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Mac's Radio Service Shop: Unusual New Equipment

Mac's Radio Service Shop: Unusual New EquipmentJohn T. Frye's monthly "Mac's Radio Service Shop" techno-drama, written in story form - was usually an incognito lesson on circuit functionality or troubleshooting, how to deal with customers, industry regulations and news, or an introduction to new components and equipment. As the "Unusual New Equipment" title suggests, this time Mac described a few new items added to the service shop to aid in their work. Often when reading one of the episodes, I do a Google search on specific components or equipment mentioned in the article. He describes a special-purpose CRT (Sylvania's new 5AXP4 Television Receiver Check Tube) that could be used universally for troubleshooting in place of a wide variety of installed picture tubes. I found one for sale on eBay for $39.95. There is not much you cannot find on eBay if you watch long enough...

Electronic Photo Album Quiz

Electronic Photo Album Quiz, March 1963 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteThis is a different type of electronics-related quiz from Quizmaster Robert P. Balin. Mr. Balin created many monthly quizzes for Popular Electronics magazine. Here you are provided a series of images and a list of men's first names, and you need to match the image to the name. There are nine in all. Sure, it's kind of hokey (especially B and I), but it is a good end-of-the-work-day challenge challenge to help pass the time until the weekend begins...

Evolution of the Phonograph

Evolution of the Phonograph, May 1956 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteWhile not a second-hand store junkie, I do like to occasionally make the rounds of the local Salvation Army, Goodwill, and other independent shops to see what kind of relics are donated. Since eBay, Etsy, and their kind have gained immensely in popularity, it is getting harder to find anything useful other than clothes and kitchen wares. A few months ago Goodwill had a 1910s vintage cabinet -style Edison disc phonograph (as opposed to wax cylinder) that was in very good condition, complete with a handful of styli and a couple old records. The original finish over smooth mahogany and burl veneers had only a few scratches and could easily be polished to look practically new. The metal hardware could have stood a fresh coat of black paint due to nearly a century of oxidation. Even the original nomenclature plate looked factory-new, and a clearly legible paper plaque...

Bell Labs Germanium Refining

Bell Labs Germanium Refining, May 1954 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteBell Labs, having been responsible for creating the first positive amplification point contact transistor just before Christmas 1947, continued to lead the way in semiconductor research and new product announcements for many decades. This little tidbit was tucked away at the bottom of page 120 in the May 1954 issue of Radio & Television News magazine. It reported on "the purest substances in the world" being created there in the form of 99.99999999% (aka 10N) pure germanium crystals, which are used as seed for growing boules for device production. That's one rogue impurity atom in ten billion germanium atoms. Modern monocrystalline silicon boules are typically 7N or better... 

New Attenuator Calculator

Attenuator Calculator Online Pi Tee Balanced Unbalanced - RF Cafe WebsiteThis Attenuator Calculator is probably unlike any you have seen. Not only does it calculate resistor values for both balanced and unbalanced Pi and Tee topologies, but it also calculates the power dissipated by each resistor, and calculates the input and output VSWR when 1% tolerance resistors are used rather than ideal values. Another page provides all equations and schematics for all four configurations.

The Strange World of Color Vision

The Strange World of Color Vision, January 1958 Radio Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteLike so many things in life that we take for granted - aspirin, automatic clothes washers, drill motors and bits, eyeglasses, rifles, bicycles, transistors, to name a few - we rarely think about the effort that went behind the end product that is now enjoyed. Even relatively simple devices like scissors are the result of someone saying to himself or herself, "Self, I need something to make cutting fabric and paper and hair simpler and neater, so what might that thing look like?" Then, after making a working prototype, improvements are made based on empirical testing from usage, improvements are made in the form factor, materials, size, etc., until evolution results in what can be purchased today. If you have ever been in a product design cycle, either privately or corporately, then you know the process well...

Over and Out - Amateur Radio Comics

Over and Out - Amateur Radio Comics, September 1969 Electronics Illustrated - RF Cafe WebsiteFound in what is the first issue of Electronics Illustrated magazine that I have bought are these Amateur radio related comics entitled, "Over and Out." The cartoonist's signature is simply "Rodrigues," which according to a Google search might be Charles Rodrigues (who also contributed to other tech magazines as well as to National Lampoon). I have to admit to needing to look up the "Yanqui aggressors" thing on the one comic, and then it made sense: Yanqui= Yankee. The last comic with the parrot is pretty funny; it's sort of the Ham radio equivalent to an auto-repeat telephone dialer like what you would use to call into a radio show during a listener contest...

