US2477028A - Dual channel gain control - Google Patents

Dual channel gain control Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2477028A
US2477028A US576096A US57609645A US2477028A US 2477028 A US2477028 A US 2477028A US 576096 A US576096 A US 576096A US 57609645 A US57609645 A US 57609645A US 2477028 A US2477028 A US 2477028A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
radio
signal
receiver
audio
gain
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US576096A
Inventor
Wilkie Harry
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US576096A priority Critical patent/US2477028A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2477028A publication Critical patent/US2477028A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03GCONTROL OF AMPLIFICATION
    • H03G3/00Gain control in amplifiers or frequency changers
    • H03G3/20Automatic control
    • H03G3/22Automatic control in amplifiers having discharge tubes

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a means for maintaining constant the gain of an alternating current amplifier, and more particularly to a means for maintaining substantially equal a plurality of radio frequency amplifier channels such as are used in radio directio finders and the like.
  • radio direction finders in use in the past, two independent loop antennas with separate radio receivers have been commonly used. The comparative strengths of signals that are intercepted by the loop antennas are indicated by two adjacent signal strength meters that com- "monly have their pointers crossed for ease in making comparative readings.
  • Radio direction Tfinders of this type have lacked automatic means for maintaining constant the gain of the pin- 3 rality of alternating current amplifiers therein.
  • Another type of direction finder in which two receivers are employed and in which the gains must be preserved equal and/or constant is disclosed in patent to Taylor, No. 2,361,436.
  • the objects of the present invention comprise the provision of an improved means for maintaining constant the gain of an alternating current amplifier; a means for maintaining substatially equal a plurality of radio frequency amplifier channels; a means for maintaining the gains of a plurality of alternating current amplifiers in substantially constant ratios with respect to one another; a means for maintaining substantially equal and constant the gain of radio receivers in a radio direction finder to impart improved functional advantages thereto; and a means for maintaining constant the gain of a radio receiver of an amplifier in certain forms of meters for measuring field strength.
  • Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a radio guide that embodies the present invention.
  • Fig. 2 is a schematic and block diagram of a circuit that embodies the present invention and that forms a part of the radio guide that is shown in Fig. 1.
  • the radio guide that is shown in Fig. 1' and that comprises one type of physical device in which the present invention may be used, comamended April 30, 1928; 370 0. G. 757) prises a pair of loop antennas I and 2 that are fixed relatively to one another in intersecting planes and that preferably are vertically disposed.
  • the loops l and 2 are mounted upon radio receivers 3 and 4, respectively, that have a meter 5 interposed therebetween and that receive output from a common audio oscillator 8 in accord.- ance with the teaching of my invention.
  • the radio guide as a whole is rotatable about a vertical axis A-A. Operatively, signal that is inter:- cepted by the loop antenna l is fed to the radio receiver 3 where it is amplified and detected.
  • a signal that is proportional to the strength of the radio signal that is picked up by the loop I is passed from the receiver 3 to a double signal strength meter 5 where a pointer 1 indicates the signal strength on a dial part thereof,
  • signal that is intercepted by the loop antenna 2 isfed to the radio receiver 8 and a signal that is proportional to the strength of the signal that is intercepted by the loop 2 is passed from the receiver i to the double signal strength meter 5 where apointer 8 thereof in-'- dicates the signal strength on a dial part thereof.
  • the meter 5 comprises a pair of usual meters that are positioned so that preferably their pointers cross each other and preferably in their null positions are collinear and are oppositely directed.
  • the radio receivers 3 and 4 each receive a common auxiliary gain control signal from an audio oscillator 6, by means of which the gains of the two receivers 3 and 4 are maintained constant and equal to each other.
  • the present invention comprises means for maintaining the gain of the receivers 3 and 4 constantand equal upon the interception of signal by the antenna! l and 2, and a preferred circuit therefor is shown in Fig.2 of the accompanying drawing.
  • the circuit that embodies the present invention and that is shown in Fig. 2 of the drawings is applicable to the individual receivers 3 and 6 that are shown in Fig. 1 and its presentation as a part of the receiver 3 may be taken as being illustrative of its application to other receivers, such as the receiver 4 or the like, as well as to its application in general. 1
  • radio signal is fed to the receiver 3 thru the pair of antenna terminals III that connect directly to a radio frequency transformer primary winding II that is tuned by a variable condenser l2 and that is balanced to ground as shown.
  • a transformer secondary winding I3 is inductively coupled with the primary winding 1 l, is tuned variably by a condenser l4, and is connected at one end to the grid of an amplifier tube II that has its cathode to ground.
  • An auxiliary gain control audio oscillator 8 is connected to the receiver 3 thru a pair of terminals l8 that connect with a primary winding ll of an audio transformer wlthinthe receiver 3.
  • the transformer primary winding I1 is shunted by a fixed condenser 18 and is inductively coupled with a secondary winding It.
  • the transformer secondary windings i3 and II are connected in series between the grid of the amplifier tube It and a grid bias supply lead 23.
  • a capacitor 2! provides a by-pass for radio signal around the audio transformer secondary winding is and, if desired, provides a means for tuning the audio transformer to the frequency of the auxiliary gain control signal from the audio oscillator 8.
  • the interstage coupling between the amplifier tube 18 and the succeeding amplifier tube 22 is seen to be by transformer coupling through two transformers, one variably tuned radio frequency transformer 23. the other an audio transformer 24.
