Old Electronics Magazines On Line

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Want to see and read the audio and electronic magazines from the 1930s to the 1980s? Most of them are on line at: AmericanRadioHistory.Com - Documenting the History of Radio TV and FM broadcasting

Issues of Popular Electronics, Audio Engineering, Hi Fidelity and other mags plus old catalogs and industry publications. You can down load the as PDF and read the at your leisure on PC or any portable device. Over 3 Million pages to search through.
 
There it is, in the July 1964 edition.....with a quarter million volts of firepower, it is powerful enough to get me and my friends banned from the high school science fair FOREVER!!!!

The Popular Electronics Big TC....Of course, even then building things according to the plans weren't big enough. Instead of a 3 foot tall Tesla Coil, we made it 5 feet tall. Instead of one sheet of glass and foil for the capacitor, we had a stack an inch thick. One of my friends found a transformer so big it took three high school kids and a shopping cart to get it into the classroom....the only name on it was "Budweiser".
 
There it is, in the July 1964 edition.....with a quarter million volts of firepower, it is powerful enough to get me and my friends banned from the high school science fair FOREVER!!!! . . .
Circa mid 1960's, the interior doors in schools and commercial buildings were often some kind of glued-up sandwich with some variant of Formica as the outermost skins. Now, Formica is an excellent electrical insulator - in fact, that's supposedly what the stuff was originally created to be.

The restroom doors at my High School had some huge stainless steel push-plates on them. Much larger than any functionality would require. Being the era of the "space race", perhaps that acreage of satiny brushed stainless was supposed to look "high-tech" to our adolescent eyes. Or maybe it helped the janitors, by not showing smudges left behind from poorly-aimed pushes. Now, stainless isn't a great conductor but it'll suffice as the conductive plate for a capacitor of a few picofarads.

At my High School there was a Boy's room directly across the hall from the Electronics Lab (yes, we had a full-fledged Electricity and Electronics curriculum in High School in those ancient days), and that restroom entrance was also just around the corner from the Physics Lab, where the Van de Graff generator was stored . . .

Although the potential was present, there wasn't enough capacitance to accumulate much net charge. And most of it dissipated before you could get the Van de Graff disconnected and stowed out of sight.

Dale
 
This is great documentation. Am sure it would be a great source of information.

Here 'Electronics for you' and 'Elektor' were the only popular magazines available. I don't know which magazines were published in 80s when Audio CDs came out. Would some gentleman guide me to any credible review of audio cd sound quality comparison against Cassettes/vinyls when they first came out ? It would be interesting to read reviews of that time period.
Thanks and regards.
 
There it is, in the July 1964 edition.....with a quarter million volts of firepower, it is powerful enough to get me and my friends banned from the high school science fair FOREVER!!!!

The Popular Electronics Big TC....Of course, even then building things according to the plans weren't big enough. Instead of a 3 foot tall Tesla Coil, we made it 5 feet tall. Instead of one sheet of glass and foil for the capacitor, we had a stack an inch thick. One of my friends found a transformer so big it took three high school kids and a shopping cart to get it into the classroom....the only name on it was "Budweiser".
It's alive it's Alive !
 
Scott probably remembers the rash of "Thrifty 3-way" (another David Weems project) construction that happened on our dorm floor - I forget whether it was my freshman or sophomore year. The early 70's were the age of the acoustic suspension speaker.
 
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