generator in the form of floor covering and reach for a dial or switch. A couple thousand volts could easily build up on a body clad in lime green polyester pants (remember the era), then fzzzzt, there goes the clock radio or AM/FM tuner. Vacuum tube circuits from a decade earlier...

BroadWave Technologies 600 Ω Terminations

BroadWave Technologies 600 Ω Terminations - RF CafeBroadWave Technologies showcases 600 Ω Impedance Terminations. Model 592-401-005 has a DC-1 GHz operating frequency range and is rated 5-Watts average power at 25°C. The maximum VSWR is 1.20:1 and the RF connector is N male. Developed to simulate load flow on a data bus these terminations are useful in simulating emergency operation conditions. Applications include installations with elements that vary over time such as electric vehicle charging stations. Delivery for up to 25 pieces is from stock to 1-week ARO. Custom impedance and other connector types are also available...

Hams in the FBIS

Hams in the FBIS, January 1945 QST - RF CafeWe hear and read a lot in the news about the electronic surveillance carried out by governments - on both foreign entities and civilians. If you think this is a phenomenon that has only existed since the age of cellphones and the Internet, you might be interested in this article that appeared in a 1945 issue of the ARRL's QST magazine. Long before the entire textual content of the Encyclopedia Britannica could be carried on a USB stick in your pocket - and access virtually all the information in the world on your iPhone, engineers were developing recording media to facilitate the capturing and later analysis of over-the-air and wired communications. They wanted both encrypted and unencrypted conversations. The National Archives has a huge store of magnetic tapes, vinyl discs...

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.

Arc, Surge, and Noise Suppression

Arc, Surge, and Noise Suppression, April 1967 Electronics World - RF CafeEven though this article was written more than half a century ago, the fundamentals of protecting relays against interference from either internally generated or externally generated noise haven't changed. Sometimes a datasheet will recommend protection and noise suppression techniques, and when that is that case, the manufacturer's advice should be followed (unless you have a really good reason to deviate, possibly voiding a warranty). When you find yourself on your own with the design, whether a new creation or modifying an existing circuit, use this article and the very comprehensive table of application examples. This reminds me of the early 2000's when the RFIC company I worked for was in a frenzy developing ways to protect the inputs and outputs of their devices...

Chip-Based System for Terahertz Waves

Chip-Based System for Terahertz Waves - RF Cafe"The use of terahertz waves, which have shorter wavelengths and higher frequencies than radio waves, could enable faster data transmission, more precise medical imaging, and higher-resolution radar. But effectively generating terahertz waves using a semiconductor chip, which is essential for incorporation into electronic devices, is notoriously difficult. Many current techniques can't generate waves with enough radiating power for useful applications unless they utilize bulky and expensive silicon lenses. Higher radiating power allows terahertz signals to travel farther. Such lenses..."

Withwave Multi-Channel SMPS Cable Assemblies

Withwave Multi-Channel SMPS Cable Assemblies - 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 new Multi-Channel SMPS Cable Assemblies (WMCS Series) provide a wide range of multiple coax connectors and flexible cable assemblies with a choice of 26.5, 40, 50 & 67 GHz configurations based on precision array design and superior high frequency cabling solutions. These products consist of high performance flexible assemblies which can be bundled in housings (2, 4, & 8 channels) and the interface to board is compression type which provides lower total cost of testing by avoiding costly soldering components...

CBS Tubes Advertisement

CBS Tubes Advertisement, August 1958 Radio News - RF CafeThis full-page advertisement by CBS Tubes caught my eye because of the vast array of vacuum tube shapes and sizes. It appeared in a 1958 issue of Radio & TV News magazine. Most people, even back in the era of tube-based electronic equipment, think of the standard 12AX7 type rounded top, cylindrical glass package with a plastic or phenolic base and some metal pins sticking out of the bottom. Television and radio sets were full of them, and those are what you or your parents or grandparents would yank from the chassis and take to the local drug store or electronics shop to plug into the big tube tester that was commonplace back then. However, as this photo shows there was a great variety of special glass and inner electrode configurations. If you have ever attended the MTTS (IMS) show, you might have seen the equipment display provided by the National Electronics Museum...

