|
PRE WW1 WIRELESS TELEGRAPH - 1912
| In this file. Index General summary.
Boys who joined Impregnable will
commence to pass for PO Telegraphists early in 1913.
Signal and Long Distance Signal Code to be brought up to date. Vol
1 of the Wireless Manual will be issued shortly
and the
picture to the left is of the first page of the Manual. Design of
a Mk11 set now converted to quenched spark and trials with HMS
Vindictive conducted. As regards converting Mk11 generally to
quenched spark is not certain. Waiting for a suitable receiver
before the change over. Malta high power - Rinella - starts in 1913.
Experiments to design a short distance set for
cruisers with two tunes. A big step forward? The first [possibly] of the
"more than one frequency" sets !
Poulsen's quenched systems being tested on a considerable scale.
A naval officer travels to America {this was the
year of the Titanic disaster!} to the Poulsen Station and is most
impressed. Calibrated wavemeter now issued.
New petrol engine for portables etc. Motor Buzzer
designed and issued. Destroyers are being fitted to transmit on
any wave between 635 feet and 2000 feet [1.5MHz and 491kHz].
HMS
Defiance has completed the design of a submarine installation.
Mechanical cipher machine - a description. Decision as to whether
it goes to sea for trials. New magnetic key,
operators key and operating switch.
Good progress being made
on experiments with W/T in aeroplanes.
Instructional report - officers and ratings instructed in HMS Vernon.
Lieutenant [S]' still lag behind Lieutenant [T]'. Note the two
Australians here on course. HMS Defiance' numbers.
Note for
the first time HMS Defiance is training Boy Telegraphists but
only on short courses - long courses still being done in HMS
Impregnable. Note local training outside
of Defiance but still in the West Country for the most part.
Training also being done in HMS Acteon which is the Nore Command
torpedo school at Sheerness Kent. A "ST's" was a Seaman Torpedo
Operator, the 'ordinary rate'; his next rate was Torpedo Operator [the
'able' rate] and then a Leading Torpedo Operator [LTO] and all were
electricians.
Telegraphists Branch. Note number of Boy Telegraphists at sea at
this time. Numbers of PO Tel's and Ldg Tel's now near equal.
Warrant officers to be put in charge of some shore stations.
Major reform of the
Service wavelengths. To be increased by reducing the frequency
spacing between each wave and then to be renamed. Seven
[7] main books now in use.
1.
Signal Manual - flag signalling [which I would have called V/S]
and wavelength organisation [very much W/T].
2. Fleet
Signal Book Vol 1 - intended for V/S but can also be used for
W/T.
3. Fleet
Signal Book Vol 2 - W/T [but can be used for V/S] tables,
callsigns, 4-letter words [no, not the ones used by V/S personnel] but
for consono-vowel signals of important and specially confidential
[secret !] nature likely to be used for long distance working in
wartime.
Operating Signals [first time mentioned] introduced for signals of a
technical nature to expedite W/T signalling.
4.
Vocabulary Signal Book - a section containing sentences - routine
and exercise vocabularies are included.
5.
Signal Handbook - intended for instructional purposes -
instructions on W/T, Heliograph, Flashing Light etc [note:
18 years to go to the first BR222 written by Lieutenant Commanders Louis
Mountbatten and Peter Bracelin].
6 and 7 as previously mentioned namely Vol 1 and 2 of the W/T Manual.
Shore stations - Bunbeg [Ireland] completed and in action - Wick
and Scarborough also new and all are using the old 'C' Tune sets landed
by ships. New station to come soon at Stockton*,
Lerwick and Grimsby [D] the latter for a proposed destroyer base in that
town.
* - There are
seven Stockton's in the UK but only two coastal towns with that name.
The one in Norfolk near Great Yarmouth would be too close to the already
existing station at Ipswich and the one up north, viz, Stockton-on-Tees
is too close to Scarborough. So, take your pick !
Modifications to the DIP - Differential Interference Preventer.
Low power stations all use 'D' Tune [2.45MHz] range 60 miles.
