Autos Main Cause of Accidents
THE automobile continues to be the most dangerous article in America. Inside the home, bathtubs and loose rugs on floors vie with each other for the doubtful distinction of being most dangerous to human life and limb. More people are injured inside homes themselves than in gardens, farmyards or otherwise around the home. More than twice as many people are injured when riding in automobiles than as pedestrians.
In seriousness of injuries as measured by the money value of claims for accident insurance, automobile injuries again are far in the lead, being more than twice as costly on the average as injuries at home or to pedestrians and about one – fourth more costly than injuries to travelers. Among the causes of injuries by automobiles, collisions with other automobiles holds first place, accounting for 1572 injuries in 1929.
Author: Charlie
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Autos Main Cause of Accident (Aug, 1930)
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Radio-Powered Sky Station (Feb, 1960)
Radio-Powered Sky Station
A loft on microwave power, sky station will provide better communications, better missile-age defense.
THE controlled transmission of energy through space is no longer a dream of scientists or the exclusive tool of fiction writers—it is reality.
Raytheon’s Airborne Microwave Platform (RAMP) is a sky station, not an orbiting satellite, that is powered and supported aloft by microwave energy generated at a ground station and beamed to the platform by antennas grouped in a 400-foot-square antenna array. Like a battery of searchlights all operating as one, these beams converge and are focused on a circular spot under-
neath the sky station, which is about 50 feet in diameter.
Why a sky station? The projected military and commercial capabilities are tremendous. RAMP is designed to raise itself 65,000 feet above the earth and become a highly stable “stationary” platform far above the weather. The curvature of the earth will not matter at that height.
To the average man, this would mean that he could watch the Folies Bergere from Paris, the Olympics from Europe, and other world events on his TV set as they happen. It would also mean that business and personal telephone calls and telegrams to distant points could be made at a fraction of the present rate.
A system of such platforms would act as a long-range missile alarm, guide defense vehicles (such as Bomarc anti-missile missiles), and reliably relay broadband communications and weather surveillance data to stations on the ground. The entire North Atlantic can be covered with only four such platforms. This amounts to an extension of
the DEW Line all the way to Europe.
Until recently, tubes with high enough power to keep a sky station aloft were available only at relatively low microwave frequencies. Low frequencies meant antenna arrays covering many acres would be needed to focus the microwaves on a high altitude sky station. The new Amplitron tubes now can provide power at much higher frequencies and they have the stability required to ensure an efficient, highly directional antenna pattern. This means that antennas can be brought down to reasonable size.
The Amplitron is the key to the entire project. A high-efficiency microwave amplifier tube developed by Raytheon, it can increase the microwave energy generated by the older magnetron many times. Under security wraps for many months the Amplitron’s effectiveness has been proved in the “Flight-Tracker” air traffic control system and other long-range radar systems. The heat dissipation problem has always placed severe limitations on the design of high-power
tubes, but the improved Amplitron can now handle many kilowatts thanks to new forced water cooling technology. Three-thousand megacycle tubes of 20 horsepower output are in production and units of 100 horsepower will be available shortly. Five hundred horsepower tubes are expected to be available in the foreseeable future.
The RAMP sky station has a projected 50-foot diameter (dictated by the antenna size on the underside), with a rotary wing 170 feet from tip to tip.
The circular collection antenna array on the underside is designed to pick up the microwave energy beamed from the ground and conduct it through waveguides to “lossy” elements, which convert microwaves to heat in much the same manner that a stove element converts electricity to heat. Compressed air or gas heated by the lossy elements will drive a heat engine while turbines operate the rotor blades keeping the platform aloft and supplying the power
for the electronic detection and transmitting units on board.
The received microwave energy can be efficiently converted to heat by any one of several high temperature heat exchange metals that are placed in a pipe-like waveguide, which is fed from the antenna. This is a key element of the propulsion system. When the platform is operating on microwave power, this heat exchanger performs the same function as the combustor section of a conventional gas turbine engine, which increases the work potential of the engine fluid by raising its temperature. In the combustor this is done by mixing fuel with air and burning the mixture. In the microwave heat exchanger, the same result is achieved by attenuating microwave energy, changing its form from electrical energy to thermal energy, and dissipating this heat directly to the working fluid which ultimately spins the turbine. A new Raytheon government-funded study (details still classified) is said to have conclusively licked the heat exchange problem.
The logical means to get take-off and climb power for the platform’s rotor blades is to install a chemical engine in the propulsion system. The supplementary chemical engine would amount only to a fuel tank, burner and heat exchanger in parallel with the microwave heat exchanger.
Even in high winds capped by gusts up to 20 to 30 knots the chemical system could lift the platform. At low altitudes the greater air density provides a power advantage despite the fact that the rotors are geared to work best at high altitudes. The RAMP would climb to altitude in a spiral path.
The science fiction writers are hard-pressed to keep ahead of present-day scientists. Perhaps in the not too distant future we will have high efficiency Amplitron-type tubes mounted in sky stations all the while beaming power through space at the earth, providing electricity for cars, houses and factories without local wiring.
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YOURS Without Extra Charge – 1929 ATLAS (Sep, 1929)
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YOURS Without Extra Charge – 1929 ATLAS
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The Atlas Is the 1929 ”New Reference Atlas of the World,” containing 180 pages. Maps are beautifully printed in colors and include recent changes in boundaries, airway maps, and latest census figures, etc., all handsomely bound in cloth, size 9-3/4 x 12-1/2 inches.
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Cancer Treated With Stale Butter (Jul, 1933)
Cancer Treated With Stale Butter
RANCID butter, or rather the chemical called butyric acid which bacteria form in fresh butter, is the newest cancer treatment reported in England by a famous surgeon.
The acid of rancid butter is not to be eaten or injected but is applied directly to the cancerous growth. For some reason, which still is mysterious, the butyric acid bites much more viciously into the cancer tissue than into the healthy tissues which surround it. A graduated dose of the acid can kill and eat away all of the diseased cancer cells without damaging the nearby healthy ones. This is the same way that radium attacks cancer.
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Ceiling Movies ROUT Fears of Patient (Jul, 1935)
Ceiling Movies ROUT Fears of Patient
A BOSTON dentist has discovered a new sort of “anesthetic,” in the form of motion pictures, which he claims is so effective that patients refuse to leave the chair at the conclusion of their dental work. One peculiar effect of the new “drug” is that it soothes harsh feelings against dentists. Patients no longer fear the semi-annual visit.
