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	<title>Radio Shack</title>
	<link>http://radioshack.blogchili.com</link>
	<description>The authorative blog about Radio Shack</description>
	<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jul 2008 03:31:21 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>But their trip now was far different from the</title>
		<link>http://radioshack.blogchili.com/but-their-trip-now-was-far-different-from-the</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jul 2008 03:31:02 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[But their trip now was far different from the one they had had across
 England. Where, in that country, they had seen big concentration camps,
 and men preparing for war, with an occasional evidence of wars effects
 in a building wrecked by a night air raid, here, in the eastern part of
 France, they came [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>But their trip now was far different from the one they had had across<br />
 England. Where, in that country, they had seen big concentration camps,<br />
 and men preparing for war, with an occasional evidence of wars effects<br />
 in a building wrecked by a night air raid, here, in the eastern part of<br />
 France, they came upon actual war in all its fateful progress, with<br />
 whole towns demolished, forests and orchards blotted out&#8211;stark ruin<br />
 written over the face of the earth.<br />
 With a clear right-of-way, their high-power machine swept past<br />
 ammunition and food trains&#8211;long strings of powerful motor trucks<br />
 driving toward the scene of action. They came upon towns and villages in<br />
 that area known as &#8220;behind the lines,&#8221; where French, American, Belgian<br />
 and British soldiers were recuperating after hard days and nights in the<br />
 front-line trenches.<br />
 By this time they were well within sound of the heavy guns, and their<br />
 driver told them that the artillery duel then going on had been in<br />
 progress for forty-eight hours at least.<br />
 &#8220;Sometimes it lasts for a week or more, you know,&#8221; he said, &#8220;in<br />
 preparation for a great infantry advance. But I understand that this<br />
 time they expect to go forward before the end of to-day.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Which, means,&#8221; added Lieutenant Mackinson, &#8220;that we probably will get a<br />
 chance to get right into the thick of it.&#8221;<br />
 On and on they went, and nearer and nearer to the scene of actual battle<br />
 they came.  <a href="http://www.usradiostations.info/California/SanDiego/73279/KGB-FM.aspx">Kgb-fm 101 Mhz San Diego</a> They passed the third-line trenches, and now, in places, they<br />
 seemed to be in a straight line with some of the concealed artillery<br />
 that was pounding away at the enemy in terrible detonations that shook<br />
 and rocked the ground every minute.<br />
 At the second-line trenches their orders called for a halt. They did not<br />
 have to be told that there was &#8220;something doing.&#8221; The road, so far as<br />
 the eye could reach backward over the route they had traveled, was a<br />
 constantly moving line of motor trucks, coming forward with men and<br />
 shells, while out ahead of them, tremendous and menacing, big tanks&#8211;the<br />
 biggest things the boys ever had seen propelled on wheels or<br />
 tractors&#8211;were pursuing their uneven course toward the front, in<br />
 preparation for a new kind of assault.<br />
 &#8220;They look like miniature battleships on land, dont they?&#8221; exclaimed<br />
 Slim.<br />
 The others agreed that it was about the best description that could be<br />
 given of these massive fighting machines, equipped with guns and men,<br />
 that could travel with their own power practically anywhere, across<br />
 shell holes, over trenches, through barbed wire&#8211;the most human piece of<br />
 war mechanism that had yet made its appearance on the battlefield.<br />
 Summons to a long-delayed meal gave a welcome interruption to their<br />
 guesses as to just what their first duties would be, and they had<br />
 scarcely finished their substantial rations of food when an orderly<br />
 informed Lieutenant Mackinson that he was to report at once to the field<br />
 headquarters.<br />
 &#8220;Await me here,&#8221; he said to the five men under his immediate command. &#8220;I<br />
 probably will be only a short time.&#8221;<br />
 And, indeed, it seemed to them that he had hardly time to reach the<br />
 headquarters when he was seen returning hurriedly. He gave some hasty<br />
 instructions to the chauffeur, and the latter immediately began a quick<br />
 examination of his engine and tires, which promised another early move.<br />
 &#8220;We go forward as far as we can by automobile again,&#8221; the lieutenant<br />
 informed them, &#8220;and after dark to-night we are to establish an outlying<br />
 communication from the farthest skirmish points to headquarters.&#8221;<br />
 Almost as he finished the sentence, they were started, but now their<br />
 progress frequently was impeded, and occasionally a shell broke so close<br />
 to them as to jar the machine from its course.<br />
 None of the men in the rear seats of that car were cowards, but, aside<br />