Medium power station Pembroke shifted from 'W' Tune [151kHz] to 'S' Tune
[298kHz]. Horsea Island experimenting with quenched spark and
with Arc transmitters, however, delayed by the pressure of work in
HMS Vernon. Receiver set at Horsea is disappointing.
Quenched spark transmitter is now [quite obviously] being banded around
as the QS set. High power station at Gibraltar has a brand new
aerial with good results. Problem of defending Gibraltar remains
and new locations for North Front are being considered to render it save
from shell fire and aerial attack. Malta delayed because of the
pressure of work in HMS Vernon. To get Malta up and running
by 1913, a temporary rig will be installed hoping that it has enough
power to communicate with Gibraltar, the UK and to all the ships in the
Mediterranean. 'D' and 'P' Tunes with Mk1* and Mk11
Installations. Problems and suggested remedies. Still having
problems with brushing [and large sparking/arcing] on aerials. HMS
Vernon and HMS Vindictive have fitted aerials which have
used up all available aerial build material. Vindictive
reports reasonable results overall. Wooden spreaders of teak and metal
of navaltum [a very light alloy]. Destroyer installation - list
of destroyers fitted, 123 to date. Pleased with Type 'C' receiver.
Combined spark gap and oscillator set = Type 4 Destroyer Set. This
set will be covered in detail on the transmitter page accessible from
the "Your Choice" menu. Power generation for portable wireless
set.
Wireless office ventilation.
Patrol flotillas [small craft] to be fitted with W/T Type 4 sets.
Portable and Harbour Defence net. Appears to work well but modifications
are required for best results. Destroyer wave interferes badly
with these sets. HMS Acteon's report - trials on Portable
Harbour Defence sets on 500 feet [1.97MHz] not satisfactory due to
defects.
Short Distance sets - list of ships fitted with 5-mile distance sets.
Battleships are to get the 5-mile version, and
cruisers the 20-mile version when one is designed. Report
from sea suggests moderate satisfaction. If possible cruisers
should have 30-mile range. Interference immunity between main and
short distance sets is of paramount importance even if the range is
sacrificed, but C-in-C Home Fleet does not like that idea. Instead
he suggests sets capable of two frequencies [waves] for cruisers one of
them being the single battleship wave. Motor Buzzers -
description of and how they work. It will now replace the ordinary
buzzer transmitter. |
1912 one.
pdf |
| In this file. Submarine
Installation - the first submarine so fitted was the B5 - This was
called the Type 'X' Fit.
The 'B' Class consisted of 11 boats all of them obsolete by the start of
WW1. The characteristics were
as shown below and
here is a picture of the B4 [but without a main roof aerial] her
sister boat, with apologies for not having a picture of B5.
The W/T fit was the same as the
Type 4 Destroyer
kit but with some basic alterations to the circuitry. At all times
in a submarine there is a very real danger of a battery explosion.
Like all batteries, they "gas" and give off hydrogen. Sparks and
hydrogen are not good bed-fellows unless fireworks are the order of the
day. Hence, many of the modifications were addressing the problems of
sparking and brushing. Airtight boxes have been used for The two-knob Morse key [completely boxed in unlike the surface version]
and have had their respective key-bars extended and each protrudes through
an airlock also to avoid sparking. Platinum contacts have been
used in lieu of silver. Submarines were given a Tune of 600 feet = 1.64MHz to
transmit on and a suitable receiver with additional tuning so as to receive her own
waves plus that of destroyers and Harbour Defence sets.
Just like a surface ship, the boat had a W/T
office and within, a silent cabinet wherein the operator sat - it was
very tiny! The aerial was enormous and consisted of a
four-fold roof type, which could be lowered from the conning tower. The
strength of a submarines pressure hull not only depends upon the
material used [shape, metal, welding etc] but on the fewest possible
holes being made in it. When W/T was introduced into boats, a
'deck tube' [to connect the communications equipment to the aerial]
having a diameter of 4 inches was cut through the pressure hull. 
