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Electronics and the Handicapped

Mac's Service Shop: Electronics and the Handicapped, February 1967 Electronics World - RF CafeOf the scores of Mac's Service Shop stories I have read and posted here on RF Cafe, this is the first that deals with a subject near and dear to author John Frye - the plight of handicapped people. If you don't know, Mr. Frye had been confined to a wheelchair for most of his life. "Electronics and the Handicapped" is essentially the story of his life, though he does not say so. Mac: "When I was a kid growing up in a little Arkansas town, I knew a crippled boy whose dad ran the local garage." Guess where John grew up? His father owned a machine shop, and made gadgets to help his crippled son. "I had never heard the term 'respo' until you told me about a month ago it was the nickname for a victim of respiratory polio." He had polio at 18 months old...

High School Electrical Vocational School Letter

Annapolis Vocational Technical  Center Electrical School Letter - RF cafeVery few items from my early days here on Earth have escaped destruction or disposal. A couple dozen household moves in the last half century have been responsible for some of it. Oddly, one thing that survived is a box full of old letters and greeting cards - dating back to the late 1960s. Melanie has been scanning her and my items for a more permanent record, and ran across this letter of praise written from the administrator of the Annapolis Vocational Technical Center, where I studied for the electrical trade in high school. The linked page has information on the AVTC and my time there...

Glaring Satellite Communications Vulnerabilities

Glaring vulnerabilities discovered in satellite communications - RF Cafe"With $800 of off-the-shelf equipment and months' worth of patience, a team of U.S. computer scientists set out to find out how well geostationary satellite communications are encrypted. And what they found was shocking. Close to half of the communications beamed from satellites to the ground that the researchers were able to listen in on were not encrypted. This included sensitive data including cellular text messages, voice calls, as well as sensitive military information, data from internal corporate and bank networks, and the in-flight online activity of airline passengers. The research team, led by Aaron Schulman and Nadia Heninger, then set out to find out which companies and government agencies were failing to encrypt data in order to contact them and disclose the vulnerabilities..."

Practical Adjustment of the Gamma Match

Practical Adjustment of the Gamma Match, February 1953 QST - RF CafeThis is one of the earliest examples I have seen (and I've seen many) of an electronics article that was written in a conversational tone rather than in the heretothen[sic] stoic, all-business type prose. In fact, you would be hard pressed to discern it from a contemporary article in QST magazine. Author Davis describes his process of interfacing 52 Ω coaxial cable to his multi-element beam antenna. The gamma match has the advantage in such an application of being usable when the center of a driven element is directly grounded to the antenna boom. Most other types of feed systems...

Mantola Models 92505, 92506 Schematic & Parts List

Mantola Models 92505, 92506, July 1948 Radio News - RF CafeAccording to the RadioMuseum.com website, B.F. Goodrich manufactured the Mantola line of radio receivers. It was evidently a low quality, low price, short-lived run of models. The simplicity of the schematic shows the low parts count. A lack of multipole filter circuits likely means selectivity was fairly marginal. One good feature is that unlike many earlier radios and TVs, the AC line connection to the chassis is DC-isolated through a 150 kΩ resistor. Look at the schematics of older sets and it is not uncommon to see one line of the AC supply tied directly to the metal electronics chassis. An isolation transformer right at the input is the safest way to do it...

Electronically Steerable Antenna

Electronically Steerable Antenna, October 1968 Electronics World - RF CafeThis article describes an electronically steerable aperiodic loop antenna developed that claims superior beam pinpointing on targets with high gain in minimal space for high-frequency signals (2-32 MHz) via ionosphere, akin to linear arrays. Comprising 36 untuned balanced loops, each about 1 meter in diameter with transistorized preamplifiers, arranged on a 150-foot circular perimeter, the system weighs roughly 12 pounds per element and withstands 100 mph winds. Phase shifts enable simultaneous beams every 10° through 360°, or commutator scanning for direction finding, equating to 18 rhombic antennas at 10° intervals...

Algebra in Electronic Design

Algebra in Electronic Design, February 1952 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeAlthough this "Algebra in Electronic Design" article in the February 1952 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine does not claim to be the second part of author Edmund Berkeley's "Light Sensitive Electronic Beast" article from the previous December's issue, it does help to know that the "Squee" mentioned here came from there. Squee is a Robot Squirrel which has four sensing organs, three acting organs, and a small electronic and relay brain. "Although Squee is not a very clever robot, he does have a small amount of memory and of reasoning ability." Boolean logic (aka Boolean algrbra), a common part of modern electronic circuits and systems...

