Search RFC: |                                     
Please support my efforts by ADVERTISING!
About | Sitemap | Homepage Archive
Serving a Pleasant Blend of Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow™
Vintage Magazines
Electronics World
Popular Electronics
Radio & TV News
QST | Pop Science
Popular Mechanics
Radio-Craft
Radio-Electronics
Short Wave Craft
Electronics | OFA
Saturday Eve Post
Alliance Test | Isotec
Please Support My Advertisers!
RF Cafe Sponsors
Aegis Power | Centric RF | RFCT
Empwr RF | Reactel | SF Circuits

Formulas & Data

Electronics | RF
Mathematics
Mechanics | Physics


Calvin & Phineas

kmblatt83@aol.com

Resources

Articles, Forums, Radar
Magazines, Museum
Radio Service Data
Software, Videos


Artificial Intelligence

Entertainment

Crosswords, Humor Cogitations, Podcast
Quotes, Quizzes

Parts & Services

1000s of Listings

        Software:

Please Donate
RF Cascade Workbook | RF Symbols for Office
RF Symbols for Visio | RF Stencils for Visio
Espresso Engineering Workbook <--free
Crane Aerospace & Electronics (RF & Microwave) - RF Cafe

ARRL Is Hiring!

ARRL Is Hiring - RF CafeThe National Association for Amateur Radio® (ARRL) is seeking talented individuals to join our team and help advance the Amateur Radio Service. We are currently hiring for several impactful positions: • RFI Lab Engineer Support ARRL's mission to protect and enhance spectrum access by managing and resolving Radio Frequency Interference (RFI) cases • W1AW Station Manager This is a rare opening and exciting opportunity to lead operations at W1AW • Public Relations & Outreach Manager • Awards Program Supervisor • Development Associate • IT Support Specialist • Logbook of The World Support Associate • Membership Manager...

Visions of 1946

Visions of 1946, December 1936, Radio-Craft - RF CafeDecember is traditionally the issue for magazines to sum up accomplishments of the ending year and make predictions for the next year. Radio-Craft magazine was no exception, but in 1936 they went ten steps farther and prognosticated a decade into the future - all the way to 1946! It is actually a tongue-in-cheek reprint from Pathe News magazine. However, note the drawing of "professor teaches 2 million pupils," where he is instructing via television and the railroad company boss checking in on the conductors en route via wireless teleconferencing. It might have seemed like a pipe dream in 1936, but now it is commonplace. Not only do we now have live classroom broadcasts, but millions of YouTube videos of instruction for performing...

Mac's Service Shop: Automation and the Technician

Mac's Service Shop: Automation and the Technician, July 1961 Electronics World - RF CafeOnce transistorized computers made desktop-sized systems a reality, the sure eventuality of humans being replaced by their electronic equivalents became a popular theme of media pundits. News reports and "special features" on TV at the same time scared citizens concerned for their jobs and assured them that by the year 2000, humans wouldn't need to work anymore anyway because computers and robots would be doing everything for them. The millennium crossover occurred a quarter of a century and a half ago, and looking back it is true that computers and robots have usurped a lot of what used to be done manually, but, as Mac presciently predicts in this story...

Talent Hunt Unearths Junior Scientists

Talent Hunt Unearths Junior Scientists, July 1958 Popular Electronics - RF CafeYou have been warned not to believe anything you see, hear, or read anymore, because of the ability of AI (artificial intelligence) to alter and/or create just about anything. I offer in support of that thesis the two photos shown here. The black and white image was scanned from a 1958 issue of Popular Electronics magazine. I fed it exactly as shown to Gemini 2.5 Flash, along with these simple instructions: "Please clean up the 1958 magazine photo to remove noise, sharpen, and colorize it." You see the result. The AI beast not only perfected the picture, but interpreted its content (an amateur cyclotron, per the article) as a science laboratory scenario and added the appropriate background. Yikes!

Radio Set Prints Newspaper!

