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#1
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I think the subject of military surplus becoming ham gear and
influencing ham gear is worth its own thread, so here goes. (I've reused enough surplus stuff in my time...) Some examples of the influences: Look at the quartz crystals used in post-WW2 ham gear, and you'll see "FT-243" and "HC-6/U" units being used extensively, while the large round prewar types disappeared quickly. Although they seem huge today, the FT-243 and HC-6/U holders, and many others, were miniature types developed for military use during the war to both save space and get more out of the limited supply of radio-grade quartz available during the war. There were so many FT-243 units made that well into the 1990s the surplus supply was still being used up. The move to flexible coax-cable feedlines in amateur radio and elsewhere was a direct result of WW2 developments in the manufacture of such cables. "RG-8/U" was originally a military designation Semiconductor type numbers such as 1N5408 and 2N2222 are the result of a parts numbering system developed during WW2. Ironically, the system was developed for tubes - think of the 2E26, 2C39, 3E29, 6C21, etc. It was short-lived as a way to name new tube types, but lives on today for semiconductors. There are many other examples. And it wasn't just hams who benefited. Of course a lot of these developments were done by private industry, not by military personnel. But the developments were a direct result of military needs and funding. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
#2
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On May 5, 6:27�pm, N2EY wrote:
Look at the quartz crystals used in post-WW2 ham gear, and you'll see "FT-243" and "HC-6/U" units being used extensively, while the large round prewar types disappeared quickly. Although they seem huge today, the FT-243 and HC-6/U holders, and many others, were miniature types developed for military use during the war to both save space and get more out of the limited supply of radio-grade quartz available during the war. There were so many FT-243 units made that well into the 1990s the surplus supply was still being used up. For a link to MOST of the quartz crystal holders go to this link: http://s88932719.onlinehome.us/crystal_holders.htm [save it off-line, it was made by Brian Carling AF4K] During WWII the USA set priorities on who should get what for raw material, test equipment, facilities. Priority #1 was the Manhattan Project (to develop the atomic bomb). Priority #2 was to quartz crystal unit production with the civilian overseer being Galvin Mfg (changed to Motorola after the war). Main reference is Galvin's own biography book and the oft-repeated Bottoms paper (Bottoms was a participant, now deceased) found in frequency control special interest group at the IEEE and on several crystal companies today. Based on the Bottoms paper, USA production of quartz crystal units from about 60 different companies (most of them small firms) was about one million units per month in the last three years of WWII. The major source of natural quartz was Brasil (a neutral in WWII) and much research and trial began after WWII to grow quartz crystals from seed material, slightly impeded by a similar method for producing germanium and silicon ingots of astonishing purity. Both "man-made" efforts succeeded to make the color TV industry possible (both NTSC and PAL systems required a quartz crystal in each set to regenerate the color sub-carrier signal). The "HC-" prefix to quartz crystal HOLDERS is apparently a USA DoD designator prefix and was not used during WWII. To use those required more refined techniques in plating electrodes on quartz, "cold-welding" (a new technology adapted from the exploding semiconductor industry) to those electrodes and adaptation of "microwelding" developed for vacuum tube manufacturing (sometimes called "spot-welding" by those who haven't done it...an "eye-opener" and "eye-closer" if done through a stereo microscope). The vast majority of quartz crystal units made since around 1960 have the metal holder under various "HC-" prefixes. Semiconductor type numbers such as 1N5408 and 2N2222 are the result of a parts numbering system developed during WW2. Ironically, the system was developed for tubes - �think of the 2E26, 2C39, 3E29, 6C21, etc. It was short-lived as a way to name new tube types, but lives on today for semiconductors. Transistors were not available until 1947 and then not in production. High voltage breakdown silicon diodes such as the 1N5408 (3 A, 1 KV, plastic case) would not be available until around 1960. The "1Nxxxx" and "2Nxxxx" and (rare but there) "3Nxxxx" designations were done by the electronics industry, not by the military. During WWII the military had its own variation on vacuum tubes with labels of "VT-nnn" while the electronics industry used the civilian industry designations exsiting before USA's entry into WWII. The USA