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Three Letter Quiz

Three Letter Quiz, January 1964 Popular Electronics - RF CafeOf all the ones to miss on this "Three Letter Quiz," I screwed up drawing "A." It was a matter of thinking too hard (at least that's my excuse). This is another of Robert P. Balin's many electronics-related quizzes that appeared in Popular Electronics magazine over a couple of decades. I will once again admonish non-old guys (unlike myself) to not spaz when you see a vacuum tube in the circuit. Just mentally replace it with an equivalent semiconductor device (a diode if it has two elements - other than a heater coil - or a transistor if it has three or more elements). Surely, you will easily figure our "A," and probably the other nine as well...

Analysis of Radio Interference Phenomena

Analysis of Radio Interference Phenomena, June 1946 Radio News - RF CafeImage response, harmonic of the IF, direct IF response, harmonics of the oscillator, combination of the IF, heterodyne oscillator radiation, cross modulation within the receiver, cross modulation external to the receiver, same channel beat, adjacent channel beat and monkey chatter are all sources of radio interference addressed in this article that appeared in a 1946 edition of Radio News. I don't know about you, but I've never heard of the term "monkey chatter." According to the troubleshooting table it is, "Unintelligible modulation superimposed upon desired station, having the character of 'inverted speech...

Generator Taps Freezing Void of Space

Generator Taps Freezing Void of Space - RF Cafe"Engineers at the University of California, Davis, have created a device capable of producing mechanical energy at night by taking advantage of the warmth near the ground and the extreme cold of outer space. This approach could support practical uses such as moving air through greenhouses or other structures. The research was recently published in the journal Science Advances. The device is based on a Stirling engine, a type of machine that operates using temperature differences. According to Jeremy Munday, professor of electrical and computer engineering at UC Davis and co-author of the study, many engines, including internal combustion engines..."

Carl & Jerry: The Electronic Beach Buggy

Carl & Jerry: Electronic Beach Buggy, September 1956 Popular Electronics - RF CafeYou can go into Walmart or Radio Shack (though not for much longer) and pick up a pretty decent handheld metal detector for under $100 these days, but in the 1950s even a rudimentary metal detector was a rather large and heavy contraption. So unwieldy were they that most had a belt clip and shoulder straps to help support and manipulate them. That was the situation facing teen electronics aficionados Carl and Jerry as they pondered how to leverage their combined technical prowess to facilitate a thorough combing of the nearby Lake Michigan beach area for treasures of coins, watches, jewelry, cigarette lighters, and other metallic objects given up as lost by weekend seekers...

Simple Dual Proportional R/C System

Simple Dual Proportional R/C System, September 1956 Popular Electronics - Airplanes and Rockets (and Telescopes, Cars, Helicopters, Boats)If you are relatively new to radio control (R/C) operation, whether for the latest "drone" craze (technically multi-rotor aircraft), model cars, model boats, helicopters, or airplanes - or even robots, then you might be interested in discovering a little about the systems which pioneers in the sport had to work with. In the mid 1950s when this article appeared in Popular Electronics magazine, multi-rotors and helicopters were not even in the list of model types. As with radios and television sets, before the convenience and performance increase brought about by the advent of solid state components, R/C modelers struggled with vacuum tube equipment, too. If you are old enough to remember needing to re-tune your radio or TV occasionally due to...

What's New?

What's New?, December 1959 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeThe dawn of the "Space Race" was in the late 1950s, when the USA and USSR were vying to be the first to place a satellite in orbit around Earth, and then to see who could exploit the communications benefits of those platforms most advantageously. At the same time, radio astronomy was gaining ground quickly as gigantic new parabolic dishes were being constructed to "listen" to signals from stars and hot, nebulous gases deep in space. Early concepts for communications satellites did not very accurately predict what real-world satellites would look like, as can be seen in this 1959 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine's "What New?" feature...

Radar Engineering Crossword Puzzle

Radar Engineering Crossword Puzzle for March 1, 2015 - RF CafeI stopped creating the RF Cafe engineering and science themed crossword puzzles at the end of January in order to test the interest in them. Although not much feedback has been received, enough came in to motivate me to resume creating them. I actually enjoy making them, but it can take up to an hour to make each crossword by the time I decide which version to use, and then go through and manually format the images and text. Enjoy....