The movies, projected on the office ceiling, divert the patients’ attention as the doctor fixes their teeth.
Mickey Mouse and Popeye the Sailor pictures are most popular with the younger patients, according to the doctor.
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Young Detective Smashes Police Ring (Jul, 1936)
Young Detective Smashes Police Ring
MANY an officer saw stocky, youthful Wallace Jamie about the St. Paul police station the late winter and early spring of 1935 and laughed up their sleeves at his activities.
By midsummer that year, however, they wished sincerely in their hearts they never had heard of him.
For Wallace Jamie was the kind of a kid who liked to play “policeman” with a vengeance as a lad and then grew up to continue playing the game—but playing it for keeps. Before he finished, almost a score of the officers were under indictment and awaiting trial for alleged neglect of duty.Wallace Jamie went to St. Paul at the behest of Howard Kahn, embattled editor of the St. Paul Daily News, and a World War veteran of the French army, and Henry E. Warren, Commissioner of Public Safety, who, at that time, had been just elected to office. St. Paul was rankling under label of “Poison Spot of Crime,” placed upon it by Attorney General Homer Cummings. The three men determined that the city must be cleaned up.
In secret conference, it was decided that 27-year-old Jamie, who had majored in police administration and criminal detection at the University of Chicago and Northwestern University, would pose as an efficiency expert making a survey of police methods.
He was given an office in the new public safety building on the floor below Warren’s and took with him secret operators whom Kahn had brought to the city previously. To the coppers about the building, he became just another “smart college guy” whose duty it was to go to work on a report that would soon be forgotten.
First he tapped telephone lines.
It was decided next to supplement the tapped telephones with three dictaphones— new, compact, modern, highly sensitive instruments—the position of which should be changed from time to time. These were placed under desks, in desk lights, under chairs in which certain officials sat.
The method of listening to conversations and taking them down in shorthand soon proved cumbersome and slow. To be of any use later as evidence, the shorthand notes had to be transcribed, and this in itself was a herculean task. So Jamie went on a hunt for a short cut.
He found what he wanted in the pamograph, later to be known as the “mechanical stool-pigeon.” This machine, built like a portable phonograph, recorded conversations on an aluminum disk, cutting them deep into the metal with a sapphire needle. The tapped telephone lines and the dictaphones were rigged so that they could be switched to the pamograph in a moment’s notice.
Jamie naturally was acquainted with signal devices of all kinds used in public safety work and now he turned his attention to the apparatus used in fire department offices to punch out on continuous tapes the record of fire alarms sent in from alarm boxes.
Ticker Tape Records Telephone Numbers He set to work to fit one of these recorders to watch through the silent hours of the night in his office.
Should a police official, to take a number not used in St. Paul, call Duncan 3224, the record on the tape the following morning would show 3-8-3-2-2-4.
The regularity with which certain numbers were called led to undercover operations which served only to fashion more firmly the case Jamie was building up.
Janitor Tips Off Jamie’s Plot The tip-off came one day when a janitor was repairing a ventilating shaft leading to the office of a high police official. In the shaft was found one of Jamie’s high-powered dictaphones and the officials realized instantly what had been going on. But Jamie had been in operation for four months and had secured more than 400 disks of incriminating conversations. These were placed in the hands of the mayor, the city attorney and the county attorney, and immediately three detectives and a patrolman were dismissed and a number of other officers, including the chief of police, were suspended.
Jamie now came to his reward. In the resultant shakeup in the police department, he found himself made assistant commissioner, a post next to that held by Warren. Later he was invited to join the force of a large private detective firm in New York City at such a salary that he could not possibly turn it down.
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MANY nurses say “yes definitely” to douching with ZONITE (Jun, 1954)
SURVEY SHOWS MANY nurses say “yes definitely” to douching with ZONITE for feminine hygiene
The practice of using a cleansing, deodorizing douche for feminine cleanliness, health and married happiness is prevalent among modern women. Another survey showed that of the married women asked:
83.3% douche after monthly periods,
86.5% at other times.Zonite is a perfect solution for your douche! It is recommended among nurses who know of zonite’s many advantages. In fact, no other type liquid product for the douche of all those tested is SO POWERFULLY EFFECTIVE yet so absolutely safe to body tissues as ZONITE.
ZONITE Offers Great Hygienic Protection Zonite is a powerful antiseptic-germicide. An advantage of douching with Zonite is that it promptly washes away germs and odor-causing waste accumulations. Zonite leaves a woman with a sense of well-being and confidence— so refreshed and dainty. Zonite completely deodorizes.
Enjoy the many benefits of Zonite. Inexpensive — only a few pennies per douche.
ZONITE has ‘101′ uses in the home
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Four Rotating Magnets Run Clock. (May, 1932)
Four Rotating Magnets Run Clock.
NO MATTER how closely you listen, you can’t hear this clock tick because four rotating magnets have replaced the old gears, making the clock “tickless.” The mechanism of this new timepiece, shown below, is made up of four magnetic fields. One rotates every second; one each minute; the third each hour; and the fourth operates the hour hand at the rate of one revolution every twelve hours.
The new clock must be set face up on a table or support because the mechanism doesn’t function properly when hung on a wall or placed on the mantel.
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HOW AN OFFICE BUILDING OPERATES (Jan, 1950)
HOW AN OFFICE BUILDING OPERATES
Prepared by the Armstrong Cork Company, makers of Industrial Insulations, in cooperation with the National Association of Building Owners and Managers
Below ground, a modern office building is a beehive of activity. There you’ll find electrical, plumbing, and carpenter shops, employees’ locker rooms, control centers, and even a garage. Down deep in the basement, too, are the boilers and compressors that supply heat and refrigeration for the entire building.
Delivering that heat and cold to every floor is a complex and expensive job. To cut the cost of these services and make them work more efficiently, modern office buildings depend on insulations. Many of the insulating materials they use are made and installed by the Armstrong Cork Company.
Elevators, telephone lines, electric wiring, along with pipes carrying steam, hot and cold water, and refrigeration travel from basement to top floors through an opening called the “service core.” This core is really a vertical highway through which move all the services that make a building livable.
Steam and hot water come from the boiler room (1), and are kept hot by 85% Magnesia insulation on the pipes that carry them. Right beside them are lines filled with a liquid refrigerant and insulated with Armstrong’s Cork Covering to keep it cold.