 from Hoskins, it was their first experience under actual fire, and they<br />
 marveled at the coolness of the driver, who seemed not to mind at all<br />
 the dangerous quarters they were in.<br />
 When they climbed out of the machine, half an hour later, Joe remarked<br />
 upon it in tones of open admiration.<br />
 &#8220;Its nothing,&#8221; the youthful chauffeur replied. &#8220;Youll get used to it,<br />
 too.&#8221;<br />
 As he turned the automobile and started backward, Slim suddenly<br />
 remembered that they hadnt even heard his name.<br />
 &#8220;Dont know it,&#8221; said Hoskins, &#8220;but he was wounded twice in the<br />
 trenches, I heard while we were waiting for the lieutenant. Thats why<br />
 hes driving a car now. He has seen enough service to know that<br />
 nervousness doesnt help.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>A 25 to 50 Mile Wireless Telephone Transmitter</title>
		<link>http://radioshack.blogchili.com/a-25-to-50-mile-wireless-telephone-transmitter</link>
		<comments>http://radioshack.blogchili.com/a-25-to-50-mile-wireless-telephone-transmitter#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Jul 2008 12:41:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A 25 to 50 Mile Wireless Telephone Transmitter&#8211;With Direct Current
 Motor Generator.&#8211;Where you have to start with 110 or 220  Southwest Colorado Tv Translator Association K24ch volt direct
 current and you want to transmit to a distance of 25 miles or more you
 will have to install a _motor-generator_. To make this transmitter you
 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A 25 to 50 Mile Wireless Telephone Transmitter&#8211;With Direct Current<br />
 Motor Generator.&#8211;Where you have to start with 110 or 220  <a href="http://tvstations.usradiostations.info/tvstation/61444/K24CH.aspx">Southwest Colorado Tv Translator Association K24ch</a> volt direct<br />
 current and you want to transmit to a distance of 25 miles or more you<br />
 will have to install a _motor-generator_. To make this transmitter you<br />
 will need exactly the same apparatus as that described and pictured<br />
 for the _100 Mile C. W. Telegraph Transmitting Set_ in Chapter XVI,<br />
 except that you must substitute a _microphone transmitter_ and a<br />
 _telephone induction coil_, or a _microphone transformer_, or still<br />
 better, a _magnetic modulator_, for the telegraph key and chopper.<br />
 The Apparatus You Need.&#8211;To reiterate; the pieces of apparatus you<br />
 need are: (1) one _aerial ammeter_ as shown at E in Fig. 75; (2) one<br />
 _tuning coil_ as shown at A in Fig. 77; (3) one _aerial condenser_ as<br />
 shown at B in Fig. 77; (4) one _grid leak_ as shown at C in Fig. 77;<br />
 (5) one _grid, blocking_ and _protective condenser_; (6) one _5 watt<br />
 oscillator tube_ as shown at E in Fig. 77; (7) one _rheostat_ as shown<br />
 at I in Fig. 75; (8) one _10 volt (5 cell) storage battery_; (9) one<br />
 _choke coil_; (10) one _panel cut-out_ as shown at K in Fig. 75, and<br />
 (11) a _motor-generator_ having an input of 110 or 220 volts and an<br />
 output of 350 volts.<br />
 In addition to the above apparatus you will need: (12) a _microphone<br />
 transmitter_ as shown in Fig. 84; (13) a battery of four dry cells or<br />
 a 6 volt storage battery, and either (14) a _telephone induction coil_<br />
 as shown in Fig. 86; (15) a _microphone transformer_ as shown in Fig.<br />
 87; or a _magnetic modulator_ as shown in Fig. 88. All of these parts<br />
 have been described, as said above, in Chapter XVI, except the<br />
 microphone modulators.<br />
 [Illustration: Fig. 86.&#8211;Telephone Induction Coil. (Used with<br />
 Microphone Transmitter.)]<br />
 [Illustration: Fig. 87.&#8211;Microphone Transformer. (Used with Microphone<br />
 Transmitter.)]<br />
 [Illustration: Fig. 88.&#8211;Magnetic Modulator. (Used with Microphone<br />
 Transmitter.)]<br />
 The Telephone Induction Coil.&#8211;This is a little induction coil that<br />
 transforms the 6-volt battery current after it has flowed through and<br />
 been modulated by the microphone transmitter into alternating currents<br />
 that have a potential of 1,000 volts of more. It consists of a primary<br />
 coil of _No. 20 B. and S._ gauge cotton covered magnet wire wound on a<br />
 core of soft iron wires while around the primary coil is wound a<br />
 secondary coil of _No. 30_ magnet wire. Get a _standard telephone<br />
 induction coil_ that has a resistance of 500 or 750 ohms and this will<br />
 cost you a couple of dollars.<br />
 The Microphone Transformer.&#8211;This device is built on exactly the same<br />
 principle as the telephone induction coil just described but it is<br />
 more effective because it is designed especially for modulating the<br />
 oscillations set up by vacuum tube transmitters. As with the telephone<br />
 induction coil, the microphone transmitter is connected in series with<br />
 the primary coil and a 6 volt dry or storage battery.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>He flashed his light about the hole</title>
		<link>http://radioshack.blogchili.com/he-flashed-his-light-about-the-hole</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 29 Jun 2008 03:31:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[He flashed his light about the hole. It was difficult to tell where the
 opening had been.