1951 Belden Radio Wire Ad

Belden Radio Wire, September 1951 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteDuring World War II, the government created a specification for military-grade cable and assigned the designation RG-#/U, where "RG" stands for Radio Guide and the "U" stands for Utility. The "dash number" was sequentially issued and has no bearing on the characteristics of the cable. Founded in 1902 in St. Louis, Missouri, by Joseph Belden, the eponymously named company has been and continues today designing and manufacturing coaxial cable. Most of the RG-x/U coaxial cable types displayed in this 1951 Radio & Television News magazine advertisement are still being used today, in particular the very familiar RG-58/U (50 Ω), RG-59/U (75 Ω), RG-8/U (50 Ω), and RG-11/U (75 Ω)...

Circulators & Isolators Quiz

Quiz #76: Circulators & Isolators Quiz - RF CafeWelcome to the RFCafe Isolators & Circulators Quiz, a technical overview focused on non-reciprocal microwave components. These specialized devices are the primary tools used to protect sensitive signal sources from reflected power and to route signal flow in multi-stage RF systems. Whether you are isolating a high-power transmitter from a high-VSWR antenna, developing duplexers, or optimizing the signal isolation between cascaded amplifiers in a precision measurement setup, a solid grasp of circulator and isolator physics is essential. This assessment addresses the fundamental properties of ferrite-based non-reciprocal hardware, including insertion loss, port-to-port isolation, power...

What Does Your Daily Commute Cost You?

What Does Your Daily Commute Cost You? - RF Cafe SmorgasbordHow far do you commute each day for the privilege of doing your part to push back the frontiers of technical ignorance and to boldly go where no engineer - or technician - has gone before. Do you know what the cost equates for you each year? This handy-dandy infographic lays out some gruesome numbers. Those with a weak stomach probably should pass on viewing this one. Here's a hint at what you will see: See that big $795 in the thumbnail image? That's the average cost per year for commuting -- per mile! Yessiree, if you live just 10 miles from work, you're losing nearly $8,000 per year, depending on you automobile type, on gas, tires, maintenance, devaluation, and loss of your personal time (which is valuable, after all). Back in the early 1990s I drove about 45 miles each way...

Measuring Semiconductor Device Input Parameters with Vector Analysis

Measuring Semiconductor Device Input Parameters with Vector Analysis - RF Cafe WebsiteJoe Cahak, owner of Sunshine Design Engineering Services in Ramona, California, has written a white paper entitled, "Measuring Semiconductor Device Input Parameters with Vector Analysis." This article covers a recent test experience that utilized some thinking about the test fixture, the bias requirements and the device mounting and special calibration offsets needed to de-embed the test fixture response from the device response within the test fixture. The device also had to have bias on several ports simultaneously. We had to establish a "reference plane" within the fixture, from which we can use the Vector Network Analyzer's Port Extension or Phase Offset to dial out the distance from our 1 port calibration reference plane to the point of short reference within the fixture. With this phase offset compensation we can then measure...

Low-Pressure Modulation Facts

Low-Pressure Modulation Facts, July 1953 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteAuthor Howard Wright takes the opportunity here to distill the concept of modulation down to its basic operation while dispensing with the garbled mix of "graphs, formulas, charts, vectors, diagrams, and Greek letters which often enter into various discussions of modulation". Wright describes how to the uninitiated radio dial spinner, the culmination of events occurring behind the scenes in an AM reception is akin to knowing "that, to be reproduced, the picture [in a magazine] was broken down into its primary colors, if all we had to go by was the original print and the magazine?" That is a very apt comparison...

Many Thanks for Alliance Test Equipment's Support!

Allied Test Equipment Products - RF Cafe WebsiteAlliance 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 Radio Service Shop: A Little Lightning

Mac's Radio Service Shop: A Little Lightning, July 1948 Radio News - RF Cafe WebsiteBenjamin Franklin is famous for his kite-flying experiment whereby he "discovered" not electricity (as many people believe), but that lightning is a form of electricity (most people thought it was a jet of gas). A lesser known fact about Mr. Franklin is that he invented the lightning rod after realizing the electrical nature of lightning. His understanding of electric fields facilitated an implementation whereby hefty iron cabling interconnected a tall, pointed rod installed at the tallest point on a building and a spike driven into the ground. Lightning typically strikes the object that is the shortest distance (in terms of electrical field strength) from it because the discharge can begin at the lowest voltage. The presence of the grounded lightning rod above the highest point on a structure effectively brings that point all the way down to ground level...

