Elektor Electronics USA 1992 10
Elektor Electronics USA 1992 10
Elektor Electronics USA 1992 10
AVOWS
051>SINGLE-BOARD COMPUTER
r.. maeo
•
History of the valve
14.:4-7et4,11e,
me-
AO t fraiRri
ceafflAo
cfflie)
(-; uílelrie (-,Lo °Effie()
ee )
frig
WorldRadioHistory
istiLeir‘filZtel
TAPTO KITS
Our high quality kits will provide you with educational projects. After you complete your kit, you will have ahigh-tech pmduct that will provide years of
reliable operation. Assembly instructions in English, French, Dutch crnd German. Over 100 kits available. Call or write for afidl-line catalogue.
K1771 FM Oscillator $16.95 K1803 Universal Mono Pre-Amplifier $7.95 K2622 AM-FM Antenna Amplifier $15.95
Mini FM transmitter with good frequency Ideally suited as amicrophone amplifier, Do away with noisy signals! The K2622
stability (100-108MHZ). Built-in pre-amp signal matching of tuner or tape outputs.* gives you 22 dB gain where it's needed. DC
(5mV Sensitivity). Interfaces to all Supply voltage: 10-30 VDC (stabilized)' supply direct or via the coax cable (50-75
microphones. Requires 9-12 VDC. Gain: typ. 40 dB• Adjustable output level* Ohm impedance), metal box included.
Frequency range: 20 Hz to 20 KHZ (+/- 3
db)* Maximum input voltage: 40 mV.
K2637 2.5 Watt Mini Audio $13.95 K2666 Precision Stereo Vu-Meter $69.95 K2032 Digital Panel Meter $33.95
This small kit comes with apre and power Extremely precise VU-meter' 2x30 LED's A compact kit that can be incorporated
amplifier. No adjustments required. Short "flying dot" readout* dB-linear scale from into many housings or into existing equip-
circuit protected. Power supply: 4,5 to 15 +6 to -6 dB (0.75dB per LED)* Steadily ment* Power supply: 5VDC, 250 mA
VDC' Input sensitivity: power-Amp: 150 increasing scale partitions under -6dB• (regulated)* Read out: -999 mV to +99
mV (12V)* Pre-Amp: 20 mV (12V)* Max Peak measurements* No adjustments* mV, 1mV resolution* Overload indication
output 2.5W (4 Ohm, 12V)* Size: 42 x32 Maximum error 0.5dB. (positive and negative)* Linearity 0.1%•
x27 mm. Input impedance: 100 Molun.
Record your voice message on aIC and Reliable acoustic indication of radiation Decode Morse messages on your shortwave
play it back! Short messages (10-12 level. Excellent sensitivity to Gamma rays receiver. This decoder keeps up with the
seconds) can be repeated to welcome your and high energy Beta rays. Battery quickest signallers or automatic stations,
guests in your home or store. Use your operated (9V). Battery life exceeds 2 and "notes" message on LCD.AI-
imagination. Tech data: Loudspeaker out- months in continual use and in normal phanumeric LCD' 1line of 16 characters*
put: 2W at 4Ohm• 9VDC regulated. natural radiation surroundings. Very com- decodes Morse at almost any speed.
pact: 99 x 54 x 25 mm. Light weight;
assembled pcb weighs only 55 gr.
K2651 Digital Volt Meter $39,95 K4300 Audio Spectrum Analyzer $99.95
ORDER INFORMATION
n il Call:
Fax:
(303)-480-7544
(303)-480-7553
WorldRadioHistory
11
October 1992
CONTENTS Volume 2
Number 11
GENERAL INTEREST
WorldRadioHistory ELEKTOR E
4
aliseuDlo SpeakerBuilder
THE LOUDSPEAKER JOURNAL
The magazine
that finally deals seriously with
The newest publication from
the folks who bring you the art and craft of speaker building
Audio Amateur and Speaker Builder
The Art of building aspeaker is to optimize that
Glass Audio features the best vacuum tube mixture of design and engineering to balance all
designs for audio reproduction—past and contem- the parameters for the most beautiful sound pos-
porary. The new designs take advantage of im- sible. The Craft is knowing how and why.
proved components and control techniques that Speaker Builder gives you knowledge—from
make the end results far superior to anything possi- driver parameters and crossovers to woodwork-
ble during the early days of audio's rebirth after ing—to develop and refine your techniques, and
World War II. to get the most out of your system.
That's why tubes are having such arenaissance
of interest as aperfectionist approach to good
sound. And that's why tubes are reappearing in
AudioAmateur
THE JOURNAL FOR AUDIOPHILE CRAFTS
original equipment, in high end consumer and pro- The innovative, independent
fessional audio systems.
audiophile journal for the thoughtful
Published quarterly, Glass Audio will inform you
and capable music lover
about new innovations in the field and about parts
sources. We'll also include modification projects,
Audio Amateur's articles deal with how audio
reviews of technical basics and regular columns
equipment works, as well as how to build or mod-
such as Tube Troubles, Tube Tips and much more.
ify it. Construction and modification articles are
Subscribe today! plentiful, supplying all needed parts, performance
and assembly details. Exceptionally high quality
designs.
NAME
STREET 8 NO
CITY
STATE ZIP
MC OR VISA NUMBER
EXPIRE
AM\ 11 "sum
W I 4"' P.O. Box 567 -Van Nuys, CA 91408
irw- ra gigs ULTRASONIC LCD Display
.•
IMM IBM BIM
•.1 um Lig, TRANSDUCER
40 Character X 2 Lines
Panasonic
(MatsiornitaIll
15
diameter X 3/8' high. ser 4.85 rm. Data sheets and instructions available.
with an on-board
BASIC interpreter.
long leads.
CATI UST-1
bii 00
ir ll am m o,
CATI LCD-3 $00 *ash
wet
music source for PA background music and telephone e • •
ing C51) and awide music-on-hold. RCA lack inputs and outputs. Removable
b
metal control cover to prevent tampering. eaErzete -
range of accessories. 6.75" X 5.75' X 3.125' high 415" LE .... =
CAT* E0-1 male
•AUTOMATION
•DATA LOGGING
12 VDC PIEZO ELEMENT
•HOBBY/HOME PROJECTS
•OEM APPLICATIONS STEPPER MOTOR
3Wire Piezo Element.
Taiyo Yuden Co. ICB35BBKFi4.
Self-excited paco electric diehram.
1.40' diameter x0.021' thick. Resonant
BLUE EARTH resistance: 400 ohrns. 5' color-coded leads.
RESEARCH CAT8 PE-12 S1.00 each • 10 for S8.50
e_. -.: ,
...... ... ,
,
ouigutia,l.a.. tiu*ilia 1
With aminimum of external wir-
mghSW ... I mØ1UØ
PC board wit control the
speed and duration of a 120 Vac
motor or other load up to 300
Attach blank Most il nee sssss y If you prefer home delivery use
the handy subscription card enclosed.
ELEKTOR ELECTRONICS USA, PO Box 876, Peterborough, NH 03458-0876 (603) 924-9464 FAX (603) 924-9467
TECI
ELE RONIC
'Chip' experts agree with Dr. Munk.
COMPONENTS
TECI'S PC based microcontroller Whether you order 1 part or
all 39,504...MOUSER stocks
development tools are the most cost
and...can ship today!!
effective for veterans or beginners.
Call today for afree information package. CALL...
6805 PRIMER FOR BEGINNERS $195.00 (800) 992-9943
6805 /68HCO5 /68HC11 CROSS ASSEMBLERS...$99.00
for your
6805 /68HCO5 SIMULATOR /DEBUGGER $99.00
68705 P3,P5,U3,U5,R3,R5 PROGRAMMERS FROM $349.00
FREE
68HC705 /68HC805 PROGRAMMERS FROM $395.00 CATALOG
COMPLETE PC BASED DEV. SYSTEMS FROM $449.00 2401 Hwy 287 N.
68HCO5 /68HC11 REAL TIME EMULATORS FROM $895.00
Mansfield, TX 76063
THE ENGINEERS COLLABORATIVE,INC.
R3 BOX 8C BARTON, VT. 05822 USA
r-r, TEL: (802) 525-3458
MOUSER°
Tct., FAX: (802) 525-3451 ELECTRONICS
TOLL FREE 1-800-336-8321 Sales & Stocking Locations Nationwide
Weather Radio
A complete guide.
SCANNING ACTION!
NOAA Weather
Radio, VOLMET
aviation Weather,
FAA, military, nari-
time weather
National Scanning Report is services. Where to tune and
what you'll hear. 125 pp.
America's fastest-growing scan- $14.95 plus 2.00 book rate or
ning magazine. That's because 3.50 UPS.
every issue of National Scanning
Report offers the latest in: $14.95 POSTPAID
From first alarm to final 1993 Passport!
*Law Enforcement clean up, National Scanning New, 1993 edition. Offer
Communications Report is crammed with up-to- expires August 15 .Don't
*Fire and Rescue date information written by and wait! Order now. Get it fist!
UNDERSTANDING & INSTALLING BKDG1 HOW TO SERVICE YOUR OWN TUBE AMP:
HOME SYSTEMS: $29.95 A COMPLETE GUIDE FOR THE CURIOUS MUSICIAN
HOW TO AUTOMATE YOUR HOME Tom Mitchell
David R. Gaddis This program includes afact-filled, illustrated, easy-to-read guidebook
Now in a second edition, this handbook is designed to provide infor- and a75-minute VHS color videotape. Written in an informal, rontechni-
mation that will help the reader to understand and install various home cal, and entertaining style, the book takes readers on a step-by-step
systems, as well as make his own decisions about home automation. In "crash course in electronics while teaching troubleshooting, servicing,
addlion to giving standard how-to advice, the author also includes and problem prevention. The videotape helps to drive home key points
recommendations on materials and suppliers. Chapters include Basic from the text, demonstrating procedures and illustrating the use of hand
Information, Installing Electrical Wiring, Home Security Systems, Lighting tools and test equipment. Contents include an introductior to basic
& Appliance Controls, Audio/Video Systems, Telephone & Communica- electronics; recognizing electronic components; in-depth coverage of
tion Systems, Environmental Control Systems, and Automation System tubes and transformers; detailed coverage of speakers and e-iclosures;
Controllers. Bearing in mind that this book emphasizes system theory amplifier circuit basics; demystifying biasing; tool and test equipment
and design rather than step-by-step construction, it is one of the most selection and use; using schematic diagrams; troubleshooting with volt-
complete books of its type available anywhere. 1991, 140pp., 81 2 x 11,
/ age charts; how not to use an amplifier; voltage charts for most common
softbound. amplifiers; ten troubleshooting flowcharts; tables and illust -ations for
international AC; many amplifier modifications; maintenance criecklist for
troublefree operation; and much useful reference information Vinyl car-
BROADCAST SOUND TECHNOLOGY BKB9 rying case for book plus videotape is extremely handsome ard durable.
Michael Talbot-Smith $44.95 1991, 250pp., 81 / x 11, spiralbound.
2
NAME
COMPANY
STREET
CITY ST ZIP
DAYTIME TELEPHONE
SHIPPING
Li FREE CATALOG PLEASE REMIT IN US DOLLARS ONLY. PAYMENT BY:
MC OR VISA EXP.
I
quality wireless microphone system for video The ID-8 sells for $89.95. Contact Commu-
camcorders consists of atransmitter, a re- IN CIRCUIT EMULATOR nications Specialists, 426 West Taft Ave.,
ceiver and an ATR35 omnidirectional con- The Engineers Collaborative announces Orange, CA 92665-4296, (800) 854-0547, (714)
denser lavalier microphone. the TECICE-HCO5 In Circuit Emulator, which 998-3021, FAX (714) 974-3420.
The ATR45W's receiver employs a more comes standard with atarget system emu- Reader Service #235
durable rubber-coated flexible antenna rather lation probe and debugging software, and
than the standard telescoping metal tube style. sports many real-time features such as hard-
The antenna can be rotated through awide ware breakpoints with 16-bit pass counter.
angle for better reception and convenience. The Emulator also has aunique automatic
Both the receiver and the transmitter op- clock speed switching feature that allows em-
erate on 9V batteries and include acamera ulation at very low speeds.
shoe mount, velcro strips for use when ashoe The system includes the emulator, which
mount is unavailable, belt clips, earphone for comes in protective housing, apower sup-
monitoring recording and an ATR35 omni- ply, one emulation pod, aTASM-05 cross as-
directional condenser microphone with tie sembler, user's manual, tutorial, and ater-
clip land windscreen. ATR45W system is minal emulation program.
$239.95. The complete system sells for $1,110 (up-
Contact Audio-Technica US, 1221 Com- grade extra), through The Engineers Collab-
merce Dr., Stow, OH 44224-9971, (216) 688- orative, Rt 3, Box 8C, Barton, VT 05822,
2600, FAX (216) 688-3752. (800) 336-8321.
Reader Service #232 Reader Service #290
Peterborough, NH 03458-0876 USA The Netherlands Editor: Lakatos Andras Editor: Jeremias Sequeira
Telephone: 011 31 4638 9444
Telephone: 603-924-9464 (National) INDIA SPAIN
Telex: 56617 (elekt nI)
or +1 (603) 924-9464 (International) Elektor Electronics PVT Ltd Resistor Electronica Aplicada
FAX: 011 31 4637 0161
FAX: (603) 924-9467 (National) Chhotani Building Calle Maudes 15 Entio C.
Managing Director: M.M.J. Landman
or + 1(603) 924-9467 (International) 52C, Proctor Road, Grant Road (E) 28003 MADRID
Advertising: Maureen E. McHugh BOMBAY 400 007 Editor: Agustin Gonzales Buelta
Overseas Editions:
Telephone: (603) 358-3756 Editor: Surendra lyer
FRANCE SWEDEN
FAX (603) 358-0157
Elektor sarl ISRAEL
Subscriptions: Katharine Gadwah Electronic Press AB
Les Trois Tilleuis Elektorcal
Elektor Electronics USA Box 5505
B.P. 59; 59850 NIEPPE P 0 Box 41096
Post Office Box 876, 14105 HUDDINGE
Editors: D.R.S. Meyer TEL AVIV 61410
Peterborough, New Hampshire 03458 Editor: Bill Cedrum
G.C.P. Reedersdort Publisher: M. Avraham
Subscriptions to Elektor Electronics USA are
UNITED KINGDOM
available ONLY in the fifty United States, NETHERLANDS
GERMANY Elektor Electronics (Publishing)
Canada, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and Elektuur By
Elektor Verlag GmbH P.O. Box 1414
those Pacific territories administered by the Peter Treckpoelstraat 2-4
Susterfeld Strasse 25 Dorchester DT2 8YH
United States of America. 6191 VK BEEK
5100 AACHEN England
Editor: P. E. L. Kersemakers
International Advertising: Editor: E.J.A. Krempelsauer EdItor/Pubilsher: Len Seymour
Uitgeversmaatschappij Elektuur b.v. PAKISTAN
P.O. Box 75 GREECE Electro-shop
6190 AB BEEK Elektor EPE 35 Naseem Plaza
The Netherlands Kariskaki 14 Lasbella Chawk Printed in the United States of America.
