"Research groups from NIMS, Seagate Technology,
and Tohoku University have made a breakthrough in the field of hard disk drives
(HDD) by demonstrating the feasibility of multi-level recording using a
three-dimensional magnetic recording medium to store digital information. The
research groups have shown that this technology can be used to increase the storage
capacity of HDDs, which could lead to more efficient and cost-effective data storage
solutions in the future. Enhancing Data Storage Capacity Data centers are increasingly
storing vast amounts of data on hard disk drives (HDDs) that use perpendicular magnetic
recording (PMR) to store information at areal densities of around 1.5 Tbit/in².
However, to transition to higher areal densities, a high anisotropy magnetic recording
medium consisting of FePt grains combined with heat-assisted laser writing is required.
This method, known as heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR), is capable of sustaining
areal recording densities of up to 10 Tbit/in². Furthermore, densities of larger
than 10 Tbit/in² are possible based on a new principle demonstrated by storing multiple
recording levels of 3 or 4 compared..."
RF Cafe visitor James G. sent me photos
of some paper capacitors he plans to replace in a 1950s vintage radio set. It is
a foreign job, most likely from France, based on the schematic. Some markings on
the capacitors are not familiar; maybe you have seen them.
The photos show things like "ESSAI 1.500
V.C.C." which I assume means 1,500 V (1.5 kV) working voltage, based on
the European swapping of dots and commas for decimal points. "Essai" in French means
"test," or "trial." "V.C.C." is probably a French marking for voltage similar to
WVDC (DC working voltage). Another marking shows "100/1000 deF," which could be μμF,
but unlikely given it is a paper capacitor. Maybe millifarad? Any insight will be
appreciated.
With more than 1000
custom-built symbols, this has got to be the most comprehensive set of
Visio Symbols available
for RF, analog, and digital system and schematic drawings! Every object has
been built to fit proportionally on the provided A-, B- and C-size drawing page
templates (or can use your own). Symbols are provided for equipment racks and test
equipment, system block diagrams, conceptual drawings, and schematics. Unlike previous
versions, these are NOT Stencils, but instead are all contained on tabbed pages
within a single Visio document. That puts everything in front of you in its full
glory. Just copy and paste what you need on your drawing...
Here is a really good synopsis of
"rare earth" elements that explains how they came to be known in that way. Hint:
It is not that they are so rare, in fact per Wikipedia, Cerium is the 25th most
abundant element on Earth. The issue is they are not in concentrated lodes, but
spread out as components of other mineral compounds, so extensive processing is
needed to isolate and purify them. One of the first post-war commercial level extraction
processes was the result of experimentations during nuclear bomb research. As you
might know, "holes" existed in the Periodic Table of the Elements when it was first
constructed in 1869 by Dmitri Mendeleev, because not all predicted naturally occurring
elements had been found. Helium, atomic number 2, was not found on Earth until 1895,
after first having been observed in the sun's spectrum a few years earlier (hence
its name, from Helios). Author Alden Armagnac provides a primer in the original
15 rare earths (now 17) in this 1949 Popular Science magazine article...
1965 was the beginning of America's involvement
in Vietnam. A mere decade had passed since the end of the Korean War (or "conflict"
if you prefer), and the Department of Defense had not done much to modernize the
military since then. Unlike with World War II when U.S. factories were turning
out military aircraft, ships, and ground vehicles ahead of formal involvement, Congress
was not interested in making headlines with news of war machines. When the first
U.S. troops were sent in March of that year, things kicked into high gear. Lyndon
Johnson was said to have tried to direct the war from the White House, but it was
his Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara, whose actions caused the Vietnam efforts
to be nicknamed "McNamara's War." The "Washington
Newsletter" feature of this October 1965 issue of Electronics magazine
reported on, among other military-related items, the U.S. Air Force's plans to phase
out the venerated (now, not then) B−52 Stratofortress bomber by sometime in the
1970s...
In the original radio broadcast of Jean
Shepherd's "A Christmas Story," which was set in the Great Depression era, he spoke
of magazine advertisements promising rewarding careers in electronics for men of
adventure. Over the last few years I have posted many such advertisements from vintage
electronics magazines, but they were also commonly seen in women's magazines,
Life, The Saturday Evening Post, and many others. This ad pitching
the Radio Corporation of America's (RCA) home study courses for electronics technology
ran in a 1961 edition of Electronics World. Chairman of the Board,
David Sarnoff, sends the message to readers. Sarnoff was commissioned as a Brigadier
General in the Army Air Corps during World War II. He orchestrated radio broadcasts
for the D−Day invasion (June 6, 1944), and also the Radio Free Europe system for
post-war years...