This refrigerant is used for air conditioning. It is pumped from compressors 2 to machine rooms 3 spaced at intervals all the way up the building. Here the refrigerant runs through bare coils or pipes, and the air is cooled by being blown over them. Then the cooled air is carried to each office through ducts 4 covered with Armstrong’s Corkboard to hold it at the right temperature.
Insulation works at other places, too. The boilers can generate steam with less fuel because Armstrong’s Insulating Fire Brick in their walls hold in the heat. Top floor offices are more comfortable because a layer of Armstrong’s Corkboard Roof Insulation helps keep temperatures steady.
All through a modern office building, as in hundreds of other industries and businesses, Armstrong’s Industrial Insulations keep the cost of controlling heat and cold within practical limits. If insulation can solve a temperature problem for you, there is a trained engineer in a near-by Armstrong office who will be glad to help you.
ARMSTRONG’S INDUSTRIAL INSULATIONS
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The Secret Keepers (Aug, 1962)
The Secret Keepers
The latest methods of radio communications defy detection by any listener —friend or foe
By KEN GILMORE
MOST radio communications systems are like “party lines”—anyone can listen in. But electronics scientists have been working overtime to come up with the equivalents, radio-wise, for the more desirable (and costly) “private lines.” Their objective: to allow our military and government officials to transmit secret information on the air with the full assurance that it can be “received” only by those listeners it is intended for.
Perhaps the best known gadget of this kind is President Kennedy’s “scrambler.” Thanks to this device, the transmitters in his private automobiles and airplanes take his words and turn them into a kind of electronic “hash.” Then a special receiver which is set for the right “code” unscrambles the hash and turns it into intelligent speech again. The result is that no unauthorized listener can eavesdrop on the President’s conversations.Electronics engineers are coming up with a number of devices to allow “private” radio communications. And some of them—already being tested by the armed services—do the job by performing a series of ingenious electronic tricks.
RACEP. The Orlando Division of the Martin Company has come up with a system called RACEP (short for Random Access and Correlation for Extended Performance). One of the more promising schemes to insure secrecy on the airwaves, RACEP is based on a principle that is really quite simple—electronic circuits are capable of switching millions of times a second, but our ears, by comparison, are very slow.
Therefore, suppose an electronic circuit were designed to snip tiny samples out of words being spoken. Let’s say this circuit takes 8000 such samples every second, and that each sample is one microsecond long.
Now suppose you’re talking by radio and speak a 1-syllable word which has a fundamental frequency of 200 cycles— about average for a man’s voice. During one cycle of your voice signal, the sampling circuit will take 40 1-microsecond samples.
The pulses generated by this sampling technique will trace out the shape of your voice waveform quite accurately. Using just these pulses, decoding equipment at the receiving end can reconstruct the original 200-cycle voice signal so well that the human ear can’t tell it from the original “unsliced” signal. Your voice, in other words, has been transmitted faithfully by a series of pulses.
Now, to take it one step further, suppose the transmitter keeps shifting its frequency, so that each pulse is sent out on a different wavelength. A receiver, in order to pick up this tricky signal, must be set to synchronize with the pulses at the proper repetition rate. And, at the same time, the receiver must keep changing frequency exactly in step with the transmitter, so that it’s tuned in to each pulse at the right time and at the right frequency.
Your words will be heard clearly on this special receiver, of course, but they’d be lost on any radio not set up to receive them properly. Military planners are excited about RACEP because it would be almost impossible for enemy electronics experts—even if they knew the principles involved—to analyze the waveforms and build equipment capable of intercepting and untangling the scrambled RACEP signals.
Another big advantage: a RACEP user can call any receiver whose code he knows, simply by setting up his transmitter to broadcast its pulses in that code. Battle-field units could call each other as easily as dialing a telephone.
Let’s say you want to call receiver 35. Just as you can call a friend on the telephone if you know his number, you could call receiver 35 by dialing its number on your transmitter. The code you dial sets up your transmitter to broadcast a series of coded pulses at a specific repetition rate. Furthermore, each of the pulses is sent out on a slightly different frequency. Each receiver, on the other hand, is set up to receive signals which are broadcast at a predetermined pulse rate and which change frequency in a predetermined pattern.
If you transmit the pulse pattern which receiver 35 is set up to receive, its operator will hear your words as clearly as though you were speaking over a regular radio. Other receivers, not set to detect this particular combination of pulse rate and frequency changes, very likely won’t hear a thing.
RACEP brings with it another advantage, too. Your voice is sampled only one microsecond out of every 125. The system, then, is working for one microsecond, and idle for 124. Your transmitter is on the air only 1/125 of the time you are speaking, so many other transmitters can be operating in the same frequency band at the same time without interfering with you or with each other. Even if an occasional pulse does happen to synchronize with another in both time and frequency, this slight interference would be so brief as to be unnoticeable.
Development engineers at the Martin Company have found that scores of conversations can be going on simultaneously in a band about 4 mc. wide without seriously interfering with each other. Even in such busy systems as air-to-ground radio, each individual is using his radio only a small percentage of the time. Therefore, systems planners estimate that up to 700 receivers could be operating in one area with the RACEP system.
Phantom. RACEP isn’t the only new communications system. General Electric researchers have come up with an entirely different approach which they call “Phantom.”
The principle, again, is rather simple. A radio transmitter—one used by a regular commercial radio station, for example —may broadcast on a carrier frequency of 1000 kc. If it broadcasts a 5000-cycle note—about the highest frequency transmitted by most AM stations—this signal modulates the carrier so that the final output signal contains frequencies between 995 and 1005 kc. Engineers call this a bandwidth of 10 kc. (1005 – 995 = 10kc).
Your receiver has a bandpass of about 10 kc, too. As you tune across the dial, you shift the position of this bandpass. When you tune to 1000 kc, the bandpass is centered around this frequency so that you receive all frequencies between 995 and 1005 kc and thus hear the program the station is transmitting.
The Phantom system, however, would stretch the audio signal over an extremely wide band of frequencies—perhaps 200 kc or more. The transmitted signal, then, would cover a band of frequencies from 900 to 1100 kc. Since it is spread over such a wide area, only a tiny fraction of the signal would fall within the bandpass of an ordinary receiver.