Radio Set Prints Newspaper!, April 1934 Radio-Craft - RF CafeWriting about "outdated" methods of radio-based facsimile machine implementation in 1934 seems a bit incredible considering how relatively new both technologies were at the time. Nevertheless, Radio-Craft magazine editor Hugo Gernsback reported on the new era of fax machines that were on display at the 1933 World's Fair in Chicago. Of course fax machines of that time were not exactly desktop models that could be located in a corner of your office or cubicle (not that cubicles were common). If you substitute transistors for vacuum tubes, stepper motors for simple DC motors and solenoids, and solid state lasers and LEDs for incandescent light sources, the fundamentals have not...

ARRL Field Day 2026

ARRL Field Day 2026 - RF Cafe"It's not too early to gear up and get ready for ARRL Field Day! Field Day 2026 takes place June 27 – 28 and will bring together more than 30,000 amateur radio operators for one of the most popular on-the-air events in the US and Canada. This year's Field Day theme is 'Amateur Radio: A National Resource.' Combined with the ARRL Year of the Club, it provides the perfect opportunity for radio clubs to set up stations in public places to demonstrate ham radio's science, skill, and service to our communities and our nation. All of the information you need to get started..."

Radio à la Cortlandt Street!

Radio à la Cortlandt Street!, September 1932 Radio-Craft - RF CafeNew York City has forever, it seems, been the place to be for street vending. A famously large pedestrian populace creates an ideal venue for hacking goods of all sorts to passers-by. A phenomenon in radio was created in the early 1930s with the rapid advances in technology and high volume manufacturing techniques, coupled with increasingly efficient transportation of goods on interconnecting roadways and delivery trucks. The photos included in this Radio-Craft magazine story illustrate the level of enthusiasm by the public for radio. A plethora of replacement components for repairing malfunctioning sets and for scratch-built sets at fantastically low prices helped fuel the fire. An offer of "aluminum chassis" with pre-punched and drilled holes was really surprising not because of the holes, but for...

Wireless Engineering Crossword Puzzle

Wireless Engineering Crossword Puzzle for November 8, 2015 - RF CafeThis week's Wireless Engineering crossword puzzle contains the usual collection of science, math, and engineering terms. Also included are a couple topics that have been in the technical news headlines lately and the names of two new companies advertising on RF Cafe. 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...

Operation Blub

Operation Blub, by Carl Kohler, July 1958 Popular Electronics - RF CafeOnce again, the undaunted, indefatigable husband of "friend-wife" - maybe even the alter ego of story-teller and artist Carl Kohler - embarks on another grand and glorious electromechanical project, always meeting with near - but never total - success. This time around, the subject of his passion is a giant radio-controlled model cruiser. In the 1950s and 1960s, the great size of such a boat was perfect for the great sizes of model engines and model R/C systems. Vacuum tubes and rather large, leaded resistors and capacitors comprised the electronics of both transmitters and receivers, and at least two batteries were required for power...

Glass-"Metal" Tube Shield

Glass-"Metal" Tube Shield, October 1935 Radio-Craft - RF CafeWhile working on vacuum tube based USAF air traffic control radar and radio systems, and having seen many tube television and radio sets I never recall seeing one of these form-fitting metal shields. All the ones I've seen are simple cylinders that slide over the tube and either twist into a receiving rim slot or they have spring metal fingers that grab the glass envelope. As you might guess, utilizing a metal shield around a tube for anything other than a low frequency application like an audio amplifier or poser supply requires circuit design that takes into account the capacitive effects of the large metal plates...

DAVINCI Venus Mission Ceramic Sensor

NASA Return to Venus Depends on New Class of Ceramic Sensor DAVINCI - RF Cafe"Venus is often described as Earth's twin, but that comparison quickly falls apart at the surface. With temperatures hot enough to melt lead and pressures that rival the deep ocean, Venus's harsh environment has required NASA and other space agencies to orbit the planet, studying it remotely while sustained surface exploration has remained elusive. ​If NASA intends to deploy landers capable of operating for days or even weeks on Venus, it must rely on a fundamentally different class of sensing and control systems. Exploration would require high-temperature ceramic sensors built from wide-bandgap materials and advanced structural ceramics..."