If you want to jump ahead to see the submarine aerial [although you
will read about it all when you get to 1913] have a quick look at page 7
of 12 in file 1913.three.pdf.
HMS Forth, the submarine surface depot ship, has a Mk1* set
modified to operate of 'D' Tune so that she can communicate with her
boats. Look how they have spelt Forth - in one place as Fourth. A
report by the Commanding Officer of HMS Forth. 1 PO
Telegraphist and 1 Telegraphists sent to sea in B5 to communicate
with Forth - good results.
Diagram showing new Motor Buzzer Set.
Diagram of the Submarine Set. Let me stop awhile to briefly explain the
circuit - I am an ex-submariner so have a vested interest !
Before we look at the submarine set specifically, let us consider this
drawing to the left. This is how a basic spark transmitter works.
When the Morse key is pressed {**}
AC current flows through the Morse key into the primary circuit of the
transformer. This produces a very high voltage across the
secondary of the transformer. D and E respectively form the
primary and secondary of the oscillator transformer. The circuit C, F G
and D form the sparking circuit and also the oscillator circuit of a
wavelength dictated by the value D. AC alternating + and - charges
and then discharges the transmitting condenser. When it
discharges, it does so across the spark gap. A high voltage high
frequency oscillating current is transferred onto E which increases the
voltage to a very high level and then onto the aerial.
Now
lets look at the very first submarine installation.
The transmit side can now be completed by using the letter indicators in
the picture above and applying them direct onto the submarine set. When
the Morse key is pressed, contact 1 is raised to touch contact 2 thereby
joining the braiding and the centre core of the aerial cable together
shorting out the aerial to the receiver. Contact 4 is directly connected
to the primary B so that pressing the key touches contact 3 and current
flows through the primary stage at 48V AC inducing a current into C the
secondary - then see above for the rest of the story. Contact 6 is
permanently connected to the + terminal of a low voltage DC circuit and
on pressing the key the circuit is completed through contact 5: you will
see two lamps in series on the line between the + voltage and the key
position 6 and these burn accordingly to inform the operator that it is
"safe to transmit". Note the
bits and pieces used to cobble this fit together - "Oscillator T.B.D.
Pattern" = Torpedo Boat Destroyer/also TBD Condenser. "HD Transformer" =
Harbour Defence Set; "HD I.C." = Harbour Defence Set Impedance Coil; on
the receiver "PHD Sliding Condenser" = Portable and Harbour Defence Set
etc. The Type 'C' receiver has two detector options and tuning
arrangements to allow the boat to listening to the destroyer wave and
the Harbour Defence wave. Note the LS of the oscillator primary = D in
the diagram. It is 8.46. Remember
λ [in feet] = 206 x square root of the LS.
The submarine operates on a Tune of 600 feet, so 206 x 2.9086
should equal 600. It does, almost!
Many problems existed, the majority to do with the
submarine operating environment. Distances achieved very short, 1 to 2
miles and at the very best 25 miles [although Defiance thinks 50
miles possible] where strength 12 [yes, twelve]
was heard. The aerial has no stays and the masts wobble about all over
the place.
It is considered essential that a Telegraphist is necessary because it
is too much to ask a boats officer to come off the bridge or from the
engine room to sit in the silent cabinet and operate W/T equipment etc
etc., especially when he has his own duties to perform as well. HMS
Defiance' comments agree that a Telegraphist should be a member of a
submarines ships company.
Brand new experimental receiver circuit - diagram of.
POSSIBLY AN APPARATUS WHICH COULD GIVE THE R.N., A MASSIVE LEAD OVER ITS
RIVALS, AND, FUTURE ENEMIES! [See below].
Crystal Detector - The Dennis Detector appears better than the crystalite
and will be used in all Type 'C' receivers. Poulsen Tikker,
another detector has clear advantages over the crystalite but it rather
depends on whether it is receiving spark, quenched spark or Arc
transmissions. Notes on the Type 'C' receiver and the Tuning of
circuits.