It wouldn’t be possible to tune in on the wide-band Phantom signal simply by having an extra-wide-band receiver, either. If you had this kind of setup, a jumble of stations broadcasting on frequencies within the band you were covering would come tumbling in. To get around this problem, Phantom designers “tag” the transmitted signal with a special waveform. The Phantom receiver lets in only signals which are identified by this waveform and rejects all others.
You may have heard Phantom broadcasts without knowing it. General Electric has transmitted Phantom signals more than 2000 miles across the country to test the system. Because this special waveform is spread over such a wide frequency band, its amplitude in the bandpass of any normal receiver is very low—so low that you wouldn’t notice it even if you happened to be tuned in somewhere on the broad band of frequencies across which the Phantom signals go skittering. And if your receiver were sensitive enough to hear the Phantom signal, you would probably think it was just ordinary static!
Incidentally, GE engineers who didn’t know the exact waveform tried to intercept the messages during the test transmissions, just to see whether an enemy could break the “code.” The results: they couldn’t. Said one, “It’s like a combination lock. Even if you know the principle on which it works, that doesn’t mean you can open it without knowing the combination of the particular lock you want to open.”
Phantom systems can use literally thousands of “combinations” or special identifying waveforms, and they can also change from one to another rapidly. Thus, even if someone happened to stumble on the code accidentally—about as likely as opening a combination lock by chance—it wouldn’t do him much good. Next time he tried, the combination would have been changed.
Vocoder. Engineers at Hughes Aircraft have come up with still another way to transmit messages secretly, although the gadget they use to do it wasn’t originally developed for that purpose. Their basic approach, as a matter of fact, isn’t even new.
Back during the 1930’s, Bell Laboratories scientists built a gadget they called a “vocoder.” It consisted of a cabinet full of sound generators, niters, and other circuitry, and it was designed to create a reasonable facsimile of the human voice. If you turned on the right combination of circuits and did it fast enough, the vocoder produced a series of speechlike sounds.
These electronically generated words were quite intelligible. In fact, Bell’s vocoder created a sensation at the New York World’s Fair in 1939, where an operator played it from a keyboard much like that on a piano. By pressing the right combination of keys in the right sequence, he could make the vocoder “speak” whole sentences.
Hughes’ entry in the secrecy sweepstakes makes use of the old vocoder principle. Essentially, the spoken words to be transmitted are fed into an analyzing circuit which determines several important characteristics of the various sounds which go to make up each word—pitch, intensity, and so on. This information, electrically coded, is sent on to a receiver, which, much like the earlier Bell Labs unit, turns these signals into intelligible speech.
The basic diagram is on page 43. The voice signal to be transmitted is applied to the inputs of a series of 12 bandpass niters. The output of each filter is determined by how much sound energy the word or syllable being spoken contains in that particular frequency region.
Since the outputs from these circuits are rectified, the sound energy going through a particular filter shows up as a d.c. voltage. The louder the sound applied to the input of any specific filter falling within that filter’s frequency range, the higher the voltage at the output of that filter.
A final circuit—called the pitch extractor—finds out two things. First, it determines the presence or absence of pitch. And second, if sounds with a definite pitch are present, it determines their frequency.
By way of explanation, a vowel—an “a,” for example—is produced when our vocal cords generate a sound of a certain frequency. A consonant, on the other hand—such as an “s”—is a less specific sound (a hiss, in this case), requires no movement of the vocal cords, and is at no particular frequency.
The pitch extractor transmits an encoded electrical signal which determines whether pitch is present, and, if so, what its frequency is. The signals from the pitch extractor and the 12 filters go to a time multiplexer which forms them into a single composite signal for transmission by radio.
At the receiving end, a time de-multiplexer splits up all of the signals again and sends each one to its proper circuit. The signal from the pitch extractor is applied to a relay, which turns on one of two circuits. If there is no pitch pres- ent at the transmitter, the relay turns on a “hiss generator” which produces white noise. If pitch is present, the relay activates a “buzz generator” which puts out a sound rich in harmonics and similar to that produced by the human larynx. The buzz generator operates at the same fundamental frequency that the pitch extractor detected in the speech at the transmitting end.
Now, either the hiss or the buzz (depending on which one happens to be present at any given moment) is applied to the inputs of all the bandpass filters in the receiver. Suppose, at one particular moment, that the person back at the transmitter is saying “a.” The fundamental frequency of his “a” might be 300 cycles.
His particular voice quality—the characteristics of his voice which allow his friends to distinguish his speech from someone else’s—is determined, among other things, by the relative strengths of the various harmonics of this basic 300-cycle tone. Let’s say, for example, that the second harmonic—600 cycles— is twice as strong as the fundamental, and that the third harmonic—900 cycles —is half as strong as the fundamental.
Again, for the sake of illustration, let’s say that bandpass filter No. 1 at the transmitter has put out a signal of 4 volts, corresponding to the intensity of the 300-cycle fundamental. Bandpass filter No. 3, carrying the second harmonic, would have put out a signal twice as large—8 volts. Filter No. 5, transmitting the third harmonic, would have produced only 2 volts.
At the receiving end, these signals of varying strengths are applied to corresponding filters. Number 3, then, amplifies the output of the buzz filter—which, you’ll remember, is operating at the same 300-cycle fundamental—twice as much as number 1 and four times as much as number 5. The result is a sound very close to the original “a” spoken into the transmitter.
The vocoder was originally designed to squeeze voice signals into a narrower bandwidth and make space for more messages in the crowded radio spectrum. And it does this very efficiently. The encoding vocoder generates 13 signals: one from each of the 12 filters and one from the pitch extractor. Each of these 13 signals can be squeezed into a channel just 25 cycles wide, and all 13 taken together require a total bandwidth of only 325 cycles.
Normally, communications channels such as those used by the military, commercial airlines, and so on, are some 3000 cycles wide—about the same as a telephone channel. With the vocoder, about nine conversations can be squeezed into the band space usually taken up by only one.
A vocoder operating as described above is said to be an analog device, that is, the voltage output of the separate circuits varies continuously as the input signals change, and these constantly changing values are transmitted continuously. But the vocoder can also be operated as a digital encoder and decoder.
When operated digitally, a sampling circuit checks each of the individual circuit outputs some 50 times a second. The series of pulses obtained by this method is transmitted to a receiver where an unscrambler separates the various pulses. Then, it sends each to the circuit in the receiver corresponding to its counterpart in the transmitter.