Measuring Distortion in Audio-Frequency Amplifiers

Measuring Distortion in Audio-Frequency Amplifiers, May 1941 Radio-Craft - RF CafeAs with so many topics, the basics of topics like harmonic distortion (and other forms of distortion) in an amplifier circuit has not changed much - if at all - over the decades. Test equipment and circuits being measured get more advanced, but, especially if you are new to the concept, articles like this one on audio-frequency distortion from a 1941 edition of Radio-Craft magazine are as useful today as it was when it was written. When studying, in particular, harmonic distortion, having a knowledge of the Fourier series for common waveforms like triangle waves, sawtooth waves, square waves, and even a semi-circle- shaped wave is especially enlightening since it explains a lot of waveform shapes where harmonics are present...

A Stationary Reversible Beam

A Stationary Reversible Beam, March 1940 QST - RF CafeA vertical antenna can have a significant advantage over a horizontal antenna from a maintenance perspective, since, depending on how high the antenna is mounted off the ground, the "business end" where electrical connections are made are more accessible. The configuration shown here would be difficult to implement if a mast rotator is to be used because of the stabilizing guy wires on the lower frame. Although it should be possible to achieve the necessary rigidity without guys by using an aluminum or fiberglass tubing frame rather than wood, preventing weathervaning in strong winds could prove difficult. A nifty feature of this "reversible beam" antenna is that reciprocal directivity is implemented simply by swapping out a short...

What the Sputniks Said

What the Sputniks Said, July 1958 Popular Electronics - RF CafeA 1958 report in the Russian journal Radio detailed early scientific findings from Sputnik I and II, marking a significant advancement in space-based electronics. Analysis of Sputnik I's radio transmissions revealed complex propagation patterns, including refraction and reflection off the ionosphere's F2 layer, which allowed signals to travel far beyond direct visibility and occasionally produce a round-the-world echo. These observations provided researchers with critical data regarding how radio waves behave in relation to atmospheric layers and satellite positioning. Furthermore, the article discussed findings from Sputnik II concerning solar radiation intensity beyond the earth’s atmosphere. The researchers utilized actinometry - the science of measuring electromagnetic radiation, particularly solar radiation...

An 18 Metal-Tube All-Wave Superhet

An 18 Metal-Tube All-Wave Superhet, October 1935 Radio-Craft - RF CafeAs I have written in a couple articles recently, there was a huge push in the mid 1930s to adopt the revolutionary new metal-encased vacuum tubes over established glass-encased tubes. Today, interest in vacuum tube amplifiers is building among audio enthusiasts both from a nostalgic perspective and from a long-perpetuated belief that sound from vacuum tube circuits have a distinctively richer quality than that of solid state devices. I post this stuff for the benefit of those who otherwise might not be able to find the information otherwise. Your patience indulgence is appreciated...

Utilities Prepare for Drone Attacks

Utilities Prepare for Drone Attacks - RF Cafe"In the fictional nation of Beryllia, the 2026 World Chalice Games were set to begin as the country faced an unrelenting heat wave. The grid, already under strain from the circumstances, was dealt a further blow when a coordinated set of attacks including vandalism, drone, and ballistic attacks by an adversary, Crimsonia, crippled the grid's physical infrastructure. This scenario, inspired by the upcoming 2026 World Cup and the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, was an exercise in studying how utilities can prevent and mitigate, among other dangers, physical attacks on power grids..."