"As transistors are made ever tinier to
fit more computing power into a smaller footprint, they bump up against a big problem:
quantum mechanics. Electrons get jumpy in small devices and leak out, which wastes
energy while degrading performance. Now a team of researchers is showing that it
doesn't have to be that way. With careful engineering, it's possible to turn electrons'
quantum behavior into an advantage. A team of English, Canadian, and Italian researchers
have developed a
single-molecule
transistor that harnesses quantum effects. At low temperatures, the single-molecule
device shows a strong change in current with only a small change in gate voltage,
nearing a physical limit known as the sub-threshold swing. Getting near or beyond
this limit will allow transistors to be switched with lower voltages, making them
more efficient and generating less waste heat. The research team, including physicists
at Queen Mary University of London, achieved this by taking advantage of how quantum
interference alters the flow of current in single molecules..."
When's the last time you saw a magazine
advertisement showing electronic devices in
TO- type metal packages? "TO,"
by the way, stands for "transistor outline." It's been a long time for me. I did
a double-take upon spotting this full-page ad by
Silanna UV appeared in the April issue of
Photonics. The
products encased in the those vintage metal cans are ultraviolet light emitting
diodes (UV LED), which are used primarily in sterilization processes for killing
bacteria and viruses. Per the company website, 'Our best-in-class UV LED technologies
can address everything from reducing healthcare-acquired infections and food contamination
to minimizing the transmission of diseases and removing micro pollutants from drinking
water. And in creating these products, Silanna focuses on minimizing its own use
of natural resources and energy through innovative approaches to 'designing for
manufacture' and investing in the latest, optimized production processes.'" That's
it; I thought you might enjoy a trip back in time, a la the old
Watkins
Johnson, M/A-COM, and Avantek RF amps and mixers.
This assortment of custom-designed themes
by RF Cafe includes T-Shirts, Mouse Pads, Clocks, Tote Bags, Coffee Mugs and Steins,
Purses, Sweatshirts, Baseball Caps, and more, all sporting my amazingly clever "RF Engineers - We Are the World's Matchmakers"
Smith chart design. These would make excellent gifts for husbands, wives, kids,
significant others, and for handing out at company events or as rewards for excellent
service. My graphic has been ripped off by other people and used on their products,
so please be sure to purchase only official RF Cafe gear. I only make a couple bucks
on each sale - the rest goes to Cafe Press. It's a great way to help support RF
Cafe. Thanks...
This article is a good indicator of how
prevalent cigarettes were back in 1948 when it appeared in Popular Science
magazine. Transmitter, receiver, and hearing air amplifiers were referenced to be
"about the size of a pack of cigarettes." The peanut vacuum tubes used within are
said to be "smaller than a half-smoked cigarette." Those of us who lived back in
the days when smoke-filled restaurants, buses, grocery stores, and houses was the
norm easily compare the sizes to such a familiar entity. We even know what it means
to be "smaller than a bread box." Nowadays, references to the size of electronic
components would be to something like a grain of sand, which is a form of irony
since that's what the chip is made from (essentially). The article's title, "The
Radio That Was Shot from a Gun," derives from the miniaturization technology
developed for anti-aircraft shell proximity fuses...
Robert Radford's (not to be confused with
Robert Redford) "Electromaze"
is a unique - and weird - sort of word puzzle format which first appeared in the
April 1966 issue of Popular Electronics magazine. Some people were confused
about the strategy, believing that all the white spaces needed to be filled in.
They do not. Just because a letter might have an empty square adjacent to it does
not imply that another letter must fill it. You will probably want to print out
the maze grid and find an old guy who should still have a pencil stowed away somewhere
you can borrow to use for filling in the boxes...