Radio Terms Illustrated

Radio Terms Illustrated, August 1947 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteThese "Radio Term Illustrated" comics from vintage Radio-Craft magazines are some of my favorite tech-themed comics. Most were drawn by Frank Beaven in response to suggestions / requests by magazine readers. The one here from page 80 entitled "Crystal Gazing" was done by Franklin Folger. If you didn't know that it appeared in a 1947 edition, you might assume it depicts a Steam Punk themed LCD computer monitor mounted atop a Morse code straight key, but of course it is not. At the time, cathode ray tubes (CRTs) were the only form of video display, and while small like the one in the drawing (and round, unlike the drawing), they were far from flat. Little did the artist suspect that his "Crystal Gazing" idea meant to imply a type of mystic's medium for seeing...

Negative Feedback Transistor Amplifiers

Negative Feedback Transistor Amplifiers, May 1957 Radio & TV News - RF Cafe WebsiteThe big graphic with Figures 1 through 17 reminds me of the kinds of study sheets I used to make when cramming for exams in my college circuits courses. Did I ever tell you about the wise guy instructor I had for my first Circuits class at the University of Vermont? Anyway, this article provides an introductory level treatment of using negative feedback in amplifier circuits. Lots of illustration and formulas are included. Frequencies are at baseband, so you won't learn any secrets for high frequency amplifier stabilization, but then even RF and microwave circuits eventually need to convert down to baseband at some point for sampling or for use as audio or video...

QST Strays: Powder Puff Derby

Powder Puff Derby Peanuts July 6, 1975 - RF Cafe WebsitePrior to seeing this new tidbit in a 1976 issue of QST magazine, I had no idea that the wife of Peanuts comic strip creator Charles Schulz was an airplane pilot - and that is with having been a huge Peanuts fan for decades. Other than one of Snoopy's alter egos being that of a World War I flying ace, there is no other theme of airplanes in the strip, although according to this article, there was a 1975 Sunday comic strip with Peppermint Patty and Marcie flying atop Snoopy's doghouse, from California to Michigan. The Straits Area Radio Club (W8GQN) provided communications for the Powder Puff Derby, aka the Women's Air Derby, race in which Mrs. Jean Clyde Schulz took part in 1970, 1971, and 1975. It was a very long course - more than 2,000 miles as the crow flies...

SPURS Software - RF Design Magazine Software Contest

SPURS Software - RF Design Magazine Software Contest Winner (November 1992) - RF Cafe WebsiteWay...... back in 1992, RF Design magazine ran a software contest. Those were the days when most engineers and hobbyists wrote software in either Basic or Fortran. I happened to use Turbo Pascal, by Borland. At the time, I was working as an RF engineer for Comsat, in Germantown, MD. Having done a lot of frequency conversion designs in my previous work at General Electric, and even more there at Comsat, I had already written a crude program to calculate mixer spurious products, so this challenge gave me the excuse I needed to refine the user interface and add some creature comfort features like...

Time for Another Breakthrough

"It Seems to Us..." Time for Another Breakthrough, August 1976 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteAmateur radio operators - and all electromagnetic spectrum users for that matter - have always lamented crowded bands and interference (QRM and QRN). That goes for licensed and unlicensed bands. In 1976 when this editorial was printed in the ARRL's QST magazine, spectrum occupation within allocated bands was defined by commonplace analog AM and FM methods. Co-existence was generally not possible for operation within a common frequency range. Spread spectrum modulation / demodulation changed all that beginning in the 1990s, but prior to then such schemes were largely the exclusive domain of military communications, as were many other spectrum-saving methods which are commonplace today. A big part of the reason is the significant advances in digital processing hardware and software, along with declassification of some of the algorithms that eventually found their way into cellphone, WiFi, and other commercial applications. Given that many of the professional engineers...