Interference Preventer Inventions - proposed by an officer and a
rating [a PO Telegraphist] from the Fleets, respectively from HMS
Exmouth and HMS Lancaster.
Quenched spark experiments and progress. HMS Vindictive
whilst abroad conducting experiments with HMS Vernon is seconded
for one month to the 1st Battle Squadron. She has a quenched spark
transmitter. These are the very interesting comments made by the
Vice Admiral Commanding that Squadron.
When the
Squadron is in close-order with Mk11 transmitters and Type 'C' receivers
fitted, a ship with a quenched spark transmitter [QS] causes total
interference to all waves rendering them useless. Detaching the QS
ship out to 50 miles and the interference is still severe but good
operators can just about receive signals. By placing a wavemeter in the
receiver circuit and tuning it to the frequency being received results
in a reduction of interference such that the QS ship can be brought no
closer than 20 miles from the main body when all interference ceases.
A diagram of a typical QS system is shown. Then the QS story
continues.
Mk11 sets
which are converted to QS will be known as Mk11* [that means they had a
Mk1*, a Mk11 and a Mk11*] - eventually Mk11 were known as Type 2 sets
and the Mk11* as the Type 11 [eleven] set.
QS as compared
with an ordinary spark transmitter makes more efficient use of the
applied power giving more power to the aerial. Giving only the one
wave but more sustained spark trains [remember the spark photography
page ?] enables a more finely tuned and more selective receiver to be
used. This appears to hold true for longwave but less so for
shortwave. QS has disadvantages too. It generates waves
suddenly with an initial shock at the beginning of each train which
shocks receiver circuitry. If a receiver can be designed to cope
with such shock it can achieve the selectivity required making it a much
more superior set to the current Service receiver, the Type 'C'.
Thus, a QS
transmitter with a special receiver, could form a good
communication circuit, but quite the opposite would be the case without
that 'special' receiver. Current Service kit [the Mk1*, the MK11
and the Poulsen] are all "friendly transmitters" in that all
navies can receive their transmission.
If the RN had a QS transmitter and the desired special receiver, then
the enemy [or other navies] would be frustrated at the level of
interference caused to their receivers, whilst our own ships would read
the signal with impunity. It would have the same advantages of a good
cipher code. But until HMS Vernon has designed this
special receiver there is no point in converting the fleet from ordinary
spark transmission to quenched spark transmission. The chase is on
and HMS Vernon is pleased with the progress being made. Twelve
Mk11 sets will be converted to QS [Mk11* sets] and Vernon will
have one as will ships which operate on the extremities of the Fleet,
the cruisers. However, all Mk11 sets will stay onboard these ship
just in case there are problems with the Mk11* system. |
1912 two.
pdf |
| In this file. Poulsen's experiments. Much activity in the
procurement and testing of Poulsen's Arc transmitters and receivers.
Power output is in doubt?? Poulsen has a monopoly in the USA
having 16 x 12kW stations and 2 x 24kW stations covering thousands of
miles. San Francisco is 2500 miles from Chicago and 1800 miles to
Seattle. Chicago to Los Angeles in a good 1700 miles.
Good/satisfactory communications would not have worked with an ordinary
spark transmitter. System uses a 600V 24kW DC
Generator. Switch over from transmit to receive is done in just
one minute. High speed working is used occasionally. No silent
cabinet, the Morse operators typing directly
onto paper what they hear in their earphones. New
Poulsen tikker detector.
Use of Duplex. Two wavelengths,
7% apart, one from a transmitter 600 miles distant and the other 300
miles distant were received simultaneously in Los Angeles
{proving the reception aerial and two receivers with varying strength of
signals neither interfering with the other}. Then
San Francisco, using her 24kW transmitter sent two messages
simultaneously, one on each wavelength each separated by 10% with good
reception results {proving the transmit/receive aerial paths and
the ability to radiate two signals simultaneously from one transmitter}.
Honolulu and San Francisco hope to maintain 24 hour a day communications
using new 60kW transmitters.