Telephone: +31 48 38 94 44 16673 Voula—Athena KARACHI 5
FAX: +31 46 37 01 61 Editor: E. Xanthoulis Editor: Zain Ahmed ISSN: 1051-5690
WorldRadioHistory
ELEKTOR ELECTRONICS USA OCTOBER 1992
I VIBRATION SCOOPER ELECTRONICS SCENE
Scantek, announces MODENT software for
testing mechanical components and struc-
tures which are subject to vibration and dy-
namic loads. Applications include vehicle
components testing, PC board vibration char- I HAM SOURCE
acteristics, turbine blade development, and Hart Publishing announced the fourth edi-
predicting switch-gear performance under tion of the Amateur Radio Mail Order Cat-
earthquake conditions. alog and Resource Directory which contains
The MODENT modal-analysis function 220 pages and more than 1,200 entires of
uses measured frequency response functions mail-order products and services for hams.
to describe the vibration properties of a
structure. MODENT compares and validates
The catalog is alphabetized in categories
from antennas to weather instruments. List- I GET MY DRIFT?
finite element modeling results and modifies ings include the name, address, phone, and Analog Devices' AD621 is a low-drift in-
the models based on experimental findings. FAX number of the vendor, plus adescrip- strumentation amplifier with 5ppm/ °C max-
You use MODENT on any industry stan- tion of products or services. There are new, imum gain drift and 0.6µV/°C voltage off-
dard 286, 386, or 486 PC, with high-resolu- non-radio related listings in the catalog, such set drift, key parameters with weigh scales
tion color graphics and co-processor capabil- as environmental organization BBSs, and and bridge interfaces. The AD621 features
ities and in conjunction with many signal other informative sources under "Catalogs a maximum nonlinearity of lOppm of full
analyzers including Diagnostic Instruments, and References." The catalog also has the scale, an initial offset voltage of 50µV and
H-P, B&K, Ono-Sokki, Schlumberger, and complete Ham-Soft Shareware Catalog in- again error of 0.05%. Packaged in an eight-
SD. cluded and includes directories of free cata- pin SOIC or DIP, the AD621 has pin-strap-
For information, contact Richard Peppin, logs, radio clubs, VECs, Amateur Radio-spe- pable gains of 10 and 100 and alow 1.3mA
Scantek, Inc., 916 Gist Ave., Silver Spring, cific BBSs, and foreign radio magazines. maximum supply current.
MD 20910, (301) 495-7739, FAX (301) More information is available from Hart The AD621 operates from power supplies
495-7739. Publishing, 767 South Xenon Court, Suite ranging between ±2.3 to ±18V. You can use
Reader Service #275 117, Lakewood, CO 80228, 303 987-9442. it with data acquisitions systems and as a
Reader Service #254 high-performance preamplifier: input volt-
age noise is alow 9nV/s/Hz at lkHz, 0.28µV
NEW NEWIIMEW NEW
p-p in the 0.1Hz to 10Hz band, while input
I
current noise is 0.1%, sufficient for multi-
plexing. The AD621's bandwidth is 800 at
VÎDIP
OF GLOBAL CONCERN
Global Specialties announced a portable again of 10, and 200kHz at again of 100.
design prototyping station, the PB-503-C. It Further information is available through
is acomplete electronics workstation housed Analog Devices, 181 Ballardvale St., Wil-
HI-QUALITY DIGION VIDEO
CONVERSION SERVICE in arugged carrying case, for anyone who mington, MA 01887, (617) 937-1428, FAX
VDS.SVID.1415(.11rrrn•IIII .ERV •PR•SEEMA wishes to take their lab with them. (617) 821-4273.
The design station is suited for analog, dig- Reader Service #231
I
1II
II r t4e ell
plete with a large breadboard area which
holds circuits up to 24 ICs. A full range of in- A LITTLE MATH
strumentation, including afunction gener- Because engineers and scientists often spend
eric ator, triple voltage power supply, 8-channel days, even weeks "tweaking" their equations
HOME VIDEOS logic probe, and two digital pulsers are in- in an effort to make their model reflect an
BUSINESS PRESENT/D. 1MA
4
cluded. The triple voltage power supply fea- accurate representation of the observed data,
s¡HM. I FAMILY EVE
• r ows
tures afixed +5V lA supply, and two vari- MicroMath released DIFFEQ with Fitting
CHRISTMAS AteleergATKIM
able 5-15V /
2 A supplies. The function gen-
1 version 2.0 for MS-DOS systems. Priced at
erator is continuously variable in frequency, $399, the program offers asolution environ-
I
from 0.1Hz to 100kHz, with selectable wave- ment that encourages experimentations and
GLOBAL VIDEO MAILER form outputs of sine/square/triangle and TTL verification. It does least squares parameter
VidiPax International offers avideo cas- clock output. estimation with differential equations. The
sette mailer service which digitally converts The rugged carrying case folds into the size program features several operators, including
video tape to or from any country's standard, of alarge briefcase, making the lab portable. those supporting range functions, plot types
and returns both your tape and the converted Storage facilities are provided in the carry- including time and phase plots phase-por-
one to you for $39.95. ing case for manuals, an optional multimeter, traits with varying initial conditions, and the
The world's incompatible television stan- and the optional WK-1 wire jumping kit. The capability to solve models using any of eight
dards need not prevent you from sharing PB-503-C retails for $349.95. The Proto-Meter accepted numerical methods.
videos for family, training, education, or 4000 and WK-1 are $139.95 and $13.95 Current users may upgrade for $29; sug-
other communication needs. Simply request respectively. gested retail is $399. Contact MicroMath Sci-
an order form, (printed in English, Spanish, Contact Global Specialties, 70 Fulton Ter- entific Software, PO Box 21550, Salt Lake
and French), and mail it in. race, New Haven, CT 06512, (203) 624-3103, City, UT 84121, (801) 943-0290, FAX (801)
For the VidiPax dealer nearest you, call FAX (203) 468-0060. 943-0299.
(914) 557-3600. Reader Service #294 Reader Service k260
I
CTL-L/LANCS from the serial port of Com- PS/2 Model 30s.
modore-Amiga computers. SPECTRUM ANALYZER The PCB plugs into the expansion bus and
MediaPhile is ideal for 8mm editing and Stanford Research Systems' SR760 ($4,350) occupies ahalf slot, and includes 24 lines of
interformat edits from 8mm to SVHS. Edit is a full-featured FFT with 90dB dynamic programmable digital input/output, an 8-chan-
controllers give infrared and serial control range, frequency spans from 191MHz to nel 8-bit A/D converter, and 12-bit CMOS
over most prosumer video decks and cam- 100kHz, and afast 100kHz real-time band- counter (a 7-channel 50V 0.5A driver is also
corders. Other source devices include laser width. Analysis functions such as THD, PSD, available). Communication to the PC is via
and compact disc players, audio cassette octave, band and sideband analysis are menu 4 I/O memory locations and is easily inter-
decks and DAT decks. The software sup- driven and supported with on-screen help. faced to all popular languages. Sample BASIC,
ports insert and assembly edits with special Averaging (vector, peak hold and RMS) can QuickBASIC, and Assembler programs are
effects and multimedia presentation. be performed on up to 64K scans. Data traces, included on 5.25" floppy.
Complete systems, including Commodore- Limit and Data tables, and instrument setup The Model 30 costs $79 and is available for
Amiga computer and video deck, range from files can be stored on the 3.5-inch DOS for- immediate shipment from Prairie Digital,
$2,500-10,000. Contact Interactive Micro- mat disk drive, or accessed through the stan- Inc., 846 Seventeenth St., Industrial Park,
Systems, Inc., 9Red Roof Lane, Salem, NH dard RS-232 and GPIB interfaces. Applica- Prairie du Sac, WI 53578, (608) 643-8599,
03079, (603) 898-3545, FAX (603) 898-3606. tions include vibrations, acoustics, noise FAX (608) 643-6754.
analysis and electronic design. Reader Service #271
Reader Service #248
Additional data is available from Stanford
I
Research Systems, 1290 D. Reamwood Ave.,
TEAM FOR TUNES Sunnyvale, CA 94089, (408) 744-9040.
Snell Acoustics and Audio Alchemy have Reader Service #288
WorldRadioHistory
ELEKTOR ELECTRONICS USA OCTOBER 1992
14
M
OST wideband antenna amplifiers met by the source follower, because it ter signal of T3 back to the source of Ti, via
are simply impedance converters forms an attenuator, and so degrades the network R7-C4. Without feedback, the gain
that provide some gain. The impedance of overall noise figure considerably. of the amplifier lies between 15 dB and
a whip or telescopic rod antenna is rela- 20 dB (measured at an output impedance
tively high because these antennas are of 50 Q). With the feedback parts fitted, the
A different approach
short with respect to the wavelength of the gain starts to rise alittle at about 100 MHz.
received signal. Obviously, this high im- Thus, at the input of awideband antenna The increase amounts to about 2 dB to-
pedance needs to be transformed down to amplifier we require adevice that (1) has a wards the end of the mobile communica-
50 a or 75 1 -2to match the receiver input, low input capacitance; (2) is capable of tions section of the VHF band, at about
and that is why most wideband antenna very high frequency operation at low 160 MHz. This effect is caused by the in-
amplifiers 'begin' with an old faithful: the noise; (3) has a very high input imped- creased phase shift at lower frequencies,
J-FET based source follower. ance; (4) can cope with high signal levels which result in aless effective feedback.
Now while aJ-FET is anearly ideal im- without running into high intermodula- The amplifier is powered by a12-V reg-
pedance converter, its use in a wideband tion figures; and (5) provides some gain. ulated supply via the downlead coax
active antenna has two major disadvan- That may seem alot to ask from asingle cable. This so-called phantom supply is
tages. First, it has arelatively large input active device, but fortunately agood com- shown separately in the circuit diagram. If
capacitance (typically 10 pF), which easily promise can be struck by using adual-gate you are lucky, your receiver has a 12-V
creates a filter in combination with the MOSFET at the amplifier input. power supply, in which case it is conve-
high antenna impedance. Second, one of The amplifier discussed here is one of niently used to power the antenna ampli-
the rules of good antenna amplifier design the 'overall feedback' type, of which every fier. It should be noted that the
is that the first active stage should provide one of the three stages provides amplifica- components in the phantom supply, i.e.,
at least some amplification to ensure the tion. Actually, it is a two-stage amplifier the two connectors (K3 and K4), the choke
lowest overall noise figure of the design. with an emitter follower at the output. (L2) and the decoupling capacitor (C7) are
Unfortunately, this requirement can not be As opposed to the J-FET source fol- not fitted on the PCB.
The inductance of chokes Li and L2 de-
pends on the frequency that is of interest
to you. The highest inductance value,
4.7 mH, is used for VLF reception; the low-
est value, 470 µH, for VHF/UHF recep-
tion. Finding the best value may require
some experimenting. In all cases, the d.c.
resistance of the chokes must be smaller
than 10 Q.
The output of the amplifier is con-
nected to the phantom supply via BNC
connectors and a length of 50-75 Q coax
cable. Inexpensive TV coax cable will be
adequate for this application.
The current consumption of the an-
tenna amplifier is not more than 60 mA.
COMPONENTS LIST
Resistors:
1 12k52 R1
1 220i≥ R2
2 15012. R3:R8
1 1MS2 R4
1 221(12 R5
2 56S2 R6;R7
1 25k52 preset H P1
1 50S"2 preset H P2
Capacitors:
1 47nF Cl
1 10µF 16V tantalum C2
2 100nF C3,C6
1 10pF ceramic 04
1 330nF C5
Semiconductors:
1 BF981 Ti
1 BF979 T2
1 2N5109 T3
Inductor
1 choke 470uH to
4mH7 (see text) Li
Miscellaneous: Fig. 2. PCB artwork for the project. Note that anumber of components are fitted at the track
1 Banana socket, insulated, side of the board.
for chassis mounting,
receptacle dia. 2.6 mm K1
1 BNC socket K2 necessary — 30 to 50 cm is long enough in pleted printed circuit board is fitted in a
1 Printed circuit board 924101 most cases. The prototype used abicycle metal box.
spoke cut to about 40 cm and secured to a The d.c. setting of the amplifier is de-
Phantom supply (not on PCB) banana plug. When your reception area is pendent on anumber of factors, and may
2 BNC socket K3;K4 'infested' with hum (e.g., from nearby require some experimenting for best re-
1 330nF 07 mains wiring), the antenna should be cou- sults. In general, Pr and P2 should be ad-
1 choke 470uHto pled to the amplifier input via a10-pF ca- justed for avoltage of 6-8 V at the emitter
4mH7 (see text) L2 pacitor. of T3. When the amplifier is used for day-
To ensure proper screening, the corn- time short-wave or medium-wave recep-
tion, the best possible S/N ratio is
aniainiansuaiii required. Hence, preset Fr must be ad-
justed for agate2-to-source voltage (Ug2_ s)
11111111111111111111111111111111.11111111 of between 3V and 6V. The lowest voltage
111111111111111111111111111111111 that gives adequate reception of a weak
station should be used.
1111/1111111111111111111 1111 For night-time reception, adifferent set-
11111111111111111111111 ting is required to cope with the much
1111111111111111111 higher signal levels. In that case, we require
MAINS SEQUENCER
Design by T. Giesberts
W
HEN an electrical or electronic appa-
ratus is switched on, apeak current
much larger than the nominal one flows, par-
100.00 1.00
ticularly in the case of motors and trans-
formers. If agroup of such equipment is 60.0 0.60
g
Tri IC9
V.9
5V 5V IC3
17
IC4
(5 16
IC5
(5 119
IC6
(5 120
IC7
é iv
24 9V BY164 1=1
IC4 n 74HC14
5V o
3VA3 1000 0
25V 3 IC5, IC6, IC7 n 74HC74
Ti
82
e
CA3160 (4BC550C
818
819
CV 7" 0 6811
5V 5V
A IC10
•05V TIC263141
4 BC560C K2
IC4a
4 680n.
C4 R15 5V GL
'MS
93
•
Re 100n
814 2
IC5a 2+
3
CLK
5V o GN
10M
03 F2
C4BC550C SA
2
IC2 5 r-
1,12
- 1ci
, 426
TLC271
. L11 924
o
IC4b
145 7 4 680n
C3 825
921 Cl2
3 6811
1515 1 14 10 13
-J
IC5b
On 4 L
IA 2.6 14 44 Tin
11
CLK
TIC263M
Ji ICS
IC IB BC560C K3
5
OC 74 213
3
5V
NC 11
4316
— -3C
1 3B
,•1 4c .8 12
2
10n
•-0 5V 5V o
RC CX . 1i13
7 680n
IC41 Is
F3
IC3a (4BC550C
927
13 SA
4 1M5
oT
IC6a
3
CLK 3 12111 r-
5V 3
930
3 RIO
5V 931
6811
CIO
10n _J
ern
14 15
1l
RC CX 5 •
TIC263M
IC3b 10 BC560C K4
12
680n
R33
IC4e 5V
1 12 9
'MS D o
13
IC6b
CLK
5V 5V o
17
G5V OF4
All
(4BC550C SA
o
812 913 110 TrI4
øc+
r- — 1
IC4c — cuc
IC7a 1,-- D
9 936
e
6 C16
6811
oojl CLK a 2
L - _
SI 177n
C7 03
13 TIC263M
jeE à• BC560C
100n 100n 5V
920013 -11
PARTS LIST
Resistors:
RI, R3 =22 ma
R2, R14 =47 k.Q
R4-R7, R12 = 100 LQ
R8 = 10 MQ
R9-R1I, R17, R23, R29, R35 = lokfl
R13 = 1Mû
R15. R21, R27, R33 = 1.5 Nu/
RI6, R22, R28, R34, R40 = 1LS./
RI8, R19, R24, R25, R30, R31, R36, R37
= 68 I/
R20, R26, R32, R38 = 100 Q
R39 = 220 Q
Capacitors:
CI, C2, C4, C7, C8, C17-C21 = 100 nF
C3, C5, C6 = 10 nF
C9,01. C13,C15 =680 nF 71
•1re 1I• •
C10,C12, C14, C16 =47 nE 630 V tirl!dee
C22, C24 = 1000 uF, 25 V, radial
C23, C25 = 10 g, 40 V, radial l ib
ék
d fri r ‘ Will I
íe
..l.ary I11 dit
Semiconductors:
DI-D4 = LED, high efficiency*
D5 = LED*
t
ig49 41
Viirl) I1
B1 =BY164
Ti, T3, T5, T7 = BC550C SWe,*
Yefe
T2, T4, T6, T8 =BC560C
ICI = CA3160
IC2 =TLC271
IC3 =4538
.