The January 1951 issue of Radio-Electronics
magazine had a big collection of
electronics-themed comics - five of them. All of them are pretty good, and you
don't need to have been there during the early TV era to appreciate the humor. The
comic from page 127 is a good first step in troubleshooting for today, and is usually
at the top of the problem solving section of consumer gear throughout the electronic
age. The page 126 comic is an oft-used gag for garage-related funnies. Although
not directly related, it reminds me of how early wireless garage door openers had
their antennas stretched underneath of the car, as mentioned in other articles,
including "The New Radio Garage Door Opener." I colorized them all...
TotalTemp Technologies has more than 40
years of combined experience providing thermal platforms.
Thermal Platforms are
available to provide temperatures between −100°C and +200°C for cryogenic cooling,
recirculating & circulating coolers, temperature chambers and temperature controllers,
thermal range safety controllers, space simulation chambers, hybrid benchtop chambers,
custom systems and platforms. Manual and automated configurations for laboratory
and production environments. Please contact TotalTemp Technologies today to learn
how they can help your project.
An article on the TechExplore website entitled,
"Why
won't some people use a smartphone? And is that difficult?," states, "In a world
where more and more services and social interaction are based on mobile apps, a
smartphone has become close to a necessity. Despite this, some people avoid smartphones
and instead use a dumbphone - a traditional mobile phone or a reduced-feature designer
phone." One contributor remarked: "We found that in many societies, all sorts of
tricks had to be invented to make life without a smartphone work." Um, does the
university prof not realize that life "worked" just fine for the preceding many
millennia without a smartphone? Evidently now if you don't feel the need to be "connected"
24/7, you're considered a weirdo. Well, count me in that group. I rarely carry a
phone - dumb or smart. I read from and write (even cursive) on paper. I look up
definitions and spellings in a printed Webster dictionary. My landline phone sits
on the desk and has a handset on a curly cord. I eat meals and do household tasks
without checking a phone ...been managing to eek out a survival that way for 65
years now. Other than by tracking purchases on credit cards around town, nobody
has a record of my whereabouts or schedule. I pity the phone slaves.
Exodus Advanced Communications, is a multinational
RF communication equipment and engineering service company serving both commercial
and government entities and their affiliates worldwide. We are pleased to present
the new Exodus
AMP2070A solid state high power amplifier, ideal for broadband EMI−Lab, Communication
and EW applications. Class A/AB linear design for all modulations & industry
standards. Covers 1.0 to 6.0 GHz, producing 150 W minimum Psat, 100 W
minimum P1dB, and 52 dB minimum gain, with 20 dB gain adjustment. Excellent
flatness, optional monitoring parameters for Forward/Reflected power, VSWR, voltage,
current & temperature sensing for superb reliability and ruggedness. Integrated
in our compact 3U chassis weighing approximately 25 kg...
Banner 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 280,000 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...
"New insights into how
proton-coupled electron transfers occur at an electrode could help researchers
design more efficient fuel cells and electrolyzers. A key chemical reaction - in
which the movement of protons between the surface of an electrode and an electrolyte
drives an electric current - is a critical step in many energy technologies, including
fuel cells and the electrolyzers used to produce hydrogen gas. For the first time,
MIT chemists have mapped out in detail how these proton-coupled electron transfers
happen at an electrode surface. Their results could help researchers design more
efficient fuel cells, batteries, or other energy technologies. 'Our advance in this
paper was studying and understanding the nature of how these electrons and protons
couple at a surface site, which is relevant for catalytic reactions that are important
in the context of energy conversion devices or catalytic reactions..."
Knowing that I am an avid consumer of literature
pertaining to time and astronomy, Melanie picked up a book at the library for me
entitled,
Longitude: The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific
Problem of His Time, by Dava Sobel. When Christopher Columbus discovered
America, his intended target was, if you recall, the Indies. His original charter
was to find a direct westerly pathway from the Atlantic coast of Europe to the immensely
profitable trade production region of the Indies as an alternative to to sailing
around the treacherous Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of Africa. How could
such an experienced navigator have missed his mark by so far, you might reasonably
ask? Didn't Columbus know how to use a sextant, or at least have a navigator who
could? The answer to the second question is, "no." The answer to the first question
is complicated. Recall your elementary school poem titled In 1942, which began "In
fourteen hundred ninety-two, Columbus sailed the ocean blue." John Hadley's and
Thomas Godfrey's sextant - originally called an octant - was not invented and refined
until the middle of the 18th century. The answer to the first question is that prior
to the advent of the sextant and accurate sea-going clocks, determining latitude
was easy, but determining longitude was mostly guesswork and dead reckoning...