New wavemeters - new designs to be issued to schools and flagships
for trials. Buzzer repeaters - which allow remote users not in the W/T
office to listen to the Morse code being sent from the ship. Silent
cabinets to be lead lined to every aspect to better the current
screening effects - still having problems with ventilation etc. Browns
Telegraphone relay not to be adopted. It has been found to
intensify both signal interference and atmospherics with equal merit.
An emergency set has been issued for trials. It is to be used
when all power fails, for boat work and for landing parties. Sparking
condenser [capacitance] values.
|
Measured in Jars |
Measured in Farads |
| 47.7 to 50.4 |
0.048μ to 0.05μ |
| 17.1 to 18 |
0.017μ to 0.018μ |
| 16.2 to 17.1 |
0.016μ to 0.017μ |
| 5 |
0.005μ |
| 6 |
0.006μ |
| 45 |
0.045μ |
| 11 |
0.011μ |
The Teletyper or Mechanical Cypherer {very first crypto machine}.
Automatically
codes and decodes by a simple transposition of letters. The word 'teletyper'
has been chosen so that each of the several manufacturers of the kit
won't know what the part they are manufacturing is really for, the
machine being the sum of its parts. 12 sets ordered so that sea trials
can be carried out.
How does it work - a help with the explanation!
Two ordinary Service type typewriters are connected together side
by side [Left and Right] which includes their respective rollers
connected as one roller controlled by the Left typewriter which is
called the
PRIMARY.
Over the top of the Primary are placed 26 spring loaded Plungers a la
[Once opened, move the picture around your
screen by grabbing the top blue band with your mouse pointer so that you
can see this text clearly]. Note the grey coloured key cover
which is the same as an ordinary typewriter keyboard key which you press
down. This action concertina's the string and the little yellow button
on the very bottom extends and depresses the typewriter key immediately
below it. Here we show just five of the 26 spring loaded Plungers which are
called the
PRIMARY
SWITCHES
connecting A with A, U with U, L with L, B with B and C with C, and for
ease of drawing only, the 26 keys of the alphabet {each with a second
function depending upon the shift for upper or lower casing} are shown
10 on top row, 9 on middle row and 7 on bottom row.

The diagram above shows the
PRIMARY KEYBOARD sitting above the left hand TYPEWRITERS KEYBOARD so that if the
letter 'A' is pressed on the primary it
MECHANICALLY presses the letter 'A' on the
typewriter keyboard immediately below it and PRINTS the letter 'A' on
the left hand roller. It also sends an
ELECTRICAL
SIGNAL to the Magic Box which we have shown {in a most
exaggerated manner} as a simple switch and the primary key NOT yet
pressed; when it is, that switch closes and completes the circuit.. The
right hand TYPEWRITERS KEYBOARD prints
ELECTRICALLY on the
right hand roller [which is directly connected to the primary roller]
the transposed letter of the alphabet [which represent 'A'] dictated by
what is the Magic Box above - say, the letter 'Q'.
We haven't got to the right hand typewriter yet, so if you have
followed that we are both doing well !
Over the keyboard of the right hand typewriter there is a group of
hands-free electrically operated switches {they too are plungers] each
key having its own - so again, 26 in number. Each one is connected to
that Magic box above. If the magic box
CODES
the letter 'A' as the letter 'Q' [as in our example] the Magic Box will
send an electrical signal to the letter 'Q' switch which will strike the
typewriter keyboard letter 'Q' to PRINT the letter 'Q' on the right hand
roller. To
DECODE
the operator types the received code into the primary, there is a
mechanical action on its roller, the electrical signal is sent to the
Magic Box and the Magic Box sends the transposed decoded letter to the
right hand typewriter, and it, via electricity, prints the plain
language on the right hand roller.
By now, those of you with TYPE X/CCM or KL7 experience will be
shouting out easy-peasy, let's have more ! For the rest of you it
is easy going eh?
Now, all we have to do is to understand what the Magic Box does and
then we have cracked it: pardon the pun.
I am wearing my BLUE PETER hat so you know what that means ? First we
are going to learn how their [1912] key card worked which they called a
CODE CARD or a CARD SWITCHBOARD.