 &#8220;Joe and Frank Hoskins!&#8221; cried Jerry, a new terror in his voice. &#8220;I
 heard Joe shriek!&#8221;
 Slim, catching his meaning, snatched a rifle from beside one of the
 bodies, and with the butt of it began pounding  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>He flashed his light about the hole. It was difficult to tell where the<br />
 opening had been.<br />
 &#8220;Joe and Frank Hoskins!&#8221; cried Jerry, a new terror in his voice. &#8220;I<br />
 heard Joe shriek!&#8221;<br />
 Slim, catching his meaning, snatched a rifle from beside one of the<br />
 bodies, and with the butt of it began pounding  <a href="http://tvstations.usradiostations.info/tvstation/61217/WNKY.aspx">Mmk License Llc Wnky</a> frantically upon the side<br />
 of the cave where the entrance had been.<br />
 There was no answering knock.<br />
 &#8220;Joe,&#8221; shouted Jerry in a frenzied tone. &#8220;Joe! Can you hear me?&#8221;<br />
 No answer came, either from Joe or Frank.<br />
 &#8220;Pinned under tons of that stuff,&#8221; gasped Slim, the words trembling upon<br />
 his lips and a tear trickling down his cheek.<br />
 &#8220;I do not think so,&#8221; the lieutenant assured them. &#8220;Both Joe and Frank<br />
 were upon the outside when we entered.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;But they would try to get us out,&#8221; said Jerry. &#8220;If they were out there<br />
 they would give us some sort of signal that they were trying to help<br />
 us.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;We might not be able to hear them,&#8221; answered the lieutenant, even<br />
 against his own judgment. &#8220;But look at it this way. Even though they<br />
 never were inside here, they had a fair idea of what the place was like.<br />
 They knew from that that we needed help, and needed it quickly. If one<br />
 went alone, and anything happened to him on the way, the other might<br />
 wait here indefinitely, not knowing whether he had got assistance or<br />
 not. By going together they took the safest course.&#8221;<br />
 And Lieutenant Mackinsons reasoning was correct. That was exactly the<br />
 way Joe and Frank had figured it out, and, the latter forgetting all<br />
 about his own wound, they had started as fast as they could for the<br />
 American front.<br />
 &#8220;Keep cool, conserve your energy, and I feel certain everything will be<br />
 all right,&#8221; the lieutenant told the two friends with whom, in such a<br />
 short time, he already had gone through so many harrowing experiences.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>He then gave each of the boys a pass</title>
		<link>http://radioshack.blogchili.com/he-then-gave-each-of-the-boys-a-pass</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Jun 2008 06:51:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[He then gave each of the boys a pass, and told them to be aboard the
 _Everett_ not later than half-past ten oclock, and departed for the
 special work to which he had been called.
 &#8220;Wouldnt you like to be a lieutenant, though?&#8221; exclaimed Joe
 enthusiastically. &#8220;Just imagine being called from ship to ship to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>He then gave each of the boys a pass, and told them to be aboard the<br />
 _Everett_ not later than half-past ten oclock, and departed for the<br />
 special work to which he had been called.<br />
 &#8220;Wouldnt you like to be a lieutenant, though?&#8221; exclaimed Joe<br />
 enthusiastically. &#8220;Just imagine being called from ship to ship to help<br />
 them out of their difficulties.&#8221;<br />
 And, discussing their aspirations and what the future held for them, the<br />
 three young men from Brighton went to mess, afterward brushed their<br />
 brand-new uniforms of the last possible speck of dust, and left the navy<br />
 yard for a stroll through the southern section of the city founded by<br />
 William Penn.<br />
 How far they walked none of them knew. They had turned many corners, and<br />
 their conversation had covered a wide field&#8211;always, however, turning<br />
 upon some military subject&#8211;when a church clock tolled out nine times.<br />
 &#8220;I think we had better return,&#8221; said Slim, who was beginning to tire<br />
 under the long days strain and excitement.<br />
 &#8220;Yes,&#8221; agreed Jerry, &#8220;but which way do we go?&#8221;<br />
 They were, in truth, lost. Uniformed as they were, they were ashamed to<br />
 ask directions, and finally agreed that Joe was right in indicating that<br />
 they should walk straight southward.<br />
 Twelve blocks southward they walked, and the damp, marshy atmosphere<br />
 assured them that they were nearing the river, but their only hope now,<br />
 as they plodded across desolate and deserted dumps, and even invaded a<br />
 truck patch or two, was that they would strike a road that led around to<br />
 the  <a href="http://www.usradiostations.info/Colorado/GrandJunction/71371/KAFM.aspx">Kafm Mhz Grand Junction</a> navy yard entrance.<br />
 &#8220;Whats that?&#8221; exclaimed Jerry in a hoarse whisper, grasping a boy on<br />
 either side of him by the arm. &#8220;Did you hear?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;I thought I heard something,&#8221; averred Slim, also lowering his voice.<br />
 &#8220;What did it sound like to you?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;We are almost upon the river bank,&#8221; said Joe. &#8220;It was someone rowing,<br />
 but it sounded to me as though they were using muffled oars.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>CHAPTER XV OPERATION OF VACUUM TUBE RECEPTORS</title>
		<link>http://radioshack.blogchili.com/chapter-xv-operation-of-vacuum-tube-receptors</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Jun 2008 11:21:10 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[CHAPTER XV
 OPERATION OF VACUUM TUBE RECEPTORS
 From the foregoing chapters you have seen that the vacuum tube can be
 used either as a _detector_ or an _amplifier_ or as a _generator_ of
 electric oscillations, as in the case of the heterodyne receiving set.