military stopped using the "VT-nnn" designator after WWII. Many high-power vacuum tubes used manufacturer's own part designations which the electronics industry accepted so as to ease their own burden in the fantastic explosion of electronics parts that began with TV set production once the civilian 'radio' industry restarted after WWII. Of course a lot of these developments were done by private industry, not by military personnel. But the developments were a direct result of military needs and funding. Almost ALL developments in electronics began as industry projects, even the IC. There is some controversy in the industry whether Intel or TI made the "first IC." Intel's first IC was for an Asian customer to use in a four-function calculator. Nearly all digital IC part numbers have number suffixes which follow the original TI line of "54" and "74" prefixes. Intel went on to gain a virtual monopoly on CPUs for PCs while there is just no stopping TI to date. While RCA Corporation developed the first CMOS junctions (and ICs), the semiconductor industry here and in Europe developed the Advanced CMOS juntions having idle current nearly down to leakage current yet with clock speeds so high that power drain is specified by operating speed. TTL logic structures have specified idle time current drain; Advanced CMOS logic does not. Major semiconductor corporations have their own part numbers for ICs, such as the one-"chip" PLL frequency source made by Analog Devices and favored by many QRP afficionados in amateur radio. Analog Devices grew out of the George Philbrick company which began with vacuum tube operational amplifier plug-ins (two tubes in a special holder which contained the circuitry). Addenda: I've never seen any FT-243 holder quartz crystals in USA-made CB transceivers. There might be some among roughly a million CBs made in the USA (millions more born off-shore). This post was done on 6 May 2010. 73, Len K6LHA |
#3
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"K6LHA" Len Anderson wrote...
Almost ALL developments in electronics began as industry projects, even the IC. There is some controversy in the industry whether Intel or TI made the "first IC." Intel's first IC was for an Asian customer to use in a four-function calculator. Intel's first commercial IC products were static (volatile) RAM chips (like the 3101) which replaced the magnetic cores used even in solid-state computers of the era (1960s). It wasn't until 1971 that Intel marketed the first monolithic microprocessor product, the 4004. Originally designed, as Mr. Anderson said, for the (now defunct) Japanese customer Busicom for a desk calculator. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Busicom |
#4
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In article ,
"Richard Crowley" wrote: "K6LHA" Len Anderson wrote... Almost ALL developments in electronics began as industry projects, even the IC. There is some controversy in the industry whether Intel or TI made the "first IC." Intel's first IC was for an Asian customer to use in a four-function calculator. Intel's first commercial IC products were static (volatile) RAM chips (like the 3101) which replaced the magnetic cores used even in solid-state computers of the era (1960s). It wasn't until 1971 that Intel marketed the first monolithic microprocessor product, the 4004. Originally designed, as Mr. Anderson said, for the (now defunct) Japanese customer Busicom for a desk calculator. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Busicom Richard- I have no documentation to cite. I once read that the first commercial product that used a microprocessor, was the HP-35 Calculator. According to http://www.hpmuseum.org/hp35.htm, the HP-35 was produced from 1972 to 1975. Fred K4DII |
#5
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On 6/4/2010 11:44 AM, Richard Crowley wrote:
"K6LHA" Len Anderson wrote... Almost ALL developments in electronics began as industry projects, even the IC. There is some controversy in the industry whether Intel or TI made the "first IC." Intel's first IC was for an Asian customer to use in a four-function calculator. Intel's first commercial IC products were static (volatile) RAM chips (like the 3101) which replaced the magnetic cores used even in solid-state computers of the era (1960s). It wasn't until 1971 that Intel marketed the first monolithic microprocessor product, the 4004. Originally designed, as Mr. Anderson said, for the (now defunct) Japanese customer Busicom for a desk calculator. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Busicom Though I might agree with you in part, There have been major advances in Electroincs due to non industry projects too. Of course that was then.. This is now. Back in the old days several major advances in electroincs were brought about by some tinker, tinkering around with stuff and learning (I am fond of saying Marconi had to have been an amateur radio operator cause before him there were no professionals in the field and thus no industry) However... With today's VLSI circuits... You do need an "Infrastructure" to "Tinker" and short of folks like Mr. Gates and partners... Not many people have that kind of resource on their own. |