Anatech Newsletter - The Internet of Things Has Finally Grown Up

Anatech Electronics January 2026 Newsletter (The Internet of Things Has Finally Grown Up) - RF CafeSam Benzacar, of Anatech Electronics, an RF and microwave filter company, has published his January 2026 Newsletter that, along with timely news items, features his short op-ed entitled "The Internet of Things Has Finally Grown Up." Sam points out how the expectations of wireless connectivity to all aspects of our everyday lives have transitioned from a science fiction daydream to a reality that now constitutes a critical aspect of modern-day existence. The Dick Tracy wristwatch is no longer a comic prop; it is reality. In fact, so commonplace are such technological wonders that young kids even wear them to school - not just super cops. Factory automation no longer relies on massive bundles of wires, but on high-speed, ultra-reliable wireless...

Technological Prescience

Computer-themed comic, Electronics World - RF CafeTechnological prescience refers to the rare ability to accurately foresee or anticipate future technological developments, inventions, or trends well in advance of their realization. It combines deep technical insight, pattern recognition from historical precedents, and intuitive leaps about scientific trajectories. In practice, it's undervalued today amid hype cycles (e.g., metaverse flops vs. steady AI progress). True prescience demands skepticism of short-term trends and focus on exponential laws like computing power doubling. Few possess it; most "futurists" recycle buzzwords. The comic artist who drew this comic for a 1968 issue of Electronics World magazine probably had no idea how spot-on he was.

Basics of Eye Pattern Analysis

Anritsu Basics of Eye Pattern Analysis - RF CafeAnritsu has just released an application note entitled, "Basics of Eye Pattern Analysis." It is available as a free download on their website, but you do have register for it. "Eye pattern analysis using the sampling oscilloscope is an effective method for evaluating signal quality in the physical layer of high-speed digital systems. This application note explains the basic terms used for eye pattern analysis and methods for evaluating the performance of optical modules...

Belmont Model 5240 Radio Schematic & Parts List

Belmont Model 5240 Schematic & Parts List, July 1948 Radio News - RF CafeBelmont Radio Corporation was located in Chicago, Illinois. Founded independently sometime the 1920s, it became a subsidiary of Raytheon Manufacturing after World War II in an effort to quickly launch the Raytheon into nascent consumer FM radio and television markets. Belmont advertisements were prominent in electronics trade magazines throughout the 1940s to promote their war efforts. A schematic and parts list for this Belmont Model 5240 receiver appeared in the July 1948 edition of Radio News magazine...

Recent Developments in Electronics

Recent Developments in Electronics, February 1967 Electronics World - RF CafeRecent in 1967, that is. These half dozen developments made the headlines in Electronics World magazine in February of the year. Solid-state electronics was rapidly gaining on the traditional vacuum tube, and the new technologies were glomming onto the trend. Lasers, integrated circuits, computer-aided design, superconductors, and similar technologies were moving from the realm of science fiction to reality. Operational power levels were still relatively low, and physical sizes were still rather large and heavy, but as history has shown, incremental improvements happen quickly. More than half a century later, compare these news items to their modern equivalents or descendants. ICs have...

The Radio Month in Review

The Radio Month in Review, April 1936 Radio-Craft - RF CafeDid you know that some radio service equipment can be financed by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA)? That's right, if your business needs a new tube tester or maybe an oscilloscope, Uncle Sam is there to help. That was in 1936, anyway, per this Radio-Craft news blurb. Today, of course, the FHA no longer makes loans for business equipment - the Small Business Administration (SBA) takes care of that. Nowadays the FHA restricts itself to home loans - including to illegal residents and otherwise traditionally unqualified. Also reported, among lots of other interesting stuff, is some early instances of RFI (radio frequency interference) emanating from...

China Super-Embassy Next to Critical Comms Cables

China Super-Embassy Next to Critical Comms Cables - RF CafeNothing to see here, folks; conspiracy theorists just move along. This article appeared in the UK Telegraph on 1/12/2026. "Uncovered: Secret room beneath Chinese embassy that poses threat to City Telegraph obtains unredacted plans showing how close the underground complex will come to cables carrying sensitive British financial data. China is to build a hidden chamber alongside Britain's most sensitive communication cables as part of a network of 208 secret rooms beneath its new London 'super-embassy.' This newspaper has uncovered detailed plans for an underground complex below the vast diplomatic site in central London. Despite the apparent security risk, Sir Keir Starmer is expected to approve the embassy..."