 To understand how a vacuum tube acts as a detector and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>CHAPTER XV<br />
 OPERATION OF VACUUM TUBE RECEPTORS<br />
 From the foregoing chapters you have seen that the vacuum tube can be<br />
 used either as a _detector_ or an _amplifier_ or as a _generator_ of<br />
 electric oscillations, as in the case of the heterodyne receiving set.<br />
 To understand how a vacuum tube acts as a detector and as an amplifier<br />
 you must first know what _electrons_ are. The way in which the vacuum<br />
 tube sets up sustained oscillations will be explained in Chapter XVIII<br />
 in connection with the _Operation of Vacuum Tube Transmitters_.<br />
 What Electrons Are.&#8211;Science teaches us that masses of matter are made<br />
 up of _molecules_, that each of these is made up of _atoms_, and each<br />
 of these, in turn, is made up of a central core of positive particles<br />
 of electricity surrounded by negative particles of electricity as<br />
 shown in the schematic diagram, Fig. 69. The little black circles<br />
 inside the large circle represent _positive particles of electricity_<br />
 and the little white circles outside of the large circle represent<br />
 _negative particles of electricity_, or _electrons_ as  <a href="http://tvstations.usradiostations.info/tvstation/18267/WKOP-TV.aspx">East Tennessee Public Communications Corp. Wkop-tv</a> they are<br />
 called.<br />
 [Illustration: Fig. 69.&#8211;Schematic Diagram of an Atom.]<br />
 It is the number of positive particles of electricity an atom has that<br />
 determines the kind of an element that is formed when enough atoms of<br />
 the same kind are joined together to build it up. Thus hydrogen, which<br />
 is the lightest known element, has one positive particle for its<br />
 nucleus, while uranium, the heaviest element now known, has 92<br />
 positive particles. Now before leaving the atom please note that it is<br />
 as much smaller than the diagram as the latter is smaller than our<br />
 solar system.<br />
 What Is Meant by Ionization.&#8211;A hydrogen atom is not only lighter but<br />
 it is smaller than the atom of any other element while an electron is<br />
 more than a thousand times smaller than the atom of which it is a<br />
 part. Now as long as all of the electrons remain attached to the<br />
 surface of an atom its positive and negative charges are equalized and<br />
 it will, therefore, be neither positive nor negative, that is, it will<br />
 be perfectly neutral. When, however, one or more of its electrons are<br />
 separated from it, and there are several ways by which this can be<br />
 done, the atom will show a positive charge and it is then called a<br />
 _positive ion_.<br />
 In other words a _positive ion_ is an atom that has lost some of its<br />
 negative electrons while a _negative ion_ is one that has acquired<br />
 some additional negative _electrons_. When a number of electrons are<br />
 being constantly given by the atoms of an element, which let us<br />
 suppose is a metal, and are being attracted to atoms of another<br />
 element, which we will say is also a metal, a flow of electrons takes<br />
 place between the two oppositely charged elements and form a current<br />
 of negative electricity as represented by the arrows at A in Fig. 70.<br />
 [Illustration: Fig. 70.&#8211;Action of Two-electrode Vacuum Tube.]<br />
 When a stream of electrons is flowing between two metal elements, as a<br />
 filament and a plate in a vacuum tube detector, or an amplifier, they<br />
 act as _carriers_ for more negative electrons and these are supplied<br />
 by a battery as we shall presently explain. It has always been<br />
 customary for us to think of a current of electricity as flowing from<br />
 the positive pole of a battery to the negative pole of it and hence we<br />
 have called this the _direction of the current_. Since the electronic<br />
 theory has been evolved it has been shown that the electrons, or<br />
 negative charges of electricity, flow from the negative to the<br />
 positive pole and that the ionized atoms, which are more positive than<br />
 negative, flow in the opposite direction as shown at B.<br />
 How Electrons are Separated from Atoms.&#8211;The next question that arises<br />
 is how to make a metal throw off some of the electrons of the atoms of<br />
 which it is formed. There are several ways that this can be done but<br />
 in any event each atom must be given a good, hard blow. A simple way<br />
 to do this is to heat a metal to incandescence when the atoms will<br />
 bombard each other with terrific force and many of the electrons will<br />
 be knocked off and thrown out into the surrounding space.<br />
 But all, or nearly all, of them will return to the atoms from whence<br />
 they came unless a means of some kind is employed to attract them to<br />
 the atoms of some other element. This can be done by giving the latter<br />
 piece of metal a positive charge. If now these two pieces of metal are<br />
 placed in a bulb from which the air has been exhausted and the first<br />
 piece of metal is heated to brilliancy while the second piece of metal<br />
 is kept positively electrified then a stream of electrons will flow<br />
 between them.</p>
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		<title>Seeing no one that he knew</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Jun 2008 22:51:01 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Seeing no one that he knew, and his mind weighted anyway with the
 menacing mystery of the strange happenings of the night before, he sat
 down on a coil of rope, just in the lee of the forward smokestack, to
 think the whole matter over for the twentieth time.