1950s Semiconductor Making Massive Comeback

1950s Semiconductor Making Massive Comeback - RF Cafe"Scientists from the University of Warwick and the National Research Council of Canada have set a new record by creating and measuring the highest 'hole mobility' ever observed in a material that works with standard silicon technology. Today's semiconductor devices are typically built from Silicon (Si). As these components become increasingly compact and tightly packed, they generate more heat and begin to approach fundamental performance limits. Germanium (Ge), which appeared in some of the earliest transistors of the 1950s, is gaining renewed attention as researchers look for ways to take..."

Carl & Jerry: Extra Sensory Perception

Carl & Jerry: Extra Sensory Perception, December 1956 Popular Electronics - RF CafeCarl and Jerry were early adopters of the near field communications (NFC) craze that is going full-swing today. The often harmlessly mischievous teenage duo used their combined grasp of modern electronics to pull off gags on unsuspecting friends... and sometime adversaries. In this episode, a near-field transmitter and receiver pair is designed to help Carl bedazzle a scientist who was attempting to disprove the ability to use extrasensory perception (ESP) to determining what another person was thinking about. In this case it was detecting which playing card was being displayed on an overhead projector. Of course Carl didn't really have "the gift," but relied on his co-conspirator, Jerry...

Morse Code Translator Added to Espresso Engineering Workbook

Morse Code Translator Added to Espresso Engineering Workbook - RF CafeRelease 12.14.2025 of RF Cafe's amazing Espresso Engineering Workbook is now available for download. As always, it is provided FREE of charge, compliments of my dedicated advertisers. The newest calculator translates any text string into Morse code. I tried to get an audio output to work, but Excel does not have a built-in sound generator, so the resulting noise it makes is really awful; you would have hated it. You're welcome.

Frequency & Time Standards

Frequency & Time Standards, August 1964 Electronics World - RF CafeIt was not until 1963 that the International Committee of Weights and Measures (CIPM) adopted the cesium clock as the world scientific community's standard time reference. It boasted an accuracy that kept it within 1.1 parts in 100 billion, meaning it would not gain or lose more than a second in 3 thousand years. To show how far technology has advanced since 1963, in April of 2014 the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) launched a new atomic clock called NIST-F2 (also cesium-based) to serve as a new U.S. civilian time and frequency standard. NIST-F2 would neither gain nor lose one second in about 300 million years - a factor of 10 thousand. According to the U.S. Navy's official Time.Gov website, the Internet time reported on my computer was 1 minute and...

Billions of Electronic Facts

Billions of Electronic Facts, December 1959 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeIn his 1959 Radio-Electronics magazine editorial, Hugo Gernsback envisioned a "National Facts Center" - a government-run repository where all global scientific knowledge would be coded, cross-indexed, and accessible via computers. He argued that researchers were drowning in uncoordinated information, leading to wasted effort and redundant discoveries, like the "electronic cigarette" concept which had been documented decades earlier. His solution anticipated key aspects of the Internet: a centralized, searchable database that could deliver relevant facts within seconds, drawn from worldwide sources. What he does not allow for is the propensity for corrupt information - both intentional and not - to be inserted into the system, thereby "poisoning the well...

Training with Visual Aids

Training with Visual Aids, October 1945 Radio News - RF CafeLong before there was Power Point, presentations at training seminars were conducted using overhead projectors and larger-than-life props of the devices being taught. The U.S. Navy, during World War II, set up a special facility called the Visual Aid Model Shop located at Radio Chicago, Chicago, Illinois. Its charter was to design and build very large scale models of equipment and tools that service personnel used while performing their duties. It is kind of funny to look at the sizes of some of the items, like the 8x size radio chassis assembly shown in this article's main photograph. As a life-long model builder myself, I would have loved to work in a shop like that building torso-size electrolytic capacitors and potentiometer...