'èiii .
Iç. d11 • ,
«esee •
IC5-1C7 =74HC74
ICS =74HC4316
reaton.:
IC9 = 7805
ICIO = 7905
Tril-Tri4 =TIC263M
. .. .•.,,,,,• •
*Use only with approved insulated holder.
byeegg -
Miscellaneous:
KI-K4 = 2-way terminal block, 7.5 mm pitch
lffezed,•i
. . •, , , :
.....•.,.,.. •
SI = single-pole mains switch
Tri = mains transformer; 2x9 V, 3.3 VA
secondary (e.g. Monacor VTR3209)
FI -F4 = fuse, 5A
4fuse holders for PCVB mounting
2heavy-duty mains terminals for screwing
on to PCB
4heat sinks for Tril-Tri4, 5K/W (e.g.
Fischer SK129, available from Dau,
Bamham, Sussex,
Telephone 0243 553 031)
4Mains outlet chassis socket
1mains inlet chassis plug
5insulated LED holders
4LED lenses, red
1LED lens, green
1enclosure (e.g., LC860 from Telet)
1PCB Type 920013 (see page 70)
Construction
It must be borne in mind at all times that
the entire circuit is electrically connected to
the mains supply. As long as the circuit has
not been built into asuitable enclosure, no
mains should be supplied to it or, if it is for
test purposes, extreme care should be taken
not to touch the circuit with your bare hands
or non-insulated tools.
Furthermore, under no circumstances must
the ground of the sequencer be connected to
earth (mains or otherwise).
13 /
32 in) from voltage-carrying parts of the connected to ground. be touched should be connected to mains
board. When choosing an enclosure, make sure earth.
When you link two boards, make abso- that the ventilation holes are not larger than The insulation of switch S1must conform
lutely sure that the mains connections are 5 mm (/16 in), but preferably 3mm ( 1/8 in). to the relevant safety regulations for mains-
not interchanged, since the neutral line is Any metal parts of the enclosure that can operating switches.
Deslign by T. Giesberts
S
TRICTLY speaking, the converter described
so far does not need switching logic, since
it can simply be connected direct to aCD
player. However, developments in digital
audio equipment make it awise decision to
fit the converter with the input/output se-
lector circuit described in this final part of
the article. This circuit enables the selection
of one of four different digital input signals.
Moreover, atape out facility makes it possi-
ble to connect one of the four inputs to adig-
ital recorder, while one of the other three can
be listened to at the same time. All inputs
and outputs can be linked to either coaxial
or optical lines. The inputs are selected with
key switches. Four more of these switches
facilitate the looping of one of the inputs to
the tape record output. The selected source
and record inputs, as well as the various set-
tings of the converter, are indicated on the
front panel—see Fig. 18.
Circuit description
The circuit will be described with reference
to channel 1: the design of the other three chan-
nels is identical—see Fig. 16.
The coaxial input is terminated into a75
resistor, R1.The bi-phase signal is fed via C1
and R2 to inverter ICi a,which operates as an
amplifier. Capacitor C31 suppresses any ten-
dency of the gate to oscillate. Feedback resistor
R3 enables an amplification of x6 to be ob-
tained, so that the output of the inverter is
about 3V. Note that the design of the cir-
cuit is identical to that of the input circuit in
Fig. 5(in Part 1).
The level of the output of ICid, which is
applied to ICib, is exactly half-way between
that of the supply voltage and earth. This
enables ICib to produce rectangular signals
with minimal displacement of the transitions
(edges) of the signal. This is important for
an optimum reconstruction of the original dig-
ital signal.
The signal is then applied to three-state
buffer IC3b, which processes it if switch S1 is
open. If S1 is closed, IC 3bis off and buffer
IC3 a,which is fed with the signal from the
optical input circuit, IC 9,is on.
The three-state buffers are followed by two
more buffers, IC 5d and IC 6d, which are oper-
ated by the key-switch logic. In that way it is
determined which of the input signals drives
the converter (IC 5d) or the tape output (IC 6d).
The optical input consists of a receive
diode and acomponents contained in asmall
plastic module called aToslink (named after
its manufacturer, Toshiba). Externally, the cir-
cuit, whose output is TTL compatible, only
needs apower line decoupler, here consist-
5V
IC1b
IC3b
IC5d
12
11
IC8b
'Cg
r) e l
TORX173 5V
622
5V
IC1e RECORD
SELECT
10
IC3c IC13
IC5c
8 9
Zze
TOTX173
IC8c
9
Mal
10 700n 100n
[) ei
TOR X173 IC8d
13
12
RECORD
1311
620
SELECT
1:110 Tri
100»
IC4b
5 IC5b
6 5
IC2c
4 5 6 IC7d
IC6b
3 5
[)ZZ
TORX173
1115
10011
IC7c
9
10
[eX
TORX173 C8
•••
1
5V
R23 624 625 626 627 628 IC1,1C2 74HCUO4
1C3...IC6 74HC126
7
4
181) 19
IC7 IC7,1C8 = 74HCO3
C12 W C13 W C14 W14 C16 W C17
o
7
IC1 IC2 IC3 IC4 IC5 IC6 RIM
77n p 77n p 77n p 77n p 77n p 77n
920063 -III -118
61
î
Toslinks
835 830
SOURCE SELECT
09 D10 011 012 88
16.1 57
L..1 86
L.1 S5
La
-6.sok-Is• -lag>
M OM ° 0M O
D1
48kHz
D2
•
D3 ei .1
44.1kHz
32k He
3 XIV
DEEMP.
14
1 10 C20
2
2 *
15 100n
3 13 C21.
2
4 * 1
6 IC14 100n
12 C22.
7 5 4
6 * I
K9
1
"0 ++ 022 4 7 74HC4028 100n
11
1-LLD
e
-
hia D23 14
1 8 834 833 832
E] El
0 0 3 5 On
9
• " 12 0 0. 5
10 0 0. 7 1:11
4 0 0 3 XIV
O
2 0 5
1 10 C24
2
* 100n
3 13 C251
1 2
4
6 IC15 100n
5V 12 C:60
7 5 4
6
4 7 74HC4028
11 C*27
9 8
* I
100n
-
5 9
08
07 brif of
05 D6 )4
841
reZeZei:
RECORD SELECT
842
K6
*see tent
K7
3
4
2 1
920063 -III -12
WorldRadioHistory
ELEKTOR ELECTRONICS USA OCTOBER 1992
24 AUDIO & HI-FI
L_
the enclosure in such away that the ana-
O 0 o li o
logue output board can just be mounted be-
hind it. It is advisable to screen the left-hand
side of the busboard with asmall piece of tin
and 26).
PARTS LIST
Resistors:
RI, R5, R9, R13, R20 =75
R2. R6, R10. R14 = 100 Q
R3, R7, R11, R15 = 101LQ
R4, R8, R12, R16 =47 ILQ
RI 7, R18 = 820 Q
R19 = 220 Q
R21 = 8.21(Q
R22 =4.7 1 2
-
R23—R28 = 10 Q
R29 =see text
R30, R36 = 1ILQ
R3 I—R34, R37—R40 = 1MQ
R35, R41 =470 Q
Capacitors:
CI, C3, C5, C7, C9, C11 = 100 nF,
ceramic
C2, C4, C6, C8 = 100 nF, SMD
C10, C12—C19 =47 nF, ceramic
C20—C29 = 100 nF (see text)
C31—C34 = 39 pF, SMD
Inductors:
LI—L4 =47 µH
Semiconductors:
D1—D8 = 1N4148
D9—D16 =LED (in S5—S12?)
D17, D21—D23 =LED, 3mm, red*
D18, D20 = LED, 3mm. yellow*
D19 =LED, 3mm, green*
ICI, IC2 =74HCUO4
IC3-1C6 =74HC126
IC7, IC8 =74HCO3
IC9-1C12 =TORX173
IC13 =TOTX173
IC14, IC15 = 74HCV4028
Miscellaneous:
K1—K7 = audio socket bus for PCB
K8 = I6-way header
K9 = 16-way flatcable connector for
PCB mounting
Sl—S4 =mini slide switch, 1make
S5—S12 =key switch, 1make
Trl =see text (core =LAB G2-3FT12)
PCB Type 920063-3
Front panel foil Type 920063-F
Fig. 18. Wiring and interconnecting diagram of the entire converter, and the suggested front panel (scaled down to half size).
FLASH EPROMS
by T. Scherer
I
F you have followed the fortunes of the will ensure a much larger future market
world's giant semiconductor manufacturers share for IBM processors.
over the past few years, you will know that, What has all this to do with Flash EPROMs
because competition in the chip markets is you may ask. As we have seen, all semicon-
fierce and price wars are rife, the manufac- ductor manufacturers are under pressure. There is first of all the relative size of
ture of memory chips is profitable only if The market for DRAMs is nearing saturation, the memory cel (transistor) for one bit; this
gigantic quantities are produced. The manu- that for processors is hard to penetrate and it is an important factor, since the density of the
facturer who is the first to develop anew tech- offers only small niches for all other types chip, that is, bits per unit area, determines
nique and who will, therefore, be the first to of chip. Now, as everyone knows, all com- the quantity price of the memory. If the area
bring anew generation of chips on the mar- puters contain at least one ROM or EPROM. occupied by one cell in astandard EPROM
ket has adecided advantage. However, since the market for computers is taken as unity, that in aFlash EPROM is
Currently, this intense rivalry is particu- expands (at present) only slowly, no for- 1.2-1.3, and in an EEPROM about 3. Assuming
larly noticeable in the market for dynamic tunes can be made (any more) with these mem- equal production quantities, that would make
RAMs (or DRAMs). These devices occupy ory chips. Furthermore, the techniques for the Flash EPROM 20-30% dearer than the
the largest sector of the market. Since their producing current ROMs or EPROMs are not standard EPROM. The EEPROM, particu-
structure is fairly simple, new techniques really suitable for further development. However, larly since its production quantities are much
can be readily applied to them. Flash EPROMs with their different proper- smaller, is much more expensive than these
Processors also have alarge share of the ties have given manufacturers (and users) new two. At the time of writing (spring 1992),
market, but they have been handled differ- opportunities. the price of a1Mbit Flash EPROM, in quan-
ently for along time. Manufacturers of these tities of 1000, is £10-£12 each, while that
devices created so-called industry standards of Intel's 8 Mbit Flash EPROMs (which
A comparison
that have given them avirtual monopoly they call FlashFileTm memories—Type
for most of the 1980s. However, this cosy The fact that Flash EPROMs are electrically 28F008SA) in quantities of 10 000 varies
setup has recently started to show signs of erasable alone does not make these devices from £18 for the 120 ns version to £24 for
movement. Intel processors are now being attractive. After all, EEPROMs are also elec- the 85 ns version. Those prices are expected
cloned or produced under licence (Harris, trically erasable. The important advantages to come down rapidly over the next 12-18
AMD, Sun). The most exciting develop- of Flash EPROMs over the current erasable months as more players enter the field.
ment in the past 18months was undoubt- memory chips, summarized in Table 1, are Another aspect of chip density is that with
edly the Apple-IBM cooperative setup that as follows. current 1pm technology only acertain num-
ber of transistors can be deposited on to a
given area. At present, most DRAMs, EPROMs
Table 1. Comparison of the various properties of erasable memory cells. and Flash EPROMs are manufactured with
adensity of 1Mbit per chip (although Intel
EPROM Flash EPROM EEPROM introduced an 8Mbit type in early 1992),
and most static RAMs and EEPROMs with
relative size of cell adensity of 256 Kbit per chip.
1 1.2-1.3 about 3
Other important factors are the technol-
programming by external means internal internal
ogy and manner of, and time taken for, pro-
technique hot electron injection hot electron injection tunnel effect
gramming of the memories. Between the
voltage 12.5 V 12 V 5V three types, there is no difference in resolu-
resolution byte byte byte tion: all three types can be programmed byte
time taken <100 ps <10 1..ts 5ms by byte, although the standard EPROM has
erasing by external means internal internal the disadvantage that this must be done by
technique ultraviolet light tunnel effect tunnel effect an external apparatus. The other two types
voltage 12.5 V 12 V can be programmed in the equipment in which
5V
they are used, since the most important parts
resolution whole chip whole chip or block byte
of the programming logic have been integrated
time taken 15 min 1s 5ms in them. To make updating of an EPROM at
alater date possible, the chip must be fitted
WorldRadioHistory
ELEKTOR ELECTRONICS USA OCTOBER 1992
FLASH EPROMS 29
in asocket, which increases manufacturing relatively high current flows. When that hap-
costs of the equipment in which it is used, pens, anumber of so-called hot electrons ensue
ignoring for amoment the extra cost of up- and these capture other electrons from the
dating to the user. substrate material; because of the high elec-
There is another aspect connected with tron density, some of these electrons reach the
programming: EPROMs and Flash EPROMs oxide layer between substrate and floating
need an auxiliary voltage of 12 V, other- gate. Because of the high potential of the se-
wise the hot electron injection technology lect gate, several electrons actually pass
does not work. An EEPROM can operate through the substrate and reach the floating
with the 5V normally available in the com- gate. The electron cluster so caused at the
puter: it raises this internally to 18 V. Since floating gate remains (according to the manu-
the load presented by aFlash EPROM on facturers for at least ten years) even when
the 12 V supply is negligible (it draws no the +12 V programming voltage is removed.
more than 30 mA), and most computers Thus, the floating gate is negative with re-
have aregulated +12 V line available, there spect to the source and the memory cell is
is not likely to be adifficulty. If neverthe- inhibited.
less there is no 12V line available, atiny volt- In an EPROM there would be only one per-
age converter in aDIL package must be added missible way back: via ultraviolet light. For
at acost of some £2. that reason, EPROMs have awindow in the
It is also interesting to look at the time taken housing of the chip. Ultraviolet light has
by the programming. A 1Mbit EPROM enough energy to remove the electrons from
needs not less than 15 s, whereas aFlash the floating gate.
EPROM is programmed in about 1.5 s. An A different process, based on the tunnel
EEPROM may take minutes! effect, is used in EEPROMs. Because of this
The technology and manner of erasing is nected as normal to the Vpp line and the effect, electrons are able to tunnel through a
also quite different. An EPROM must be re- transistor is enabled via the select gate, the narrow potential barrier that would constitute
moved from the apparatus in which it is used channel conducts and alogic 1is available aforbidden region if the electrons were treated
and be radiated for about 15 minutes with at the source. Programming such acell re- as classical particles. However, quantum
ultraviolet light in aspecial unit. Flash EPROMs quires anegative charge in or at the floating mechanics indicates that there is adefinite
and EEPROMs are electrically erasable and gate, which is not simple to arrange, since that probability of electrons tunnelling through
can, therefore, remain in the equipment in gate is totally isolated. the barrier. This technique, although slower
which they are used. That difficulty is overcome with the hot than the injection process, has the advan-
As far as the user is concerned, erasing electron injection technique. Briefly, this pro- tage of permitting electrical erasing.
an EEPROM is anormal read operation. cess works as follows. If the cell is aranged The Fowler- Nordheim variant of the tun-
Each byte can be erased and re-programmed as in Fig. la, the voltage at the drain and the nelling technique is used for erasing Flash
separately. Since, as already mentioned, gate is +12 V, and the source is at earth po- EPROMs. Briefly, it operates as follows. If
this can be alengthy process, many (large) tential, achannel is formed through which a the memory cell is arranged as in Fig. lb,
EEPROMs can be programmed in the so-
called page mode at 16 or 32 times the nor-
mal speed.