Thanks to Exodus Advanced Communications for Continued Support

Exodus Advanced Communications - RF CafeExodus Advanced Communications is a multinational RF communication equipment and engineering service company serving both commercial and government entities and their affiliates worldwide. Power amplifiers ranging from 10 kHz to 51 GHz with various output power levels and noise figure ranges, we fully support custom designs and manufacturing requirements for both small and large volume levels. decades of combined experience in the RF field for numerous applications including military jamming, communications, radar, EMI/EMC and various commercial projects with all designing and manufacturing of our HPA, MPA, and LNA products in-house.

The Picturephone in Your Future

The Picturephone in Your Future, September 1964 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeOn April 20, 1964, AT&T introduced the Picturephone at the New York World's Fair, enabling coast-to-coast video communication. The device, which featured a 4-3/8" x 5-3/4" screen and push-button controls allowing users to display themselves, others, or nothing at all, went into commercial service on June 24 with public booths in New York, Washington, and Chicago. The article notes that the concept of video telephony was first imagined in Hugo Gernsback's 1911 science fiction novel "Ralph 124C 41+," where it was called the "Telephot." While initially expensive ($16-$27 for 3 minutes depending on cities connected), the Mr. Gernsback, in this 1964 editorial, predicts the technology would eventually become more affordable and evolve to include features like language translation, 3D capabilities...

Today in Science History

Today in Science History - RF Cafe

ABC's of Transistors

ABC's of Transistors, December 1968 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeAs with so many aspects of electronics, physics, economics, medicine (well, maybe not medicine), the basics do not change a whole lot since first being discovered. If you are a newcomer to the world of electronics and are trying to come up to speed on transistor fabrication and operation, even this article that appeared in a 1958 issue or Radio-Electronics magazine will be useful to you. Figure 1 reminds me of a situation I witnessed while working as a technician at Westinghouse Oceanic Division, in Annapolis, Maryland. If you've heard this before, please indulge me. One of the managers there, who was not a degreed engineer (although he held the title), one day while in the lab actually soldered a pair of 1N4148 diodes together back-to-back per Figure 1 and tried biasing it to function like a transistor. A "real" engineer, whom I greatly admired, stood watching with his mouth agape as he watched. Before he could politely explain why the diode pair is not the same as the intimate PN junctions of an actual transistor...

December 1960 Popular Electronics Crossword Puzzle

Crossword Puzzle, December 1960 Popular Electronics - RF CafeIt was a little difficult to make out the shape within the crossword puzzle grid from this December 1960 issue of Popular Electronics magazine, so I got out my blue Crayon and filled in the hashed squares. It appears to be a transistor schematic symbol. Unlike the weekly RF Cafe crossword puzzles, not all of the clues and words are specifically related to science and engineering, but a large percentage of them are. Admittedly, I have the advantage of a software program to help place the words within the grid. Margaret LeFevre did not. Doing it by hand is a lot more work. I can't imagine how the people who created the New York Times' Sunday-size puzzles were able to do it without computer assistance!

How Ohms Law is Used in Service Work

How Ohms Law is Used in Service Work, June-July 1958 National Radio-TV News - RF CafeMany people end on RF cafe as a result of a Google (or other) search about electronics, so even though regular visitors might find this primer on Ohm's law to be redundant review, it will be valuable to the aforementioned people. Electronics technology has moved forward at lightning speed in the last century, but the fundamentals of Ohm's law remain unchanged. Indeed, we would be in trouble if voltage no longer equaled the product of current and voltage (E = I x R). National Radio-TV News magazine was published monthly by National Radio Institute, a correspondence school that did business from 1914 through 2002. A bonus electronics-themed comic is included...