First take two sheets of A4 paper, marry them together, measure 8¼"
from the top, draw a line and cut off the smaller remaining sections
thereby make two squares. Leave one of the squares blank. On the other
square, pierce three good sized holes at random anywhere on the square.
Turn the square over and cut or tear off the pushed-through torn paper.
On one side mark it TOP then North South East and West, turn over and
mark the other side BOTTOM and again N,S,E and W. Place the marked
square over the unmarked square so that the word TOP is uppermost and
North to the top. Using a pen or pencil mark through the holes you have
made leaving a mark on the clean bottom square. Turn the top square
through 90˚and
again mark the bottom square through the three holes. Continue turning
through 90˚,
then turn over so that the word BOTTOM is uppermost and repeat through
90˚.
From those simple three holes you have made
a generous pattern on the bottom sheet. Now imagine that you had made 26
holes. That one square with 26 holes has eight days of different
code depending upon the orientation of the card. Thus four such
sheets of dissimilar holes would cover a month of crypto.
Ok,
but how do we use it?
Imagine 26 wires coloured blue laying on
a flat surface each uniformly separated. Above them but not touching
are another set of 26 wires this time coloured red laying at right
angles.
The
wires can be made to touch each other creating a
permutation of 26 x 26 = 676 choices of connections at their cross-over
points. If we were to put a kind of switch for each possible junction we
could switch on or off at will for that cross-over point. This they did
by using a spring loaded plunger and when the card [which we have just
made in our Blue Peter session] was not in place all the plungers were
proud and sticking up. An analogy here is an openly running autohead
RATT or CW where ALL the peckers are un-hindered and are allowed to
cycle without a paper tape forcing them down. Once the card was placed
in the switchboard ONLY 26 of the spring loaded plungers
were allowed through the holes in the card and a plunger proud was a
switch switched on. These switches sent the necessary transposed letter
to the electrically operated keyboard on the right hand typewriter
printing that letter on the right hand roller. To reverse the processes,
the Magic Box had a change over switch marked CODE and DECODE.
Today it is a "noddy machine" but to men
of those far away days it was state of the art stuff. However,
comments were made as follows. It was thought that with such a simple
code the system would be vulnerable to crypto-analysis and thus
objections were raised. The objections were not considered to be
serious as applied to this apparatus because of the changing code card
and the unlimited codes available. In practice it could be
arranged for the code card to be changed at stated times and frequent
intervals, or, as an alternative, the number of the code card used could
be quoted at the beginning of every message. Owing to the large
number of different combinations available it would be possible to issue
complete sets of new code cards from time to time especially if it was
feared that any of the card had been stolen.
{Clearly we adopted their ideas and procedures}.
This didn't please all and HMS Vernon designed a system of
changing the code after every letter had been transposed. The end
product was abandoned as unreliable and the code card theory prevailed
and the Navy's first stab at a crypto machine joined the fleet. In the
end there was only one problem caused by such a machine and that was
that it produced a lot of code which kept the ether extremely busy,
whereas, using the ordinary Service three letter coded groups direct
from books was much quicker - though obviously a lot less secure.
|
1912 three.
pdf |
| In this file. Throughout these early years we have regularly
mentioned the relationship of the Morse key and the receiver, both sited
in the Silent Cabinet which is part of the W/T office. The transmission
side, is also in the W/T office but in the high power/RF cage
immediately above which is the aerial connection point and the start of
the trunking system leading to the Deck Insulator [DI] to which the
aerial wires are connected. In the transmit section will be found the
operating switch, the protection switch and the magnetic key. The
Morse key works the magnetic key which keys the transmitter.