WMC-2-18-15dB-S Coupler for 2-18 GHz

Werbel Microwave WMC-2-18-15dB-S Directional Coupler for 2 to 18 GHz - RF CafeWerbel Microwave began as a consulting firm, specializing in RF components design, with the ability to rapidly spin low volume prototypes, and has quickly grown into a major designer and manufacturer. The WMC-2-18-15dB-S is a directional coupler that covers 2-18 GHz with a flat response over the band. Features 15 dB coupling response with broadband flat coupling response, high directivity, and excellent return loss performance. Coupling flatness ±0.35 dB typical. Insertion loss 0.8 dB typical. Directivity 17 dB typical. "No Worries with Werbel!"

A New English All-Metal Tube

A New English All-Metal Tube, August 1933 Radio-Craft - RF CafeThe saga continues... Please bear with me even if you have no interest in the much-hyped (at the time) history of the advent of all-metal vacuum tubes in the mid 1930s. They were predicted to make glass-encased tubes obsolete. It never happened. Believe it or not, there are a few folks out there (like moi) who like reading about the history. Posting this on the RF Cafe homepage helps the search engines find and register it faster. If you also happen to care, then you might be interested to know this article was...

Radio-Radar-Sonar in Naval Applications

Radio-Radar-Sonar in Naval Applications - RF CafeWorld War II was the "necessity" that elicited the "mother of invention" activity responsible for many huge leaps in technology - not the least of which was electronic verbal and non-verbal communications. Along with radio and radar, Loran had become a major means of ocean and air navigation. A fair description of the operational details, including timing diagrams, is included in the text. Loran-A, the original system as it came to be known, was fully decommissioned in 1980, thereafter supplanted by Loran-C. With the advent of GPS, Galileo, and Glonass navigation systems and their low and their low equipment and installation costs...

Carl and Jerry: Whirling Wheel Magic

Carl and Jerry: Whirling Wheel Magic, January 1960 Popular Electronics - RF CafeIn this 1960 Popular Electronics magazine adventure, teenage inventors / hobbyists Carl and Jerry explore the mechanics of Space Inertial Reference Equipment (SPIRE), a sophisticated navigation system using gyroscopes, pendulums, and clocks to track position autonomously. Inspired by a television program featuring Dr. Charles S. Draper, Jerry demonstrates how a gyro-stabilized platform maintains spatial orientation regardless of external movement. The duo soon applies this scientific knowledge to a practical mystery when a local factory manager seeks their help in catching an employee stealing expensive alternators. By placing a timer-controlled, battery-operated gyroscope inside a bait package, they successfully trap the thief. As the culprit exits the factory, the activated gyroscope creates unexpected torque during a turn, causing the lunch box to move erratically and reveal the stolen goods. The story concludes with the boys reclaiming their device, leaving the factory manager delighted by his opportunity to experiment with the powerful "toy." This plot is a lot like "The Hot Hot Meter" story.

Microwave & RF Engineering Crossword Puzzle

Microwave & RF Engineering Crossword Puzzle for November 15, 2015 - RF CafeThis week's Microwave and RF Engineering crossword puzzle contains the usual collection of science, math, and engineering terms. Each week for more than two decades I have created a new technology-themed crossword puzzle using only words (1,000s of them) from my custom-created lexicon related to engineering, science, mathematics, chemistry, physics, astronomy, etc. You will never find among the words names of politicians, mountain ranges, exotic foods or plants, movie stars, or anything of the sort. You might, however, find someone or something in the otherwise excluded list directly related to this puzzle's technology theme, such as Hedy Lamarr or the Bikini Atoll, respectively. Avid cruciverbalists amongst us: the gauntlet has been thrown down.

GaN-on-Silicon HEMTs for mm-Wave 5G

GaN-on-Silicon HEMTs for mm-Wave 5G - RF Cafe"Researchers based in Singapore and Belgium have reported record high peak power-added efficiency (PAE), of more than 60%, for moderately scaled gallium nitride (GaN) on silicon (Si) high-electron-mobility transistors (HEMTs) at 30 GHz operation. At the same time, the devices perform with state-of-the-art noise figures (NFs) as low as 1.1 dB. 'These results suggest that moderate scaling could deliver competitive GaN-on-Si HEMT technology, when combined with optimized epitaxial structure and process..."

