Ad
related to: radio electronics magazine projects
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Part 2. With this fun project you'll never have to tell time again. Lee Glinski: 54/7: July 1983 Digital voltmeter for your car's dashboard: This easy-to-build project helps keep an eye on your car's electrical system. Fred L. Young Sr., Fred L. Young Jr. 54/7: July 1983 Timex/Sinclair memory expansion: Part 2.
Radio-Electronics was an American electronics magazine that was published under various titles from 1929 to 2003. Hugo Gernsback, sometimes called the father of science fiction, started it as Radio-Craft in July 1929. The title was changed to Radio-Electronics in October 1948 and again to Electronics Now in July 1992.
The Mark-8 was introduced as a 'build it yourself' project in Radio-Electronics's July 1974 cover article, offering a US$5 (equivalent to $30 in 2023) booklet containing circuit board layouts and DIY construction project descriptions, with Titus himself arranging for US$50 (equivalent to $300 in 2023) circuit board sets to be made by a New Jersey company for delivery to hobbyists.
The magazine started as Radio-Electronics Special Projects in 1980. [1] This was nominally a quarterly supplement to Radio-Electronics that had 10 issues from a single 1980 issue to the Spring 1984 issue. The Summer 1984 issue was renamed Hands-On Electronics. [1] It became bi-monthly in January 1986 and monthly in November 1986.
In other projects Wikidata item; ... Pages in category "Electronics lists" ... List of projects published in Radio-Electronics magazine;
The September 1973 issue of Radio-Electronics shows Don Lancaster's TV typewriter. The TV Typewriter is a video terminal that could display two pages of 16 lines of 32 upper case characters on a standard television set. The design, by Don Lancaster, appeared on the cover of Radio-Electronics magazine in September 1973. [1]
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Simon was a relay-based electromechanical computer, described by Edmund Berkeley in a series of thirteen construction articles in Radio-Electronics magazine, from October 1950. Intended for the educational purpose of demonstrating the concept of a digital computer, it could not be used for any significant practical computation since it handled ...