On 6/3/17 2:38 PM, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
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In message <cabxq0zczlhbjpzwt+jtxtgr+xgprao9x9ewkwxs+jaye2h8...@mail.gmail.com>
, "Donald E. Pauly" writes:

Electronic thermal coolers did not exist then

http://www.thermoelectrics.caltech.edu/thermoelectrics/history.html

I'm not sure about fancy coolers.. Yeah, people showed that the effect worked, but I think they really didn't come into their own until the modern ones that are omnipresent in 12V powered beer coolers and the like were developed. That was 70s according to the article. Borg Warner (of clutch, brake, and gearbox fame) apparently had one in 1960.
http://www.thermoelectric.com/2010/archives/library/Ads%20in%20the%2060's.PDF

So they existed, but were pretty exotic. would a crystal oscillator builder have wanted to fool with one? Hey, there have been people tinkering with almost everything forever.



Electronic temperature sensors did not exist either.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resistance_thermometer#History


Yep... and thermocouples have been used for thermometry for a long time too. Thermistors, for that matter, nonlinear as all get-out, but readily available.

In the 50s, a *transistor* oscillator would have been pretty unusual. I'm not sure they could work at a high enough frequency. You'll note that the early "transistor radios" were basically TRF designs for the AM band, and the transistor basically provided audio gain, not RF gain.

http://www.junkbox.com/electronics/sheets/GE_2N107_Datasheet.jpg

I guess the regen receiver must have had some gain at 1 MHz. I found an old GE datasheet that gives the ft of 0.6 MHz. (and the hfe wasn't bad, 20, at DC, probably)

But you sure weren't building a 5MHz or 10 MHz oscillator with a 2N107 or a CK722. Or the 2N170 NPN, which I am surprised to find you can still buy (and cheaper, in constant dollars, than originally).



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