Fig 6 of this file is basic and straight forward showing the Morse key
having centre stage. Notice three areas of activity in the front
contact, back contact and the arm of the bar. Current flows when
the key is at rest [i.e. not pressed] through one part of the circuit,
and when pressed, through another part. The lamp shown is expressed as
32 CP [candle power] and when current flows the lamp is illuminated. [As
a matter of interest only, candle power cannot be directly associated
with today's lamp measurements viz, Watts. Have a look at this
Note the contact set-points where clearly as soon as the key is
touched to start its downward travel and well before the front of key
contacts meet, the back contacts break shutting off the current. This of
course would slow the speed of the Morse code down considerably with
such a large front gap.
The diagram of the new operating switch is indeed heavy stuff
especially when it depicts a simple switch. It is of interest
because just around the corner is WW1 and the operators at Jutland,
Coronel and the Falklands are going to use it for real in the hunt and
subsequent destruction of the German navy. How it does it, is simple to
understand, but unimportant. What it does, is core to understanding the
aerial and the receiver only.
On the bottom part of the diagram [the plan] both left and right you
will see two sections of what we call coaxial cable and what they called
C.C.C., or Concentric Cable,
one coming from the aerial to this switch and one goes from this switch
to the receiver - which is which doesn't matter. Looking to the
right is the easiest to understand for it shows you a cable with five
cores or circles. Three of them are screw-clamped to the main body
of the switch which are, top to bottom, outer core, third core or
braiding at earth potential, and core five the centre or feed conductor.
The second core [marked with an 'S'] is an additional insulating core,
and core four is the main polythene insulator. The cable on the
left is exactly the same but cut-away so we can see its make-up.
The two core three's [braiding] are connected together permanently by
the big curly piece of metal in the top part of the diagram [the
elevation] marked 'D', which, for engineer-drawing purposes has not been
completed over to the right. Now, to protect the receiver when
transmitting all that is required is to join core five, the centre
feeder, to earth [core three the braiding] and that is it - end of
reason for having the switch.
Again, look at the elevation and to where they have marked 'O'.
'O' is an electrical unit [a solenoid] which is activated when pressing
the Morse key. The solenoid forces 'N' to attract 'G' in a
downward motion through the air gap you see drawn between them, and
physically attached to 'G' is 'A' which touches 'B' with 'E', and 'E' is
touching the centre core. A lot of engineering for just a simple
receiver/aerial relay!
The magnetic switch [transmission].
Starting at the top left hand side you will see the two cables coming in
from the Morse key. When the Morse key is pressed the bobbin 'B' works
which moves the armature up and down 'G' which travel a
¼" only. At the bottom and in the centre of
the diagram and just above the 'E' coaxial cable, you will see a white
square box inside which is a grey circle and through it is drawn a shape
rather like an opened-out letter 'U' on the end of which are two dark
grey semicircles. Got 'em? Good. This box is on the end of
the armature spindle 'G' [¼" down-up movement]. It is in fact a
rocking bearing and the device drawn through it are the main
transmitting contacts of the key.
Next comes the two coaxial cables coming in left and right at 'D'.
They are from stand-alone resistance boxes - practically not of any
great interest to us. Then, what appears to be wheels which are in fact
contact holders. Note left upper and lower and right upper and
lower. Note also that both uppers are connected to the centre core
of the coaxial cable and that both lowers are connected to the braiding,
so that the resistance between the two can be varied. The main
contacts follow the Morse code by moving on the end of the rocking
bearing. Note the conductor of the main aerial 'E' is connected
only to the right hand side of the upper contact holder.
Professor Goldschmidt's HF Alternator.
Note as always in these early days
HF was really
RF - if it wasn't AF then it was.....!
This alternator generated an RF signal suitable for direct application
to the aerial and ether. Running the machine at great speeds the
Professor demonstrated that he could key [with a Morse key] a continuous
wave or a modulated voice signal and with many kW's on the aerial right
up to a 21288 foot Tune [46kHz]. Four mighty 150kW
alternators are being built for trials in Germany and the USA.
However, because of the precise operating environment necessary,
as ingenious as it was, the alternator was not suitable for naval
service.
|
1912 four.
pdf |
| In this file. Report on Clifden W/T station May 1912.
Aerial current 150 amps - pretty impressive.
