Folks,
great claims are made for German radio technology, not least by Arthur Bauer at http://www.cdvandt.org/ A nice summary is in Arthur's paper “The significance of German electronic engineering in the 1930s”, which is can be downloaded here.
What I am wondering is whether any work has been done on evaluating the performance of various sets using modern test gear? For instance, oscillator stability was supposed to be not far short of that obtained elsewhere with quartz stabilisation. So has anyone put these sets in an oven and checked it out? (And made the report public?)
The selectivity of the E-52 receiver is legendary, with its multiple tuned circuits in front of the mixer. But how about intermodulation - a parameter that you hardly hear mentioned as far back as WWII ( I have seen few figures for equivalent Allied equipment either)? We now know that intermod is a critical factor in receiver performance, particularly when you have several strong signals close in to your wanted signal. Anyone checked this out?
Some of the equipment is working at VHF. Anyone checked out noise figures of receivers, and compared them to those the Allies were achieving?
Richard
great claims are made for German radio technology, not least by Arthur Bauer at http://www.cdvandt.org/ A nice summary is in Arthur's paper “The significance of German electronic engineering in the 1930s”, which is can be downloaded here.
What I am wondering is whether any work has been done on evaluating the performance of various sets using modern test gear? For instance, oscillator stability was supposed to be not far short of that obtained elsewhere with quartz stabilisation. So has anyone put these sets in an oven and checked it out? (And made the report public?)
The selectivity of the E-52 receiver is legendary, with its multiple tuned circuits in front of the mixer. But how about intermodulation - a parameter that you hardly hear mentioned as far back as WWII ( I have seen few figures for equivalent Allied equipment either)? We now know that intermod is a critical factor in receiver performance, particularly when you have several strong signals close in to your wanted signal. Anyone checked this out?
Some of the equipment is working at VHF. Anyone checked out noise figures of receivers, and compared them to those the Allies were achieving?
Richard
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