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From: N2EY
Date: Sun, 2 May 2010 12:32:32 EDT On May 1, 1:43 pm, John from Detroit wrote: K0HB wrote: Better in what way? Better in that it's more advanced.. For example, the R-390 and R-390A were designed way back in the early 1950s, and one of the requirements was a digital frequency readout. Not quite. The "digital frequency readout" was done for several reasons. Collins Radio was heavy into a LINEAR FREQUENCY tuning scheme using permeability tuning rather than variable capacitors. This is witnessed in the predecessors which used a combination of LF to HF receivers having straight-line scales in addition to the rotary dial around the main tuning knob. Linear frequency tuning was also adopted by the consumer radio manufacturers, particularly for auto radios having automatic seek systems that appeared in the very late 1940s and early 1950s. It was advantageous to the cheap servo systems used there. Such "signal seeking" tuning would disappear for quite a while until solid-state tuning systems (much cheaper) would appear in 30 years. The (LF) R-389 and (HF) R-390 series were required to tune a wider band of frequencies with relatively the SAME sensitivities across the whole span of tuning. That was unlike the older systems which had a large disparity of sensitivity due to ganged variable capacitor tuning in previous multi-band HF designs. The TUNING RATE was linear on all bands of the 390 series, advantageous to the R-391 "Autotune" version of the basic 390 series (Collins was big on "Autotuning" everything they could back in the 1950s and 1960s). Using the common mechanical turns-counter of machinery ('Veeder-Root'as an example of type) offered a great physical advantage in the 390 series since it did away with the space needed for a straight-line indicator. The gear-cam-geneva-wheel mechanical coupling could be fitted in easier than that long (sometimes rotating on axis) scale. All of the permeability-tuning L-C circuits could be adapted to track straight-line tuning easier than using (bulkier) variable capacitors. There was physical space to incorporate the "Autotune" servo system (R-391) without undue change of the R-390 physical structure. That the 390 series was "digital" is like saying a whole lot of metal-working equipment was "digital" in the 1930s because they used Veeder-Root counters having decimal digit indication. Main Source: Collins Radio "Final Engineering Report" 15 Sep 53, submitted to U.S.Army Signal Corps, contract W36-039-SC-44552, scanned by Al Turevold, WA0HQQ on 18 Apr 99. I suspect that the use of ham gear in military applications came about only when nothing else was available at the time. In the historical sense, the word "ham gear" should be replaced by "commercial users" especially in the period 1910 to 1970. Before the commsats, before the transcontinental microwave relay network, before the self-pumped fiber-optic-laser lines, the ONLY long- distance comm paths for commercial use was HF. SSB on HF was pioneered commercially from the early 1930s onward (Netherlands being the first to introduce voice and TTY service 24/7 to Netherlands Antilles). MARS was never an integral part of the worldwide military tactical communications of the USA. The AN/FRC-93 is a KWM-2 by virtue of its label, nothing else, was used by MARS stations for morale purposes...much like a Zenith "Trans-Oceanic" portable receiver procured for troops during WWII. A difference was that this Trans-Oceanic was actually painted olive drab. :-) Remember too that a lot of ham gear and components (such as the PTOs developed by Collins) were originally developed for military applications and then used for ham stuff. That seems anecdotal and subjective. Resistors, capacitors, inductors, fastening devices, blank chassis and cabinets, et al were all developed by INDUSTRY standards, not just military. Rack cabinets came from the telephone infrastructure. Teleprinter code format came from the computer industry. Collins "mechanical" ( magnetostrictive) filters were done first for the microwave radio relay frequency multiplexer market. Modern USA amateur radio design owes almost everything new to innovative Japanese communications equipment designers. The US Army went to VHF voice for short-range communications IN WWII and kept doing that until now. Long-haul communications of the US military and government is over the DSN (Digital Switched Network) which can use any comm path or relay method plus is compatible with the standard telephone infrastructure. USA submarines use ELF for Alerts and nuke subs don't have any OOK CW capabilities. Cellular telephony developed all by itself, by the telephone industry, owing nothing technological to the military. Roughly 100 million cell phones are now in the USA alone. Digital television owes nothing to any military yet the USA switched over entirely in TV broadcasting to DTV (the first and second NTSC systems did not come from military requirements). CB on 11m (roughly 5 million users) owes nothing to the military. FM stereo broadcasting owes nothing to the military. Medical electronics communications owes very, very little to the military in technology. All of those are RADIO applications. 73, Len K6LHA |
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