AMC Intros 3 New Models

Anatech Electronics Intros 3 New Models for December 2025 - RF CafeAnatech Microwave Company (AMC) offers the industry's largest portfolio of high-performance standard and customized RF and microwave filters and filter-related products for military, commercial, aerospace and defense, and industrial applications up to 40 GHz. Three new models have been added to the product line in November, including a 1700-1900 MHz directional coupler with a coupling of 20 ±0.5 dB, a 250 watt terminator with frequency range from DC to 2.5 GHz, and a 2 dB SMA attenuator with a frequency range...

Thordarson Christmas Advertisement

Thordarson Christmas Advertisement, December 1929 QST - RF CafeThis advertisement from Thordarson is from one of my oldest editions of the American Radio Relay League's QST magazine - December 1929. Thordarson Electric Manufacturing Company was founded in Chicago, Illinois, by Chester H. Thordarson in 1895. He was the first producer of industrial and commercial transformers. They are still in business today. Thordarson patented more than 30 inventions for transformer design and manufacturing back in its early days, including the still most popular form of laminations, the scrapless "E and I." Many discussions are available on various transformer lamination configurations, including the very common "E and I" types...

Pilotless Plane Run by Radio

Pilotless Plane Run by Radio, May 1946 Radio News - RF CafeNews reports are full of features about the wave of radio controlled (R/C) "drones" terrorizing citizens with their often inexperienced pilots navigating their camera-laden craft to peer into bedroom windows, obtain "birds-eye" views of sporting events, and to be a general pain in the posterior to people trying to enjoy their right to privacy and safety (except, of course, unless it is the Government choosing to violate them). Incredible advances in radio, navigation, and sensor systems has facilitated a wide variety of very affordable multirotor (the correct term, not "drone") aircraft that can literally fly themselves. For under $500 you can buy a GPS-guided multirotor that can be programmed...

Thanks Again to Centric RF for Long-Time Support

Centric RF microwave components - RF CafeCentric RF is a company offering from stock various RF and Microwave coaxial components, including attenuators, adapters, cable assemblies, terminations, power dividers, and more. We believe in offering high performance parts from stock at a reasonable cost. Frequency ranges of 0-110 GHz at power levels from 0.5-500 watts are available off the shelf. We have >500,000 RF and Microwave passive components we can ship you today! We offer Quality Precision Parts, Competitive Pricing, Easy Shopping, Fast Delivery. We're happy to provide custom parts, such as custom cables and adapters, to fit your needs. Centric RF is currently seeking distributors, so please contact us if interested. Visit Centric RF today.

Circuit Boards Are Getting Better

Circuit Boards are Getting Better, December 1959 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeThis 1959 Radio-Electronics magazine article details a transitional phase in PCB technology, where manufacturers were responding to service technicians' concerns by implementing significant usability improvements. Key features included color-coded conductors for circuit tracing, board-edge connectors for easy removal, and "road-mapped" overlays replicating circuitry on the component side. Innovations like Westinghouse's "See-Matic" board functioned as a built-in schematic with component symbols printed directly on the conductor side. Boards were single or double-sided, utilized wax coatings and solder-resist...

What is Q?

What is Q?, October 1963 Electronics World - RF Cafe"Q" is an often used term to describe the electrical "quality" of a circuit or component, and for the most part anyone engaged in the conversation (verbally or via reading) understands the concept. However, having a firm grasp on the technical ramifications is required if you happen to be a circuit or system designer and need to conform to certain specifications. "Q" can be good or bad, depending on your needs. If, for example, you need a narrowband receiver to reject adjacent signals or you are designing a high stability and spectrally clean oscillator, then you want all the "Q" you can get. On the other hand, if your goal is to receive a spread spectrum signal or generate white noise across...

"Silicon Valley" Coined by Electronic Design Mag

"Silicon Valley" Coined by Electronic Design Magazine - RF cafe"The Heinz Nixdorf MuseumsForum (HNF), in the city of Paderborn, Germany, occupies the former headquarters of the Nixdorf Computer AG, the country's biggest computer builder of the 1970s and 1980s. Founded in 1996, the HNF calls itself the largest computer museum in the world. HNF recently opened a new gallery about Silicon Valley and early microcomputers. In preparation for the gallery's opening, some historical facts about the Valley and its name were researched for the HNF's weblog. In 1977, West German newsmagazine Der Spiegel put 'Silicon Valley' in quotation marks. It has since become a household name. Geographically, it refers..."