 He was thus absorbed when something, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Seeing no one that he knew, and his mind weighted anyway with the<br />
 menacing mystery of the strange happenings of the night before, he sat<br />
 down on a coil of rope, just in the lee of the forward smokestack, to<br />
 think the whole matter over for the twentieth time.<br />
 He was thus absorbed when something, at first vague and indefinite, then<br />
 clearer and clearer until it was unmistakable, began to impress itself<br />
 upon his mind. Like the awakening call that comes to a man in a sound<br />
 sleep&#8211;seemingly as a far-off whisper that gradually gathers volume and<br />
 strength until finally the sleeper awakes with a start to find someone<br />
 standing directly over him, loudly and insistently calling his name&#8211;so<br />
 Slim came to a realization of the strange series of sounds that were<br />
 being repeated within a few feet of him.<br />
 Could it possibly be only the crackling of the steam-pipe that ran along<br />
 the smokestack to the whistle&#8211;a crackling merely from the pressure<br />
 within? For a moment Slim thought an over-wrought imagination was<br />
 playing tricks upon him. But he rose hastily and crossed the short<br />
 intervening distance.<br />
 Clearly and distinctly it came to him then. Someone in another part of<br />
 the vessel was rapping desperately upon that pipe! And in the long and<br />
 short dashes of the international code that someone was repeating a<br />
 single word&#8211;&#8221;Help! Help! Help!&#8221;<br />
 In another instant, using the heavy end of his jackknife as a crude<br />
 transmitter, Slim was tapping off the reply:<br />
 &#8220;Who are you&#8211;and where?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Lieutenant Mackinson,&#8221; the message began to come back. &#8220;Locked in<br />
 closet off engine room. Cant make self heard. Can you help?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;This is Slim,&#8221; the youth rapped back upon the pipe. &#8220;Caught your<br />
 message on deck. Am coming with help at once.&#8221;<br />
 And he dashed down the deck toward the captains quarters, almost<br />
 bowling over the captains aide as he hurtled into the sanctum of the<br />
 ships commander unannounced.<br />
 &#8220;Well?&#8221; the captain demanded sternly. &#8220;Why all the haste?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Lieutenant Mackinson,&#8221; Slim blurted out; &#8220;hes locked in a closet down<br />
 near the engine room.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Locked in a closet!&#8221; the captain repeated incredulously. &#8220;How do you<br />
 know?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;He gave a telegraphic call for help on the steam-pipe which runs<br />
 through there and connects with the whistle,&#8221; the lad explained. &#8220;I was<br />
 on deck and heard it. I talked with him over the pipe.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;There is no time to lose, then. Come with me.&#8221; And the captain himself<br />
 hurriedly led the way down through the lower depths of the ship, where<br />
 it became hotter and more oppressive with every step they took.<br />
 They had taken a route by which they escaped the attention of anyone<br />
 else on the ship.<br />
 &#8220;It should be right about here somewhere,&#8221; the captain announced, as<br />
 they  <a href="http://www.usradiostations.info/Texas/Longview/73193/KFRO.aspx">Kfro 1370 Khz Longview</a> approached a particularly dark passage. For a few steps they felt<br />
 their way along, and then stopped to listen.<br />
 There was nothing but the dull and constant hum of the engines and the<br />
 almost insufferable heat.<br />
 &#8220;The other side,&#8221; said the captain in a lowered voice, as they failed to<br />
 find any trace of the imprisoned lieutenant where they were.<br />
 They were crossing a short gallery when Slim abruptly signaled a halt.<br />
 &#8220;I thought I heard something,&#8221; he said. &#8220;It sounded like another call.&#8221;<br />
 They stood silent a moment, and then, faint and indistinct, apparently<br />
 from somewhere several feet ahead of them, they both heard repeated that<br />
 which had made Slim stop. As the letters were tapped off upon the pipe<br />
 the lad repeated them for the information of the captain.<br />
 &#8220;S-M-O-T-H-E-R-I-N-G.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Smothering!&#8221; echoed the commander of the ship. &#8220;Great Scott! I believe<br />
 I know now where he is. This way,&#8221; and he started down the passageway<br />
 toward a narrow stairs leading to a still lower chamber in the vessel.<br />
 Three turns&#8211;two to the right and one to the left&#8211;and the captain<br />
 stopped again to listen. Seemingly from within the wall, right at their<br />
 elbows, there came a feeble knock. The officer whipped out a pocket<br />
 flashlight. They were directly in front of a heavy wooden door. It was<br />
 locked.<br />
 &#8220;Run get a cold chisel or a heavy screwdriver and hammer,&#8221; the captain<br />
 ordered, and Slim hastened away, to return two minutes later with all<br />
 three tools.<br />
 &#8220;Stand back as far as you can from the door,&#8221; said the captain, placing<br />
 his lips close to the keyhole. But there was no response from within.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>The energy of these oscillations sets up oscillations</title>
		<link>http://radioshack.blogchili.com/the-energy-of-these-oscillations-sets-up-oscillations</link>
		<comments>http://radioshack.blogchili.com/the-energy-of-these-oscillations-sets-up-oscillations#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 21 Jun 2008 06:31:03 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[The energy of these oscillations sets up oscillations of the same
 frequency in the secondary coil and these high frequency currents
 whose voltage is first positive and then negative, surge in the closed
 circuit which includes the secondary coil and the variable condenser.