SPURS Software - RF Design Magazine Software Contest Winner

SPURS program featured in 1992 RF Design - RF CafeWayyyy.... back in 1992, RF Design magazine (Gray Breed was editor at the time) ran a software contest. Those were the days when most engineers and hobbyists wrote software in either Basic or Fortran. I happened to use Turbo Pascal, by Borland. At the time, I was working as an RF engineer for Comsat, in Germantown, Maryland. Having done a lot of frequency conversion designs in my previous work at General Electric, and even more there at Comsat, I had already written a crude program to calculate mixer spurious products, so this challenge gave me the excuse I needed to refine the user interface and add some creature comfort features like loadable mixer spur files and detection of spectral inversion if present. Although I did not win the grand prize, I did win the runner-up prize. The prizes included having the following article published in the November 1992 edition of the magazine, a couple experimenter kits of surface mount inductors and resistors, a T-shirt, and a couple other items. Of course, the greatest prize as far was I was concerned was having an article published in a major magazine...

Radio-Electronics' Service Digest

Service Digest, September 1953 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeRadio-Electronics magazines' "Service Digest" column regularly reported on issues relevant to the electronics servicemen who repaired radios, television sets, phonographs, recorders, and similar items - often in the customers' homes. Then, as now, professionalism and courteous behavior was often rewarded with word-of-mouth referrals to friends and relatives, resulting in new business opportunities. An interesting topic also included was the need to observe extreme caution when working around TV tubes (CRT's) not just because of the lethally high voltages present, but because of the danger of tube implosion and the resulting scattering of glass shards. An example given is that due to standard atmospheric press of 14.7 lbs/in2 on the outside of the evacuated volume, a 17-inch screen CRT tube supports a total pressure of 3,322 pounds, or 1.66 tons...

The FCC's Kilocycle Kops

Kilocycle Kops, January 1956 Popular Electronics - RF CafeExcept under special circumstances, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) does not conduct much frequency monitoring activity. I know first-hand that even when a report of radio frequency interference (RFI) is made to them, you will be told to figure out the source on your own and then get back to them*. There have been a lot of news items lately where the FCC has levied heavy fines on Ham operators found to be in violation of the regulations, and usually not because of independent complaints. This article from a 1956 edition of Popular Electronics magazine relates some of the cases experienced by guys in the FCC Field Engineering and Monitoring Bureau's according to "Negotiated Rulemaking Committee" (NRMC - now defunct) records...

Product Review: Hewlett-Packard HP-25

Product Review: Hewlett-Packard HP-25 Programmable Scientific Calculator, October 1976 QST - RF CafeThe Hewlett Packard HP-25 programmable scientific calculator was initially introduced in 1975 at a retail price of $195. It was considered ground-breaking because of its size and the number of functions available. Thirty pushbutton keys including two second function keys provided more than seventy-two overall types of inputs, most of which could be incorporated in program steps (up to 49 operations). This was not HP's first programmable calculator, but the price point put it in reach of hobbyists and school kids. The original model would lose its program at power down, but the HP-25C, which came out in 1976, had battery-backed memory (called "continuous memory by HP) that was retained even when turned off. By the time this product review appeared in a 1976 issue of QST magazine, the price had dropped to around $135. Here is the HP Museum entry for the HP-25 calculator. A functional HP-25 calculator can be purchased on eBay...

Sawtooth Sticklers Quiz

Sawtooth Sticklers Quiz, November 1960 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeHere is an unusual twist in waveform recognition presented by Radio-Electronics' and Popular Electronics' quizmaster, Robert Balin. If you happen to be a former analog television repairman, then you will probably recognize the answers based on your many years of diagnosing faulty horizontal or vertical sweep circuits. If not, then you might need to strain the "little gray cells" a bit, as Agatha Christie's premier sleuth Hercule Poirot might say. The instructions say to assume that if you choose the horizontal sweep sawtooth to be the errant signal, then assume the vertical sweep sawtooth is correct, and vice versa. Right off the bat, waveform 8 is unique enough to easily identify the sweep that would produce it since only one has two repeating components. Most of the others can be readily deduced, too, by mentally following the x and y points as the "correct" sweep...

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle January 12

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle January 12, 2020 - RF CafeAs with my hundreds of previous engineering and science-themed crossword puzzles, this one for January 12, 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.