Signal Splitting Pads

Splitting Pads, April 1951 Radio & Television News - RF CafeDesigning resistive impedance-matched signal splitting networks is nowadays mostly done with the assistance of computer software. In fact, odds are pretty high that the designer either has no idea what the formulas behind the "magic" are, or at least it has been a very long time since working them with pencil and paper. There's no shame in that, though, just as there is no reason to expect someone using a cellphone must know the intricacies of the internal circuits or the network to which it is connected. We've moved past that. For those of us who still appreciate a refresher on the behind-the-scenes calculations being performed at lightning speed...

Listening to the World

Listening to the World, January 1946 Radio News - RF CafeDuring and immediately following World War II, the "Monitoring Service" of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) relentlessly listened to radio broadcasts from all over the world in order to be able to break headline news and, if appropriate, pass strategic military information on to Allied command centers (who were simultaneously doing their own monitoring). This article tells of some of the more significant messages intercepted and how the facility was a highly guarded secret in order to prevent sabotage and infiltration. At the height of activity, 32 languages were being transcribed into English daily, consisting of more than...

Technical Headlines - RF Cafe

• 6G Coming - with Connectivity & AI

• 5G Americas Dissolves in 2026

• Taiwan Exports to U.S. More Than China

• FCC Requires FRN Contact Information Change Within 10 Days

• India Targets 1B 5G Subscribers by 2031

• 6G Coming - with Connectivity & AI

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.

Radio Theme Crossword Puzzle for June 12th

Radio Theme Crossword Puzzle for June 12th, 2021 - RF CafeThis Radio Theme Crossword Puzzle for June 13 has many words and clues related to RF, microwave, and mm-wave engineering, optics, mathematics, chemistry, physics, and other technical subjects. Also, it contains at least five (5) instances of this puzzle's theme word. 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!

Electronics-Themed Comics

Electronics-Themed Comics, October & November 1968 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeI haven't watched much television for the last thirty years, so I don't know if having someone get electrocuted is still considered as funny as it used to be. Maybe that went out with the Three Stooges. In the 1960s and 70s, just about every Prime Time comedy show ran an episode where somebody's tooth filling was picking up radio broadcasts. I particularly remember the Gilligan's Island episode called "Hi-Fi Gilligan" where he became an AM radio receiver when a jolt to the jaw affected the filling in a molar (those AM signals travelled quite a distance to that "uncharted desert isle"). These two electronics-themed comics from 1968 Radio-Electronics magazine hits on both of those themes...

Bandwidth Requirements for Pulse-Type Transmissions

Bandwidth Requirements for Pulse-Type Transmissions, February 1945 QST - RF CafeIn 1945, when this article was published in QST magazine, radar was still in its infancy. Engineers were already aware of the need to shape pulse waveforms from experience with CW keying and the need to mitigate the effects of "chirping." A perfectly rectangular pulse in the time domain, as we learned in our signals and systems courses, creates a sin (x)/x response in the frequency domain. The Fourier transform shows that a perfectly square pulse in the time domain is the summation of an infinite number of odd harmonics of the fundamental (1st harmonic). The first few harmonics are audible to the CW copier as higher frequency "chirps." To reduce the annoyance (and wasted transmitted energy), time constants were added to the leading and trailing edges of the waveform to remove the higher frequencies, while leaving the pulse shape sufficiently rectangular to achieve its goal. The same type issue applies to radar pulses...

The "Fair Use" Doctrine and the U.S. Copyright Office

The "Fair Use" Doctrine and the U.S. Copyright Office - RF Cafe"The Congress shall have Power … To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Tımes to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries." - United States Constitution, Article I, Section 8. Therein lies the authority for legislation and prosecution of rights for virtually every human creation within the jurisdiction of the country. Each nation has it own version, and international agreements help assure universal protection of a creator's rights of ownership; e.g., the "Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works" (aka the "Berne Convention") of 1886 and the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). America has the U.S. Copyright Office. Those of us involved in presenting information and referring to legally protected works of others are, or should be, concerned with laws governing how such content may be used...