The newest release of RF Cafe's spreadsheet
(Excel) based engineering and science calculator is now available -
Espresso
Engineering Workbook™. Among other additions, it now has a Butterworth Bandpass
Calculator, and a Highpass Filter Calculator that does not just gain, but also
phase and group delay! Since 2002, the
original Calculator Workbook has been available as a free download. Continuing
the tradition, RF Cafe Espresso Engineering Workbook™ is also
provided at no cost,
compliments of my generous sponsors. The original calculators are included, but
with a vastly expanded and improved user interface. Error-trapped user input cells
help prevent entry of invalid values. An extensive use of Visual Basic for Applications
(VBA) functions now do most of the heavy lifting with calculations, and facilitates
a wide user-selectable choice of units for voltage, frequency, speed, temperature,
power, wavelength, weight, etc. In fact, a full page of units conversion calculators
is included. A particularly handy feature is the ability to specify the the number
of significant digits to display. Drop-down menus are provided for convenience...
Amplifier Solutions Corporation (ASC) is
a manufacturer of amplifiers for commercial & military markets. ASC designs
and manufactures hybrid, surface mount flange, open carrier and connectorized amplifiers
for low, medium and high power applications using Gallium Nitride (GaN), Gallium
Arsenide (GaAs) and Silicon (Si) transistor technologies. ASC's thick film designs
operate in the frequency range of 300 kHz to 6 GHz. ASC offers thin film
designs that operate up to 20 GHz. ASC is located in an 8,000 sq.ft. facility
in the town of Telford, PA. We offer excellent customer support and take pride in
the ability to quickly react to evolving system design requirements.
More than half a century has passed
since Radio-Electronics magazine editor Hugo Gernsback wrote this piece
entitled, "Upheaval
in Electronics." In it, he compares the state of the art in electronics since
half a century earlier, which would have been 1911 - a couple years before World
War I began. He stated the obvious, "Just as electronics of today bears no
resemblance to electronics of 50 years ago, the present art cannot be compared to
electronics 50 years hence." Of course he was correct. Present day communications
routinely goes beyond radio frequencies, into microwave, millimeterwave, nanometerwave
(aka light) and onward. As of recent, add to that instantaneous quantum communications
over great distances via "entangled" media. Semiconductor technology was relatively
new in 1961, with the first monolithic integrated circuit having been developed
the year before. As of this writing, Micron has a 5.3 trillion MOSFET memory
chip on the market. An entire FM radio receiver, GPS receiver, and radar receiver
fits on a single die, sans antenna and power supply - Mr. Gernsback's predicted
"diminutive radios." The depth and breadth of modern electronics is impossible to
document in a single printed volume. Even the collective works of Wikipedia does
not comprise a panoptic resource...
Raise your hand if you used 5¼" floppy
disks (360 kB). Raise your other hand if you used 3½" floppy disks (720 kB).
Take a bow if you used a cassette tape deck for storing and retrieving programs.
I've got both hands raised, and am bowing over. My first external computer storage
consisted of a Sears cassette recorder/player connected to a
Sinclair ZX80 machine with a membrane
keyboard and a 13" color TV for a monitor. That would have been sometime around
1983. According to Wikipedia, in 1976, Shugart Associates introduced the 5¼-inch
FDD, and IBM the 3½" in 1986. This
IEEE Spectrum article delves into 3M's (Minnesota Mining
and Manufacturing) role in the removable storage realm..
With more than 1000
custom-built symbols, this has got to be the most comprehensive set of
Visio Symbols available
for RF, analog, and digital system and schematic drawings! Every object has
been built to fit proportionally on the provided A-, B- and C-size drawing page
templates (or can use your own). Symbols are provided for equipment racks and test
equipment, system block diagrams, conceptual drawings, and schematics. Unlike previous
versions, these are NOT Stencils, but instead are all contained on tabbed pages
within a single Visio document. That puts everything in front of you in its full
glory. Just copy and paste what you need on your drawing...
|
In 1958 when this "Customer Cues" installment
of John T. Frye's "Mac's
Service Shop" series of technodramas in Radio & TV News magazine, color
television was a relatively new phenomenon. The first commercially sold color TV
set - the Admiral C1617A - went on sale at the very end of 1953. The NTSC approved
the first standardized specification for a composite color television composite
signal (color, gray scale, audio, brightness, synchronization) earlier that year.