Main spark gap disk weighs 1 ton and rotates at 1600 revs, has 12 studs
with sparking surfaces of 3" long x 1" wide. Spark cooling blower to be
a 7½ kW machine with a pressure on the
spark gaps of a kindly 1½ lbs p.s.i.
Look under aerial and earth........all well stirred up in an asbestonite
container ?
Receivers - valves only used for standby detectors. Green or grey
carborundum crystals used as primary detectors.
Duplex working - awaiting Mr Marconi's next visit for final trials
before going commercial.
The Letterfrack station, mentioned a year ago as having taken part as a
jury-rigged station in trials, has moved ½ mile to a new position with
new aerials are is getting new reception kit.
Clifden's aerial is a single wire over a mile long at an average height
of 25 feet.
Tape recording message - trial at Marconi Headquarter building in
Chelmsford.
Clifden will have to go high speed to keep pace with increasing traffic
flows, but presently uses 20 wpm as the norm. Traffic at 40000 to
50000 words per week is already cumbersome.
Glace Bay to go down to 24000 feet [40.9kHz] and suffers badly from
atmospherics unlike Clifden.
High speed reception at Marconi Company works. 54¼ wpm to 60
wpm achieved but faster still is a requirement. Still under trial so no
fixed or published parameters. At 50 wpm, the processes [reception,
recording, developing and fixing] take approximately one minute to
conclude. The problem as always with high speed Morse, is that after
reception, it has to be transcribed by hand which is time consuming and
man-power oriented.
HMS Good Hope - struck by lightning.
Experiments are taking place in both
aircraft and aeroplanes ?
Aeroplanes
are what we call anything that flies which is not a kite, a bird,
insects, airships, helicopters, microlights, missiles, bullets/shells,
rockets......and.....Aircraft
are the same but delete airships and add aeroplanes.
You are just going to love the
picture at Fig 14 on page 6 of 8 in the file. Dig those aviators!
Eastchurch is in Kent on the
Isle-of-Sheppey where an aeroplane [hydroplane, one that uses water for
its runway] that's the fixed wing type, used a destroyers
harbour exercise set on a wavelength of 850 feet [1.15MHz] for a
distance of 8 to 10 miles. Spark not good and got weaker as the
aeroplane got higher. Aerial stretched along the wings.
French system tried with aerial on wings [known as the balancing aerial]
and also a trailing aerial. It was fitted to a "triple tractor
bi-plane" which we think means three pieces of landing/take-off
gear. In Fig 14, note the hole in the airframe through which the
trailing aerial could be raised or lowered. Good musical signal on 450
feet [2.18MHz].
In the aircraft [airship] W/T was tried
during army manoeuvres in the "Gamma" [obviously the name of the
airship]. The aerial was again in two sections, the balancing
section wrapped around the inside of the airship without touching its
sides, and the trailing aerial, in two lengths each of 200 feet long
wound up or down at will. The wavelength was 900 feet [1.09MHz]
resulting in good signals out to 35 miles. The naval airship will
be fitted with W/T in early 1913, and it will operate on any Service
wavelength from 150 to 700 metres [2MHz to 428kHz] with ranges expected
out to 150 miles.
Kites - Portsmouth [Southsea Common] is
famous for its Summer kite flying festival when the biggest and
best compete for airspace. The 1912 kite experiments were
conducted at Portsmouth to ascertain their use for receiving purposes.
Pilot, single box and double box kites were used. Heights of 1200
feet achieved. Using kite combinations in various wind conditions, good
results were achieved in the receiver attached to the kited-aerial.
Reception went from strength 3-4 to strength 10-12. For
transmission, the wavelength was four times the length of the wire
aerial so a length of 265 yards gave a frequency of 308.96kHz - the
newly designated 'S' Tune [where 298 kHz was the old 'S' Tune]. Uses of
the kite thought to be assisting ships to increasing the range of
reception for long distance working for cruisers on outlying trade
routes, by torpedo boat destroyers [TBD], for helping reception to be
restored after battle and for use with portable sets ashore or afloat. |
1912 five.
pdf |
|