Down-to-Earth Discussion: Resistance of a Ground

Down-To-Earth Discussion - Resistance of a Ground, October 1963 Electronics World - RF CafeFor some reason the subject of grounding has been very prominent in my reading in the last few days. The chapter I just finished reading in one of David Herres' books on the National Electric Code (NEC) covering grounding of commercial and residential services, an article by H. Ward Silver in QST titled, "Grounding and Bonding Systems," and now this article by John T. Frye (of Carl and Jerry fame) on grounding, makes for a wealth of knowledge. Mr. Frye takes a unique approach at teaching by exploiting his gift for story-telling. In this article, electronics repair shop owner Mac give technician Barney a nice bit of tutelage on what constitutes a good Earth ground and what does not. In some...

RF Cascade Workbook Update - You'll Love It!

RF Cascade Workbook™ vL (User Values Reset, Component Parameter Swapping)- RF CafeNew! Reset button to put all user parameters at default values, streamlined VBA code, updated Help, and more... For more than two decades, RF Cascade Workbook™ has been the de facto standard for spreadsheet-based RF system cascade analysis. Chances are you have never used a spreadsheet quite like this. Extensive use of VBA code enables complex calculations and automated user interface features that make the experience more like a software program than a spreadsheet. Using RF Cascade Workbook™ is as easy as any other Excel spreadsheet, and it allows you to make modifications to the cells and charts if your expertise is sufficient...

Many Thanks to Exodus Advanced Communications for Their 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.

Radar Reaches the Moon

Radar Reaches the Moon, April 1946 Radio News - RF Cafe"These pulses speed toward the moon at the fantastic speed of light... through the ionosphere and on into the unknown void surrounding the earth's atmosphere [emphasis added]." Hard as it might be to imagine nowadays, in 1946 there was no empirical data regarding the Earth's upper atmosphere other than the few instrumented sounding rockets that had been launched for studies. Orbiting man-made communications satellites were still a decade away when engineers at the Evans Signal Corps Engineering Laboratory in New Jersey made the first Earth-Moon-Earth (EME, aka 'moon bounce') signal bounce using a massive radar and antenna that blasted 10 MW EIRP pulse at the lunar surface. It was a big deal then; it's no big deal today. Amateur radio hobbyists routinely conduct EME...

War Comes! ...and Goes

War Comes! January 1942 QST - RF CafeIt came as no surprise to amateur radio operators that their operational privileges would be curtailed immediately after the United States was drawn into World War II following the Japanese Imperial Navy's attack on Pearl Harbor. After all they were subject to the same kind of restriction during WWI. Just as President Woodrow Wilson issued an executive order prohibiting unauthorized transmissions by amateurs, President Roosevelt had the FCC ban the radio transmissions of Hams. The fear was that enemy intelligence gathering posts would be able to divulge sensitive information via "coded" broadcasts, as well as the unintentional providing...

News Briefs

News Briefs, December 1959 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeThe electronics and communications worlds were on fast-forward in 1959 when this "News Briefs" column was published in Radio-Electronics magazine. Space exploration featured Explorer VII's launch to study radiation belts with advanced instrumentation. A pioneering "Stratovision" project planned airborne educational TV broadcasts across six Midwestern states using DC-7 aircraft. Communications developments included the world's most powerful naval transmitter in Maine for submarine communication and Bell Labs' experiments with passive satellite balloons for intercontinental microwave...

Technical Headlines - RF Cafe

• 700 Nokia Jobs Gone in Germany

• SSTV Images Beamed from ISS to Celebrate 25 Years

• Manufacturing down for 9th Month in November

• Regulatory Standards for EMC Compliance

• Murata Leads RF Front-End Patent Race

Today in Science History - RF Cafe
Homepage Archives - RF Cafe

The RF Cafe Homepage Archive is a comprehensive collection of every item appearing daily on this website since 2008 - and many from earlier years. Many thousands of pages of unique content have been added since then.