The Spook - Another Weird Effect to Haunt TV

The Spook - Another Weird Effect to Haunt TV, March 1953 Radio & Television News - RF CafeHow often have we all mistaken "spooks" for Barkhausen oscillations? Yeah, it's embarrassing, but we've all done it. I can't tell you how many times as a kid I saw the tell-tale effects on our old black and white TV and said, "Mom, can you remind Dad to do something about those dang Barkhausen oscillations when he gets home from the newspaper office?" If you believe that line of bull hockey, I've got some waterfront property in the Sahara Desert to sell you. The only thing close to 'Barkhausen' I might have known back then was the name of a German beer house on Hogan's Heroes. Anyway, this article, written in the days of over-the-air television broadcasts, presents a solution to...

Exodus AMP20175 C-Band HPSSA

Exodus AMP20175, 4.0–8.0 GHz, 6 kW Pulse C-Band SSHPA - RF CafeExodus Advanced Communications, is a multinational RF communication equipment and engineering service company serving both commercial and government entities and their affiliates worldwide. Exodus' AMP20175 pulse amplifier is designed for Pulse/HIRF, EMC/EMI Mil-Std 461/464, and Radar applications. Providing superb pulse fidelity 4.0-8.0 GHz, 6 kW typical, and up to 150 µsec pulse widths. Duty cycles to 10% with a minimum 68 dB gain. Available monitoring parameters for Forward/Reflected power in watts and dBm, VSWR, voltage, current, and temperature sensing for outstanding reliability and ruggedness in a compact configuration...

Collins Radio Company Advertisement

Collins Radio Company Ad, June 1946 Radio News - Airplanes and RocketsArthur Collins founded the Collins Radio Company in 1933 to enter the fledgling domestic AM broadcast market. His equipment instantly became renowned for high quality and reliability. Collins gained early notoriety as the result of being selected by Admiral Richard Byrd for his South Pole expedition. The U.S. military took notice and the company quickly earned a reputation as a preferred supplier of aviation communications equipment both for commercial and military aviation. As seen in this 1946 advertisement in Radio News, Trans World Airlines proudly employed Collins radio equipment in its fleet of Lockheed Constellation (aka "Connie")...

Many Thanks for Alliance Test Equipment's Support!

Allied Test Equipment Products - RF CafeAlliance Test Equipment sells used / refurbished test equipment and offers short- and long-term rentals. They also offer repair, maintenance and calibration. Prices discounted up to 80% off list price. Agilent/HP, Tektronix, Anritsu, Fluke, R&S and other major brands. A global organization with ability to source hard to find equipment through our network of suppliers. Alliance Test will purchase your excess test equipment in large or small lots. Blog posts offer advice on application and use of a wide range of test equipment. Please visit Allied Test Equipment today to see how they can help your project.

Mac's Service Shop: The Laser - Toy or Tool?

Mac's Service Shop: The Laser - Toy or Tool?, October 1968 Electronics World - RF CafeIn this 1968 "Macs Service Shop" entitled "The Laser - Toy or Tool?," Mac educates Barney on lasers, from Einstein's 1917 stimulated emission theory and Townes & Schawlow's 1958 optical maser to Maiman's 1960 ruby crystal laser using a mirrored rod pumped by flash tubes for coherent, narrow-beam red light. He highlights properties like focusability (1/10,000th cm spot), minimal divergence (200 ft at 25 miles), and applications: surgery (retina welding, scalpels), metal cutting, ICBM/satellite defense, precise ranging, gyroscopes, altimeters, auto modeling, 118-mile / 10-TV-channel communications, high-speed...

2025 Turning Point for Telecom Satellites

2025 Turning Point for Telecom Satellites - RF Cafe"2025 saw telecom giants accelerate their integration efforts of non-terrestrial networks (NTNs) to bridge connectivity gaps and future-proof the sector. As the industry further shifts from viewing satellites as standalone solutions to critical components of hybrid terrestrial-NTN architectures, here we look back at some of the top stories and key developments over this past year. Satellite and terrestrial integration A 2025 survey showed that NTNs are viewed by the telecom industry as reinforcing service reliability and adding an extra layer of network redundancy to 5G. This view increasingly makes the convergence of satellites..."