AFlash EPROM is erased in amanner sim-
ilar to that of an EEPROM, but it is not pos-
sible to do this byte by byte, that is, the en-
tire memory or ablock or blocks of bytes is
erased. Erasure time for a 1Mbit model is
1-4 s; moreover, before erasure can take
place, all bits must be set to '0'.
It is clear that the Flash EPROM looks
the most advantageous of the three memo-
ries. Its drawback of being erased completely,
or in blocks, as compared with the byte-by-
byte erasure of an EEPROM is more than
made up by the speed with which it is erased
(and re-programmed)—whence its name.
Fig. 3. Housings and pinouts of a 2 Mbit Flash EPROM (Intel's Type 28F020).
References
Fig. 5. The Mustang accelerator card from Pyramid Computer, intended primarily as Mustang Accelerator Card for Laser Printers,
aretrofit for HP Laserjet printers, uses Intel's Type 28F020 Flash EPROM. Data Sheet, Pyramid
MULTIFUNCTION
MEASUREMENT CARD
$300 BASE IO ADDRESS: Possible values are $300 (JP1=A) and $310 (JP1=B). FOR PCs
10000000 RefF7eq— : Frequency meter (crystal-) reference in Hz.
10 MaximumGateTime: Typical 410 seconds (10 Mhz referency frequency).
2.5
2
RefVolt
IRQ
:
:
ADC full-scale voltage
Hardware interrupt (Possible values: 2 .. 7)
MAIN SPECIFICATIONS
920067-t1
DC Voltmeter
Range: 0.1 V to 300 V
Inputs: eight
Fig. 1. Parameters in the configuration file ADCF.CFG may be edited with any ASCII-compat A-D converter: 12 bits, 3 jas,
ible wordprocessor. 0 to 5 V
tains, among others, functions for PPI ini- tailed description to be rendered here: for Frequency meter
tialization, multiplexer control, A-D con- more information, refer to the source code. Range: 0.0025 Hz to 10 MHz
version, digital I/O and pulse time and The peripheral interfaces (PPIs), IC13 Inputs: eight (TTL)
frequency measurement. These and all and IC14, are read from and written to via Max. error: 0.0001%
other procedures and functions that are the procedures ReadPPI and WritePPI re- Accuracy: 6 digits
declared in the unit may be called directly spectively. Although these are really very
from the associated source file using the basic routines, they form the nucleus of Pulse time meter
command 'uses PMEASURE'. the card control system. ReadPPI and Range: 0 to 400 s
Before discussing the programming WritePPI are, therefore, frequently called Resolution: 0.1 is
routines, we take the opportunity to re- by other procedures and functions. Adjustable measurement level
fresh your memory: the 'specs' box of the Among the 'users' are: InvertInput,
measurement card is repeated on this CounterValue, GetCurrentAnalogChan- Event counter
page. Also, we suggest to once more go nel, SelectRatioI0 and StartEventCounter. Range: 32 bits
through the whole article on the measure- During the initialization phase, PMEA- Max. frequency: 10 MHz
ment card. SURE automatically loads the hardware Adjustable trigger edge
configuration file ADCF.CFG, and the
Pascal unit presence of the measurement card at the
set base address is checked. If the card is
The effect of a unit function is nearly al- found, the PPIs are automatically initial-
ways apparent from the name: e.g., ized at the end of the test (see the InitPPI Time related
SelectFreqChannel(Channel:ZeroToSeven) routine in PMEASURE.PAS). This is an measurements
connects channel number 'Channel' of important event, because it takes place be-
multiplexer IC22 to the frequency meter. fore the control program proper (i.e., your PMEASURE makes the best possible use of
Where necessary, the declared constants, software) is started. The Boolean variable the available hardware facilities. Hence,
variables, procedures and functions are 'HardwareFound' thus allows software to the pulse time and frequency measure-
described by a few words of 'comment'. decide to go on (card found) or not (card ments are fully interrupt-driven. The IRQ
This comment obviates the need of a de- not found). input used in the PC needs to be set in
hardware as well as in software. On the
measurement card, one of the jumpers JP2
to JP7 is fitted in the X-row. Make sure to
use a free IRQ line (usually IRQ2), and
check that jumper JP8 is in position E. As
to the software setting, the IRQ line must
function ADC(var Overflow:boolean):word; be identified in line 5of the configuration
(**************************************)
file (see Fig. 1).
Depending on the type of measure-
(-ADC samples the analogue input and returns the previous 12 bit
conversion result through ADC. ment, a measurement cycle starts with a
The high order byte must be read first because reading the low call to StartPulseTimeConversion or
order byte starts the next conversion cycle.)
StartFrequencyConversion. The associated
var interrupt routine, HardwareIntHandler,
X: word; starts automatically the moment hardware
begin (* ADC *)
flag EOC-F is actuated. This happens at
if not HardwareFound the end of each (sub-) conversion. By
then virtue of the interrupt procedure, the en-
begin
ADC:=2048; tire measurement remains fully transpar-
Overflow:=false; ent to the main program. Yet, the
end
measurement results are simple to call up
else
begin by subsequently reading the records called
X:=portw[BIO_Address+1]; PulseTime and Frequency.
X:=swap(X);
if (X=8FFF) OR (X=8000)
A second interrupt routine plays an im-
then Overflow:=true portant role when frequency measurement
else Overflow:=false; is used. A routine called TimeIntHandler
ADC:=X;
end; monitors the time taken by the second
end; (* ADC *) phase of the measurement (fm'), and veri-
920067-12
fies this time against the maximum con-
version time calculated during the test
measurement. When the time limit is ex-
Fig. 2. This ADC function is one of the many routines contained in PMEASURE.PAS. ceeded, this is taken to mean that the fre-
Measure f. conversion
time
IRET
HardwareIntHandler
INT $08
INT $08
Time of day
Data acquisition
INT SiC
Data AcqHandler
Interrupt vector table
IRET Interrupt vector table
Base RAM address = 00000:000
80xxx 80xxx Base RAM address = 80000:0000
INTS Bios-timer interrupt-handler
Microprocessor 4- Microprocessor
isle
4-
Time of da
T=Mee Counter 0
5ms Counter 0
Keyboard
Keyboard
PC-slot
PC-slot
11402
1802
11403
11403
11404
11304
11405
IRO5
11406
1806
11107
1807
920067
920067 -14
Fig. 3. Schematic representation of the standard PC interrupt net- Fig. 4. As Fig. 3, but with the PMEASURE routines installed. Note
work. the way the BIOS interrupt handler is given new parameters.
quency of the input signal has gone down The ADC function is called from aperi- ity's sake, the usual interrupt network is
so far that the test measurement and the odic interrupt routine to make sure that drawn in Fig. 3, while Fig. 4 shows the
set scale factor are no longer representa- the d.c. measurements can run in the back- configuration with the new interrupt rou-
tive. To prevent frequency measurements ground, just as the frequency and pulse tines installed.
taking up too much time, TimeIntHandler time measurements. The TimeIntHandler
breaks off the current conversion, and is not suitable to control the timing: being
starts anew test measurement. The proce-
Get cracking
started 'only' 18.2 times asecond, it is too
dure itself makes use of the PC-user-timer- slow, and would cause astochastic calcu- Apart from the Pascal library, diskette
tick-interrupt ($1C), and is therefore lation using, say, 100 samples, to take far ESS 1751 also contains an example pro-
actuated every 55 ms. too long. A different data acquisition rou- gram, PMDEMO.PAS. This program
tine was, therefore, devised, to make sure serves to demonstrate how the interrupt
DC measurements that the selected input can be sampled at procedures are installed and removed,
200 Hz. This sounds simpler than it is, be- and show you how to get access to the
The function 'ADC' (Fig. 2) allows a12-bit cause the only periodic interrupt that is measurement results. Incidentally, a nice
binary representation of an analogue input still available in the IBM PC is the user- feature of PMDEMO is that it makes use of
voltage to be acquired. The important timer-tick, which runs at a rate of 55 ms. the AutoScan mode. In this mode, the in-
thing about ADC is that the A-to-D con- Drastic measures are required to make terrupt routines ensure that all channels
version operations are not started until at sure that amuch shorter interrupt period defined in FChanScan and VChanScan are
the end of the function. This means that is available. This is achieved by replacing measured one by one.
the value of ADC is related to the previous the BIOS timer interrupt handler (inter- As amatter of course, PMEASURE may
conversion, and, inevitably, that the first rupt $08) by the data acquisition proce- be extended or adapted to meet your re-
conversion result is meaningless. dure 'DataAcqHandler'. After having quirements. This will cause few problems
Functions SelectAnalogChannel and reprogrammed the system clock prescaler, as long as you keep to the rules of proper
SelectRatiol0 are intended for the control the handler is called at the desired rate, programming. Take care, however, with
of the input multiplexer (lCio), and the set- i.e., every 5ms. The new scale factor (divi- the special rules that apply to stack use
ting of the stepped attenuator (IC12), re- sor) is supplied by ReProgTimer, while and DOS interrupts, since these have
spectively. UnDoReProgTimer restores the default many pitfalls in store for the 'unwary'.
Since the analogue circuitry on the factor later. Once bitten, twice shy!
measurement card is designed for direct To make sure that the real-time clock
voltages, it would seem logical to base and the diskette station motors continue to Reference
each measurement result on an average function normally, the original BIOS timer 1. "Multifunction Measurement Card for PCs,"
obtained from a number of samples. This interrupt handler (and, with it, interrupt Elektor Electronics USA, January and February
so-called stochastic measurement enables $1C) is started with the original frequency, 1991. 1
noise pulses to be suppressed efficiently. and from the DataAcqHandler. For clar-
8051 or 8032, and the supporting routines Where SMO, SM1 specify the serial port mode, as follows • 198 is the 9th data bit that will be
contained in the system monitor, transmitted in Modes 2and 3. Set or
WO Sell Mode Description Baud Rate
EMON51, ever since the 80C32 single- 0 shift register /12
clear by software as desired.
The serial interface contained in the 8051 be O. bit time ro the other modes, in any
serial reception (except see SM2).
• REM enables serial reception. Set by
family of microcontrollers is the most software to enable reception. Must be cleared by software.
WRITE
TO
SBUF
SMOD SBUF
SMOD TX0
,0 Mitt
ZERO DETECTOR
+111
SAMPLE if
RS CLOCK RI LOT
---+ RANSITIO
1-70-0 START RX CONTROL SBUF
DETECTOR SHIFT JOIN THE COURSE!
FFH
'If
BIT I
nETECTOR
INPUT SHIFT REG.
What you need to follow this course:
SHIFT A _L 1 L i I i I i 1
RI ( Appeared so far:
910109-7-12
Part 1: Introduction (February 1992)
Part 2: First 8051 instructions (March
1992)
Fig. 45. 8051 serial interface architecture. Part 3: Hardware extensions for
80C32 SBC (April 1992)
Part 4: Flags, bit addressing, PSW,
conditional jumps, logic
operators (June 1992)
Part 5: Arithmetic instructions (July
1992)
Part 6: Analogue signal processing
and stack management
(September 1992)
and the extension board (Part 3) are use a 8031 or 8051 (i.e., TCLK=0 and clock (here: 1 MHz). See line 22 in
shown in Fig. 46. The diagram shows how RCLCK=0 in Fig. 45). In the interest of Fig. 47. The preload value is 243 (lines 4,
the various jumpers enable the 8051 serial software compatibility we will, therefore, 24 and 25), which causes Timerl to divide
interface to be connected to aPC (via the set the baudrate with the aid of Timer 1. by (256-243) = 13. SMOD is set to ' 1' in
9-way sub-D connector) or aMIDI com- The 'counter overflow' pulses produced line 21 to disable the ÷2 scaler. Thus, the
patible instrument. by this timer are fed to the transmit and baudrate becomes
receive controls. To ensure a continuous
supply of pulses, the timer is operated in 1MHz/13/16 = 4,807.6923 bits/s
EMON51 communication
mode 2, i.e., as an 8-bit clock generator
Studying a worked out example is pro- with automatic reload. In this way, the That is not exactly 4,800 baud, but suffi-
bably the best way to familiarize oneself timer is capable of producing an overflow ciently accurate for our application.
with the programming of the serial inter- every n microseconds on the basis of the After being preloaded and set to the de-
face. Let us look at the listing in Fig. 47. 1-MHz internal clock (quartz oscillator sired mode, Timer 1is switched on by set-
This program is a series of subroutines frequency 12 MHz), where n is a whole ting TCON bit 6 (line 26). The baudrate
contained in EMON51 relevant to com- number between 2and 256. Additionally, generator is now running.
munication via the serial interface, we can switch on the divide-by-two scaler As an aside, Timer2 contained in the
'stitched together' to show how you can by setting the SMOD bit (SFR PCON 8052 and 8032 may, of course, also be
make use of them for your own program- bit 7). The final baudrate clock is arrived used as the baudrate generator. This can
ming work. Each of the points to be ob- at by dividing the clock signal by 16. If be achieved by setting bits TCLK and
served in programming the serial interface SMOD=1, we get: RCLK in the Timer2 control register,
will be discussed below, with reference to T2CON. Since T2CON contains the value
certain parts of the listing. Note that this Baudrate = (overflow rate Timer1)/16 00H after a reset, the 8052 always starts
program is not contained on your course with Timer! as the baudrate generator
disk. alternatively, if SMOD=0, (which ensures that programs written for
the 8051 run on a8052 too!).
Baudrate = (overflow rate Timer1)/32 The standardized baudrates (1200,
Baudrate generator
2400, 4800, etc.) can be achieved exactly
We wish to use mode 1of the serial inter- In the system monitor software, by using acrystal clock of 11.0592 MHz
face. In this mode, the baudrate is deter- EMON51, the following is done to obtain rather than 12 MHz. However, aprocessor
mined either by Timer! or Timer2. abaudrate of about 4,800. First, Timerl is cycle then takes 0.9044225 jis rather than
Remember, Timer2 is not available if you set to auto-preload mode with internal 1 Its exactly. Obviously, the deviation
from 1jis may be annoying in calculating
loop times, since all the internal timing of
the 8051 is derived from the quartz crystal
LISTING of EASM51 (V24XAM8L) clock oscillator. This dilemma, by the
INELOC OBJ T SOURCE
I0000 ; taken from EMON51.851 way, has resulted in the integration of on-
20000
30000 chip baudrate generators in follow-up
40000 ;./24SPD EQU 256-13 ; V24 speed: 1MHz/16/13 - 4807.69 baud
50000 controllers such as the 80535 and 80537,
; SFR definitions:
6
7
0000
0000 PSw EQU ODOH
whose serial interfaces are capable of op-
8
9
0000
0000
ACC EQU 080H erating at 4,800 baud and 9,600 baud ex-
100000 PCON EQU 087H actly, while a 12 MHz quartz crystal is
110000 TCON EQU 088H
120000 TMOD EQU 089H used. More about these interesting proces-
130000 TL1 EQU 088H
140000 TH1 EQU 08DH sors in future issues of Elektor
150000 SCON EQU 098H
160000 SBUF EQU 099H Electronics.
170000
180000 éNT1 EQU 050H ; in RAM: counter for CR/LF time
190000
20
21
0000
0000 75 87 80 (2) V24SET
ORG 0
NOV PC014,8808 ; SMOD I
Transmitting
220003 75 89 22 [2] NOV TMOD, 822H ; both counters as timer
23
24
0006
0006 75 8D F3 [2]
; RCLK.0, (CLK-0 with 8051, and in TCON also
NOV TH1,11V24SPD ; preload value TImER1 (baudrate generator)
Transmitting abyte is very simple: write
250009 75 88 F3 (2) NOV TL1,8V24SPD it to the SBUF register. The write opera-
26000C D2 8E (1) SETB TCON.6 ; start counter 1
27000E 75 98 52 [2] NOV SC08,805211 ; MODE 1, REN=1, TI.1, RI-0 tion causes the transmitter control to start
280011 ; etc.