Reader Letter: Waveguide

Reader Letter: Waveguide, May 4, 1964 Electronics Magazine - RF CafeThis letter submitted to Electronics magazine by reader Fred Standish really should have been saved for the next April issue. He writes concerning an attempt to mathematically describe the three-port circular-to-rectangular waveguide transition for the pictured configuration. If I remember correctly, the first time I saw that optical illusion was sometime in the early 1970s. The drawing showed Alfred E. Neuman (the red-haired, freckled-faced "Me Worry? guy from Mad magazine) attempting to don a pair of pants (a triplet of pants in that case?) sewn to resemble the three-legged configuration - known unofficially as the "Impossible Trident." I was in my early teens at the time and though it was awfully clever. After doing a little research, I found that the first instance of the Impossible Trident in Mad magazine was on the cover of the March 1965 issue...

FM to AM Converter for Vintage Radios

FM to AM Converter for Vintage Radios - RF Cafe Cool ProductRF Cafe visitor Bob D. sent me information on this interesting device that allows owners of vintage AM radios to receive FM stations while using the original tuning dial to cover the entire 88-108 MHz band. Monsieur David Winter, of France, is the designer and seller of this FM Converter for Vintage Radios. Installation and calibration is not for the faint of heart, since it involves tapping directly into the circuitry and disconnecting some of the sections where the device inserts the signal into the audio frequency (AF) section, totally bypassing the RF and IF sections. A direct connection to the tuning capacitor is used to tune the module throughout the FM band, which is a primary feature of scheme. However, it requires the capacitor to be disconnected from all other circuitry to prevent normal voltages and impedances from adjacent connected components from entering the integrated circuit (IC). Retaining the AM reception (and possibly shortwave reception) function requires the installer to devise a custom switching scheme. It uses the 6.3 VAC vacuum tube (valve) heater supply. In older radios you need to be sure to locate a "real" ground (common) point to assure the voltage is properly referenced. The price is €29.90 ($32.83), which is currently the cost of 7-8 gallons of gasoline...

CapaciQuiz - 1961 Popular Electronics

CapaciQuiz, August 1961 Popular Electronics - RF CafeRobert Balin, Popular Electronics magazine's quizmeister, created this CapaciQuiz for the February 1961 issue. Most of these are elementary, but think carefully about the exact wording of Q4 before you answer. With Q8, believe the better explanation is that for a purely capacitive circuit, current and voltage are 90° out of phase, so when the sinewave voltage is at zero, the current is at a maximum. Note that Q6 and Q10 are opposites (parallel vs. series capacitor combinations), so if you have trouble reasoning one of the configurations, work on the other and then you'll know both. Bon chance!...

Put Your Aerial Underground

Put Your Aerial Underground, February 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF CafeBurying any antenna in the ground seems like a bad idea from radiated field pattern and efficiency perspectives. As determined in a 1974 paper published by the National Bureau of Standards, most of the energy from a buried dipole antenna that is not absorbed by the ground is radiated nearly straight up (many studies of underground antennas can be found). Motivating the NBS's burial study was a desire to conceal radio communications antennas in covert operations. This short piece in a 1935 edition of Short Wave Craft reports on a case Hams were experimenting with buried antennas in order to avoid the expense and trouble of an overhead installation. These days, Hams want to bury antennas for those same reasons AND to get around restrictive neighborhood and town restrictions prohibiting certain antenna installations...