Hi Tide in the Tweeter

Hi Tide in the Tweeter, October 1956 Popular Electronics - RF CafeBefore the current generation began destroying its hearing with smartphone earbuds, their parents and grandparents (that includes me) destroyed our hearing* with ridiculously powerful loudspeakers, often in boom boxes perched on shoulders right next to the ears (not me). The "concert hall" - or concert auditorium - experience has been long sought-after since recorded music has been available, which has only been about a century. As evidenced by the sudden increase in articles and advertisements in my growing collection of vintage electronics magazines, the early and mid 1950s saw a sudden swell of articles promoting the equally swelling supply of high fidelity (hifi) recording and playback...

Modern Batteries

Modern Batteries, October 1963 Electronics World - RF CafeAs with most things of consumer, commercial, and industrial nature, the battery - more correctly "cell" - science has come a long way in a relatively short time. Alessandro Volta invented the eponymous voltaic pile in 1799; it consisted of zinc and copper electrodes immersed in a sulfuric acid electrolyte, thereby being a wet cell. The first dry cell was the zinc-carbon type invented by Guiseppe Zamboni (not the guy who invented the ice rink resurfacer) in 1812. Rechargeable dry cells of the NiCad variety hit the scene in 1899. Then, it wasn't until 1991 - a century later - that Sony commercialized the Li-Ion cell (and varieties thereof) that now dominates...

Please Welcome Johanson as a New Supporter!

Johanson Technology - RF CafeJohanson Dielectrics and Johanson Technology, located in Camarillo, CA, are now supporting RF Cafe's publication. Johanson Technology designs and manufactures RF & microwave ceramic chip capacitors, inductors and integrated passives. These includes chip-format antennas, capacitors, lowpass, highpass, and bandpass filters, couplers, inductors, baluns, power dividers, substrates, chipsets.

Johanson Dielectrics - RF CafeJohanson Dielectrics has produced ceramic chip capacitors for over 60 years. They design and manufacture capacitors that include standard and high-voltage SMT ceramic chip capacitors, as well as a variety of standard and custom high voltage & high capacitance value ceramic capacitors.

Please return the favor by exploring their offerings when planning your projects!

Characteristics & Parameters of Coaxial Transmission Lines

Characteristics & Parameters of Coaxial Transmission Lines, October 1968 Electronics World - RF CafeAllen Kushner's (Times Wire and Cable) 1968 Electronics World magazine article portrays coaxial cables as essential microwave components with impedance, power-handling, attenuation, time-delay, and shielding traits that must hold steady over broad frequency, temperature, and harsh environmental conditions like moisture, corrosion, and flexing. Optimal use demands impedance matching for maximum energy transfer, minimizing VSWR, radiation losses, and delays; dielectric selection -- solid polyolefins/PTFE for moisture resistance versus low-loss foamed or air-spaced types with aluminum sheaths reducing attenuation by 20%; and superior shielding, from ~80 dB in single-braid...

Mac's Radio Service Shop: All Work and No Play

Mac's Radio Service Shop: All Work and No Play, March 1952 Radio & Television News, Dagmar (wikipedia) - RF CafeI have to admit to not recalling ever having heard of Dagmar; have you? Crack electronics technician "Red" mentioned her in this episode of "Mac's Radio Service Shop" appearing in the March 1952 edition of Radio & TV News. I thought Prince and Cher were the first man (ostensibly) and woman, respectively, to use a single-name public moniker, but evidently Dagmar beat them to the punch ...but I digress. John T. Frye, author of the popular Carl & Jerry series that appeared later in Popular Electronics magazine, wrote this series before that time. On this cold and wintry day, Red and Mac are discussing troubleshooting methods and how looking for and interpreting certain symptoms...

5G Networks Bolster Satellite Navigation

5G Networks Bolster Satellite Navigation - RF Cafe"Finding accurate positions in dense urban areas remains difficult for satellite-based navigation systems, where high-rise buildings and signal blockages can cause large errors or complete loss of service. A recent study outlines a deeply integrated positioning method that combines commercial 5G New Radio (NR) signals with Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) to address these issues. By reinforcing 5G signal tracking and tightly merging it with satellite measurements, the approach improves both ranging stability and overall positioning accuracy in demanding city environments..."