Tips for Technicians

Tips for Technicians, May 1967 Electronics World - RF CafeI know I keep saying this, but it keeps being true so I say it again: The basics of electricity and electronics have not changed in the last 75 or more years, so these articles from vintage issues of electronics magazines are as applicable today as they were back then. If you are just getting into the field of electronics, valuable information can be found here to supplement your learning process. In fact, I have seen examples in some of these articles where I re-learned something long-ago forgotten, and some of the stuff is rarely, if ever, seen in contemporary writings. Regardless, making yourself aware of the work done by pioneers in the industry is always valuable because it gives you a sense of approaches taken that have led to success, and sometimes...

Electronics-Themed Comics

Electronics-Themed Comics, May 1963 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeAs were the majority of electronics-related comics from the 1950s and 1960s, this set of four from a 1963 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine had themes related to home entertainment devices (radios, television, and stereos) and computers. Keep in mind that almost all equipment used vacuum tubes rather than semiconductors. There was no such thing as a home / personal computer then, either. The public was dealing with the introduction and integration of computers into everyday life, so they (computers) were subject to ridicule and criticism - legitimately. Those were the days where programs consisted of cardboard "punched cards" that were placed in a stack into the computer, which would "read" the presence or absence of rectangular holes as "0"s or "1"s. Most used an 12 row by 80 column format, accommodating 80 words of 6 or 8 bits each. Southern Senior High School, from which I graduated in 1976, had a small computer which used punched cards...

PS Magazine: The Preventative Maintenance Monthly

PS Magazine: The Preventative Maintenance Monthly, Kirt's Cogitations #328 - RF CafeA few times in the past I have mentioned the U.S. Army's long-running comic-book-style of training material for vehicle maintenance. It began in 1940 under the title of The Army Motors and ran through the end of World War II. In June 1951, at the beginning of the Korean War, the publication was re-introduced as PS Magazine - The Preventative Maintenance Monthly, where the "PS" part stands for "Post Script," a la the "p.s." you might put at the end of a written letter. In this case the "p.s." is a post script to the regular Army vehicle maintenance manuals. I recently happened to run across the RadioNerds.com's extensive section on PS Magazine, and it is a treasure trove of downloadable PDF versions of the magazines. As you can see from the cover illustrations and the contents, its appeal was primarily to the predominantly male vehicle maintenance force...

Electronics Theme Crossword Puzzle for October 9th

Electronics Theme Crossword Puzzle for October 9th, 2022 - RF CafeThis week's crossword puzzle for October 9th sports an electronics theme. All RF Cafe crossword puzzles are custom made by me, Kirt Blattenberger, and have 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!

Industrial Chemistry - It Meets Demands of War

Industrial Chemistry - It Meets Demands of War, March 23, 1942 Life - RF CafeIn 1942 and throughout the War Years, Life magazine (and many others) ran many articles promoting industries, services, organizations, and individuals who contributed toward our ultimate victory. Of course no one knew for certain that we would prevail in the end, but if it hadn't turned out that way, it wouldn't have been for lack of effort and sacrifice. Part of the objective was to inform the populace about how the country was pooling its resources - physical, labor, and mental - to defeat the Axis Powers that sought to takeover the world. This particular issue of Life focused on the chemical industry, with the raw materials and processes used to produce needed products both for fuel and for the base components of other finished goods. Sulphur, potassium, and coal mining and processing, along with petroleum, common table salt, and air and water were some of the most fundamental ingredients of every other item needed to aid the effort. Ever hear of Ameriopl rubber?

Lens-Like Antenna: Low Noise, Less Space

Lens-Like Antenna: Low Noise, Less Space, February 28, 1964 Electronics Magazine - RF CafeThis is the first article I have posted from a magazine called, simply, Electronics. It is very different from all the other vintage electronics magazines I have used in the past. Electronics is much more focused on military, space, and fundamental research. New issues were published bi-weekly by McGraw-Hill from 1930 until 1988. About half the editions (this is not one of them) had two to three times as many pages as the other half, with most of the extra pages being advertisements. The publishers must have made a fortune on advertising revenue. My guess is that the vast majority of the companies appearing in the early 1960s issues I bought on eBay do not exist anymore, having either gone out of business or having been acquired by bigger...

