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"Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message
... On Mon, 29 Oct 2012 21:19:05 +0000 (UTC), "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote: On another list, populated by people with good guessing skills, poor memories and so on, the question of where did the RG numbers come from? The most popular answer told with the most auhtority is that RG stands for "Radio Guide", as a device, the predecessor to wave guides. I was under the impression, and may have read from a better source that it does indeed stand for Radio Guide, but that was a tile of a book. Is that the case, are we all wrong? If it is from the title of a book, does anyone have a link to, or can send me a (scanned?) copy of it? The current consensus is that it means "Radio Guide" and that it was a big heavy printed book called "Army-Navy List of Preferred Cables" as part of MIL-HDBK-216. The problem is that nobody I can find has ever seen such a book or offered a scanned image of at least one page. http://www.avsforum.com/t/1433989/rg11-compression-connector-installation#post_22497621 Note that the book was dated in the early 1960's. I believe coax cable was in use with the RG designation long before 1960. Methinks the whole thing is rubbish. 2nd best is "Radio Grade", which simply means that it's suitable for use on a radio. That begs the question why it would be necessary to even have such a designation, making that rather improbable. My guess(tm) is that it's someone's initials or a combination of the last names of the draftsmen that were charged with documenting the cables. Coax cable was invented at AT&T by Lloyd Espenschied and Herman Affel in about 1928 or 1929, a patent issued in 1931, and commercialized in 1941. My guess(tm) is that the RG designation appeared somewhat after commercialization and sales to the military during WWII. Original coax cable patent. http://www.google.com/patents?vid=1835031 -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 There's evidence that Oliver Heaviside patented a new arrangement of two conductors that would include co-axial in 1880, in a British patent numbered 1407. I haven't found a FOC source for downloading a copy of that patent but there's reference to it on the web (e.g. by Googling 'heaviside coaxial cable patent'). Google Books has 'Oliver Heaviside: The life, work and times of an electrical genius of the Victorian age' in which Page xvi refers. I didn't spot any reference to such prior art in the AT&T patent but, of course, they may have had no knowledge of something patented across the pond 51 years earlier ... particularly before the advent of under-sea co-axial cables! However, where I used to work we had an extensive set of transcriptions of the work of Heaviside (Heaviside. O. Electromagnetic theory. Benn Brothers Ltd., London, 1922) and when I tried to research Heaviside's condition for a distortionless line (G/C = R/L) I was bogged down by an awful lot of waffle and found it impossible to determine what he actually meant by 'distortionless' - some say absence of dispersion, I thought absence of a limited frequency response. So, sacriligeous as it may seem, I wonder if the US patent is actually the first one about co-axial conductors that anyone other than the patentee actually understood! Chris (cynic) |
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