As you may have guessed, digital operation gives the vocoder several outstanding advantages. First, it can operate reliably in the presence of tremendous amounts of interference—amounts which would paralyze an analog system; consequently, a digital system is far harder to jam. Second, signals from a digital vocoder can easily be encoded— by turning them into a kind of electronic “hash” something like that used with President Kennedy’s scrambler. Then, a special unscrambler at the receiving end turns the scrambled signals back into words. To anyone listening without an unscrambler set specifically for the message being transmitted, the signal sounds like pure gibberish.
Thus, with such tricky electronic devices as these, our military forces and government officials can have all the advantages of radio’s instant communications. And they can also have another advantage that radio has seldom offered —the assurance that their messages have traveled through the ether in such a manner that only the persons they are intended for will ever know what they were all about.
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Jumpin’ Jiminy.. Check This Jumpin’ Water (Mar, 1962)
Jumpin’ Jiminy.. Check This Jumpin’ Water
THE illuminated fountain that will be one attraction of the soon-to-open Seattle World’s Fair is a combination of design and science that makes most other fountains look like amateur night at the waterworks.
This one will shoot “sculptured” water 70 ft. into the air in graceful, moving patterns. Designed by two young Japanese architects, it was chosen from a field of 268 entries from the United States and 14 foreign countries. One of the fountain-competition judges described it as “a true breakthrough in imaginative frontiers in the use of water.”The fountain consists of a 185-ft.-diameter concrete basin, the floor of which is 12 ft. deep and 120 in diameter. At the center is a 30-ft.-diameter dome, 6 ft. high, which is sleeved to accommodate 117 water-jet nozzles. A maximum of 32 nozzles are on at a time, with each one discharging about 200 gals, of water a minute.
Because the water jets fan out at differing angles from the vertical center nozzle, almost every nozzle has a different volume and pressure relationship. Thus, considerable balancing work was needed to get the precise angle and distance for each jet stream called for by the designers.
In a control room, a pre-recorded tape mechanism sequences the operation of the nozzles to produce the ever-changing, spectacular displays. A carillon bell and music system is also tied in, as are lighting effects at night.
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This IBM physicist is working to reduce the cost of data processing even more – before some other company does. (Nov, 1967)
This IBM physicist is working to reduce the cost of data processing even more – before some other company does.
Back in 1950, the cost of processing 35 thousand computer instructions was one dollar. Today, one dollar processes 35 million instructions.
What has driven the cost down? The work being done by IBM’s Dr. Sol Triebwasser and his associates may give us a clue.
In an oven and camera-filled laboratory, physicist Triebwasser and his colleagues are developing new methods to make the microscopic parts inside a computer even smaller.“Smaller parts mean faster computer speeds because the electronic impulses travel a shorter distance—more work in less time.
“In the last ten years,” says Dr.Triebwasser, “competitive research in the industry has taken computers from bulky vacuum tubes to transistors so tiny that 50,000 of them would fit in a thimble. As the parts have shrunk, so have processing costs.
“And we must find ways to make data processing even more economical. In today’s competitive world, we can’t afford not to.”
IBM
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How “Weather Eye” Maps World’s Clouds (Jun, 1959)
How “Weather Eye” Maps World’s Clouds
THE Vanguard II “weather eye” satellite has paved the way—although it’s a bumpy road— to continuous, world-wide mapping of the world’s weather.
The forerunner of more-advanced satellites scheduled for orbiting this year, it has provided some basic know-how in the use of artificial moons for meteorological purposes.
What it also has done is give scientists a crude picture of the cloud patterns over a large part of the earth. While forecasters now are limited to scattered ground observations, Vanguard II was above the clouds—over oceans and unpopulated areas—making continuous reports. And though cloud data alone can’t guarantee accurate forecasts, it is one of the most important factors.
The weather eye was launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., into an equatorial-type orbit with a perigee of 347 miles and an apogee of 2,050 miles (see Fig. 2).
A 20-inch sphere weighing 21-1/2 pounds, it spins at about 50 rpm, which—with a gyroscope effect —keeps its axis always pointing in the same direction in space. Launching was timed so that perigee would occur at about local noon over the equator, insuring that the satellite would be at its closest to earth during daylight for the 19-day lifetime of the mercury cell batteries powering its instrumentation.
Two photocells (see Fig. 3)—projecting diametrically opposite from each other at 45° from the spin axis—scanned the earth. At perigee, both photocells “saw” the earth (see Fig. 2), while at apogee both “eyes” saw above the horizon. As Vanguard II spun, each eye in turn scanned a swath on the earth about seven miles wide and 600 miles long. Thus, as the satellite moved in its orbit, the eyes covered a long path, different each time around since the satellite’s orbit changed constantly with respect to the earth’s surface.
Each photocell picked up reflected sunlight from clouds and land and sea masses. The reflections, in the form of infrared radiation, were focused onto a tiny infrared detector, which converted them into electrical signals proportionate to their intensity. These signals were stored on a pigmy tape recorder (see Fig. 4) inside the satellite.
Since clouds reflect up to 80% of the sunlight that hits them, while land reflects only about 10% to 15% and water about 5% (see Fig. 1), the variation in intensities produced a definite range of signals on the tape and hence a rough electronic “picture” of cloud coverage. The photocells fed the tape with opposite polarities, so that during data reduction, technicians could monitor one eye at a time to avoid duplication.
The tape recorder stored 50 minutes of data during each trip over the sunlit side of earth— roughly 25 minutes on each side of perigee. Then, as the satellite swung into the dark side of earth, the nearest ground station sent a coded command signal which triggered the tape recorder to run in reverse and transmit the data to earth, where it was re-recorded. The satellite’s tape was erased at the same time, readying it for new data. Playback speed of 15-in. per second compared to recording speed of 3/10-in. per second was needed, because only about one minute of telemetering time was available each orbit.
The tapes made at the ground stations were sent to the Army Signal Corps lab at Fort Monmouth, N. J., where they converted them into crude film strips. Because there was considerable distortion at the edges of the 600-mile swath scanned, only the central 300 miles shown were used when the film strips were fitted together to form a global cloud picture.
A tracking transmitter in Vanguard II kept the technicians up to date on the satellite’s whereabouts, and this information was correlated with the film data — plus routine ground cloud observations—to pinpoint where the pictured clouds were located.
Several shortcomings showed up, most of which had been anticipated by the weather rocketeers.