Microwaves Themed Crossword Puzzle for July 31st

Microwaves Themed Crossword Puzzle for July 31st, 2022 - RF CafeHere is your custom made Microwaves Themed Crossword Puzzle for July 31st, 2022. All RF Cafe crossword puzzles are custom made by me, Kirt Blattenberger, and have 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!

Lee de Forest and the Navy

Lee de Forest and the Navy, January 1947 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe This is another of the articles written about Lee de Forest that appeared in the January 1947 issue of Radio-Craft magazine, in celebration of the 40-year anniversary since the industry-changing Audio vacuum tube was invented. Author George H. Clark, a member of the first "radio-man" to be graduated from the Massachusetts of Technology (MIT), was, in addition to working for Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company, RCA, and the Telegraph and Telephone Company, the U.S. Navy's "Sub-inspector of Wireless Telegraph Stations." He dealt extensively with de Forest regarding installation and operation of radio systems both on ships and on shore. Interestingly, he mentions that the first Audions were used as detectors more so than as signal amplifiers, which in fact was de Forest's original goal (a more sensitive detector) in his experimentation...

A Primer on Capacitors - What Is a Capacitor?

A Primer on Capacitors - What Is a Capacitor?, October 1954 Popular Electronics - RF CafeA timeless introduction for newcomers to electronics, this article in the 1954 Popular Electronics - the very first issue - presents the basics of what a capacitor is and how it works. As you might expect in a premier edition of an electronics hobbyist magazine, a lot of fundamental information was introduced over a wide range of topics including resistor and capacitor color codes, neon bulbs, televisions, radio control model airplanes, amateur radio, home-built electronics projects, electronic products kit building, model trains, stereo hi-fi equipment, solar cells, and more. Popular Electronics pretty much stayed that course for the first decade, and then began to adjust content to address new technologies...

Bell Telephone Laboratories Punch Cards

Bell Telephone Laboratories Punch Cards, March 1955 Radio & Televsion News - RF CafePunch cards have been used in computer systems since the very early days of digital programming. They were probably the first form of read-only memory (ROM), come to think of it. I hate to have to admit it, but the meager computer used in my high school computer lab (circa early-mid 1970s) used punched cards. I never took the class, but stories abounded of how pranksters would shuffle a stack of punch cards while the student programmer wasn't watching and then get a good laugh when nothing worked. There are also plenty of cases where a stack was inadvertently knocked onto the floor and had to be laboriously re-ordered. IBM is the brand that comes to most people's minds when thinking about the old punched card computer systems, but other companies like NCR (National Cash Register), HP (Hewlett-Packard), DEC (Digital Equipment Corporation), and plenty of others others...

Improving the Receiver Using a Screen-Grid Coupling Stage

Improving the Receiver Using a Screen-Grid Coupling Stage, December 1931 QST - RF CafeIn December of 1931, the discovery of deuterium (aka "heavy water") was announced by Harold Urey, Japan abandoned the gold standard, the New York Metropolitan Opera broadcasted an entire opera over radio for the first time (on Christmas day), and the ARRL's QST magazine published an article about how to improve a receiver by using a screen-grid coupling stage on vacuum tubes. A "tickler coil" is introduced via a tuned circuit to provide a small amount of positive feedback to the grid in order to make the amplifier stage more sensitive in the band of interest. Care needed to be taken to avoid so much feedback that oscillations could occur. As with most of these old articles I post, while the exact application might not be relevant in today's world of electronics, the basic principles are certainly timeless...

15 Things We Do Know About Phono Cartridges

15 Things We Do Know About Phono Cartridges, June 1971 Popular Electronics - RF CafeAs the planet's population grows older and people have an increasing amount of disposable income and spare time, the opportunity to engage in nostalgic endeavors has gone up. That includes collecting, restoring, and operating equipment and peripherals that were the mainstay of their lives during their halcyon days of youth. In recognition of the new marketing opportunities, industries are popping up to feed the frenzy. Look no farther than eBay and the amount of vintage items available for purchase - at ever increasing prices. Having myself been an eBay buyer of memorabilia from my early model airplane, model rockets, and electronics hobbies, I have watched prices soar in many cases. Turntables (aka phonographs, or for the lowbrow types, record players) are being manufactured again...