 At the same time the alternating positive and negative voltage of the
 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The energy of these oscillations sets up oscillations of the same<br />
 frequency in the secondary coil and these high frequency currents<br />
 whose voltage is first positive and then negative, surge in the closed<br />
 circuit which includes the secondary coil and the variable condenser.<br />
 At the same time the alternating positive and negative voltage of the<br />
 oscillating currents is impressed on the grid; at each change from +<br />
 to - and back again it allows the electrons to strike the plate and<br />
 then shuts them off; as the electrons form the conducting path between<br />
 the filament and the plate the larger direct current from the B<br />
 battery is permitted to flow through the detector tube and the<br />
 headphones.<br />
 Operation of a Regenerative Vacuum Tube Receiving Set.&#8211;By feeding<br />
 back the pulsating direct current from the B battery through the<br />
 tickler coil it sets up other and stronger oscillations in the<br />
 secondary of the tuning coil when these act on the detector tube and<br />
 increase its sensitiveness to a remarkable extent. The regenerative,<br />
 or _feed back_, action of the receiving circuits used will be easily<br />
 understood by referring back to B in Fig. 47.<br />
 When the waves set up oscillations in the primary of the tuning coil<br />
 the energy of them produces like oscillations in the closed circuit<br />
 which includes the secondary coil and the condenser; the alternating<br />
 positive and negative voltages of these are impressed on the grid and<br />
 these, as we have seen before, cause similar variations of the direct<br />
 current from the B battery which acts on the plate and which<br />
 flows between the latter and the filament.<br />
 This varying direct current, however, is made to flow back through the<br />
 third, or tickler coil of the tuning coil and sets up in the secondary<br />
 coil and circuits other and larger oscillating currents and these<br />
 augment the action of the oscillations produced by the incoming waves.<br />
 These extra and larger currents which are the result of the feedback<br />
 then act on the grid and cause still larger variations of the current<br />
 in the plate voltage and hence of the current of the B battery<br />
 that flows through the detector and the headphones. At the same time<br />
 the tube keeps on responding  <a href="http://tvstations.usradiostations.info/tvstation/33296/K09AL.aspx">Kamiah Valley Inc K09al</a> to the feeble electric oscillations set<br />
 up in the circuits by the incoming waves. This regenerative action of<br />
 the battery current augments the original oscillations many times and<br />
 hence produce sounds in the headphones that are many times greater<br />
 than where the vacuum tube detector alone is used.</p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Now bring a pair of No</title>
		<link>http://radioshack.blogchili.com/now-bring-a-pair-of-no</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Jun 2008 05:31:09 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Now bring a pair of _No. 12_ or _14_ insulated wires from the 110 volt
 lighting leads and connect them with a single-throw, double-pole
 switch; connect one pole of the switch with one of the posts of the
 primary coil of the alternating power transformer and connect the
 other post of the latter with one [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Now bring a pair of _No. 12_ or _14_ insulated wires from the 110 volt<br />
 lighting leads and connect them with a single-throw, double-pole<br />
 switch; connect one pole of the switch with one of the posts of the<br />
 primary coil of the alternating power transformer and connect the<br />
 other post of the latter with one of the posts of your key, and the<br />
 other post of this with the other pole of the switch. Now connect the<br />
 motor of the rotary spark gap to the power circuit and put a<br />
 single-pole, single-throw switch in the motor circuit, all of which is<br />
 shown at A in Fig. 22.<br />
 [Illustration: (A) Fig. 22.&#8211;Top View of Apparatus Layout for Sending<br />
 Set No. 2.]<br />
 [Illustration: (B) Fig. 22.&#8211;Wiring Diagram for Sending Set No. 2.]<br />
 Next connect the posts of the secondary coil to the posts of the<br />
 rotary or quenched spark gap and connect one post of the latter to one<br />
 post of the condenser, the other post of this to the post of the<br />
 primary coil of the oscillation transformer, which is the inside coil,<br />
 and the clip of the primary coil to the other spark gap post. This<br />
 completes the closed oscillation circuit. Finally connect the post of<br />
 the secondary coil of the oscillation transformer to the ground and<br />
 the clip of it to the wire leading to the aerial when you are ready to<br />
 tune the set. A wiring diagram of the connections is shown  <a href="http://tvstations.usradiostations.info/tvstation/23142/WWSI.aspx">Hispanic Broadcasters Of Philadelphia, L.l.c. Wwsi</a> at B.<br />
 For Direct Current.&#8211;Where you have 110 volt direct current you must<br />
 connect in an electrolytic interrupter. This interrupter, which is<br />
 shown at A and B in Fig. 23, consists of (1) a jar filled with a<br />
 solution of 1 part of sulphuric acid and 9 parts of water, (2) a lead<br />
 electrode having a large surface fastened to the cover of surface that<br />
 sets in a porcelain sleeve and whose end rests on the bottom of the<br />
 jar.<br />
 [Illustration: Fig. 23.&#8211;Using 110 Volt Direct Current with an<br />
 Alternating Current Transformer.]</p>
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		<item>
		<title>A Twowire Aerial</title>
		<link>http://radioshack.blogchili.com/a-twowire-aerial</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jun 2008 05:01:03 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A Two-wire Aerial.&#8211;An aerial with two wires will give better results
 than a single wire and three wires are better than two, but you must
 keep them well apart. To put up a two-wire aerial get (1) enough _No.