It allowed the same signal to work with both black and white (B&W) and color
receivers. A lot of research went into making sure the viewing public was happy
with their sets, using polls, hands-on instruction and publications on how to properly
adjust tuning and picture controls, plus tips on installing outdoor antennas and
running the twin lead transmission cable down to the set. Of course the proper way
to fiddle with the built-in "rabbit ears" antenna was covered as well. I don't think
any official pamphlets included mashing tinfoil onto the rabbit ears in complex
patterns as many people did - truth is, it must have worked in some cases. In the
story, Mac schools Barney on the situation.
Mystery stories were broadcast on radio
stations in the days before television - and for quite a while after TV was available
for that matter. Families gathered around the living room radio set in excited anticipation
of the next adventure of shows like "The Shadow," "Amos 'n' Andy," "Tales of the
Texas Rangers," "Dragnet," and "The Green Hornet." During that era, it was common
also for electronics magazines, which focused largely on radio communications, to
experiment with printed
dramas
that had a radio-centric theme. Here is the first of a series tried by Radio-Craft
magazine in the late 1930s. A couple decades later the "Carl & Jerry" adventures
were run in Popular Electronics, but other than that I don't recall seeing
a lot of these things. If you're a mystery fan, then here you go. A great collection
of old time radio broadcasts can be heard on the Old Radio World and Old Radio Programs
websites...
Moral standards seem to rigidly obey the
second law of thermodynamics, which states that entropy (disorder) increases in
a closed system. Most people would say society is more rude and corrupt today than
in days gone by - count me among them. However, believing so does not obviate or
excuse acts of deviance in the past. Indeed, even esteemed organizations like the
American
Radio Relay League (ARRL) seems to have been guilty of promoting dishonest acts.
To wit, consider this offer appearing in the "Strayed" column of the April 1933
issue of QST magazine, "For Sale: QSL Cards of any country. Win your WAC
without delay. Name your spot. We'll send the card." It also describes a scheme
for ripping off electronics supplies stores. Shameful!
Temwell is a manufacturer of 5G wireless communications filters
for aerospace, satellite communication, AIoT, 5G networking, IoV, drone, mining
transmission, IoT, medical, military, laboratory, transportation, energy, broadcasting
(CATV), and etc. An RF helical bandpass specialist since 1994, we have posted >5,000
completed spec sheets online for all kinds of RF filters including helical, cavity,
LC, and SMD. Standard highpass, lowpass, bandpass, and bandstop, as well as duplexer/diplexer,
multiplexer. Also RF combiners, splitters, power dividers, attenuators, circulators,
couplers, PA, LNA, and obsolete coil & inductor solutions.
"Columbia Engineering researchers have built
a photonic chip that can produce
high-quality, ultra-low-noise microwave signals using only a single laser. The
compact device - a chip so small, it could fit on a sharp pencil point - results
in the lowest microwave noise ever observed in an integrated photonics platform.
The achievement provides a promising pathway towards small-footprint ultra-low-noise
microwave generation for applications such as high-speed communication, atomic clocks,
and autonomous vehicles. Electronic devices for global navigation, wireless communications,
radar, and precision timing need stable microwave sources to serve as clocks and
information carriers. A key aspect to increasing the performance of these devices
is reducing the noise, or random fluctuations in phase, that is present on the microwave.
'In the past decade, a technique known as optical frequency division has resulted
in the lowest noise microwave signals that have been generated to date,' said Alexander
Gaeta, David M. Rickey Professor of Applied Physics and Materials Science and professor
of electrical engineering at Columbia Engineering..."
Rhode & Schwarz publishes a lot of very
useful application notes that are particularly for newcomers to the field of RF
and microwaves. All are forms of infomercials for their products, but than all companies
do it. This new one entitled, "Testing
RF Amplifier Designs," "...offers an overview from electronic design automation
to real RF devices while focusing on verification, characterization, repeatability,
and throughput. It explains the important characteristics and how they can be verified.
In addition, it sheds light on the specialties along the value chain from development,
validation and characterization to production." Here is a link to
Testing RF Amplifier Designs that doesn't require registration...