Spur Web™ Mixer Spurious Product Finder

Spur Web(tm) mixer spurious chart - RF CafeHere is a reprint of an article I had published in Wireless Design & Development magazine in 1995. Some of the references are a bit dated, but the info is all still very useful. Waypoint Software is now RF Cafe, and TxRx Designer is now Shareware by the name of RF Workbench. With the advent of high speed personal computers, a very insightful graphical method of determining inband mixer spurious products has been largely forgotten. The Spur Web™ (my name trademark, but used widely w/o attribution) chart rapidly identifies both inband and out-of-band spurs, affording a pictorial view of where conversion system frequencies lie with respect to all spur products. A comparison will be presented between the Spur Web chart method and the common numerical method...

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 average 225,000 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...

Acoustic Surface-Wave Devices

Acoustic Surface-Wave Devices, March 1971 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe"Praetersonic" - now that's a word you don't run up against very often. It is a combination of praeter* (beyond) and sonic (related to sounds), or what more familiarly is called ultrasonic. If fact, praetersonics was the early term given to surface acoustic wave (SAW) piezoelectric devices. Amazingly, even as far back as the early 1970s, SAW filters were being fabricated that worked in the 40 MHz realm. This Popular Electronics article does a really nice job of introducing the basics of SAW and BAW (bulk acoustic wave) technology at the time it was coming into the mainstream. Lots of hurdles still needed to be overcome, like high insertion loss, difficult to control impedances and internal signal reflections, etc. As with many new technologies, pundits cast hopeful prediction...

Howard W. Sams Photofact Service

Howard W. Sams & Co., Inc. Photofact Service, May 1948 Radio-Craft - RF CafeI and many people who visit RF Cafe tend to do our own repair and maintenance work whenever possible. Having had this obsession for as long as I can remember, there is no doubt that the ready availability of service information and how-to aids available on the Internet not only makes the job easier, but also makes things possible that could never have been achieved a couple decades ago. When I needed to put new rotors and brakes on my 2011 Jeep Patriot last month, a quick search turned up multiple videos of people demonstrating how to do it. Sure, I've done dozens of brake jobs and am fairly comfortable with what might be involved, but being able to watch a beginning-to-end video before diving into it is really nice. My trusty Hanes repair manual was on-hand, but a couple black and white photos and terse instructions usually do not describe the complete environment. A couple years ago when my gas-fired furnace would light and cut off after a few seconds, an Internet search turned up the likely cause...

Winding Your Own Output Transformers

Winding Your Own Output Transformers, September 1970 Popular Electronics - RF CafeEven if you no longer - or never did - have the need to wind your own audio frequency output impedance matching transformers, this article from a 1970 issue of Popular Electronics magazine provides good insight into the factors necessary for consideration when doing so. One particularly nice feature here is that power handling is taken into account, including wire size to use for the primary and secondary (or multiple outputs). At audio frequencies, where the transformer is driving speakers with typical impedances of 4, 8, or 16 ohms, you do not need to worry too much about parasitic capacitance and inductance. The basic equations do a pretty good job of predicting performance. Author Ed Francis explains how to modify a junk-box laminated core transformer to work, as well as providing a table of enameled wire size ampacities and turns per linear inch. An example of how to perform all the steps is given...

Electronics-Themed Comics from a 1958 Radio-Electronics

Electronics-Themed Comics September 1958 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeGood, clean humor has always been a welcome addition to my day whether it comes in the form of a printed comic strip, a TV show, or someone's mouth. My father's side of the family was populated with many jokesters who could be counted on to deliver an ad hoc pun or zinger at the appropriate moment. The environment instilled a great appreciation for such entertainment, so these electronics-themed comics that appeared in editions of Radio-Electronics, Popular Electronics, et al, are a refreshing distraction from the workaday world. An old saying claims "laughter is the best medicine," and while it cannot cure cancer, a good dose of humor often helps ease the pain...

Espresso Engineering Workbook