 16_, or preferably _No. 14_, solid or stranded copper or aluminum
 wire, (2) four porcelain insulators, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A Two-wire Aerial.&#8211;An aerial with two wires will give better results<br />
 than a single wire and three wires are better than two, but you must<br />
 keep them well apart. To put up a two-wire aerial get (1) enough _No.<br />
 16_, or preferably _No. 14_, solid or stranded copper or aluminum<br />
 wire, (2) four porcelain insulators, see B in Fig. 5, and (3) two<br />
 sticks about 1 inch thick, 3 inches wide and 3 or 4 feet long, for the<br />
 _spreaders_, and bore 1/8-inch hole through each end of each one. Now<br />
 twist the ends of the wires to the insulators and then cut off four<br />
 pieces of wire about 6 feet long and run them through the holes in the<br />
 wood spreaders. Finally twist the ends of each pair of short wires to<br />
 the free ends of the insulators and then twist the free ends of the<br />
 wires together.<br />
 For the leading-in wire that goes to the lightning switch take two<br />
 lengths of wire and twist one end of each one around the aerial wires<br />
 and solder them there. Twist the short wire around the long wire and<br />
 solder this joint also when the aerial will look like Fig. 7. Bring<br />
 the free end of the leading-in wire down to the middle post of the<br />
 lightning switch and fasten it there and connect up the receiver to it<br />
 and the ground as described under the caption of _A Single Wire<br />
 Aerial_.<br />
 [Illustration: Fig. 7.&#8211;Two Wire Aerial.]<br />
 Connecting in the Ground.&#8211;If there is a gas or water system or a<br />
 steam-heating plant in your house you can make your ground connection<br />
 by clamping a ground clamp to the nearest pipe as has been previously<br />
 described. Connect a length of bare or insulated copper wire with it<br />
 and bring this up to the table on which you have your receiving set.<br />
 If there are no grounded pipes available then you will have to make a<br />
 good ground which we shall describe presently and lead the ground wire<br />
 from your receiving set out of the window and down to it.<br />
 How to Put Up a Good Aerial.&#8211;While you can use the cheap aerial<br />
 already described for a small spark-coil sending set you should have a<br />
 better insulated one for a 1/2 or a 1 kilowatt transformer set. The<br />
 cost for the materials for a good aerial is small and when properly<br />
 made and well insulated it will give results that are all out of<br />
 proportion to the cost of it.<br />
 An Inexpensive Good Aerial.&#8211;A far better aerial, because it is more<br />
 highly insulated, can be made by using _midget insulators_ instead of<br />
 the porcelain insulators described under the caption of _A Single Wire<br />
 Aerial_ and using a small _electrose leading-in insulator_ instead of<br />
 the porcelain bushing. This makes a good sending aerial for small sets<br />
 as well as a good receiving aerial.<br />
 The Best Aerial that Can Be Made.&#8211;To make this aerial get the<br />
 following material together: (1) enough _stranded or braided wire_ for<br />
 three or four lengths of parallel wires, according to the number you<br />
 want to use (2) six or eight _electrose ball insulators_, see B, Fig.<br />
 8; (3) two 5-inch or 10-inch _electrose strain insulators_, see C; (4)<br />
 six or eight _S-hooks_, see D; one large _withe_ with one eye for<br />
 middle of end spreader, see E; (6) two smaller _withes_ with one eye<br />
 each for end spreader, see E; (7) two still smaller _withes_, with two<br />
 eyes each for the ends of the end spreaders, see E (8) two _thimbles_,<br />
 see F, for 1/4-inch wire cable; (9) six or eight _hard rubber tubes_<br />
 or _bushings_ as shown at G; and (10) two _end spreaders_, see H; one<br />
 _middle spreader_, see I; and one _leading-in spreader_, see J.<br />
 [Illustration: (A) Fig. 8&#8211;Part of a Good Aerial.]<br />
 [Illustration: (B) Fig. 8.&#8211;The Spreaders.]<br />
 For this aerial any one of a number of kinds of wire can be used and<br />
 among these are (a) _stranded copper wire;_ (b) _braided copper wire;_<br />
 (c) _stranded silicon bronze wire,_ and (d) _stranded phosphor bronze<br />
 wire_. Stranded and braided copper wire is very flexible as it is<br />
 formed of seven strands of fine wire twisted or braided together and<br />
 it is very good for short and light aerials. Silicon bronze wire is<br />
 stronger  <a href="http://tvstations.usradiostations.info/tvstation/62530/K11QT.aspx">State Alaska K11qt</a> than copper wire and should be used where aerials are more<br />
 than 100 feet long, while phosphor bronze wire is the strongest aerial<br />
 wire made and is used for high grade aerials by the commercial<br />
 companies and the Government for their high-power stations.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>CHAPTER VI HOW THE TRANSMITTING AND RECEIVING</title>
		<link>http://radioshack.blogchili.com/chapter-vi-how-the-transmitting-and-receiving</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jun 2008 23:31:01 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[CHAPTER VI
 HOW THE TRANSMITTING AND RECEIVING SETS WORK
 The easiest way to get a clear conception of how a wireless
 transmitter sends out electric waves and how a wireless receptor
 receives them is to take each one separately and follow: (1) in the
 case of the transmitter, the transformation of the low voltage direct,
 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>CHAPTER VI<br />
 HOW THE TRANSMITTING AND RECEIVING SETS WORK<br />
 The easiest way to get a clear conception of how a wireless<br />