For the Record: The Flat Age

For the Record: The Flat Age, July 1955 Radio & Television News - RF CafeRadio & Television News editor Oliver Reed wrote in this 1955 issue about the "flattening" of electronics - including both individual components and overall assembled products. He described a large screen, wall-mountable television system with built-in flat stereo electrostatic speakers. "The so-called 'picture on the wall' television screen has also received widespread publicity although such a screen is not yet commercially available. In this system, a flat screen is connected to the TV receiver by means of a cable, and the picture is formed on the screen electronically." That is a lot like a large flat LCD or LED monitor being fed by an HDMI cable from a computer. Mr. Reed also writes of a magnetic tape video playback system akin to what eventually became the VHS / VCR. Evidently the concept of an optical-based storage medium like the DVD and Blu-ray disk was too far out of the realm of possibility...

Versatile Voltage, Power, and Decibel Nomograms

Versatile Voltage, Power, and Decibel Nomograms, August 1962 Electronics World - RF CafeAugust 1962 was a good month for lovers of nomographs and infographics. Electronics World magazine published three articles feeding the mania, including this one, Sound | Audio | Music Infographic, and Coil-Winding Charts. All make good printed references to keep on-hand. One nomograph converts the ratio of two power levels (in watts, milliwatts, etc.) to equivalent decibels of gain. It can also be used to find the unknown power level if one is known and the gain in dB is known. The other nomograph facilitates graphically calculating voltage or power based on the source resistance (assumed to have only real components; i.e., no complex values). If you are not sure how to keep units constant for voltage, power, and resistance (milli, micro, etc.), calculate using the base units and then convert afterward...

High Power Crystal Set

High Power Crystal Set, August 1960 Popular Electronics - RF CafeMost regular RF Cafe visitors will probably not be too interested in this 1960 Popular Electronics magazine article, but there are a lot of people who build and/or repair vintage radio gear and search the Internet for helpful information. Having built a couple crystal radio sets as a kid, I've always been amazed at how a few picowatts of RF energy can be received, processed, and heard through an ear plug without the need for external power from a battery. Speaking of crystal radios, I remember one time while working as an electrician in Annapolis, Maryland, (prior to entering electronics) I had a telephone handset for use in communicating with other electricians in a building I was wiring, and it picked up the local AM radio station. A pair of the old style handsets with carbon microphones would, with the help of a single 'D' cell in series, function as a very acceptable intercom system using two standard electrical wires between them...

GE 7-4305C Clock Radio Motor Repair

GE 7-4305C Clock Radio Motor Repair - RF CafeThe synchronous motor in my vintage General Electric Model 7-4305C Roll-Down Number Clock Radio began making grinding noises. An investigation showed it was the 3.6 rpm AC synchronous motor. It was tightly sealed, so I carefully drilled an 1/8" hole in the housing (being sure not to get metal debris inside), inserted a few drops of 3-in-1 oil and shook it around, then re-installed it, plugged it back in and voila - no more noise! (see photos). BTW, if you can even find these motors on eBay, they cost more than an entire clock-radio. Fortunately, I found another 7-4305C at a yard sale so I have a spare...

Transmitters Towed Through Air Tests Antenna's Radiation Pattern

Transmitters Towed Through Air Tests Antenna's Radiation Pattern, October 18, 1965 Electronics Magazine - RF Cafe"Xeledop" is the Word of the Day for October 31; use it often. Xeledop is an acronym for "transmitting elementary dipole with optional polarity." Nope, I've never heard of it, either. The Xeledop (probably pronounced "zeh'-le-dop") is an air-towed transmitter that flies a pre-planned path around the ground-based antenna under test (AUT) whose radiation pattern is being measured. The circular power level plot at the bottom of the page shows the results of an actual test flight. In this application, a high frequency (HF, 3-30 MHz) transmitter is towed behind an airplane like target drone while it broadcasts signals at eight distinct frequencies toward the AUT, while the downstream receiver records power levels. The pilot flies on the surface of an imaginary hemisphere to maintain a constant radius from the antenna. Ground equipment tracks the aircraft azimuth and slant range is calculated using aircraft altimeter data and measured elevation angles...