Amplifier Gain Nomogram

Amplifier Gain Nomogram, August 1965 Electronics World - RF CafeEven with the ready availability of programmable calculators and smartphone apps, there are still times when having a handy-dandy nomograph printed out and hanging on the wall for quick reference can be a great asset. This nomograph which appeared in a 1965 issue of Electronics World magazine provided ready conversion between two different (input and output) voltage and power values to equivalent decibel values. It seems strange that the watts and voltage scale is on the left and the milliwatts and millivolts scale is on the right. That might be more intuitive for a nomograph of attenuation, but not - at least to me - for positive gain as through an amplifier...

Technical Headlines - RF Cafe

• AT&T Drops DEI for $1B Spectrum Deal

• FCC Allocates 60-Meter World-Wide Amateur Band

• AT&T to Completely Axe DEI

• U.S. Congress Intros "No Robot Bosses" Bill

• December Manufacturing Contracts in U.S.

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.

Some Thoughts on the Balloon Fiasco

Chinese Spy Balloon Fiasco, Kirt's Cogitations #348 - RF CafeLike a lot of Americans (and presumably some Canadians), I was amazed to watch as a Chinese spy craft as large as a couple school busses was permitted to drift over the country from Alaska to South Carolina. It was laden with sophisticated sensors (optical?, radio frequency?, audio?) and communications equipment, powered by huge PV arrays. A detailed reverse engineering effort of an intact, possibly functional inspection could determine the system architecture, electronic component types, software / firmware, mechanics, optics, battery technology, etc., including where they came from and who built them. A lot of information can be gleaned from such an investigation. We are just now being informed that the military knew of the craft from the time it was launched off the coast of China. We are also now told that Biden* was not apprised of the situation until it had been spotted over Montana by civilians and photographed with a cellphone. Then, officials said bringing it down over populated areas was too risky, even though there was ample opportunity to do so while it was over unpopulated areas in Alaska and Canada. In fact, it could probably have been brought down over land gradually via controlled deflation rather than blowing it out of the sky with a Sidewinder missile. The payload equipment would then have been more readily accessible and intact for inspection. Prior to learning the balloon was being tracked even before it flew over the U.S., we were told that NORAD and all other radars missed it...

The Amazing Surface Barrier Transistor

Amazing Surface Barrier Transistor, August 1957 Radio & TV News - RF CafeAccording to the Transistor Museum website, "The Philco Surface Barrier Transistor (SBT) was the 'hottest' transistor around until the late 1950s. This device performed very well at high frequencies and was used extensively in radio and computer circuits. Hobbyists were delighted to find such an inexpensive high frequency device... [Edwin] Bohr authored many well-remembered transistor construction projects in the 1950s/60s." Many of Bohr's construction articles featuring SBTs were published in Radio Electronics magazine, and this was one of them from 1957. The manufacturing process is described where jet streams of an electrolyte were shot at both sides of the germanium crystal to etch it as required - Neanderthal in nature...

How Ohms Law Used in Service Work

How Ohms Law Is Used in Service Work, June-July 1958 National Radio-TV News - RF CafeMany people find their way to 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 a redundant review (is that phrase redundant?), 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 - at least in the Newtonian physics realm. 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 (1928 - 1980) by National Radio Institute, a correspondence school that did business from 1914 through 2002. A bonus electronics-themed comic is included...

Crosley "Chief" Model 132-1

Crosley "Chief" 12-Tube Model 132-1 12-Tube Superheterodyne Radio Service Data Sheet, February 1933 Radio-Craft - RF CafeIn a continuing effort to provide archival material for researchers and for anyone seeking information on a particular radio restoration project, this Radio Service Data Sheet for the Crosley "Chief" Model 132-1 radio from a 1933 edition of Radio-Craft is being posted. An Internet search will show that there are many people engaging in such activities. Restoring my Crosley Model 03BC console radio would have been more difficult if not for others who have done similar work to assist the "community." I generally despise the phrase "giving back" because it is usually uttered by people that really owe nothing to anyone, but somehow feel obligated to do so or are conditioned to automatically say such things. This is a case where I benefitted from somebody else's work and there is an opportunity to return the favor...