They're Taking the Guesswork out of Scatter Communications

They're Taking the Guesswork out of Scatter Communications, September 1969 Electronics Illustrated - RF Cafe WebsiteAs with many areas of electronics communications, much of both the initial and continued research in atmospheric scattering of electromagnetic signals was/is done by amateur radio operators. The phenomenon is routinely used for accomplishing long distance communications (DX, in Ham terms) by exploiting the reflection property of ionized layers when radio signals impinge at a certain angle. The portion of the signal that returns to the transmitter location, when monitored, can provide information to the sender about the height, distance, and frequency range of the reflecting atmospheric layer. Some of the first indications of backscattering were noticed by radar operators who would receive echo returns from "phantom" targets that were really atmospheric reflections...

Today in Science History - RF Cafe Website
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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.

 

An Experiment with Gravity

An Experiment with Gravity, January 1970 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteThis is pretty cool. If I owned a good receiver (which I don't), I would definitely give it a try. In 1970 when this Popular Electronics article was written, a lot of Hams were still using tube receivers so the recommendation to let the equipment warm up for several hours prior to making the fine frequency adjustments was good advice. Nowadays the warm-up time and stability of receivers should permit 30 minutes or so to suffice (even ovenized frequency references need time to stabilize when first powered up). Unless I missed it, the author does not explicitly state that the frequency change measured over time is due to gravity acting on the mass of the crystal reference, but I suspect that is his intention since part of the experiment involves disconnecting the antenna and shielding the receiver from outside interferers. Over a lunar month period (29.5 days) we experience a leap tide and a neap tide which maximizes and minimizes, respectively, the vector sum...

PartSim Online Circuit Analysis Simulator

PartSim Online Circuit Analysis Simulator by Aspen Labs - RF Cafe WebsiteSimulation Program with Integrated Circuit Emphasis (SPICE) has been around since 1973. The basic computational engine has always been open source. It began as a simple analog circuit simulator that took a structured text file as the input net list and provided a text file output that contained the calculated values that the user specified such as DC bias points, transient analysis, and AC analysis. Online simulators are now going through the same kinds of growing pains that the earlier iterations of PC-based SPICE simulators experienced. Most are really clunky and always seem to be missing key features and/or easily accessed features - like rotating components on the schematic or routing interconnect lines. Aspen Labs, in a partnership with Digi-Key, has a free online analog circuit simulator called PartSim that seems to have conquered most of the basics. Being able to save and recall your work is a huge benefit...

Sangamo Electric Company Capacitors

Sangamo Electric Company, April 1954 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsiteSangamo Electric Company was a "heap" big name in capacitors in the realm in the middle of the last century. The company always featured an American Indian in its electronics magazine advertisements, and usually also included some form of "indian-ese" statements as part of the sales pitch. Of course such marketing schemes would be vehemently raided and those responsible figuratively "scalped," if you will pardon the gratuitous expressions. As with using names like the Washington Redskins, the Atlanta Braves, the Chicago Blackhawks, and the Cleveland Indians to appropriate and celebrate the bravery and might of the named peoples, Sangamo implied quality, durability, and reliability of its products through an association with American Indians. That does not matter to people who seek to create discord amongst the population while, in many cases, seeking notoriety and financial gain for themselves. Sangamo Electric was located in Marion, Illinois, an area where a few other uses of Sangamo are used, but I could not find any direct reference to a Sangamo tribe...

Coming "Secret" Weapons - Sound Familiar? 

Coming "Secret" Weapons, November 1944 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteUsually, when I read about yet another launching of rockets from Gaza into Israel, what comes to mind is the barrage of V1 Buzz Bombs and ultimately the V2 rockets that Germany terrorized London with during World War II. Although overall not very effective individually, they did cause brief spells of horror for the localized group of people that were affected through maiming, killing, or property destruction. The difference between the Nazi's weapons and Hamas' weapons is that the Germans didn't depend on other terrorist entities to supply them with their weapons of destruction; they were brilliant people who had evil intentions of world domination. Hugo Gernsback writes here that the initial plan for the V2 was to deliver an electromagnetic impulse that would disable all electrical and electronic systems within 8,000 feet of its detonation point - what we nowadays call an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) weapon. BTW, the 'V#' designation stood for...