Schematic Symbol Stamps

Schematic Symbol Stamps, October 1953 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeEven in this time of readily available computers (including your smartphone) and printers, having a set of rubber stamps for common electronics symbols would be pretty handy; there are some Neanderthals among us who still use pencil and paper on occasion. Simpler symbols like resistors and capacitors are easy enough to sketch by hand, but something like a dual gate MOSFET with diode protection can take some time to produce legibly. Common connector types like the DB signal/power series and some RF kinds (BNC, SMA, etc.) would be useful, as would a set of oft-used logic gates for the digital designers. The set shown here in a 1953 edition of Radio-Electronics magazine includes a handful of vacuum tube types which would have taken some time to draw by hand, and a few other symbols...

Who is Liable?

Who is Liable?, February 1953 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeMost of us probably never give much thought to how vulnerable we could be in a lawsuit related to our professional activities - until it's too late. That is particularly true if you are not directly involved in the sales or service business. Even when it is reasonable to believe that there is no way a jury or judge could find you liable for a charge levied against you, the skill of a talented lawyer and/or whims and prejudices of judges and/or jurors can doom you. Although a bit dated, the legal cases cited in this Radio-Electronics article give a little insight into why you would do well to give some thought to what the consequences of your actions and/or statements might invite if someone decides you have offended him or her. Remember that settled legal cases are regarded as precedence...

Essentials of Expressing Measurement Uncertainty

Essentials of Expressing Measurement Uncertainty - RF CafeI when I originally posted NIST Technical Note 1297, it had the name "Essentials of Expressing Measurement Uncertainty." Since that time, the NIST website changed its link to the updated version which now goes by the title of "Guidelines for Evaluating and Expressing the Uncertainty of NIST Measurement Results." It includes a lot of new data; in fact, it has been nearly totally re-written. This is a valuable reference for anyone who needs to understand the proper method for calculating measurement uncertainties. Preface to the 1994 Edition The previous edition, which was the first, of this National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Technical Note (TN 1297) was initially published in January 1993...

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...

Understanding Wave Physics

Understanding Wave Physics - RF CafeHere is the electromagnetic wave section of the "Wireless Networking in the Developing World," book (open source). "Wireless communications make use of electromagnetic waves to send signals across long distances. From a user's perspective, wireless connections are not particularly different from any other network connection: your web browser, email, and other applications all work as you would expect. But radio waves have some unexpected properties compared to Ethernet cable. For example, it's very easy to see the path that an Ethernet cable takes: locate the plug sticking out of your computer, follow the cable to the other end, and you've found it! You can also be confident that running many Ethernet cables alongside each other won't cause problems, since the cables effectively keep their signals contained within the wire itself. But how do you know where the waves emanating from your wireless device are going..."

Of Zerts, Plenches and Spunfits

Of Zerts, Plenches and Spunfits - RF CafeThe manned space program has unarguably provided mankind with many new and innovative tools, medicines, electronics, materials, physics, materials, appliances, and mathematics. Known officially as "spinoffs," products include items like the portable heart defibrillator unit, the portable vacuum cleaner, freeze-drying food processors, powdered lubricants, memory foam, quartz clocks and battery-powered tools. Many NASA inventions have not found an application in your basement or garage, however, because their purpose is too specialized. Take, for instance, the ZeRT, or Zero Reaction Tool...

Use it up, Wear it out, Make it do, Or do without

Use it up, Wear it out, Make it do, Or do without, March 1944 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe"Use it up... Wear it out... Make it do... Or do without" - what a great slogan! It was coined by the War Advertising Council during World War II to promote the dual need to conserve scarce resources and to help keep prices down by not generating excess demand. Most of us have seen videos or read articles about neighborhood materials collection efforts to round up old tires, scrap metal, glass, tools, electronics equipment, cloth and clothing, and many other items that could be recycled for used directly in the war effort. There was also an undertone of not abetting attempts by opportunists to profiteer off the war. Government policy did what it could to control the economy by instituting severely progressive income taxes and price controls (that way only the ultimate insiders could get rich). After 11.3% and 7.6% inflation rates...

Axiom Test Equipment - RF Cafe
withwave microwave devices - RF Cafe

Innovative Power Products (IPP) Directional Couplers

Anatech Electronics RF Microwave Filters - RF Cafe