#6
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On Jun 5, 5:58�am, Misters Davis, McKenzie, and Crowley all wrote
about integrated circuits. "K6LHA" Len Anderson wrote... Almost ALL developments in electronics began as industry projects, eve n the IC. There is some controversy in the industry whether Intel or TI made the "first IC." Intel's first IC was for an Asian customer to use in a four-function calculator. Ahem...the original subject was started in regards to WWII-era "surplus" electronic hardware. Semiconductors - as we know them today - don't quite qualify since Bardeen, Brattain, and Shockley did their transistor thing in 1947 at Bell Labs. :-) As to the very first of the "scientific handheld calculators," a good part of that story is written up in "Bill and Dave: How Hewlett and Packard created the world's greatest company" by Michael Malone. In itself, that book is representative of the entire electronics industry from 1939 onwards (HP was formed in 1939) and the (usually) monthly magazine put out free by HP, "Hewlett Packard Journal" shows that in detail. ALL the issues of the HP Journal are on-line and are free downloads. As one of the early owners of an HP-35, I can add that there was no ONE IC that was critical in it. Each one had a set of ICs that did everything, contracted for from two vendors. A fault of HP somewhere down the design line was not specifying things correctly and chips from one IC vendor would not work with those from another vendor. One of mine failed and I found out that story the hard way. HP just did not expect nearly the onslaught of orders for the '35 (described in Malone's book) and they had to set up for multiple shifts to handle them and to revise their marketing practices. Eventually HP would establish a division in Corvallis, OR, just for calculators and special ICs for those and other HP divisions. The first desktop calculator was the HP 9100 introduced in 1968. It had NO ICs in it, not even RAM or ROM. Details of its design are in the HP Journal of September 1968. It was also the first time HP employed a "full-time" consultant named Tom Osborne who demonstrated a working model he had built in his apartment. He used CORDIC algorithms which HP long-timer David Cochrane crammed into the 9100's ROM-equivalent. Both were involved in the later "box of numbers" called the HP-35. My HP-35 still works but the NiCad pack always gave trouble in recharging (three of them did) and I got a programmable HP-25, gave that to my Tech at Teledyne so that I could get an HP-67 which had program storage via magnetic card. Long time after the little card reader jammed and I got the CMOS HP-32S II which lasted ten years on one battery set, now on its 2nd set. I bought an anniversary model, the HP-35S as a memento and am waiting for the '32 to fail before using that. :-) However... With today's VLSI circuits... You do need an "Infrastructure" to "Tinker" and short of folks like Mr. Gates and partners... Not many people have that kind of resource on their own. Slight correction. I'm playing with Microchip's PIC one-package micros right now, using their free program editor-compiler. Got the development hardware package because IC lead length spacings got too small with modst SMDs. For many years AADE and Neil Heckt have been making and selling their one-chip frequency counters up in the Puget Sound area and many hams have installed those in older receivers and transceivers. Neil has a great little workshop instrument in his L/C meter also using a PIC chip. As to "surplus," I can say I've operated a lot of that while in the US Army 1952-1960 since so much was manufactured before or during WWII...some of it by Lewyt Vacuum Cleaner Co. for big hulking 1 KW HF transmitters (BC-339, BC-340). In another area, some of the contracted-for communuications electronics designed after WWII showed a different design scheme of systems, circuitry, even physical mounting than the pre-WWII thinking. There has been a constant evoltion of design, use, application of 'radio' for the last seven decades. 73, Len K6LHA |
#7
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On 6/5/2010 7:15 PM, K6LHA wrote:
Slight correction. I'm playing with Microchip's PIC one-package micros right now, using their free program editor-compiler. Got the development hardware package because IC lead length spacings got too small with modst SMDs. For many years AADE and Neil Heckt have been making and selling their one-chip frequency counters up in the Puget Sound area and many hams have installed those in older receivers and transceivers. Neil has a great little workshop instrument in his L/C meter also using a PIC chip. Not really a correction Len.. We are speaking of two different places on the development train.. You are starting with ready made hardware and developing applications or products from that hardware. I'm talking aout making new hardware. |