The mercury cell batteries lasted only 19 days, although the satellite itself may orbit for a century. To insure maximum use of the mercury batteries, however, tiny silicon solar batteries mounted on the detector units turned off the equipment when the satellite was on the dark side of the earth, then turned it on as it re-entered sunlight. Improved solar or atomic batteries—the designs of which have progressed much since the cloud cover satellite design was “frozen”—should enable future satellites to. gather and transmit information almost indefinitely.
Another of the problems is the limited degree to which photocells can differentiate between various clouds. Even at perigee, Vanguard II could detect only those masses larger than seven miles in diameter. And where a thick cumulus reflects about 80% of the sunlight it receives, a thin cirrus might as well not be there at all, as far as reflections are concerned.
Yet another difficulty—and perhaps the most crucial one—was the lag between the recording of data and turning it into useful information. Eventual aim is to have data from such satellites ready for use almost instantaneously.
Some of the bugs should be ironed out later this year when another weather eye—this one carrying miniature television cameras—is sent into orbit lower than Vanguard II.
Goal of the weather satellites is the gathering of basic meteorological knowledge that will tell forecasters the “why” of weather. With satellites measuring cloud motion, atmospheric temperatures, air moisture content, ozone content, and radiation flow into and out of the atmosphere, the forecasters hope to be able—for the first time —to say with 100% accuracy: “It’s going to rain Wednesday, and here’s why.”
And beyond that, after the basic processes in the atmosphere are understood, is actual weather control. It’s a long way off, but Vanguard II was the first step.
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Sanitary Protection must be inconspicuous (Aug, 1930)
Sanitary Protection must be inconspicuous
That’s why most women prefer Kotex
Kotex now has rounded, tapered corners which eliminate awkward bulges and assure a snug, firm fit.
THERE are times when you hesitate to enjoy sports to the fullest… unless you know about Kotex.
Kotex is the sanitary pad that is designed for inconspicuous protection. The corners are rounded and tapered. Sides, too, are rounded. It gives you complete security and ease of mind.Wear Kotex without a worry, then, under any frock you possess. Wear it for sports or with filmiest evening things—and retain the cool poise so essential to charm.
Light, cool, comfortable There’s another way in which this careful shaping brings wonderful relief. There’s no unneeded bulk to pack and chafe. No awkward bulges to grow terribly uncomfortable.
Kotex is always light, always cool, always comfortable. This is largely due to its remarkable filler — Cellucotton (not cotton) absorbent wadding. Cellucotton is five times more absorbent than cotton. This means your Kotex pad can be five times lighter than any cotton pad, with the same absorbency and protection.
America’s leading hospitals—85% of them—choose this same absorbent for important surgical work.
Kotex deodorizes . . . keeps you dainty and immaculate at times when that is particularly essential. It is so easily disposed of.
You owe it to your comfort and good health to use this modern, safe, sanitary protection. Kotex is available everywhere. Kotex Company, Chicago, 111.
IN HOSPITALS
1. 85% of our leading hospitals use the very same absorbent of which Kotex is made.
2. Kotex is soft… not a deceptive softness that soon packs into chafing hardness. But a delicate, fleecy softness that lasts for hours.
3. Safe, secure… keeps your mind at ease.
4. Deodorizes . .. safely, thoroughly, by a special process.
5. Disposable, instantly, completely.Regular Kotex—45c for 12
Kotex Super-Size—65c for 12Also regular size singly in vending cabinets through West Disinfecting Co.
Ask to see the KOTEX BELT and KOTEX SANITARY APRON at any drug, dry goods or department store.
KOTEX
The New Sanitary Pad which deodorizes
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Device Shows Bus Location (May, 1938)
Device Shows Bus Location
LONDON Transport plans to try an experiment never before attempted anywhere in the world, and if successful for regular use, will give the main office of a bus transportation company a “picture” of the city’s moving buses.
Each bus will carry on its roof a coil of wire through which will pass an alternating current. At certain fixed points a wire will be suspended across the road where the bus will pass. As it passes, it induces a current in the wire which in turn records the passing on the “clock.”
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Inventions for Convenience of Theatergoers (Jun, 1931)
Inventions for Convenience of Theatergoers
SCIENCE, with its ability to provide helpful inventions for every occasion, has now come to the assistance of theatergoers and furnished them with two new pieces of equipment for increased enjoyment of programs. For the deaf, inventors have devised a system of voice transmission consisting of a battery of “mikes” at the foot lights to pick up the voice of the players, and a series of plug-in connections at seats provided with headphones to convey the voice directly to the ears of the deaf persons. This unique system has been installed at the Goodman theater, in Chicago.
The invention which theater patrons will welcome most heartily, however, is the new adjustable push-back seat which eliminates the nuisance of having to stand every time someone passes along the row. To prevent disorder, to say nothing of much suppressed swearing, the seated person simply moves back by pressing his body against the in accompanying photos. The bottom of the seat is fitted in grooved runners and held in normal position by a spring. Any old seat can be quickly converted by the installation of this simple mechanism.
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All About Ham Nets (Feb, 1960)
Reading through this I found my self continually wanting to make everything “.net” instead of ” Net”.
All About Ham Nets
By George Hart, W1NJM
Yes, there’s a place for organized “rag chewing,” but the byword of most ham nets is “service.”
ALL over the amateur radio bands you can hear them—between 500 and 1,000 groups of operators calling themselves “nets.” You might hear, for example, one station say: “Old man, you’re interfering with the Podunk Net. Wonder if you’d mind standing by or moving to another frequency so we can clear our traffic.”
The offending station may or may not move. He doesn’t have to. A ham can operate anywhere in any amateur band (providing he has a Conditional Class license or better), and he has as much right to a particular frequency as the Podunk Net. Usually he will move since amateurs are courteous.
What Are Nets?
When a group of amateurs all get on the same frequency and one station at a time transmits while the rest listen, we have a “round table.” Usually they just take turns and each, in turn, talks about anything or about nothing. When one of the stations assumes charge and tells the others when to transmit and to whom, this station is called the “net control station” and the whole group operating in this fashion becomes a “net,” or network. Sound regimented? It is, to a certain extent, although no one has to be in the net if he doesn’t want to be.
Nets operate for a number of reasons such as preparing to provide emergency communications, or handling traffic (third party messages). There are training nets, such as those attempting to build up code speed. Some nets involve special interest groups within or outside the field of radio, such as doctors, dentists, teenagers, YLs (young ladies), or fraternal organizations. And some of them operate just for the good old fun of yakking together.