Banner 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 280,000 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...
The U.S. Air Force became a separate branch
of the armed forces on September 18th, 1947, almost exactly two years after Japan
unconditionally surrendered to Allied Forces (Germany had unconditionally surrendered
back in May). This recruitment advertisement appeared in the March 1948 issue of
Popular Science magazine, a year after the Selective Training and Service Act of
1940 expired on March 31st, 1947. It was a joint appeal by the Army and the Air
Force for men seeking careers in communications - particularly targeting, it seems,
amateur radio operators, by touting a steerable beam antenna. I could not find numbers
on how many conscripted and volunteer troops left the service immediately after
the war. Many articles reported a big force drawdown in personnel, which combined
with massive layoffs in war equipment industries, led to employment problems. It
did not last for long, as the Military Selective Service Act of 1948 reinstated
draft registration again. After all, the Military Industrial Complex, as 5-star
General/President Eisenhower would eventually call it, needed work.
Here in this 1967 issue of Electronics
World magazine is yet another example of where the basics in electronics never
changes. There are always new people entering into the realm, so even if the subject
has been covered countless times already, there is always a need to print it again.
Remember that at one time you were a newbie and appreciated seeing beginners' concepts
explained. The old-timers of the day probably complained about being tired of seeing
the simple stuff re-hashed over and over. Most standard
potentiometers (pots) are linear in operation, that is, the resistance between
the moveable wiper contact and the overall resistance between the two ends is directly
proportional to the percentage of travel along the length of the resistive element
(printed or wirewound). One of more popular specialty pots is the logarithmically
tapered type that is used in audio circuits in order to effect an audible linear
sound volume change relative to the percentage of travel of the wiper arm. Analog
stereo systems are major users of tapered potentiometers. The more things change,
the more they remain the same...
A love-hate relationship between major nations
competing for leadership and dominance in the military and aerospace technology
realms has existed in earnest at least since the
space race began. Often, the pilots, astronauts, scientists and engineers are
much more willing to set aside political differences in order to more effectively
and efficiently advance the state of the art and/or basic knowledge. Maybe archeologists,
biologists, endocrinologists, climatologists, zoologists, pathologists, and you-name-it-ologists
feel the same way, but those types, dealing with squishy living things, are probably
more altruistic than your typical physical sciences guy (or gal). It is the government
management sides of the equation agonizing over the need to solicit or accept foreign
assistance. There is (or was at the time) no better example than the U.S.A. (United
States of America) and the U.S.S.R. (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics), particularly
for space-based communications. Satellites were a very new entry into the radio
world and both sides needed each other's help in testing and assessing the few "birds"
being launched. In particular, high gain earth-based receiver systems were required...
I wonder if this this is an actually representative
of the SmallSat mentioned in the article. It looks like someone Photoshopped a set
of PV panels on a standard subsystem module package. "Terran Orbital Corporation
has made a significant move into the geosynchronous orbit (GEO) small satellite
market with its unveiling of the
SmallSat GEO solution, designed for satellites weighing over 500kg. This cutting-edge
solution will be showcased at the upcoming SATELLITE 2024 trade show from March
18-21 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Washington D.C., featuring
an immersive augmented reality experience. The SmallSat GEO solution is specifically
crafted for the communications sector, capable of operating in geosynchronous orbit
to deliver unprecedented power and performance, a demand that has surged in the
GEO sector's gradual shift towards smaller satellites. Leveraging a state-of-the-art
94,000 sq. ft. manufacturing facility equipped with advanced automation in both
construction and testing, along with the experience gained from three prior GEO
missions..."
Werbel Microwave, located in Whippany, New
Jersey, is a producer of high quality passive power RF and microwave components
across a worldwide customer base. A partnership has recently been established with
Canada's
Global Electromarketing, a sales representative agency which focuses on market
research, competitive analysis, and brand positioning. Werbel's founder and president
Ernest Werbel says, "We are looking forward to growth and success together." Werbel
Microwave designs and manufactures RF directional and bidirectional couplers (6 dB
to 50 dB) and RF power dividers / combiners (2− to 16−way) with select models
operating up to 26.5 GHz and 100 W of CW power (3 kW peak). All are
RoHS and REACH compliant and are designed and manufactured in our Whippany, NJ,
location. Custom products and private label service available.