Chart and Ruler Coil Design

This Chart and a Ruler Will Give You All You Need to Know About Coil Design, March 1930 Radio News - RF CafeEven in today's world with computing devices everywhere sporting simulators and component calculating programs, there are still times when having a good old fashioned nomograph or chart handy can be very useful while in sitting at a bench selecting component values for tweaking or troubleshooting a design. The advantage of such visual aids is that they provide a big picture of what's happening as frequencies, lengths, widths, core materials, etc. change - being able to see both the trees and the forest, so to speak. When you are working in bands where the component physical size is a significant portion of the wavelength, things get more complicated and a combination of trial and error and calculations / simulations are needed. At the IC design level, of course, you have no choice but to rely solely on your computer...

Middle East Gets Its First Television Station

Middle East Gets Its First Television Station, June 1955 Popular Electronics - RF CafeWhen this article appeared in Popular Electronics in 1955, Iraq was considered a staunch ally of the United States and most Western countries, although not long thereafter relations were strained when Communist-aligned forces gained control of the former monarchy. As part of a plan to help Iraq modernize, English telecommunications company Pye Limited built and commissioned a television broadcast station in the capital city of Baghdad. As with any country when television was first introduced, Iraqi citizens were overwhelmingly enthusiastic - to the extent that TV sets were banned from being on in store display windows during major broadcasts because of the crowds being drawn and the subsequent traffic blockages...

National Union Radio and Electronic Tubes

National Union Radio and Electronic Tubes, September 1944 Radio News - RF CafeIn 1944 when this National Union Radio Company ad appeared in Radio News magazine, the price of gold bullion was $35 US per ounce, as established by the Bretton-Woods Agreement. Inflation remained near zero until 1971 when President Nixon removed the U.S. treasury notes (dollars) from the gold standard. Take a look at the inflation chart in the background of the RF Cafe header (top of page) to see what has happened since then. Today's spot gold bullion price is around $1800 per ounce - a factor of 51x higher. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Inflation Calculator, $35 in 1944 had the equivalent purchasing power of $538 today - a factor of 15x. That means the inflation-adjusted price of gold is about 3x what it was when National Union decided to use it to plate the wire control grid of its high power vacuum tubes in order to minimize performance-degrading grid emissions. Because relatively little gold would have been used...

Infrared Electronics

Infrared Electronics, February 1961 Popular Electronics - RF CafeIt was 1958, over the Taiwan Strait, when the first Sidewinder air-to-air missile flew up the tailpipe of a MIG-17 Fresco after being launched by an F-104 Starfighter. The age of offensive infrared (IR) warfare had begun. It is amazing that the detection and guidance system for the Sidewinder was built largely from discrete components, without the advantage of large scale integration. IR night vision devices were actually used by the military as early as WWII with the renowned Snooperscope (handheld) and the Sniperscope (mounted to a carbine rifle). Both required an infrared light source to illuminate the target. Today's night vision goggles and scopes are sensitive enough to be totally passive. This "Infrared" article from the February 1961 issue of Popular Electronics magazine talks about early developments in infrared technology. Corny-looking prototypes of IR wireless phones are shown, but obviously...

Color Television Systems

Color Television Systems, January 1951 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeIt's probably a safe bet that most people, even at the dawn of color television, knew of the competition which occurred for the adoption of three different methods of implementation. Two of them - line-sequential by Color Television, Inc. (CTI), and dot-sequential by Radio Corporation of America (RCA) - were fully electronic while the third system by the Columbia Broadcast System (CBS) used a kludge of a spinning color wheel placed in front of a black and white display. The CBS field-sequential design used a synchronization component of the composite transmitted signal to position the correct color screen (red, yellow, or blue) in front of the screen as the electron gun scanned the CRT - analogous to how World War I airplane machine guns were synchronized with the engine to fire between propeller blades. Of course an out-of-synch scenario in the color wheel was not as serious as with the machine gun. The worst that could happen with the TV is a false color picture whereas with the machine gun your biplane instantly became a glider. Although I poke some fun at the CBS solution...