Some nets include only amateurs in a particular city or radio club, some extend through county or state, and some even spread from coast to coast and beyond!
Depending on what it does, what it is for and who is in it, a net might operate by voice (‘phone), Morse code (CW) or radioteletype (RTTY). Amateur TV nets are also on the horizon. CW nets may be slow, medium or high speed, depending upon the proficiency level of the net members.
How can you identify a net when you hear one? Almost without exception they begin with a “call up.” The net control station comes on at a prearranged time with a general call to all net members, something like this: “Calling the Podunk Net, calling the Podunk Net, this is K2ABC, net control station. The Podunk Net operates daily on this frequency starting at 7:30 P.M., Central Standard Time, for the purpose of emergency communication in the Podunk area. Amateur stations operating on or near this frequency are re- quested to stand by or move to another frequency while the net is in session.”
He then invites net members to “report in,” stating their location, any messages they have to send (or “traffic on the hook”). This “reporting in” may be at random, by alphabetical or prearranged order, or by roll call.
On CW nets the procedure is similar, except that abbreviations are used because it takes longer to say things via CW than by voice. The CW net control might send, for example: “PN (Podunk Net) PN PN DE (from) K2ABC K2ABC K2ABC QNN (net control station) QNZ (adjust your frequency to mine) QND (the net is directed) QNI (stations report into the net) QNA (by prearranged order) K (go ahead).
Long ago amateurs discovered that they could be useful in providing emergency communications during floods, fires, storms, and explosions which would wipe out telephone and telegraph lines, isolating communities. A ham or two in the stricken area would crank up their rigs from batteries or gasoline generators and establish a communication with the outside world. As this kind of thing became more frequent, the amateurs decided that it could be done more effectively if they were prepared and trained for it.
So about 25 years ago the ARRL organized the Amateur Radio Emergency Corps and encouraged amateurs to form local groups, prepare equipment, lay plans and conduct operator training for this specific purpose. Today there are about 1800 amateur Emergency Coordinators and over 40,000 amateurs “signed up” in the Emergency Corps.
Radio amateurs in this country can do something that amateurs in most countries are forbidden to do: handle messages for third parties. What kind of messages? Why, any kind at all, just so they don’t get paid for it. They are usually written and handled in a standard amateur message form, not unlike the Western Union form. These messages are called “traffic,” hence the nets that handle them are called “traffic nets.” The idea is to get the message from its point of origin to its destination in the least possible time by passing it from one amateur to another.
Traffic nets are generally well organized and some of them are set up in “systems.” One such system, sponsored by ARRL, is called the National Traffic System and consists of about 100 nets working together in chains covering the entire U.S., its possessions and Canada. In emergencies, these traffic nets and systems are often the means for handling important point-to-point traffic.
In a sense, the above nets are training nets. Whatever their primary purpose, a great part of it is in getting trained to do a job.
Newcomers to the amateur ranks via the Novice license need training, especially in Morse code. The Novice speed requirement is only five words per minute. You can’t handle much communication at that speed, hence the purposes of many Novice nets are to increase code speed and teach net procedure.
Sometimes a group of amateurs with something in common will get together in a net. Doctors, dentists, religious groups, engineers, pilots, etc., have been known to form nets. A year or so ago a group of doctors formed a net to discuss latest medical developments. Teenagers discuss rock ‘n roll, scouting, sports, television shows (real crazy, dad!). The YLs have their own nationwide fraternal organization, the Young Ladies Radio League (YLRL) and have a number of nets consisting strictly of members of their own sex (no men allowed) , such as the Ironing Board Net, the Nylon Net and the Tangle Net.
A few groups operate just for the sheer pleasure of getting to know each other. Usually started quite spontaneously, they might call themselves the Gum-Beaters Net, the Idiots Net, or the Hot Air Net. No telling what you might hear them talking about.
Most nets are deliberately set up by responsible amateurs for a specific purpose, usually emergency preparedness or traffic handling. These hams are bent on doing something useful with their hobby. -$-
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New Type of Flying Yacht Develops 85-Mile Speed (Jan, 1929)
New Type of Flying Yacht Develops 85-Mile Speed
AN UNUSUAL type of surf plane powered with a reclaimed wartime rotary airplane motor has been designed by Sol Messina, of New York. He expects his novel craft to develop a top speed of 85 miles an hour.
As the above photo shows, the surf plane is of light but sturdy construction. Pontoons and cabin are made from tin, the former being made watertight to support the weight of the ship. A cloth rudder at the rear serves to steer the craft. The rotary engine was salvaged at a cost of $50, affording a cheap but dependable power plant. An unusual feature is the mounting of the engine at the rear of the boat, where it pushes rather than pulls the plane. Cabin and engine are supported by steel tubing of the type used in building airplane fuselages. The photograph shows the surf plane in New York harbor, where tests are being conducted. -
Soon to Come STEREO SOUND FROM YOUR TV (Mar, 1982)
Soon to Come STEREO SOUND FROM YOUR TV
By Arthur J. Zuckerman
CRITICS of commercial television have been calling it a wasteland for years. This cultural condemnation has been leveled at commercial-network offerings since the demise of The Golden Age of TV in the 1950s, and many viewers have seen considerable reason to agree with it.
But even as criticism was heating up, alternatives, both in fare and technology, were beginning to surface. First there was educational television, which proceeded to blossom into public television. Cable systems developed into a source of alternative programming.At the same time came the video-cassette recorder, complete with commercially prepared tapes to supplement off-the-air recordings of VCR owners. And now we have the videodisc, the visual version of the phonograph record.
But television has remained pretty much a wasteland where sound quality is concerned. Despite the fact that television sound is FM, its quality from the very beginning has been sad. Manufacturers were understandably preoccupied with de- livering the best possible picture, and the sets they produced were so loaded with video circuitry that their audio amplifiers and speakers seemed almost an afterthought. Usually they were no better than what you could get in a portable AM radio.
Now this, too, is changing, and the era of good-quality video sound and, yes, even stereo video, is upon us. Perhaps it shouldn’t be too much of a surprise that many of the very forces that brought us alternative programming have also been leading to high-quality stereo sound for video.
At the head of the parade is public television. Public TV stations began getting together with public FM-stereo radio stations for simulcast broadcasting of concerts and operas years ago. They’re still at it. You can watch such a show on your TV screen while listening to a glorious FM stereo rendition of the sound through your high-fidelity system.