Electronic Crosswords, July 1960 Electronics World

Electronic Crosswords, July 1960 Electronics World - RF CafeThis "Electronic Crossword" showed up in a 1965 issue of Electronics World magazine. Most of the words are directly related to the title's subject, but a few are everyday words to fill in where needed (as opposed to my RF Cafe crossword puzzles, which contain only applicable words). For instance the 22 Down clue of "Shoshonian Indian," while at first consideration might be deemed unrelated to a crossword puzzle with an electronics theme, it could be a reference to the Indians featured in many of the company advertisements back in the day, as Sangamo (and here, here, here) often did. Or, maybe the Indian chief in the old broadcast TV test pattern hailed from the tribe. Some of the clues include (colloq.) after them, which stands for colloquialism, or a shortcut / abbreviation often used to refer to the technical name. An example (not in this puzzle) would calling an attenuator a "pad"...

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!

Electronic Abbreviations Crossword - 1958 Popular Electronics

Electronic Abbreviations Crossword Puzzle, November 1958 Popular Electronics - RF CafeThis crossword puzzle from a 1958 issue of Popular Electronics magazine is a little trickier than some because it uses abbreviations rather than full words. Not everyone uses the same abbreviation, so some answers are a bit more subjective. For instance, many people abbreviate the word 'transformer' as 'xfmr,' while others use 'trans' or 'trr' (I use xfmr). Where you really have to be careful, though, is with evolutional changes in terminology as is the case for frequency units, where 'cps' was most often used in 1958 rather than today's 'Hz." Enjoy.

Electricity in Motion: Current,  Basic Navy Training Courses

Electricity in Motion: Current,  Basic Navy Training Courses, NAVPERS 10622, Chapter 3 - RF CafeOne of the Notable Tech Quotes which has appeared on RF Cafe is, "The nice thing about standards is that you have so many to choose from," by computer scientist Andrew Tanenbaum. In the middle of the last century, a change in the fundamental understanding of current flow precipitated what has become a very large opportunity for people to misunderstand descriptions of current direction caused by a difference in voltage potential (voltage) - depending on the era a particular description was written. Beginning with Benjamin Franklin, electron current flow was assumed to be from positive to negative, ostensibly but incorrectly, because a positive thing must contain an excess of something (charge carriers - electrons) and a negative thing must have a deficiency. Hence, current flowed from an excess source to a deficient sink. We now know that negative things contain more electrons (relatively) than a positive thing. "Conventional current" is defined as charge carriers...

Say You Saw It in QST

Say You Saw It in QST, December 1933 QST - RF CafeIn the early 1930s, QST magazine (ARRL's monthly publication) usually ran a line at the bottom of every page in the back half of each issue that said, "Say You Saw It in QST - It Identifies You and Helps QST." They even got the capitalization correct (all lower case short prepositions and conjunctions, but I digress). The December 1933 edition was a bit different, however, in that all the left-hand pages had the message translated into one of fourteen different languages while the right-hand pages used English. I deemed that discovery cool enough to scan and post here. Since the only languages I speak with any fluency are English and Pig Latin...

Electronic Geometry Quiz

Electronic Geometry Quiz, January 1965 Popular Electronics - RF CafeUnless I find one I missed from my collection of vintage Popular Electronics magazines, this could be the last Friday electronics quiz for a while. All of the quizzes were created by Robert p. Balin, and range in difficulty from relatively easy to head scratchers (for typical test takers like myownself). Sometimes modern readers will be stumped by references to dated drawings and/or terms like vacuum tubes and CRTs (which are themselves vacuum tubes, of course). This Electronics Geometry Quiz might require a Millennial handicap on item "E" if you spaz out over the picture, but if you get the other nine correct, you'll get all ten by default. This is probably...

Rise-Time Measurements

Rise-Time Measurements, August 1972 Popular Electronics - RF CafeA lot of us still use older test equipment at home and even in the company lab. As discussed in this 1972 article from Popular Electronics magazine, the displayed rise time on an oscilloscope display is not necessarily that true rise time of a signal - particularly when the speed approaches the rated bandwidth of the equipment. In that case, it is necessary to mathematically compensate for the rise times of each individual component used for making the measurement. Hooking the o-scope probe tip to the calibration point on the front of the instrument and adjusting the probe's trim capacitor for a flat response is not always good enough. Most modern o-scopes can calculate and apply corrections automatically, negating the need for a manual correction. If your application is not super critical from a timing standpoint, then you do not need to bother with correction, but it is worth keeping rise time measurement inaccuracies in mind just in case you run into an otherwise...