290011 the shift-out operation. The transmit reg-
300011 30 99 FD (2) BNB JNB SCON.1,SND ; wait until last char, finally gone
310014 C2 99 (1) CLR SCON.1 ; TI»0 ister has a ninth bit position, which is
320016 F5 99 (1) MOV SBUF,A ; start transmit
330018 B4 OA OD (2) CJNE 8,810,0(2 ; LF sent? loaded with a 1' at the start of the trans-
34
35
0018 75 50 64 (2) WAITCR NOV
001E 74 FF [1] LOP1 NOV
CNT1,8100
8,8255
; if so wait for slow scrolling terminals
mit operation. Next, the start bit (0=low)
36
37
0020 D5 EO FD (2) LOP2
0023 05 50 F8 [2]
DJNZ
DJNZ
ACC, LOP2
CNTI,LOP1
is transmitted (Fig. 46).
380026 74 OA [1] NOV 8,810 Next, the eight databits are shifted out,
390028 22 [2] OK2 RET ; all ok
400029 starting with bit 0. The SBUF transmit
410029 GETCHR EQU $ ; get character from serial port
420029 30 98 FD [2] GETC1 JNB SCON.0,GETC1; wait until one available register is filled with zeroes. When the
43002C C2 98 [1] CLR SCON.0 ; signal: char. fetched
44002E (5 99 [1] NOV A,SBUF ; fetch from buffer ninth bit (i.e., the stop bit with value '1')
450030 22 [2] RET ; ready
460031
has been sent, the TI bit in the SCON reg-
470031 20 98 03 [2] T
STC JB SCON.0,isther ; test if character there return I else
ister is made 1' (Fig. 44) to mark the end
480034 74 00 [1] NOV 8,80 ; no
49
50
0036 22
0037 74 01
(2)
(1) isther NOV
RET
8,81 ; yes
of the transmission. This allows an inter-
510039 22 (2) RET rupt to be generated (by setting the rele-
520038
53003A END vant bit in the interrupt enable register). It
SYMBOLTABLE (21 symbols)
V24SPD :OOF3 PSW :0000 ACC :00E0 PCON :0087 is also possible to interrogate this bit by
TCON :0088 TMOD :0089 TL1 :008B TH1 :008D
SCON :0098 SBUF :0099 CNTI :0050 V24SET :0000 software (polling), to check for the end of
SND :0011 WAITCR :00113 LOP1 :001E
OK2 :0028 GETCHR :0029 GETC1 :0029
LOP2 :0020
TSTC :0031
the transmission.
Isther :0037
91018>7 EMON51 contains a subroutine called
SND (lines 30 to 39 in Fig. 47) that en-
ables acharacter held in the accumulator
Fig. 47. Serial interface subroutines contained in EMON51. to be transmitted via the serial interface.
This routine waits as long as bit 1in the WAITCR is called to introduce adelay of enable bit (bit 4) to be set. Bits 2and 3are
SCON register is '0'. This is necessary about 100x255x3 1.ts = 76.5 ms. This not of interest for the moment, and are left
because a '0' means that the serial inter- delay is sufficiently long for most termi- at '0'. Bit 1(TI) is set to mark the SBUF
face is still busy transmitting acharacter. nals. register as 'empty' for the rest of the pro-
When the TI bit changes to '1', the trans- That completes the description of the gramming. This is necessary to be able to
mission is finished, and the serial inter- SND subroutine contained in the system execute asubsequent transmit instruction.
face is ready to start sending the current monitor EMON51. To enable it to func- Since no byte has been received so far, RI
character. This is achieved by resetting tion correctly, the TI bit must be set at the (bit 0) is set to '0'.
the TI bit (line 31), and writing the current start of the program. After a reset, how- That completes the initialization of the
character to SBUF (line 32). Although TI ever, this bit is at '0' (refer back to Fig. 8 serial port for duplex operation at
remains '0' as long as it takes to transmit in Part 2). Therefore, if you want to use it 4,800 baud, 8 databits, 1 stop bit and
the current character, the processor al- as a 'transmitter empty' indicator, it must 1start bit.
ready continues with the next instruction. be set to 1' at the start of the program.
To make sure that it can be used with
slow scrolling terminals, EMON51 is ca- Interface control word
pable of providing a delay after the LF
SCON in EMON51
(line feed = OAH = 1010) character. This
delay allows the terminal (or terminal em- The above explains the value loaded
ulation software) to scroll the screen con- into the SCON register in line 27. The
tents. Obviously, no character may be control word, 52H (01010010B), is built
transmitted before the scroll operation is as follows. To start with, bits 5, 6 and 7
finished. EMON51 therefore checks if an (010B) select Mode 1. Next, we also wish
LF was sent (line 33). If so, the loop to receive data. This requires the receiver
Fig. 48. Assembly language listing of the MIDI sequencer program. Fig. 49. Main MIDI transmit routine flowchart.
Receiving be transmitted should be contained in a 31.25 kBit/s, the baudrate clock is readily
table. In that way, the program could form obtained by dividing the 8051 internal
Data reception is arranged by asubroutine the basis for asmall sequencer. clock (1 MHz) by 32. Since the serial in-
called GETCHR (get character) contained A MIDI 'note' command consists of terface clock is always divided by 16 (in-
in EMON5 I. Initially, this subroutine three bytes. The first byte tells the instru- ternally in the 8051), Timer 1 must be
(line 42) waits until bit 0 in the SCON ment that a note command follows, and programmed to divide by 2, while SMOD
register is set. This position has the RI bit, indicates on which channel the note is to must be set to V. This is done in lines 15
and changes to 1' when acomplete char- be played. Here, we wish to use channel 1 to 19 of our example program. Next, the
acter has been received. Next, the pro- (internal number 0), for which the byte control word copied into SCON (line 20)
gram resets RI (in line 43). The received must have the value 090H. The next byte sets mode 1, receiver switched on, TI=1,
character is fetched from SBUF and indicates the note proper, while the third i.e., transmitter empty. Apart from the
copied into the accumulator. That is all byte indicates the volume at which it is to baudrate setting, the mode selection pro-
there is to it. be played (note that this requires anote to cedure is identical to that used in
In some cases, it is necessary to check if a be switched on and off!). Thus, every note EMON51.
character is ready to be fetched. For this requires the interface to send three bytes, SNDMIDI is the MIDI transmit routine
purpose we have a subroutine called of which first is always the same, hence, proper. It transmits the character con-
TSTC (lines 47 to 51), which returns a'1' need not be stored in the table. Yet, we tained in the accumulator. First, it tests TI
to the accumulator when a character is store a third byte to form a MIDI com- (SCON bit 1) to check if the previous
ready. If not, it returns a '0'. The opera- mand. This byte determines the time that character is still being transmitted. If so, it
tion of TSTC will be clear at this point: it elapses before the next MIDI command is waits. If not, the 'transmitter empty' bit,
simply tests the RI bit. sent. The table therefore has three bytes SCON.1, is cleared, and the transmission
(entries) for every MIDI command: of the current character (table entry) is
MIDI transmit sequencer triggered by a write operation to SBUF.
[Note, volume, duration] Again, the transmit routine proper is
To close off this instalment, let us look at largely identical to that in EMON5 I.
how the serial interface can be used to The end of the table is marked by 'dura-
send data to a MIDI compatible instru- tion = 0'.
Next time
ment. The aim is to develop a program In the listing of the MIDI driver
that sends a series of note commands to (Fig. 48), the table starts at the label Next month's final instalment of this
the instrument when key S2 on the exten- NOTES. The individual table entries are course will discuss the connection of a
sion board is pressed. This allows asim- addressed in the usual way with the aid of liquid crystal display (LCD) and a key-
ple melody to be played, or arhythm box the DPTR. The operation of the main pro- board to the SBC extension board.
to be realized. gram is simple to analyse by studying the
To be able to program different flowchart in Fig. 49.
melodies in a simple manner, the data to Since the MIDI operates at a speed of
NEW BOOKS
Interestingly, both North American and
KU-BAND SATELLITE TV— European technology is discussed in great de-
THEORY, INSTALLATION mate of what can be received given your dish tail. The European contributions are by John
AND REPAIR 4th Ed. size and location. Solid material—well worth McCormac, who is known as acolumnist in
By Frank Baylin and Brent Gale buying. Satellite Trader.
ISBN 0-917893-10-7 Baylin Publications When comparing the second edition of the
Price $30 1905 Mariposa book with the first, it is salient to notice that
This book covers 11GHz (Ku-band) satellite Boulder, CO 80302 the added sections (in which we find subjects
TV reception in virtually every detail. Re- like the SCART connector, SMARTcards,
markably, the authors are American, while repair and service, and loopthrough decoder
the use of the Ku-band for satellite TV is not connections) are, firstly, nearly all European-
nearly as widespread in the USA as it is in WORLD SATELLITE TV AND oriented and, secondly, partly rewritten ma-
Europe. Nonetheless, the coverage of the sub- SCRAMBLING METHODS 2nd Ed. terial already published in McCormac's book
ject is outstanding, and the authors have suc- By Frank Baylin, Richard Maddox and European Scrambling Systems, also known as
ceeded in producing amanual with material John McCormac "The Black Book."
that is understandable to anyone having a ISBN 0-917893-11-5 The book has awealth of illustrations, prac-
curiosity but not necessarily atechnical back- Price $40 tical circuits, tables and overviews. It is also
ground. Indeed, this reviewer agrees with This second edition of the "Technician's remarkable for its easy-going style. Unfor-
them that there is no reason why laymen Handbook" is again aimed at everyone with tunately, some subjects are only covered
should not be able to participate in this ex- an interest in satellite TV reception, and, in superficially, although, admittedly, this can
citing field in one way or another. particular, decoder operation. Although the hardly be aserious criticism given the huge
The particularly strong sections of the book larger part of the book deals with principles amount of information presented, and the
are "component operation," "installation," of encoding and decoding satellite TV signals, large number of references to more detailed
and "troubleshooting and repair." Also, the anumber of quite sizeable other chapters information.
collection of footprints of European, Amer- discuss the hardware layout of aTVRO sta- Baylin Publications
ican, Australian and Japanese TV satellites tion, from the dish antenna to the video 1905 Mariposa
in Appendix C is invaluable for aquick esti- connectors. Boulder, CO 80302
By Steve Sokolowski
N
ORMALLY, a number of ICs having
features in common can be classified
as a 'family'. Devices such as the 87C541
and the 800525 can be considered as part
of the 8051 family of microcontrollers from
Intel. Although internal ROM/RAM and
the added presence of EPROM are differ-
ent between individual chips, they have a
number of common features. Figure 1 il-
lustrates the main blocks of the 8051 com-
puter family. Our development board is
based on the easily obtainable HMOS
8051, of which the basic architecture, port
functions, programming, and many other
features are discussed in great detail in here to enable the controller to fetch pro- well-known MAX232 RS232 level con-
our 8051/8032 Assembler Course, of which gram code from the external program verter, which is connected directly to the
part 7appears elsewhere in this issue. memory locations in the address range be- serial input and output pins of the 8051.
tween 0000H and OFFFH. Here, the pro- The MAX232 has on-board positive and
gram code is stored in an EPROM, IC3. negative step-up voltage converters that
Circuit description
The serial interface is formed by the obviate asymmetrical supply. The IC gen-
The circuit diagram of the 8051 SBC, Fig. 2,
shows that very few components are re-
quired to build a versatile development
Frequency
system around the Intel controller. In fact, Reference
the circuit is probably the absolute mini-
mum that you will need to start program-
ming the device.
The 8051 clock oscillator is run at
11.0592 MHz to enable the serial interface Oscillator Two 16-Bit
of the controller to transmit and receive at ROM/EPROM RAM Timer/Event
any of the standard baud rates between Timing Counters
300 and 9600 bits s -1 .
5V
0 5V
rICI
3 40 IC2
28 27
74LS373
MUM VPP e PGM
2p2
39 ADO ADO 3 2 AO AO 10
P0.0 AO NC
9 38 AD1 AD1 4 5 Al Al 9
RESET P0.1 Al
37 AD2 AD2 7 6 A2 A2 8
P0.2 A2 11 ADO
36 AD3 AD3 8 9 A3 A3 7
PORT1.0 0 -1- P1.0/T2 P0.3 A3 12 AD1
35 AD4 AD4 18 19 A4 A4 6
IC3 D1
PORT1 .1 0 ---1- P1.1/72X P0.4 A4 13 AD2
34 AD5 ADS 17 16 AS AS 5 D2
PORT1.2 P1.2 P0.5 AS 15 AD3
33 AD6 AD6 14 15 A6 A6 4 D3
PORT1.3 P1.3 P0.6 A6 EPROM 16 AD4
32 AD7 AD7 13 12 A7 A7 3 D4
PORT1.4 P1.4 P0.7 A7
IC1 D5
17 ADS
A8 25
PORT1.5 0 P1.5 30 A8 2764 18 AD6
ALE/P A9 24 06
PORT1.60 P1.6 A9 19 AD7
21 A8 A10 21 D7
PORT1.7 0 -8- P1.7 P2.0 A10
22 A9 EN All 23
P2.1 Al 1
23 A10 Al 2 2
P2.2 Al 2
24 Al 1
P2.3 OE «kw CS
80C31 25 Al2
2 P2.3 22 14 20
PORT3.2 0 INTO 8051
13
PORT3.3 INT1 2
14 P2.5 PORT2.5
PORT3.4 0 TO 27
15 P2.6 PORT2.6
PORT3.5 0 Ti 28
16 P2.7 PORT2.7 K1
PORT3.6 WA
17 29
PORT3.7 0 RD PSEN
10
RXD
T
31 2
EANP TXD 2 0
15
C +
V+ 5V o
wlw X1 X2 C6 3
--0
20 19 18 16
0
4p7 Cl IC4 C4 telephone 4
1 14 I 1 -0
T1IN Ti OUT jack 17
C2 C1
12 13 0
R1OUT R1IN 10p IN 5 „,
30p I I3Op 9 R2IN 8
R2OUT yellow 18
10 7 0
T2IN T2OUT OUT 6
-0
C8 C2+ 19
o
MAX232 GND 7
wlw o
4µ7 C7 black 20
o
RJ - 11 _
Tri
TOp 21
0
02 IC5 9
- -O
22
7805 5V 0
10
-0
23
0
Centronics Female
__ 20 Connector ll
24
cio IC2 0
12
12V 10 -0
250mA 4X 1N4001 10p 10p 25
0
13
920102 -12
Fig. 2. Circuit diagram of the 8051 single-board computer, its power supply, and the serial interface connection to the PC.
erates internal supply voltages that result The power supply of the SBC is aclassic aheat-sink.
in a swing of 20 V (±10 V) on the RS232 one designed around the 7805. The mains
output line. transformer could be asmall mains adap-
Building the SBC
A short length of inexpensive telephone tor with a.c. output. Such and adaptor will
cord is used to connect the 8051 board to in many cases be cheaper (and in all cases, If you are interested in building the pre-
the RS232 port on the PC. At the board safer to use!) than a discrete transformer. sent 8051 development system, you have
side of the cable is a 4-way miniature The current demand on the adaptor will be two options: (1) produce the PCB yourself
latching telephone cord plug, while astan- between 250 mA and 500 mA, depending (using the artwork given in Fig. 3) and
dard D25 sub-D connector (female) is used on the circuit fitted in the extension area purchasing the components from your
at the computer side (for pinning details on the SBC board. In any case, the 7805 local stockist, or (2) purchase a complete
refer to the circuit diagram). will run fairly hot, so it must be fitted with kit from Suncoast Technologies.