Predicting the Future of Radio Communications

Predicting the Future of Radio Communications, June 1951 Radio-Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteSyzygy is a great word for a Scrabble game. If you use it on a Triple Word Score (TWS) space where the "Z" sits on a Double Letter Score (DLS) space, it will net you 105 points. About the only way to do better is to use all 7 letters on a TWS play, where you earn 50 bonus points added to your word score (I've done it twice in the last year). Syzygy is an astronomical term referring to an alignment of three or more celestial bodies - not necessarily in exact alignment, but within a few degrees. Astrologers (not to be confused with astronomers) have since their knuckles no longer dragged on the ground exploited such scenarios to predict various events both good and bad. That was even before they knew those "wandering" orbs (planet means "wanderer") were different than the (seemingly) stationary points of light. Until Galileo turned his rudimentary telescope on the planets, the only celestial objects with a discernable disk shape were the sun and moon, and possibly the earth. But I digress. It was long thought that the vector sum of gravitational influences was responsible for certain phenomena on our planet, including weather, tides, and earthquakes...

How Soon Shall We Have Television?

How Soon Shall We Have Television?, May 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteIf you think government bureaucracies meddling in the affairs of private business is a relatively new phenomenon, think again. Elected and unelected persons and agencies have since the inception of control over the populace made it their business to dictate which pursuits of technology are sanctioned and which are not. Often, the motivation lies in who within those bureaucracies stands to benefit monetarily from the decision. In this story lamenting the painfully and, in the author's opinion, unnecessarily long time experienced in bringing commercial broadcast television to the marketplace - in 1935. One of the primary stumbling blocks was the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) preventing companies from televising paid commercials during programs because, in the FCC's view, picture quality was not good enough to serve advertisers' interests. In the process...

G-String Transmission and Helical Wave Coils

G-String Transmission and Helical Wave Coils, June 1951 Radio-Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteWho says engineers and scientists have no sense of humor? This is not an April Fools joke or an attempt to punk you into reading the story. An Internet browser with strict parental control settings enabled might even prevent this page from even being displayed. In actuality, the term "G-String Transmission Line" was so dubbed by its inventor, Dr. George Goubau, as a tribute to his own name - both first and last. Out of an abundance of caution, I reference the Library of Congress' "G-String" entry for the good doctor and the device's legitimacy. A drawing similar to Fig. 1 in this 1951 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine can be seen on the chalkboard behind Dr. Goubau in the LoC photo. To be honest, I do not recall ever having heard of the G-string transmission line. Its enthusiastically, nearly evangelically extolled virtues must not have panned out in real-world practice because we do not find G-strings...

The FM Radio Boom

FM Radio Boom, August 1947 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteHugo Gernsback is not necessarily a household name in 2020, but in the early to middle 20th century, he was fairly well known in both the hard science and science fiction realms. He was a prolific author of books and magazines in both areas, applying his profound knowledge of technology and his ability to foretell the futures of many aspects of communications, mechanics, electronics, and marketing and societal behavior to the aforementioned. If you are a regular RF Cafe visitor, you have seen very many articles written by Hugo Gernsback reproduced. This particular work of prognostication appeared in a 1947 issue of his Radio-Craft magazine. It presciently claimed that a post-war boom in consumer buying after half a decade of sacrifice of creature comforts for the good of the country and world would feed a significant adoption of FM radio over...

E-flite Mini Pulse XT's Brushless ESC Waveform

E-flite Mini Pulse XT's Brushless ESC Waveform - RF Cafe WebsiteMuch more than just a self-serving video of my new R/C airplane flight agility, this model represents a plethora of modern electronics. Although the radio control system in this plane is a standard narrow band FM variety on 72.170 MHz (as opposed to my 2.4 GHz, spread spectrum system), the motor is a state-of-the-art 3-phase brushless model (E-flite 450)with a sensorless electronic speed control (E-flite EFLA331, 20 A). Power for both the radio and the motor is supplied by a 3-cell (11.1 V) lithium polymer (Li-Po) battery rated at 2,100 mAh with a 15C discharge current capacity. There was a time not so long ago when no one though that electric power could ever provide a equivalent to the nitro methane gulping internal combustion engines, but the time has come. This all-electric setup is fairly small in size, but there are much larger motors...