Hi-Fi Crossover Networks

Hi-Fi Crossover Networks (part 2), May 1959 Electronics World - RF CafeSince I am currently planning a loudspeaker configuration to replace the original speaker in my 1941 Crosley 03CB floor model AM / shortwave radio set, this article made for a good refresh on audio frequency crossover networks. A very nice set of design charts is provided. Of course today there is no need to design and build your own since commercial units are very good and cost less than what I could build myself. Many moons ago while serving in the USAF at Robins AFB, Georgia, I did actually build my own crossover circuit for use in custom speaker cabinets I built in the base woodshop. The speaker that came in the Crosley has a 12" cone, which is still in good condition, but it uses an electromagnetic voice coil rather than a permanent magnet like modern speakers use...

How to Spot and Eliminate Mobile Radio Noise

How to Spot and Eliminate Mobile Radio Noise, June 1966 Popular Electronics - RF CafeElectrical noise problems in automotive environments is almost never a problem now that most forms of communications therein are fundamentally immune to ignition and even computer interference. We relics who still listen to AM radio still sometimes suffer noise from lightning static, extreme arcing from electric service connections, and, yes, even from ignition sources. In fact, occasionally while listening to AM radio in my 2011 Jeep Patriot I will detect a whine that is proportional to engine speed. It is not annoying enough to warrant going to the trouble of chasing down and mitigating the source; I can live with it. This 1966 Popular Electronics magazine article presents a very thorough treatise on ignition noise causes and cures. The techniques are still applicable to modern vehicles...

Archie's Ham Radio Adventure

Archie's Ham Radio Adventure - RF CafeStan Goldberg is a familiar name to comic book aficionados for his artistry in Spider Man, the Incredible Hulk, and the Archie series. QST magazine had him listed in the "Silent Keys" column in the November 2014 issue because he passed away in August. A Silent Key, in Hamdom, is usually a title reserved for a deceased licensed operator (the 'key' reference being a Morse code key), but a search of the Internet and the FCC license database web page did not turn up a call sign for him. Unless his record has been dropped from the database, Mr. Goldberg might never have actually been a Ham, but earned the Silent Key acknowledgement because of his involvement in a 1986 special edition comic book titled "Archie's Ham Radio Adventure." It was quite an extensive story that involved all the familiar Archie characters, and even had a section addressed to parents encouraging them to promote both their kids' and their own interest in amateur radio as an educational and character building tool...

The Big News - Pure Magnetic Current

The Big News - Pure Magnetic Current, March 1944 Radio-Craft - RF CafeThe March 1944 issue of Radio-Craft magazine published an article entitled, "Magnetic Current - Discovery of the Age?," which reported on Austrian physicist Dr. Felix Ehrenhaft's announcement that he had discovered "magnetic charges," aka magnetic monopoles. The breathtaking news set the physics world astir as believers and non-believers quickly sought to prove or disprove, respectively, his claim. A maxim in science is that the most effective way to validate a theory or claim of discovery is to try, but fail, to invalidate it. We have seen time and again, even to this day, where all attempts to show Einstein's Theory of General Relativity to be wrong have ultimately only further qualified it. Radio-Craft publisher Hugo Gernsback was one of the first to glom on to the magnetic current phenomenon and exposited gloriously about it in the same month's editorial column...

Discrete Wiring - Solderless Wrapped Electrical Connections: Wire-Wrap

Discrete Wiring - Solderless Wrapped Electrical Connections: Wire-Wrap - RF CafeUnless otherwise annotated, U.S. Government publications are deemed to be in the public domain for American citizens. Since government websites are famous for moving pages around and/or eliminating them entirely, I went ahead and captured this copy of the wire-wrapping workmanship standards as defined by NASA. In fact, many moons ago when working as an electronics technician at the Westinghouse Oceanic Division in Annapolis, MD, I attended a week-long class learning to perform soldering, wire-wrapping, and PCB rework per NASA standards. My work involved a lot of building electronic and mechanical assemblies for DoD and aerospace systems, and U.S. Navy inspectors were on-site to perform inspections on everything I built...

Crane Aerospace & Electronics (RF & Microwave) - RF Cafe