With more than 1000
custom-built symbols, this has got to be the most comprehensive set of
Visio Symbols available
for RF, analog, and digital system and schematic drawings! Every object has
been built to fit proportionally on the provided A-, B- and C-size drawing page
templates (or can use your own). Symbols are provided for equipment racks and test
equipment, system block diagrams, conceptual drawings, and schematics. Unlike previous
versions, these are NOT Stencils, but instead are all contained on tabbed pages
within a single Visio document. That puts everything in front of you in its full
glory. Just copy and paste what you need on your drawing...
If you remember watching movies and television
shows up through the 1970s or so, you have probably seen scenes (see what I did
there?) where someone struggled desperately to place and keep connected telephone
calls to, from, or within foreign countries (outside the U.S., that is). Our
Bell Telephone Company was well known and respected for the widespread, reliable,
and quality network it built out across the land. A continual effort to improve
the system while containing costs to make telephony affordable to most people is
what did the job. Beginning with manually (or more accurately, womanually) operated
switchboards, then graduating to automated electromechanical circuit switching centers,
it eventually evolved to the computer controlled and optimized solid state networking
circuits of today. Unlike the multitude of telecommunications companies today, Bell
really had no competition, so government oversight combined with the company's desire
to invoke good will amongst its customers helped keep things in check. Self-promotions
like this full-page 1949 Popular Science magazine appearance were common.
Even with the domination of LED, plasma,
and LCD displays, there are still
cathode ray tubes (CRTs) on the job. Hobbyists workbenches are filled with them
for sure, but design and manufacturing facilities still have huge inventories of
test equipment with CRTs, and a lot of computer equipment on the production line
with CRTs sitting in racks. LED, LCD, and plasma displays all have their own claims
to genius on the part of their designers, but cathode ray tube designers - and the
designers of the driver circuits - deserve special recognition. Consider the physics
and materials involved: glass, phosphor, magnetics, thermonics, electrostatics and
electrodynamics, relativity (electrons traveling at relativistic speeds gain mass,
requiring stronger deflection fields). This article from the February 1955 edition
of Popular Electronics provides a look into the CRT from a layman's perspective...
Short wave radio was a boon to both professional
and amateur radio operators because of its ability to be received over longer distances
using significantly lower transmitter power. In 1947 when this article appeared
in Radio-Craft magazine, the problem was (and still is) that short wave
bands typically suffer from
atmospheric ionization effects that vary depending on time of day, local weather,
solar activity, pollution, and other phenomena. Long wave's advantage was that although
it required higher power and longer antennas, it was (and is) extremely reliable.
For other than the most critical applications, idiosyncrasies of short wave communications
were accepted as the price of more convenient and lower cost operation. Widespread
adoption of short wave communications brought extensive studies and characterization
of atmospheric influences in particular frequency bands. Discovery of distinct "F"
layers (regions) in the ionosphere and their effects on radio transmission has allowed
radio operations to predict and accommodate the affected propagation paths. What
does the "F" in F-Layer mean? According to my sources the "F" refers not to frequency,
but to "free" electrons in the ionosphere...
A Wikipedia on the history of nuclear power
shows a photo of the first light bulbs ever lit by electricity generated by nuclear
power, at EBR-1 at Argonne National Laboratory-West, December 20, 1951. That was
two years after this "U.S.
Lights New Atomic Pile for Peace" article in Popular Science magazine,
which discusses progress at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, located in New York
state. It opened in 1947. Much public excitement - and fear - was fomented over
the use of nuclear energy, which had just four years earlier been used to bring
an end to World War II through its awesome level of concentrated destructiveness,
for peaceful uses like generating electrical power and for medicine. During the
postwar era, many such articles, which some considered propaganda, were published,
television shows aired, and movies produced in attempts to turn the public into
pro- or anti- nuclear power activists. The "anti's" have done a pretty good scaring
everyone to the point where rather than benefitting from the very "green" aspects
of nuclear power (which would have been continually improving in technology), they
instead are accepting monstrous installations of solar arrays, wind turbine farms,
and other impractical technologies. Their cost to society, economies, and the environment
are rarely reported honestly.