If your speakers flank your screen, you’ve got a perfect arrangement. Even if they don’t, headphones plugged into your receiver or amplifier will do the job— at least for solo viewing—as long as the receiver isn’t too far away from the TV.
At least one cable service is getting into the stereo act, too. Last summer Warner/Amex inaugurated Music Television (MTV), a 24-hour rock-TV music network that transmits its sound in Dolby stereo via an FM multiplex signal. The stereo can be received by using an inexpensive signal splitter to attach the cable to both a television receiver and an FM tuner’s antenna terminals.
Another boost to stereo video has come from the Philips videodisc sys- tem, now being marketed as Magnavox Magnavision and Pioneer LaserDisc. These systems carry their program information in the form of pits on the reflective surface of a disc. The length and spacing of the pits carry the encoded information, which is scanned by a laser optical system. This system has enough capacity to carry stereo sound, and most of the programs being offered on disc do have such stereo sound tracks. The players have audio output jacks that permit hookup to your regular home stereo receiver.
The most recent booster of stereo video has been the appearance of stereo in videocassette recorders. Last summer Akai introduced a portable VCR with stereo sound-recording capability. It can record the picture portion of a simulcast from a companion tuner-timer unit and the sound portion from an FM stereo receiver.
Like most home VCRs, the Akai recorder has a frequency range limited to 10,000 Hz, substantially short of the 15,000-Hz top limit of FM broadcasting. But it does offer Dolby noise reduction for the cleanest possible sound and most of the content of the average musical performance falls within the 10,000-Hz range.
Actually, a number of videocassette recorders with stereo sound are available today in Japan. This isn’t too surprising because Japan also has enjoyed television broadcasting with stereo sound for several years. Two audio channels are provided by Japanese telecasters in much the same way that we receive FM stereo in the United States. The second channel is encoded on a subcarrier which modulates the main audio carrier. This piggyback arrangement is called a multiplex system.
The two resulting audio channels are used by the Japanese in two different ways. Music programs are usually broadcast in stereo. But Japanese telecasters also offer dual-language programming, with Japanese on one channel and English on the other. (English is a mandatory subject in Japanese schools.) Home viewers can select the language they want to hear by using a switch on their receivers.
Last fall, broadcasters in West Germany also began to offer stereo telecasts. The German approach to stereo TV is simpler than the Japanese. Because their video band-widths are relatively broad, the Germans simply employ two discrete audio channels with each of their video channels.
During the past year many domestic and foreign television manufacturers finally have begun to pay attention to sound quality in their offerings for the American market, at least in their higher-priced models. If you’re in the market for a new, better-quality color set, a number of approaches to better audio are now available to you.
One is simply improved amplifiers and speakers, including two-way speaker systems. Another is pseudo stereo, employing electronic trickery to give the illusion of two-channel sound. There are also nongimmicked, monophonic television receivers that have their own stereo sound systems and inputs for playing material fed from external stereo sources.
This approach is becoming tied into the growing trend to projection television with its large screen, for which stereo sound is particularly effective. Typical are General Electric’s rear-projection Widescreen 4000, which has a 10-watt-per-chan-nel stereo amplifier driving a pair of speakers with 2-inch tweeters and 8-inch woofers. Magnavox’s 50-inch rear-projection offering is similar. It has an 8-watt-per-channel amplifier, and its speakers have 3-inch tweeters and 8-inch woofers. These projection units can accept stereo sound from simulcasts, videodiscs or videotapes.
Both the GE and Magnavox lines also include more conventional television consoles that play stereo sound from external sources through their own stereo amplifiers and speaker systems. They also can feed sound to external speakers or even to external stereo amplifiers.
Mitsubishi Electric has gone a step further to make simulcast stereo oven easier to enjoy. Its Model 2582 television receiver actually has an FM stereo tuner built in, and it provides for simultaneous reception of an FM broadcast with a telecast.
Although Panasonic has not yet joined the stereo television ranks in its American market, it does offer a couple of receivers with dual, two-way speaker systems for richer monophonic sound. One is a 25-inch console with two sets of woofers and tweeters flanking the screen. Another is a 45-inch rear-projection system with a similar audio arrangement.
True stereo from external sources is provided for by RCA in its front-projection TV offering. Its built-in speaker system consists of a pair of 2-inch tweeters and two 5-inch woofers. There is also provision for driving external speakers from the set’s stereo amplifier.
But RCA’s most innovative offering is its Dual Dimension Sound, which employs phase shifting and the separation of certain frequencies within the tonal spectrum to give the illusion of true stereo sound. Consoles with this feature have dual speaker systems and stereo amplifiers that also accept true stereo from external sources. Several table models, which are equipped with only one speaker, have stereo outputs through which they can feed Dual Dimension Sound to an externally-located stereo system.
One of the newest developments in video lends itself particularly well to stereo sound—component television. This concept is being pursued by Sony with its Profeel line. Sony offers Profeel monitors with either 19-inch or 25-inch screens. A separate tuner has auxiliary audio and video inputs that accept signals from videotape recorders, videodisc players, home computers, video games or other sources. Also offered is a choice of two speaker systems, both two-way. A small model is designed to mount on the sides of either Profeel screen; the other consists of much larger, freestanding units. Sony says its Profeel components can be adapted to receive stereo and multichannel telecasts when they become available in the United States.
Such broadcasting may become reality here sooner than you might think. The Electronic Industries Association has recently conducted a series of stereo tests over Chicago’s WTTW-TV after regular broadcast hours. Under study were three systems. One of these is a modified version of the Japanese system, as represented by Sony on behalf of the Electronic Industries Association of Japan.
The other two systems tested are entries by Telesonics Inc. and by Zenith.
The Electronic Industries Association has set considerably more stringent requirements than are asked of broadcasters in Japan. Instead of stereo or bilingual service, EIA wants stereo and bilingual service. Naturally, the stereo service must be compatible with monophonic telecasting, and the bilingual service cannot create any interference by leaking into the English service. EIA also wants an administrative channel for sending technical instructions through a network.
But EIA can only offer its results and make recommendations to the Federal Communications Commission. It is this federal agency that has the last word, making the rules by which American broadcasters must operate.
But when EIA’s work has been carefully reviewed by the people in Washington, we may find that the era of stereo television broadcasting in the United States won’t be far off.


