A Homebrew Soldering Gun

A Homebrew Soldering Gun, August 1947 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteWe take a lot for granted these days with the seemingly unlimited availability of cheap stuff of all kinds - some of it complete junk and other of it pretty darn good. That goes for electronics components and complete products and test equipment, tools, automobiles, appliances, and utensils, clothing, medical equipment - you name it. Something as simple as a pistol-type soldering gun can be purchased at just about any hardware or home store, and at a price that when adjusted back to equivalent money in the 1940s would be amazingly cheap even then. For instance a Weller Soldering Gun kit from Lowes sells for $39.48 today (less when on sale), which would have been $3.44 (per the BLS Inflation Calculator) in 1947 when this article showing how to build your own appeared in Radio-Craft magazine. If a soldering gun could have been purchased for a mere $3.44 in 1947, there would have been no need to publish such an article because its cheapness would have obviated...

Afghanistan's Buried Riches: Rare Earths & More

Afghanistan's Buried Riches: Rare Earths & More - RF Cafe SmorgasbordHave you heard about this? I hadn't. If you think the only goal in Afghanistan is to stamp out the Taliban, think again. An article in the October 2011 issue of Scientific American details the extensive mineral surveys that have been carried out there in the last year or so. Afghanistan is home to what may be the largest cache of rare earth elements in the world, with a potential to replace China as the largest extractor (~90%) of those atoms that lie in the lanthanide and actinide regions of the periodic table - the two rows that are typically pulled out of the chart. China, you may have heard, is severely restricting the export of rare earths - wanting to keep it for themselves - thereby triggering a near panic. Prices are rising so alarmingly that reopening mines in the U.S. has once again become profitable in spite of the crippling regulations that years ago closed down operations here (huge loss of jobs and tax revenue) and forced us to become reliant on offshore supplies...

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle May 3, 2020

Engineering & Science Crossword Puzzle May 3, 2020 - RF Cafe WebsiteAs with my hundreds of previous engineering and science-themed crossword puzzles, this one for May 3, 2020, contains only clues and terms associated with engineering, science, physical, astronomy, mathematics, chemistry, etc., which I have built up over nearly two decades. Many new words and company names have been added that had not even been created when I started in the year 2002. You will never find a word taxing your knowledge of a numbnut soap opera star or the name of some obscure village in the Andes mountains. You might, however, encounter the name of a movie star like Hedy Lamarr or a geographical location like Tunguska, Russia, for reasons which, if you don't already know, might surprise you.

E-flite Blade CP R/C Helicopter 4-in-1 Teardown

E-flite Blade CP R/C Helicopter 4-in-1 Teardown - RF Cafe WebsiteE-flite's Blade CP radio controlled electric helicopter comes from the factory with a 4-in-1 electronics unit that contains a 6-channel receiver that performs the functions needed for motor control, piezoelectric gyroscope, BEC (battery eliminator circuit), and ESC (electronics speed control). It also includes a dual-gimbal transmitter with an idle-up switch for transitioning to aerobatic mode where both positive and negative pitch can be commanded to the rotor head. My Blade CP has always flown well, but from the very beginning it has been prone to sudden, uncommanded control movements (glitches). The results have varied from slight jerkiness in the flight to a sudden high speed climb-outs (really bad when inside).

New York Taxing Out-of-State Healthcare Workers

New York Taxing Out-of-State Healthcare Workers"On the way back to your home state, don't let the door hit ya' where the good Lord split ya'. Oh, and we'll be sending you a tax bill in appreciation for your selfless sacrifice in caring for our citizens." That is basically the sentiment of New York's governor, who after literally begging out-of-state healthcare workers to come to NY City amongst the Chinese COVID-19 breakout, has declared that his financially mismanaged and cash-strapped state is going to collect income tax from the aforementioned good Samaritans.

All Channel Antenna Corporation

All Channel Antenna Corp., April 1954 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsitePhased vertical stacks of two or more antennas were fairly common in the television realm - especially once color broadcasts became more dominant in the 1950s. Up to 3 dB per additional antenna is possible, but due to various non-ideal physical parameters (summed phase angle, imperfect antenna geometry, etc.), realized gain is typically in the 2.5 to 2.8 dB range. Higher signal to noise ratios were needed to guarantee good color separation with the National Television System Committee (NTSC) and stereo channel audio separation with the advent of Multichannel Television Sound (MTS). As you might expect, companies appeared claiming to have invented physics-defying antennas that "outperform all present antennas." This particular "Super 60" model from All Channel Antenna Corporation further claims to outperform antennas that use a mechanical rotator (see my Alliance U-100 Tenna-Rotor) by virtue of its 9-position electronic phase switching...

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