The following few paragraphs are in- extra wiring of the voltage buses, the ponents for future projects can be
tended for those of you who wish to as- board also contains acommon ground and mounted. The power supply may also be
semble the 8051 SBC on a home brewed positive supply bus etched in. It is this hand wired in this section.
printed circuit board, which will probably area where the required interfacing corn- Inspect the completed board for solder
not be plated through, contrary to the one
supplied by Suncoast Technologies. Since
afair number of PCB through connections
is required, it is best to use Molex clip-type 88888888888888888888:8888888888888888
connectors for the IC sockets. These clips •
0.0
S.ngle Board Computer Mode. 070691 Rev "C"
00000000000
u/RS -232
can be placed in the holes provided for the 0.0 00000000000
0.0 ru-
00000000000
IC pins, and soldered at both sides of the 0.0 C3 g2 00000000000
board before they are removed from their 0.0 0 0 00000000000
metal carrier. The resulting pin strips then 102 III m 00000000000
0.0 ONO co 00000000000
form an IC socket. To reduce cost, you 0.0 oc
c - 00000000000
0.0 D P 00000000000
may want to use Molex connector strips 0.0 0 00000000000
ICI
for the EPROM socket only, and solder the 0.0 00000000000
0.0 °ma 00000000000
8051, the 74LS373 and the MAX232 direct 0.0 °ma O 00000000000
on to the board, making sure that all pins 0.0 Offll CI 00000000000
0.0 °Ma ▪ 000000000
are soldered at both sides of the board. 0.0 011103 ▪ 000000000
Capacitors C4 and Cs are electrolytic 0.0 °MO ▪ 000000000
0.0 0•03 000000000
types and require proper placement on the 0.0 OMO 000000000
board. Mis-insertion of these polarity sen- 000000000
o 000000000
sitive components can spell disaster for
000000000
the part, so take care while fitting them. 0.0 °MCI 000000000
;11
0.0 0.101 000000000
The RJ-11 telephone jack was designed 0.0 0.13 000000000
in such away that it can be inserted on the 00 MC 000000000
0.0 OMCI 000000000
board in only one way. Carefully line up Cma 000000000
the four 'pig-tail' terminals with their cor- 000000000
• o 0000000000000000000
responding holes. When lined up, care- o n
o 0000000000000000000
fully press the jack on to the board until its 000 o 0000000000000000000
mounting clips protrude on the opposite CS 104
2
o-0- 0000000000000000000
40
o DUCIUUDO 0000000000000000000
side of the board. Solder the four contacts 0000000000000000000
at the solder side of the board. Finally, fit o 0 0000000000000000
CM OOODOODO 0000000000000000
the crystal and the two ceramic capacitors. 0000000000000000
Note that the SBC has alarge prototyp- .0 00 CE3 0 00 0000000000000000
C6
+0 007 0 00 0 0000000000000000
ing area. To help eleminate the need for Voltage Buee
COMPONENTS LIST
888888888888888888888888888888888888
0-0 golonMoeT Jaeoone
•000000000
Capacitors: 0-0 area xoG 0 9
O 000000000
2 33pF 16V disc ceramic Cl;C2 oe 2884E eblnoll ,111H gnome
Li 000000000
poo 000000000
1 2µF2 16V radial 03 04 0 •000000000
3 10µF 16V radial C4;C5;C7 eo •000000000
omo 3 ! 000000000
2 4µF7 16V radial C6;C8 0.0 000000000
sembled, TEST.ASM is converted into ase- grammed into the 2764 EPROM.
ries of hexadecimal numbers (TEST.HEX). Once programmed, carefully insert the 8051 Single Board Computer Test Program
Although converted, TEST.HEX can not be EPROM into its IC3 location on the board. Hit akey — Iwill echo the character
loaded into an EPROM just like that. With your PC running your favourite
Further conversion is necessary, and for communication program (QMODEM, PC Now, just for fun, type "Hello there" on
this HEXBIN.COM is proposed. TALK, Procomm, etc.) at 1200 baud, take the PC keyboard, then press the ENTER or
HEXBIN.COM takes the hexadecimal for- the mains adaptor and plug it in. Within RETURN key. The keyboard input will be
mat of TEST.HEX, and transforms it into a an instant the SBC will display the follow- echoed and printed on the next line. When
the 25th line is reached, all text is scrolled
up by one line.
If you wish to start programming to
8818888888888888888888:88888888888888 1
..0 s'ng¡,, ',3,,, ,, d Compy,tfer %.,4 , 070691 Rev
8051 single board computer, Isuggest you
0.0
w/RS 2T2
00000000000
,
obtain the collection of 'start up' programs
0.0 00000000000
0.0 -c
o 00000000000
contained on a floppy disk supplied by
oe --,
C3 CP
, -- 00000000000 Suncoast Technologies. This 51 /-inch
4
CVO OAP) nni rioter"' - 00000000000
00 + 11 7.: 00000000000
MSDOS floppy disk (3 1 /-inch not avail-
4
Design by G. Kleine
B
OTH the 'old' (Ref. 1) and the 'new' that obviates the need for an external fil- called 'aliasing').
RDS demodulator are connected to a ter, and, importantly, filter adjustment. The 57-kHz SC band-pass filter is an 8th
dedicated 80C32-based controller board The follow-up type is designated order type with a bandwidth of about
(Ref. 2). The combination of the RDS de- SAA6579T, and is available in a 16-pin 3 kHz. It is followed by a reconstruction
modulator and the controller board forms small outline SMA (surface mount assem- filter that serves to smooth and clean the
astand-alone RDS decoder. bly) package. output signal before it is fed to the SCOUT
The SAF7579T requires an external pin of the IC. Figure 2 shows the pass-
bandpass filter to extract the RDS data- band characteristic of the integrated SC fil-
Operation
stream from the baseband spectrum trans- ter (MUX-to-SCOUT).
mitted by the FM radio station the receiver The internal organization of the SAA6579T The filter output signal is coupled ca-
is tuned to. Unfortunately, this filter is dif- is shown in Fig. 1. The multiplex signal pacitively to the input of a clocked com-
ficult to adjust because of the small band- supplied by the FM receiver is first taken parator, which digitizes the biphase
width (approx. 5kHz). Also, it adds to the through asecond-order anti-aliasing filter. modulated 57-kHz signal. A so-called
total cost of the decoder, and takes up The main function of this filter is to pre- Costas loop recovers the suppressed 57-
board space, which are important consid- vent spurious products in the following kHz carrier from the biphase-coded datas-
erations in mass production (car radios!). filter, which is based on switched capaci- tream. This recovered carrier provides a
Philips Components, the manufacturer of tors (SC filter). Without the anti-aliasing central clock signal that is locked on to the
the SAF7579T, have, therefore, worked on filter, the SC filter is prone to transform received RDS signal. It is used to clock the
an improved version of this RDS demodu- certain components in the input frequency SC band-pass filter and the comparator,
lator IC, and added an on-chip band filter spectrum into its pass-band (this effect is and also to recover the RDS data clock,
RDCL.
The output signal of the Costas loop is
taken to a biphase decoder, which turns
the biphase-coded input signal into the
47 pF TT _... 82 pF
original ones and zeros modulated at the
transmitter side. Since these are still differ-
.5 V
4.3328.664 MHz •--.101--4
entially coded, the biphase decoder is fol-
E 2.2 kCI 0 IpF lowed by a difference decoder that
supplies the RDS data signal, RDDA.
OSCI OSCO Vo00
13
A signal quality detector is imple-
14 12
a mented on the chip. It indicates whether
UPI(
men- Si IcHz OSCILLATOR
the received RDS signal is valid
22Li
.41 PAJ4
E
ALV.SING RECONSTRUCTION QUALITY err 1 CUAL
330 pf FXTER
BANDPASS
me ORDER) FILTER
AND
DIVIDER GENERATOR -I> (QUAL=H), or invalid (QUAL=L) because
SCOUT e — r-- • of interference or poor reception. The
QUAL signal may be used by the RDS de-
1560 pF •
coder to check that the bits on the RDDA
-1> COSTAS LOOP
CIN 7 BIPHASE RDDA
CLOCKED
• line are error-free.
2
VARIABLE ANO SYMBOL »•••••••• DIFFERENTIAL
COMPARATOR DECODER
41- FIXED DIVIDER DECODER
The central clock of the IC is provided
SAA6579T
vp, RDCL
E by a quartz crystal oscillator (OSCI;
OSCO). Depending on the level applied to
3 REFERENCE CLOCK
REGENERATION TEST LOGIC AND OUTPUT 15 157 the MODE input, the oscillator can work
VOLTAGE SELECTOR SWITCH
AND SYNC
with either of two quartz frequencies:
2.2 pFi
4.332 MHz or 8.664 MHz.
s
I TEST Vow
COMPONENTS LIST
Resistors:
1 2kS22 R1
Capacitors:
1 330pF Cl
1 560pF C2
3 100nF C3;C7;C8
1 2µF2 16V C4
1 47pF C5
1 82pF C6
1 10OµF 16V C9
Semiconductors:
1 SAA6579T ICi
1 4050 IC2
1 78L05 IC3
Miscellaneous:
Pass-band characteristic of the switched capacitor (SC) filter on board the SAA6579T
Fig. 2.
1 4-.332MHz or 8.664MHz
The dB levels are relative to the signal level at the MUX input.
quartz crystal (see text) X1
1 10-way PCB pin header K1
1 Printed circuit board 880209
5607
IC2a 1 2 from supplies with an output voltage be-
SAA 6579 T 0—•
RDDA 2
C IN tween 7.5 V and about 30 V.
K1
The circuit shown here can be con-
TEST
16
MODE RDCL IC2b
structed without problems on the printed
V REF OSC I OSC 4
3 13 14
circuit board originally designed for the
R1
SAA7579T-based demodulator. The filter
5V 78L05 IC3 12V components are, of course, not required in
IC2d 4 332MHz
X1
• that case. The track layout and component
91 II
mounting plan of this PCB (order code
Tp2 72p -
00nTOOp
C4
6 IC2
C8
BM 0
C9
880209) may be found in Ref. 1.
16V 77p ? TOOn 1 16t)
• References:
Mu 920093 -11 1. "Radio Data System (RDS) demodula-
tor". Elektor Electronics May 1989.
2. "Radio Data System (RDS) decoder".
Fig. 3. Circuit diagram of the 'filterless' RDS demodulator. Hook up the FM tuner's MPX out- Elektor Electronics February 1991.
put to the input of this circuit, and an 80C32 RDS controller board to connector Ki, and you
have an experimental RDS decoder.
replacement for the earlier SAF7579T- the digital section contained in the
based version, and is compatible with the SAA6579T. Output signals T57, QUAL,
associated RDS controller board. RDDA and RDCL reach the outside world
via a Type 4050 CMOS buffer and a 10-
eJ
Comprising only a handful of compo-
nents, the SAA6579T-based demodulator way PCB header, just as in the earlier de-
can handle input multiplex (MPX) signals sign based on the SAF7579T. Only the ARI
in the range from 1 mV to a couple of (Autofahrer Rundfunk Information;
volts. Capacitor C1 couples the MPX signal Motorists Broadcast Information) signal is
to the input filter contained in the omitted (ARI is a traffic information ser-
SAA6579T. The relatively small value of vice broadcast along with RDS in
C1 suppresses the lower-frequency com- Germany). Hence, the relevant pin header
ReS
ponents in the MPX signal because it connection is taken to ground.
forms a high-pass filter in combination Apart from the components already
with the input impedance of the IC. mentioned there are two supply decou-
As described above, a capacitor (here, pling capacitors, C3 and C4, and two small
RADIO DATA SYSTEM
C2) takes the SCOUT signal to the input of capacitors, Cs and C6, that flank the quartz
How it began
Although the first valve was not made
until the beginning of this century, the
foundations for its discovery were laid
many years before. People like Ampère,
Faraday and Volta all played their part,
but one of the first direct contributions
was made in 1873 by professor Guthrie.
Investigating effects associated with
charged objects, he showed that ared hot Fig. 1. A circuit using Fleming's oscillation valve.
iron sphere which was negatively charged
and held in avacuum, would become dis- cluding Preece, awell known British elec-
charged. He also found that the same did trical engineer, and Ambrose Fleming, the
not happen if the sphere was positively Professor of Electrical Engineering at
charged. University College London. Despite this,
The next major step forwards was no developments were made for some
taken by Edison in 1883. At the time, time.
electric light bulbs were in their infancy,
and had acomparatively short life. One of
More developments
the major problems was that the bulbs be-
came blackened. Initially, it was thought Fleming was obviously fascinated by the
that this was caused by atoms of carbon effect, and experimented with it from time
from the element hitting the glass. As it to time. In 1889, he had some bulbs made
was known that the particles leaving the up for him by the Ediswan Company in
element were negatively charged, experi- the UK, and using these he reproduced the
ments were carried out to prevent them Edison effect. It was not until afew years
hitting the glass. One method which was later that he observed that if an alternating
tried involved placing a second element current of between 80 and 100 Hz was
into the envelope. By placing a positive passed through the bulb, it became recti-
charge on this new element, it would be fied. Finally, Fleming demonstrated this
able to attract the particles away from the effect to the Physical Society in 1896.
envelope, and prevent them hitting the One of the major problems that ham-
bulb. pered any further developments was the
In doing this, Edison noticed that when lack of understanding of what was causing
the second element was made positive rel- the Edison effect. Matters were made
ative to the main element, a current clearer when Sir Joseph Thomson discov-
flowed in the circuit. When the potentials ered that atoms were made up from even
were reversed, he noticed that this did not smaller particles, which included nega-
happen. tively charged electrons.
Edison was fascinated by the effect,
but surprisingly he did not find ause for
A happy thought
it, although it became known as the
Edison effect. He demonstrated it to many Apart from being Professor of Electrical
other leading scientific personalities in- Engineering at University College Fig. 2. An early triode.
cl
oscillation less technology. Even though the diode
valve was still in its infancy, it was still amajor
improvement over the coherers available
at the time.
920140-12
Other devices
Whilst Fleming's oscillation valve was a
Fig. 3 De Forest's Audion' in circuit as a leaky grid detector. revolutionary idea, it did not become
widely used. Valves were difficult and ex-
pensive to make, and their heaters con-
London, Fleming was also aconsultant to It was with this problem in mind that sumed large amounts of power that had to
Marconi, who was pioneering wireless Fleming was investigating methods of im- be supplied by expensive batteries.
communications. In fact, it was Fleming proving receiver sensitivity. In November Then, in 1906, some cheaper devices
who designed the transmitter to send the 1904, he had what he called a 'sudden were discovered. In fact, two different
first message across the Atlantic. At this very happy thought'. He wondered if the patents were filed, one by Ferdinand
time, the main limitation in wireless com- Edison effect could be used to rectify Braun for a crystal detector using hy-
munications was the lack of sensitivity of what he called 'feeble to and fro motions drated crystals of manganese oxide, and
the apparatus which actually received the of electricity from an aerial wire'. the other by H. Dunwoody for a crystal
radio signals — both the coherers and the Fleming instructed his assistant to set up detector using carborundum. These crys-
magnetic detectors were very inefficient. an experiment, and they were quickly able tal devices were forerunners of the Cat's
Whisker detectors which were used up
until the mid 1920s. Although they had a
number of limitations, they were much
cheaper than valves, and this guaranteed
their popularity.
Another electrode
Despite the success of crystal detectors,
others still looked towards improving
thermionic technology. One was a man
named de Forest who had been working
on various aspects of wireless, and saw
himself as an American rival to Marconi.
In his research, he made a number of
copies of Fleming's valve, and obtained
patents for some modifications and im-
provements to it. He experimented with a
number of different configurations of
electrodes, and from the records it can be
seen that he took out patents for three-
electrode devices in 1905 and 1906.
