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Richard,
Randall & Boot's original magnetron used to be displayed in the London, England, Science Museum. It was all by itself in a very large, securely locked glass case. No magnet. I don't know whether it is still there. It lay there, all forlorn, hardly noticed, about the same insignificant size as a small, half-size, rusty can of baked beans. My sentiments lie with R and B, slaving away in the laboratory at Birmingham University while the Luftwaffer rained down bombs and incendiaries on the city. At the time, the top-secret goings-on were unknown to me, and I spent my time in a corrugated-iron air raid shelter in the back garden just a few miles down the road. A few years later, having joined the RAF as a Radar technician, I had the pleasure of holding a production model in one hand and the magnet in the other. At the other end of the workshop bench a parabolic dish rotated once every two seconds. It is not true that a 50 kW peak pulse power at 3000 Mhz sterilises one's reproductive organs. I have fathered 5 children. It was left to the Japanese to populate the World's kitchens with microwave ovens. Beyond the first, no magnetron has ever been made in the industrial city of Birmingham, England. But they don't make many motor cars there any more either. |
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