 transmitter sends out electric waves and how a wireless receptor<br />
 receives them is to take each one separately and follow: (1) in the<br />
 case of the transmitter, the transformation of the low voltage direct,<br />
 or alternating current into high potential alternating currents; then<br />
 find out how these charge the condenser, how this is discharged by the<br />
 spark gap and sets up high-frequency currents in the oscillation<br />
 circuits; then (2) in the case of the receptor, to follow the high<br />
 frequency currents that are set up in the aerial wire and learn how<br />
 they are transformed into oscillations of lower potential when they<br />
 have a larger current strength, how these are converted into<br />
 intermittent direct currents by the detector and which then flow into<br />
 and operate the telephone receiver.<br />
 How Transmitting Set No. 1 Works. The Battery and Spark Coil<br />
 Circuit.&#8211;When you press down on the knob of the key the silver points<br />
 of it make contact and this closes the circuit; the low voltage direct<br />
 current from the battery now flows through the primary coil of the<br />
 spark coil and this magnetizes the soft iron core. The instant it<br />
 becomes magnetic it pulls the spring of the vibrator over to it and<br />
 this breaks the circuit; when this takes place the current stops<br />
 flowing through the primary coil; this causes the core to lose its<br />
 magnetism when the vibrator spring flies back and again makes contact<br />
 with the adjusting screw; then the cycle of operations is repeated.<br />
 A condenser is connected across the contact points of the vibrator<br />
 since this gives a much higher voltage at the ends of the secondary<br />
 coil than where the coil is used without it; this is because: (1) the<br />
 self-induction of the primary coil makes the pressure of the current<br />
 rise and when the contact points close the circuit again it discharges<br />
 through the primary coil, and (2) when the break takes place the<br />
 current flows into the condenser instead of arcing across the contact<br />
 points.<br />
 Changing the Primary Spark Coil Current Into Secondary Currents.&#8211;Now<br />
 every time the vibrator contact points close the primary circuit the<br />
 electric current in the primary coil is changed into closed magnetic<br />
 lines of force and as these cut through the secondary coil they set up<br />
 in it a _momentary current_ in one direction. Then the instant the<br />
 vibrator points break apart the primary circuit is opened and the<br />
 closed magnetic lines of force contract and as they do so they cut the<br />
 turns of wire in the secondary coil in the opposite direction and this<br />
 sets up another momentary current in the secondary coil in the other<br />
 direction. The result is that the low voltage direct current of the<br />
 battery is changed into alternating currents whose frequency is<br />
 precisely that of the spring vibrator, but while the frequency of the<br />
 currents is low their potential, or voltage, is enormously increased.<br />
 What Ratio of Transformation Means.&#8211;To make a spark coil step up the<br />
 low voltage direct current into high potential alternating current the<br />
 primary coil is wound with a couple of layers of thick insulated<br />
 copper wire and the secondary is wound with a thousand, more or less,<br />
 number of turns with very fine insulated copper wire. If the primary<br />
 and secondary coils were wound with the same number of turns of wire<br />
 then the pressure, or voltage, of the secondary coil at its terminals<br />
 would be the same as that of the current which flowed through the<br />
 primary coil. Under these conditions the _ratio of transformation_, as<br />
 it is called, would be unity.<br />
 The ratio of transformation is directly proportional to the number of<br />
 turns of wire on the primary and secondary coils and, since this is<br />
 the case, if you wind 10 turns of wire on the primary coil and 1,000<br />
 turns of wire on the secondary coil then you will get 100 times as<br />
 high a pressure, or voltage, at the terminals of the secondary as that<br />
 which you caused to flow through the primary coil, but, naturally, the<br />
 current strength, or amperage, will be proportionately decreased.<br />
 The Secondary Spark Coil Circuit.&#8211;This includes the secondary coil<br />
 and the spark gap which are connected together. When the alternating,<br />
 but high potential, currents which are developed by the secondary<br />
 coil, reach the balls, or _electrodes_, of the spark  <a href="http://www.usradiostations.info/Texas/Lamesa/75753/KPET.aspx">Kpet 690   Khz In Lamesa</a> gap the latter<br />
 are alternately charged positively and negatively.<br />
 Now take a given instant when one electrode is charged positively and<br />
 the other one is charged negatively, then when they are charged to a<br />
 high enough potential the electric strain breaks down the air gap<br />
 between them and the two charges rush together as described in the<br />
 chapter before this one in connection with the discharge of a<br />
 condenser. When the charges rush together they form a current which<br />
 burns out the air in the gap and this gives rise to the spark, and as<br />
 the heated gap between the two electrodes is a very good conductor the<br />
 electric current surges forth and back with high frequency, perhaps a<br />
 dozen times, before the air replaces that which has burned out. It is<br />
 the inrushing air to fill the vacuum of the gap that makes the<br />
 crackling noise which accompanies the discharge of the electric spark.</p>
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