However, it was not until 1907 that he
took out a patent for a triode with a fine
element between the cathode and the
anode. It was this valve that he called his
'Audion' (a later version is shown in
Fig. 2).
this discovery, people were quick to try to through a top cap on the valve, and not called the 807, and was widely used in
exploit it. De Forest built an amplifier through the base. This idea has been used transmitters in the Second World War and
using three Audions, and demonstrated it on many other radio frequency valves afterwards. The 6L6 and 807 are shown in
to the telephone company AT&T. right up to recent times. Whilst this solu- Fig. 4.
Although the performance was poor, they tion was reasonably successful, and Prior to the war, all valves had used
saw its potential, and soon started to build Round managed to make his amplifier op- special metal or plastic bases attached to
repeaters using valves which they had im- erate well for the day, it was by no means the glass envelopes to hold the pins. After
proved. the answer to the problem. the war, miniaturization and improve-
It was not until 1915 when an Many further attempts were made to ments in manufacturing techniques en-
American scientist named Langmuir dis- reduce inter-electrode capacitance. abled the pins to be mounted into the glass
covered that gases were not required in However, it was not until 1926 that the envelope. By doing this, much smaller
the envelope. New, highly evacuated, complete solution was found with the in- valves were made (Fig. 5), and costs were
valves (known as 'hard valves') were troduction of the tetrode. This used asec- reduced.
soon produced with much better perfor- ond grid called the screen grid. This was
mance. In addition to basic improvements, placed between the normal control grid
The Fall
the full evacuation of the envelopes and the anode. Its introduction reduced
brought anumber of other improvements. the anode to control grid capacitance to The heyday of the valve could not last for-
Filaments could now be coated to improve almost zero, and solved the problem of in- ever. The invention of the transistor in
their electron emission. Previously, any stability. 1948 took a long time to affect the su-
coating would have been contaminated. Later, the tetrode itself was improved premacy of the valve. However, in the
Filament temperatures could also be re- in 1929 by the introduction of the pen- 1960s, when prices of transistors started
duced, and this improved reliability as tode. This valve had yet another grid to fall, it became obvious that valves were
well as reducing the heater current con- called the suppressor grid, which im- no longer the best option for many appli-
sumption. proved the discontinuity in the character- cations. Transistors and, later, ICs totally
The advantages of the new 'hard istic of the tetrode caused by electrons overtook the use of valves in domestic ap-
valves' soon became apparent, and large bouncing off the anode when they hit it. pliances. Radios, televisions and many
numbers were manufactured. One type other items which had previously used
manufactured in France by the military valves all turned to semiconductors.
Heaters
authorities under an engineer called Ferrie Despite all this, thermionic technology
was called the TM, of which over 100,000 Apart from making improvements in the still survives in anumber of areas where
were produced. An English development operation of valves by creating additional semiconductors have not been able to
of it, called the Type R triode, was equally grids, further improvements were made in compete. One of the most obvious is the
successful. After the first World War, the heater arrangements. It was discov- cathode ray tube (CRT) in televisions and
many of these valves came on to surplus ered that the cathode could be indirectly computer monitors. Although some semi-
market, and were snapped up by enthusi- heated, and this meant that the heaters conductor alternatives are slowly appear-
astic amateurs. could be electrically isolated from the ing, they have not yet supplanted the
cathode. This, in turn, had the advantage dominance of the CRT.
that the heaters did not need to be pow- Another area where transistors have
More electrodes
ered by a battery (d.c.) supply. A major not been able to compete is in high-power
One of the major difficulties using the improvement indeed, because it meant transmitting applications. Today, valves
early triodes was to prevent them from os- that size of radios could be considerably offer the only real solution for transmit-
cillating, especially when they were used reduced, as could be their running costs. ters producing afew tens of kilowatts or
in high-frequency circuits of more than a more. As aresult of this, many develop-
few hundred kilohertz. The problem was ments have been made in this area re-
Increase in use
caused chiefly by the inter-electrode ca- cently.
pacitance between the anode and the grid. During the 1930s, valve use increased
Many attempts were made to try to over- dramatically. Their use within domestic
Finale
come this capacitance. In 1916, H.J. radios grew, and in addition to this they
Round produced a low-capacitance valve were used in a variety of applications Valves have been used now for nearly
known as the Type V24. In it, the anode within industry. By the late 1930s, many 100 years. Their contribution to electron-
lead was passed out of the glass envelope thousands of different types of valve were ics has been enormous. In fact, there is no
being manufactured, and there was alarge doubt that electronics would not be nearly
number of different manufacturers ap- as advanced as it is today, had it not been
pearing both in the USA and in Europe. for the invention of Fleming's oscillation
Many of the valves introduced in this valve, and all the subsequent develop-
period have long since disappeared from ments.
common use. However, a few were very
successful, and remained in new designs
verülo
for a long time. One such valve was the
Type 6L6 used in many guitar amplifiers
until quite recently. In many ways, it was
quite revolutionary, being the first beam
Glass Audio magazine features the best vacuum tube designs
tetrode. It used a new technique to over-
for audio leproduction—past and contemporary. The new
come the discontinuity in the characteris- designs take advantage of improved components and control
tic of the tetrode caused by electrons techniques that make the end result far superior to anything
bouncing off the anode. Rather than using possible during the early days of audio's rebirth after World
a suppressor grid, it had a new arrange- War II. Glass Audio, THE magazine for tube lovers! For
further information, contact:
ment connected to the screen grid. This
AUDIO AMATEUR PUBLISHING GROUP
valve became so popular that it was later PO Bo: 576, Dept E92
modified for RF applications by giving it Peterborough, NH 03458-0576, USA
Fig. 5. Three modern all-glass dual triodes. a top cap for the anode. This valve was PHONE (603) 924-9464 FAX (603) 924-9467
NAME
1991 Rebuilding Tube Amps •A Four Input Stereo Line
Mixer •Improving Dyna's FM-3 •Tubes in Japan •A Line Level ADDRESS
GLASS AUDIO • PO BOX 176E • PETERBOROUGH, NH 03458-0176 • Phone (603) 924-9464 FAX (603) 924-9467
A N N
_ G
_
A I ELEKTOR
T long last, Elektor project builders on this
side of the Atlantic can use this special ITEM
software downloaded from the Dutch
Elektuur's internal files. WRITTEN IN
TRACER 1982-1991
DUTCH, EIT provides the manufacturer
(name only) for more than 2700 hard-to-find
OCSL PART# $ 795
European parts used in Elektor projects
SOF-EIT2B5
during the ten years covered. Menu-
2 x 360K DS/DD • POSTPAID
driven and including a short list of transla
tions for key words and phrases, this
detailed index is cross-referenced by ten
different parameters, including part num-
YE S! PLEASE SEND ME EIT (S)
ber and article title, and requires 4MB of o $7.95 POSTPAID FOR A TOTAL OF $
hard drive memory. Despite the language
gap, EIT is fun to use and easily mastered
NAME
in less than an hour—to provide a lifetime
of reference value.
STREET
TELEPHONES:
CITY ST ZIP
(603) 924-6371
(603) 924-6526
DAYTIME TELEPHONE TODAY'S DATE
FAX
(603) 924-9467
PAYMENT BY: 0 Mc D VISA Ci CHK/MO E
OLD COLONY SOUND LAB
MC/VISA EXP. DATE
PO Box 243
Peterborough, NH 03458-0243
mation. T10/92 CA Residents add 7.75% sales tax. SdH: $6.50 85366-6426.
(insured). Foreign orders add 20%. For more info or our
catalog; send Legal Size SASE (52 cents postage) to: SHOCKING PH REAK OFFERS: Computers, electronics,
telephones, energy. Hundred books, software, hardware
RECEIVING TUBES
AgA Engineering services. Catalog $4. CONSUMERTRONICS, 2011 Cres-
2521 W. LaPalma MK •Anaheim, CA 92801 •714-952-2114 cent, Alamogordo, NM 88310-0537, (505) 434-0234.
OVER 3000 TYPES IN STOCK! T10/92
Also hard-to-find transformers, capaci-
HEATHKIT NOSTALGIA. History in pictures and stories
tors and parts for tube equipment.
of and by the people involved. Compiled by K8TP. 124
Send $2.00 for our 32 page catalog. COMPUTER HARDWARE pages. $9.95, postpaid (plus tax in WA). HEATH NOS-
ANTIQUE ELECTRONIC SUPPLY NEW AND SLIGHTLY used but guaranteed Radio Shack TALGIA, 4320 196th S.W., Slot B-111, Lynnwood, WA
6221 S Maple Ave •Tempe, AZ 85283.602-820-5411 items: Computer hardware, software, books, "force-feed," 98036.10/92 T
etc. 20% to 80% off. Write for what you want. If we don't KENWOOD & ICOM Service Bulletins 175 + pages cov-
Reader Service #15
have it, we'll try to get it. WERNER L. JORDAN, 10 N. ering all models, $33.95 Catalog—$3. CODs, (602) 782-
Morley St., Baltimore, MD 21229, (301) 566-5388. (Please 2316 /FAX (602) 343-2141. TELECODE, Box 6426-EK,
send $2 for list). T10/92 Yuma, AZ 85366-6426. T10/92
COMPUTER SOFTWARE PROGRAMMABLE CONTROLLER: Applications in- PHOTOFACTS: Folders and specialized books; AR, CB,
PCB LAYOUT & ELECTRONICS IBM SHAREWARE clude automation, data logger, design tool. Intel 83C51FB CM, HTP, MHF, SD, TA, TSM, VCR. A.G. TANNEN-
PROGRAMS $3 S&H for 2 disks full, plus DISKALOG, (8051 family) with BASIC and MONITOR-51, 32K RAM, BAUM, PO Box 110, E. Rockaway, NY 11518, (516)
plus free $3 gift certificate. AMERICAN SOFTWARE, Clock, 8analog inputs, 14 digital I/O, Dual RS-232C, 5V 887-0057.T10/92
Suite M-17, POB 509, Roseville, MI 48066-0509. regulator, just 21
/ " x 3" (with case), $199. Hardware
2
T3/93 Package includes power supply, applications board, ca- UNITED STATES Frequency Allocations: Radio Spec-
ble, User's Manual, $299. Designer's Package also with trum, 32 by 50 color chart shows radio, tv, mobile, ama-
2,800 + IBM SHAREWARE PROGRAMS. Free disk teur, zones, $7. PUBNETIX, Box 1022, Laurel, MD
Macro Assembler, Symbolic Debugger, $399. C51 Com-
catalog. Specify disk size. GSEL SHAREWARE DIS- 20725-1022.T10/92
piler also available. BLUE EARTH RESEARCH, 310
TRIBUTORS, 3870 LaSierra Ave. #134E, Riverside, CA
Belle Ave., Mankato, MN 56001, (507) 387-4001. T10/92
92505. T10/92 MICROCONTROLLER applications notes/software cat-
BEEP BEEP—REPAIR IBM COMPATIBLE PCs! The alog. Temperature logger plans, $10 U.S. TENSOR, 342
POST CODE MASTER plug-in board captures and Roberta St., Ontario, Canada P7A 1A3. T11/92
displays Power On Self Test (POST) codes generated by
AUXILLARY GENERATOR the BIOS in most all 286, 386, and 486 PCs. A complete
MISCELLANEOUS
explanation of codes for all major BIOS manufacturers
BLUEPRINTS is included, along with descriptions of cryptic Beep codes WANTED: K/X/KU/KA/MILLIMETER band handheld
alternate energy source, $10.00. that are generated when errors occur. Only $59. radars, Gunn oscillators, Feedhoris, detectors. Also
MICROSYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT, 4100 Moorpark Macintosh, IBM-PC equipment, peripherals, software.
DEE CHA, 307 Each Ash, #153, Ave., #104, San Jose, CA 95117, (408) 296-4000, FAX JOHN WILLIAMS, 2011 Crescent, Alamogordo, NM
Box 6025, Columbia, MO 65205 (408) 296-5877. T10/92 88310, (505) 434-0234. T10/92
SESCOM INC 2100 WARD CESSE HENDERSON, NOUS A • Books and Manuals For advertising information
SES AXIS-1249 (ORDERS)800-634-3457 (TECHNICAL HELP)
CUM 702-565-3400 FAX 702-565-4828 This catalog is available FREE by fourth call Maureen McHugh at
class mail, or for Si by first class mail. (603) 358 -3756
or write
COMPONENTS, PARTS & SUPPLIES Universal Radio
6830 Americana Pkwy. EK ELEKTOR ELECTRONICS
IF YOU HATE your order to be delayed in ICs or Fly- Audio Amateur Publishing Group
backs because it's out of stock, try us. We deliver qual-
Reynoldsburg, OH 43068 PO Box 878
ity service and low prices. VIDEO TV PARTS, 514 S. Tr Orders 800 431-3939 Peterborough, NH 03458
17th, McAllen, TX 78501, phone (512) 631-1623. 1r Info. 614 866-4267
T10/92
No ads will be taken over the telephone. No questions taken over the phone. Prepayment must accompany ad. No Billing.
Categories (please check just one) • Computer Hardware For Sale • Optoclectronics
D Audio for Sale • Computer Software For Sale • Plans & Schematics
Clubs
D Books & Periodicals • Computer Systems For Sale • Professional Services D Wanted To Buy
2 3 4 5 e 7
11 12 13 14 15 18 17 18 19
21 22 23 24 25 2e 27 28 29
31 32 33 34 35 38 37 38 39
41 42 43 44 as 48 47 49
available Issue.
STREET
Li Check/Money order enclosed
CITY ST ZIP
• Please charge to my Master Card/Visa
PHONE NUMBER
Name:
A. How many electronic projects have you worked on this month?
1111e:
10 1 2o 2 3 3 40 4
Company:
Name:
A. How many electronic projects have you worked on this month?
10 1 2 2 3u 3 40 4
Company:
1 2 3 4 5 51 52 53 64 55 101 102 103 104 105 151 152 153 154 155
6 7 8 9 10 56 57 58 59 ao 128 107 108 103 110 156 157 158 159 160 E. Are there PCs in your office?
11 12 13 14 15 61 62 63 64 Eó Ill 112 113 114 115 161 162 163 164 166
19 CI Yes 20 0 No
16 17 18 19 20 66 67 68 89 70 116 117 118 119 120 166 167 168 169 170
21 22 23 24 25 71 72 73 74 75 121 122 123 124 125 171 172 173 174 175
26 27 28 29 30 76 27 78 rg 80 126 127 128 129 133 176 177 178 179 183 F. Do you make electronic equipment choices in your work place?
31 32 33 34 35 81 82 83 84 86 131 132 133 134 136 181 182 183 184 186 21 0 Yes 22 CI No
X 37 X 39 40 86 87 88 89 99 136 137 138 139 140 186 187 102 189 193
41 42 43 44 45 91 92 93 94 95 141 142 143 144 145 191 192 193 194 1%
46 47 48 49 50 % 97 98 99 170 146 147 148 149 1» 1%
If yes, check estimated weekly value of components.