#8
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On Jun 6, 4:08�am, John Davis wrote:
On 6/5/2010 7:15 PM, K6LHA wrote: Slight correction. �I'm playing with Microchip's PIC one-packag e micros right now, using their free program editor-compiler. �Go t the development hardware package because IC lead length spacings got too small with modst SMDs. �For many years AADE and Neil Heckt have been making and selling their one-chip frequency counters up in the Puget Sound area and many hams have installed those in older receivers and transceivers. �Neil has a great little workshop instrument in h is L/C meter also using a PIC chip. Not really a correction Len.. We are speaking of two different places on the development train.. You are starting with ready made hardware and developing applications or products from that hardware. I'm talking aout making new hardware. A PIC microcontroller is just an IC. It is a "tabula rasa" that can be programmed to do anything wanted (within certain limitations). A vacuum tube is "ready made hardware" that is made using very specialized machinery and test equipment. So is a transistor. So is a resistor. So are most capacitors. I don't see any dividing line there in buying/taking/scrounging components to build a larger system of electronics for any specific purpose. If the "hardware" needs software to make it work in a specific way, then that does not make it somehow worse/better/not- applicable. At least not to me. I, for one, am not going out to mine copper ore to smelt and eventually make into wire to hook up things. Or make alloys that are resistive to make resistors or delaminate mica so that I can somehow silver it to make silver-mica capacitors good for RF. I had started out as an illustrator. That is an artist who draws/ paints/inks things as they really are. Much later I had formal classes (Art Center School of Design, now in Pasadena, CA) which taught that "old masters" how to make their own oil paint. Making paint is not what I consider "art" but that's what all those old oil painters had to do. If I want to do some painting now I can go into a Michaels and buy already-to-go oil paint, or caesin or chalk or several other items to make an image on my choice of surfaces. I am an illustrator, not a paint maker. At the same time I would browse the Allied catalog (Allied then headquartered in Chicago, IL) for "radio parts" to make things electronic. I don't disparage those (limited) components nor do I separate the "hardware" from the (then) "software" that was really just a schematic/wiring diagram. Today I could (if I had access to an expensive program) make a mask for a PCB and its drill guide just from a schematic diagram. I've done that for work...as well as making PCB masks "the old fashioned way" using tracing paper (for two-sided boards) and wetware. Today's programmable microcontroller, whether from Microchip or Altera, is a wonderful additional component to our modern cornucopia of fascinating electronic components. WE can do all sorts of things with those components in ways never thought of back in olden times. Me, I'm going to keep my nice K&E Duplex Decitrig slide rule (from high school) as a memento of when "design" meant to 3-decimal-places tops or having to look in tables of logarithms (and do by-hand interpolation) to get 5 decimal places. With my HP-35 I suddenly had 10 decimal place accuracy and I could do equations never before possible without expensive mainframe computer time...all contained in bulk space of that K&E slide rule. I've built three frequency counters using old digital logic. With one PIC the size of one DIP, I can make a single frequency counter that operates up to 30 MHz and includes the circuit (but not the crystal) for the reference frequency oscillator. It will drive a small LCD panel directly and the power demand is so slight the PIC doesn't even get warm. If worst came to worst, I could program that PIC by hand, byte by byte, using toggle switches (one per bit). But, the worst is not here so I use free software to do the programming. 73, Len K6LHA |
#9
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On 6/7/2010 4:49 PM, K6LHA wrote:
Me, I'm going to keep my nice K&E Duplex Decitrig slide rule (from high school) as a memento of when "design" meant to 3-decimal-places tops or having to look in tables of logarithms (and do by-hand interpolation) to get 5 decimal places. Funny you should mention that Len, I still have mine too, albeit I bought mine used. Speaking of PICs, you see the nifty test equipment in the recent QST magazines using one of those to do all the "ugly" stuff? Jeff-1.0 wa6fwi |
#10
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On Jun 7, 7:26�pm, Jeffrey Angus wrote:
On 6/7/2010 4:49 PM, K6LHA wrote: Speaking of PICs, you see the nifty test equipment in the recent QST magazines using one of those to do all the "ugly" stuff? Please explain what "ugly stuff" is. 73, Len K6LHA |