Transistor Development History Videos

Transistor Development History - RF Cafe Video for EngineersA few days ago Bob Davis sent me a link to a YouTube video documentary, "Transistorized," of the development of the transistor. It was originally produced in 1989. Narrator Mr. Ira Flatow begins by saying that the story behind the transistor, arguably one of the most important inventions of the 20th century, was one of "clashing egos and top secret research." Anyone familiar with the collaborative effort of Drs. John Bardeen, William Shockley and Walter Brattain, at Bell Telephone Laboratories (aka Bell Labs) knows of the strain between them at times. I will not attempt to embellish the huge amount of information presented; you will get all you want to know from the film. As you might expect, in addition to the "Transistorized" video there are other videos telling the story of the transistor's history. A couple really good ones are also embedded below. One covers Japan's successful climb to the top of the electronics product food chain based on their early adoptation of transistor...

National Union Radio Corporation Promotion

National Union Radio Corporation Ad, April 1945, Radio-Craft - RF CafeNational Union Radio Corporation was ahead of its time in terms of hiring women engineers. Admittedly, they and all other manufacturers were dealing with a shortage of male engineers due to the ongoing need by the military for fending off the scourges of fascism, Nazism, communism, socialism, and all the other "isms" of the day that threatened to overtake the world. However, they should receive due credit for going out of the way to promote the sciences as careers for the fairer gender. The advertised positions required the successful applicant to have earned a bona fide degree in physics, electrical engineering, chemical engineering, mechanical engineering, mathematics or chemistry. According to a page on the Harvard Business School website, "The National Union Radio Corporation was incorporated in September 1929 to acquire...

Standing Waves on Transmission Lines

Standing Waves on Transmission Lines, December 1942 QST - RF CafeIn this article from a 1942 issue of QST magazine, author T.A. Gadwa employs a standing wave mechanism analogy that I don't recall having read before - that of a dam on a river. The river is the transmission line with a lake as the source (presumably) and then he imagines a dam load. The dam standing waves, per his description, have phase and amplitude characteristics that depend on how tall the dam wall is relative to the surface height of the dammed river. An extensive array of graphs is provided showing how the current of the dam standing waves react to the dam transmission line termination impedance. I always wonder when seeing electrical-mechanical parity examples whether, as with this case, there are any dam magazine articles out there that use an electrical transmission line to help fellow civil engineers...

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle for December 9

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle - December 9, 2018 - RF CafeEach week, for the sake of all avid cruciverbalists amongst us, I create a new technology-themed crossword puzzle using only words 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, see someone or something in the exclusion list who or that is directly related to this puzzle's theme, such as Hedy Lamar or the Bikini Atoll, respectively. Enjoy...

Electrical Meters - Why Meters?

Electrical Meters - Why Meters? NAVPERS 10622 Chapter 18 - RF CafeEven though most electrical meters have gone to a digital format, there are still many millions of analog meter movements doing service in equipment around the world. Analog meters are especially good for when the value being reported is changing rapidly and trying to read a numerical value would be tiring or impossible. A perfect example of comparing analog to digital is the Internet speed test display used by most companies. Run this speed test from Spectrum and watch the two indicator types simultaneously. Of course many pre-electronic meters are driven by sources other than electricity; e.g., fluid flow rate pressure meters, your bathroom scale, automobile speedometers, etc. A lot of modern "analog" meter indicator needles...

Chart of Radio Symbols

Chart of Radio Symbols, March 1935 Radio-Craft - RF CafeThis Chart of Radio Symbols would make a nice wall poster for your office, lab, or Ham shack. It has a nice vintage look to it - because having been scanned from a 1935 edition of Radio-Craft magazine, it is a true vintage relic. Although it would look great in its gray scale format, importing it into a graphics program and adding a little color would really jazz it up. A bit of brown would provide an aged sepia look, or you could go all out and custom color each square (I created one for you). Click on the image to have the high resolution version display for printing...

RF & Electronics Stencils for Visio

RF & Electronics stencils for Visio r4 - RF CafeWith more than 1000 custom-built stencils, this has got to be the most comprehensive set of Visio Stencils available for RF, analog, and digital system and schematic drawings! Every stencil symbol has been built to fit proportionally on the included A-, B-, and C-size drawing page templates (or use your own page if preferred). Components are provided for system block diagrams, conceptual drawings, schematics, test equipment, racks, and more. Page templates are provided with a preset scale (changeable) for a good presentation that can incorporate all provided symbols...

RF Cascade Workbook - RF Cafe