197 168 199 203
23 0 Less than $1K 24 0 $1K- $5K 25 U $5K-$20K
201-250 251300 301-350 351400 26 $20K- $50K 27 $50K +
201 202 203 204 2C6 251 252 253 254 255 301 332 333 304 X6 351 352 253 354 355
202 207 208 209 210 255 257 258 259 260 306 337 308 2% 310 2% 357 358 359 3E0
G. Number of employees in your company.
211 212 213 214 215 261 262 283 264 285 311 312 313 311 315 361 362 X3 3s4 386
218 217 2)8 219 220 295 267 268 XS 270 316 317 318 379 320 2% 367 358 35,3 370 28 0 25 or less 29 0 26- 99 30 0 100-499
221 222 223 224 225 271 272 273 274 275 321 322 323 31
324 325 371 372 373 374 375 0 500-999 32 U 1000 +
226 227 228 229 230 276 277 278 279 280 326 327 328 329 330 376 377 378 379 393
231 232 233 234 235 281 282 283 284 285 331 332 333 134 335 381 382 383 384 3%
238 237 238 239 240 286 287 288 283 290 335 337 338 339 340 386 387 388 389 393 2
241 242 243 244 245 291 292 293 294 295 341 342 343 344 345 391 392 393 »4 3%
246 247 248 249 250 2% 297 2% 2% 333 346 347 348 349 3.%. 36 397 398 399 403
WorldRadioHistory
Your
Stamp
Helps
1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
Your
Stamp
Helps
WorldRadioHistory
ORDER FORM
TELEPI18NE MIME MISERS
READERS SERVICES OLD COLONY SOUND LAB (843) 1244371, 8244528
PO INIX 243
All orders, except for subscriptions, should be PETER8081111811, MN 03458 Amodio Radios balm 8 a...,
FAX: (883) 8244487, 24 Hsu
sent to Old Colony Sound Lab: by mail to PO
Box 243, Peterborough NH 03458-0243; Visa/ CUSTOMER ADDRESS SHIPPING ADDRESS IF DIFFERENT
MasterCard charge orders by FAX to (603)
924-9467 (24 hours) or by voice 8-4 weekdays
NAME NAME
to (603) 924-6526 or 6371. Please use the form
opposite for all orders. All prices are postpaid STREET & NO COMPANY
to customers in the fifty states except for books.
Please add $2.00 for the first book and 75e CITY STATE ZIP STREET & NO
for each additional book ordered. Cana-
dians, please add $4.50 US for the first MAGIC NUMBER (FROM SUBSCRIPTION LABEL) CITY STATE ZIP
book, and 75e for each additional one. Out-
side North America, please add 20%. Cana- PAYMENT METHOD FOR CHARGE CARD ORDERS UNDER $10, PLEASE ADD $2.
dians may expect Canadian duty charges on
shipments of any items except books and Ell CHECK III MONEY ORDER E MASTERCARD III VISA
subscriptions.
SUBSCRIPTIONS CARD NUMBER EXPIRES /
Subscriptions can be provided anywhere in the
United States and its territories as well as AUTHORIZED SIGNATURE DAYTIME PHONE
Canada by sending mail subscriptions to Elektor
Electronics USA, PO Box 876, Peterborough NH Qty. Part Number and Description Price Total
03458-0876. Visa/MasterCard orders may be
telephoned directly to (603) 924-9464 between
8 and 4 on business days and to our machine
recorders at other hours and on weekends.
Orders may be FAXed at any time to (603)
924-9467. US subscription rates: $28 for one
year (11 issues); $50 for 2years. Canadian rate:
$38.80 for one year. Student rate to full-time,
registered students, $15 per year (photocopy of
student ID required).
PAST ISSUES
Back issues of the British Elektor from July/
August 1987 onward are available from World-
wide Subscription Service Ltd., Unit 4, Gibbs
Reed Farm, Pashley Road, Ticehurst TN5 7HE,
England, United Kingdom. Single copies are
$4.50 surface mail, $7.50 airmail. Back issues
of Elektor Electronics USA from October 1990 on-
ward (except 2/91) are available from Old Col-
ony for $4 postpaid, $6 for July/August or De-
cember double issues.
PAST ARTICLES CALL OR WRITE FOR YOUR FREE OLD COLONY CATALOG!
Photocopies of articles from the British Elektor
from January 1979 onward are available from Old BECAUSE OF THEIR SPECIAL NATURE, ORDERS FROM THIS PAGE ARE SUBTOTAL
Colony Sound Lab for $5 each (multi-part articles: NONCANCELABLE AND NONRETURNABLE, EXCEPT IN CASE OF DEFECT. SHIPPING
$5 per part); $6 in Canada. Indexes are available.
Send astamped (50E), self-addressed business-
size envelope to Old Colony, at the address
PLEASE ALLOW 4-6 WEEKS FOR DELIVERY. TOTAL
above, for EACH YEAR desired. Acomplete set
of indexes for 1979-91 is available for $7.50
CD player 910146-F 20.50 1/92 8751 emulator incl. 6051 50.00 3/92 Timecode interface 1611 13.00 9/91
postpaid. Also available postpaid:
Measurement 910144-F 15.00 2/92 system disk RTC for Atari ST 1621 13.00 6/91
Digital model train (13 parts) $15.00
amplifier FM tuner 6061 34.00 6/92 24-bit color extension 1631 19.00 11/91
BOOKS FM tuner 920005-F 22.50 3-8/92 (1 x 27C256) for video digitizer
The following Elektor books are currently avail- LC meter 920012-F 19.50 3/92 Connect 4 6081 26.00 12/91 PC-controlled weather 1641 13.00 1/92
able from Old Colony Sound: Guitar tuner 920033-F 15.00 6/92 (1 x 27C64) station (3)
301 Circuits $12.50 NICAM decoder 920035-F 14.00 5/92 EMON51 (8051 6091 34.00 2/92 8051/8032 assembler 1661 13.00 2/92
302 Circuits $12.50 Audio DAC 920063-F 17.00 7-10/92 assembler course) course (IBM)
303 Circuits $15.90 (1 x 27256) A-D/D-A and I/O for 1671 13.00 3/92
EPROMSIPALS/MICROCONTROLLERS Multipurpose Z80 card:
304 Circuits $19.95 lC bus
Data Sheet Book 2 $16.50 PROJECT No. Price Issue GAL set 6111 19.00 6/92 8051/8032 assembler 1681 13.00 2/92
Databook 3 $17.95 (2 x GAL 16V8) course (Atari)
Databook 4 $17.95 Multifunction 561 17.50 2/91 Multipurpose Z80 card:
AD232 converter 1691 13.00 4/92
Databook 5: Application Notes $17.95 measurement card BIOS 6121 26.00 6/92
GAL programmer 1701 19.00 5/92
Microprocessor Data Book $17.90 for PCs (1 x EPROM 27128)
(3 disks)
MIDI control unit 570 20.00 6-7/90 8751 programmer 7061 70.50 11/90
SHELF BOXES Multipurpose Z80 card 1711 13.00 6/92
(1 x 27C64) (1 x 8751)
Blue heavy-duty Elektor vinyl shelf box EPROM emulator ll 129 11.50 9/92
Digital model train 572 33.50 2-5,7/89- PASCAL library for 1751 16.50 10/92
(holds 6 issues) $6.00 DISKETTES
(1 x 2764) 4/90 MMC
WALL CHART Darkroom clock 583 18.50 2/90 PROJECT No. Price Issue
(1 x 27128) $ PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARDS
PC Connectors (1/92)
Slave indication unit 700 30.00 3/88 Digital model train 109 11.50 2-5,7/89-
$3 postpaid; 2/$5; 5/$10 PROJECT No. Price
for I.T.S. (1 x 8748H) 4/90
FRONT PANEL FOILS Logic analyzer for 111 20.00 10/89 JUNE 1992
EPROM emulator 701 30.00 12/89
PROJECT No. Price Issue (1 x 8748H) Atari ST (b/w only) 4-megabyte printer buffer 910110 32.00
Computer-controlled 113 20.00 10/89 I2C display 920004 8.00
Microcontroller-driven 702 95.00 5,6,9/88
Video mixer 87304-F 33.00 1-4/90 Teletext decoder FM tuner (4)
power supply
The complete 890169-F 15.00 3/91 (1 x 8751) Plotter driver (Lewetz) 117 11.50 5-6/88 mode control board 920005-3 9.50
preamplifier FAX interface, IBM PCs 119 14.00 6/90 synthesizer board 920005-5 18.50
Autonomous I/O 704 95.00 12/88
All solid-state 890170-F1 33.50 12/89 RAM extension for 123 10.00 7/89 Guitar tuner 920033 17.00
controller (1 x8751)
preamplifier 890170-F2 18.50 1/90 BBC-B Multipurpose Z80 card 920002 34.50
Video mixer (1 x2764) 5861 20.00 1-4/90
LF/HF signal 890183-F 18.50 12/89 Four-sensor 5921 20.00 6/90 EPROM simulator 129 11.50 12/89 JULY/AUGUST 1992
tracer sunshine recorder RS-232 splitter 1411 11.50 4/90 12VDC to 240VAC inverter
0 meter 900031-F 23.00 4/90 (1 x 27128) Centronics ADC/DAC 1421 11.50 5/90 main board 920039-1 19.00
Budget sweep/ 900040-F 20.00 5/90 girl-controlled 5941 26.00 10/90 Transistor 1431 13.00 5/90 power board 920039-2 11.00
function generator telephone exchange characteristic plot- Audio DAC (1) 920063-1 14.50
High current 900078-F 28.00 2/91 (1 x 27128) ting (Atari ST b/w) Optocard for universal 910040 22.00
hFE tester ADS decoder 5951 26.00 10/92 ROM-copy for BASIC 1441 13.00 9/90 PC I/O bus
400W lab 900082-F 35.00 10-11/90 (1 x 2764) Multifunction 1461 13.00 2/91 FM tuner (5)
power supply MIDI arogram 5961 26.00 4/91 measurement card keyboard/display 920005-4 26.35
changer (1 x 2764) for PCs S-meter 920005-6 6.50
Logic analyzer 900094-F 17.50 6/91
Logic analyzer 5971 14.00 1-2,4/91 8751 programmer 1471 13.00 11/90 RS232 quick tester 920037 8.50
Variable AC PSU 900104-F 28.00 6/91
(IBM interface) PT100 thermometer 1481 13.00 11/90 Water pump control for 924007 12.50
Universal battery 900134-F 11.00 6/91
(1 x PAL 16L8) Logic analyzer solar power system
charger
MIDI-m-CV interface 5981 26.00 2/91 software, incl. GAL Simple power supply 924024 8.50
Milliohmmeter 910004-F 28.00 12/90
Multifunction I/O 5991 14.00 7-8/91 IBM 1491 33.00 6/91 Wide-band active 924102 5.50
Wattmeter 910011-F 16.50 4/91 telescopic antenna
for PCs Atari 1501 33.00 6/91
Digital phase 910045-F 20.00 6/91
(1 x PAL 16L8) Plotter driver (Sijtsma) 1541 19.00 9/91 SEPTEMBER 1992
meter
Amiga mouse/ 6001 14.00 12/91 PC-controlled weather 1551 13.00 3/91 EPROM emulator If 910082 17.00
Timecode 910055-F 15.00 9/91 Joystick switch station (1) Audio DAC (2) 920063-2 32.00
interface (1 x GAL 16V8) PC-controlled weather 1561 13.00 10/91 OCTOBER 1992
Digital funct. gen 910077-F 18.00 10/91 Stepper motor board 6011 14.00 6/91 station (2) Audio DAC (3) 920063-3 45.00
4-megabyte 910110-F 19.50 6/92 (1) (1 x 16L8) I/O interface for Atari 1571 13.00 4/91 Mains sequencer 920013 29.50
printer buffer 4-megabyte printer 6041 26.00 6/92 Tek/Intel file converter 1581 13.00 4/91 Wideband active antenna 924101 5.50
Economy PSU 910111-F 18.00 12/91 buffer (1 x 2764) B/W video digitizer 1591 19.00 7-8/91 ADS demodulator 880209 9.00
These books are all available direct from Elektor Electronics USA through the Readers Services, from a number of bookshops and electronics retailers in the US and
Canada, and from selected bookshops throughout the world. Special prices are those of EEUSA only.
ti
to 12V battery and you can hear every sound in an
entire house over 1 mile away! Super-sensitive cir-
cuit on a single chip even picks up footsteps from M.O. or C.O.D. to
across a large room. Tunable from 80 to 130 MHZ.
Hear everything on any FM radio or wideband scanner tuned to the "secret" fre-
quency you select. Unlimited uses for security, baby monitor, remote mic, etc. SPY Supply
Not a toy. The VT -75 meets many U.S. Gov't Military Specs and with
100mW RF output, it is the smallest, most powerful miniature transmitter you 7Colby Court Suite 215
can buy. Easily assembled even by a youngster in only 5 minutes and performs
so well that It is the only miniature transmitter available anywhere that comes Bedford, NH 03110
with a full unconditional moneyback guarantee' Complete kit includes
VT-75 microtransmitter chip, miniature microphone, 9V battery connector and (617) 327-7272
instructions -$49.95 +$1.50 S&H or save- buy 2 for $45.00 each with free
S&H! Call toll free or send money order, Visa, or MC acc't number for im-
mediate shipping by U.S. Mail. COD's add $4. Checks allow 21 days.
BOX 607
DECO BEDFORD HILLS, NY
INDUSTRIES' 10507 Sold for educational purposes only
1-800-759-5553 (U.S. ONLY) ALL OTHER 914-232-3878
Reader Service #52
WorldRadioHistory
B. G. MICRO
P. 0. Box 280298 Dallas, Texas 75228
(214) 271-5546
MasterCard L VISA Mill
$19 99
STAND ALONE POWER SUPPLY
This Red Orange Matrix Can Be Arcnet)
FOR ABOVE
Stacked Horizontally. Choice of • DOS Fila and Record locking support
ADD $2.50 SHIPPING & HANDLING
• Share any device, any file, any program
Two Matrix Orientation-Cathode
• Runs in the background, totally Irensparent
Column, Anode Row. Great For
STATIC RAM EPROM SPECIAL
• Low memory overhead
"Moving Message" Signs. Typically only 2515 Is needed, but will
$1.19 Ea., 8/$6.95, 100/$75.00 vary with carious setups
• Works with most software, including DBASE 2016-2KX8 200 n.s. 1.00 We bought a large quantity of
74LS ill, Microsoft
WORD. LOTUS 123, Windows 3. 2101-1 -256X4 500 n.s..75 2708s, 2716s, 2532s, 2732s,
AUTOCAD. Word Perfect, all compilers, 21L02-1 350 n.s. .65 2764s, 27128s, 27256s and
LSOO .14 LS114 .25 LS241 .60 GWBASIC, and. In lact, most anything ,
2102AL-4 L.P. 450 n.s. .49 27512sfrom a computer manu-
LSO1 .14 LS122 .35 LS242 .65 • Works with DOS 2.0 to DOS 5.0 and DR.
DOS 2111-1 256X4 500 n.s. 1.00 facturer who redesigned their
LSO2 .14 LS123 .45 LS243 .50 DOS 3 1or greater is prelerred
LSO3 .14 LS1241.35 2112A-2 2.50 boards. We removed them from
LS244 .55 • Open network. programmer API provided
LSO4 .14 LS125 .30 Example lor low-level link modules - 2114L-3 1KX4 300 n.s. .45 sockets, erased and verified
LS245 .55 you can support specie hardware
LSO5 .14 LS126 .35 LS251 .45 2125A-2 1KX1 70 n.s. 1.70 them, and now we offer the sav-
Full specs provided on packet level
LSO8 .14 LS132 .35 LS253 .40 protocols 2147 4KX1 1.95 ings to you. Complete satisfac-
CABLES 6. ARCHET CARDS 6116P-4 1.00 tion guaranteed
LSO9
LS10
.14 LS133 .25
.14 LS136 .28
LS257 .35
LS258 .45
AVAILABLE - PLEASE CALL $75- 6117 1.20 Your Choice
2708 1.20 10/8.00
LS11 .14 LS138 .35 LS2591.00 SOCKETS 6264-15
62256 32KX8
1.40
2716 1.75 10/15.00
LS12 .20 LS139 .35 LS260 .40 5.75
Low Profile SOLDER TAIL 2532 2.00 10/17.50
SEND FOR FREE
TERMS: (Unless specified elsewhere) Add $3.25 postage, we pay balance. Orders over $50.00 add 85e for insurance. No C.O.D. Texas Res. add
81
/% Tax. 90 Day Money Back Guarantee on all items. All items subject to prior sale. Prices subject to change without notice. Foreign order -US funds
4
only. We cannot ship to Mexico or Puerto Rico. Countries other than Canada, add $9.00 shipping and handling.
WorldRadioHistory