Members of Congress - both the House and
the Senate - are not necessarily there because they are exceptionally smart and/or
wise. An argument can be made that they are there because their constituents are
exceptionally stupid and/or unwise. In an address to students at the Booker T. Washington
High School in Houston, Texas, Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee stated, among other
dumb things, "the full moon is a complete, rounded circle,
which is made up mostly of
gasses." She previously claimed the Constitution is more than 400 years
old, and that astronauts planted an American flag on Mars (look it up). BTW, she
was a member of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee. Rep. Hank
Johnson worried back in 2011 that the
island of Guam might tip over
under the weight of excessive military gear. Many other examples of idiocy amongst
our "leaders" can be found.
This RCA (Radio Corporation of America)
advertisement from a 1948 issue of Radio−Craft magazine packed a lot of
meaning to American citizens who had recently experienced the trials, tribulations,
and ultimately victories of World War II. Company president David Sarnoff,
a well-known electronic communications industry titan before the war, served under
a special commission as a Brigadier General in the U.S. Army during WWII to
oversee radio communications. He was very familiar with the tragedy of Communism
and Socialism, having experienced its ruinous philosophy. Hitler and his minions
forbade citizens, under threat of imprisonment or worse, from listening to radios
lest they learn of the war's progress or of the freedoms experienced in other parts
of the world. Propaganda via radio was a daunting weapon for and against all engaged
nations, and even some Allied governments outlawed both transmitters and receivers
for the duration. This advertisement represents the appreciation Mr. Sarnoff
and his countrymen had for the simple ability to listen to radio broadcasts without
fear of retribution. The scenario depicted in the picture is similar to the famous
"Four Freedoms" paintings done by American artist Norman Rockwell in 1943. RCA added
"Freedom
to Listen" to Rockwell's list for a total of Five Freedoms...
On
April 8, 2024, one of the best total
solar eclipses of the last century crossed the United States from Texas to Maine.
Because the moon was near its closest orbital point to the Earth, and the Earth
was about midway between its orbital apogee and perigee, the sun appeared relatively
small and the moon appeared relatively large. That combination caused the moon's
shadow to be very wide across the face of the Earth. Note in the NASA eclipse map
at the right how much narrower the path of totality was for the August 17, 2017
eclipse. Maximum eclipse for this location was just shy of 81%. That was enough
to cause an eerie feel in the sky, but it was nowhere near dark. Let me state that
when I first became aware of this solar eclipse, it was sometime around 2016, when
I was living in Erie, Pennsylvania. Due to scheduling issues, Melanie and I decided
to not travel to South Carolina to view the August 21, 2017 eclipse, figuring
we would have a front-row seat to it on April 8, 2024, from our house, which
was only a few miles from the center of the path of totality. Life happened, and
we ended up moving back to North Carolina in 2022. Because hotel rooms just about
anywhere in the path of totality were in the $300+ per night range, we stayed here
and missed totality...
I did a little research on this 1959
Popular Electronics magazine article about John H. Nelson's work on how the
positions of planets affect
magnetic storms on Earth. It looked a little more like astrology than science,
but as it turns out, Nelson's findings gained support in both the astronomical and
meteorological fields. Naturally, the astrology crowd claimed him as part of their
goofiness, but that wasn't Nelson's fault. He published a book in 1974 titled ,"Cosmic
Connections." Yeah, even that sounds like an astrology title - poor choice (or maybe
he was trying to fool the contemporary Pharisees in to buying his book). The book
is out of print now, and I could not find any contemporary work that leverages Nelson's
work. My guess is that due to the relatively short time that observations were made,
the sun had not even gone through a full sunspot cycle. Each sunspot cycle, while
occurring on average every eleven years or so, can vary widely both in intensity
and duration from one period to the next. What might have produced the claimed 85%
accuracy for that particular sunspot cycle likely never provided enough correlation
in subsequent cycles to solidify the theory...
It's time for another pop quiz (does that
line give you a fearsome flashback to your school days?). Whenever I have one available,
I like to post quizzes from vintage electronics magazines, like this one on
diode circuit functions which appeared in the August 1965 issue of Popular
Electronics. Many from that era include vacuum tubes, but this one has the
solid state symbols so the under-40 folks won't be uncomfortable. Your job is to
look at the diode circuits and match them with the names of the functions. A couple
of them will probably cause some head scratching, but you should do well. Don't
jump to a quick conclusion with circuit "E" without noticing the two signal generators
attached to it...
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