  • the primary windings of such transformers are in series in the plate circuit of tube IS; the secondary windings thereof are in series in the grid circuit of amplifier tube 22 between the grid thereof and grid bias supply lead 20.
  • the primary and secondary windings of the transformer 23 are preferably variably tuned by suitable means such as by the variable capacitors 23 and 28 or the like.
  • the output circuit of amplifier tube 22 is entirely similar to that of amplifier tube IS.
  • the primary of a tuned radio frequency transformer 32 is connected in series with the primary of an audio transformer 33, the two being in series between the plate of amplifier tube 22 and the plate voltage supply 3+.
  • Radio frequency current is by-passed about the primary coil of transformer 33 by a capacitor 38, which may also be used to tune audio transformer 33.
  • the variably tuned secondary winding of the radio frequency transformer 32 is connected in series with a load resistor 38 across a diode detector tube 39.
  • the load resistor 38 is connected in parallel with a radio by-pass capacitor 31.
  • the output'of the receiver 3 appears across a pair of terminals 40 that are connected to the ends of the load resistor 38.
  • the output of the receiver 3 is a signal that is proportional tothe signal strength of the input radio signal that is intercepted by the loop antenna 1 and that is passed to the meter where it causes a deflection of the needle 8 part thereof to give a signal strength reading.
  • the secondary winding of the audio transformer 33 is tuned by a capacitor 4
  • An adjustable tap 45 at the end of the grid bias supply lead 20 and variably engaging the load resistor 42 provides a controlled grid bias supply to both of the amplifier tubes i5 and 22.
  • the cathodes of the amplifier tubes [5 and 22 and of the diodes 39 and 43 are grounded as shown.
  • the circuit of the receiver 4 is substantially a replica of that of the receiver 3, receiving radio signal that is intercepted by the antenna 2 thru a pair of leads 43 and supply output thru the pair of leads 41 to the meter 8 where the output signal strength thereof is recorded by the position of the meter arm I. It is connected to auxiliary gain control audio oscillator 8 in parallel with receiver 3 and in similar fashion.
  • the receiver system of receiver 3 amplifies simultaneously two signals, one radio the other audio.
  • the radio and audio signals are coupled into the system independently, they pass through independently, and each is detected independently.
  • the detected radio signal forms the output signal of the radio receiver 3.
  • the detected audio signal supplies the grid bias voltage. for the amplifier tubes l4 and 22, and operates" after the manner of a conventional automatic gain control voltage. For example, if the plate voltage supply to amplifier tubes 14 and 22 should increase, the resulting increased gain of the amplifier stages would effect an increase in the audio input to detector 43. and an increased direct voltage drop across load resistor 42. This, in turn, would increase the negative bias on amplifier tubes l3 and 22, which would introduce a decrease in gain and thus offset the initialing increase in gain. The gain of the receiver 3 for radio frequency signal would thus be maintained constant.
  • the operation of.my invention is to preserve constant the gainof the amplifier circuit in the presence of disturbing influences by the use of a constant intensity of auxiliary signal input and the use of the output signal corresponding thereto to maintain constant the gain of the amplifier.
  • the successful operation of my invention is based on the fact that the radio and audio signals may be passed through the system independently and without interaction, and that insofar as electronic factors are concerned the operation of the circuit is identical for both, and variations of the electronic factors afiect the gain of a receiver embodying my invention equally for both the radio and audio signal.
  • the frequency difference between the radio and audio signals need not be extreme; it is only requisite that the frequencies be readily separable by tuned filters'in the detector stages of the particular circuit involved.
  • a volume control may be disposed within the audio oscillator 6 whereby the amplitude of the auxiliary audio signal may be varied and, in turn, the set gain of the receiver 3.
  • the increase of the auxiliary signal serves to decrease the gain of the receiver.
  • the circuit in the receivers 3 and 4 are substantially identical and are fed by the same auxiliary gain control signal from the audio oscillator 6, as previously stated.
  • the radio signal that is supplied to the receiver 3 and 4 may be of the same frequency in which event the receivers 3 and 4 will be tuned alike, or they may be of different frequencies, in which event the receivers 3 and 4 will be tuned differently.
  • the receivers 3 and 4 are substantially alike in circuit, construction, and mode of operation, and since both of the receivers have their automatic gain controls controlled by auxiliary signal in common from the single source ofthe audio oscillator 6, the gains of the two receivers may safely be assumed to be equal, at least for a common frequency of radio signal.
  • the gains of the receivers may be different due to variation of circuit Q with frequency.
  • the variation of gain with frequency may be determined by well-known means and allowed for.
  • the output signals from the receivers 3 and 4 will, therefore, be in the same relative proportion as the input signals that are supplied thereto. This constancy of proportion between the two input signals and the two output signals will be consistently maintained even though the character of the auxiliary signal varies somewhat, because the gains of the two amplifiers for a radio signal would tend to be maintained alike even though not strictly constant. It will, therefore, be observed that the device that is contemplated hereby serves to compare the ratios of two radio signals that are too weak to be compared directly.
  • a radio direction finder system including two independent channels, each of said channels comrising an amplifier tube, means supplying thereto a principal signal for amplification, means supplying an auxiliary continuous uniform signal superimposed upon the principal signal in said amplifier tube, detector means selectively responsive to the auxiliary signal, and automatic gain control means responsive to said detector and maintaining constant the amplification of said amplifier tube simultaneously with amplification of the principal signal therein.
  • a radio direction finder system including two independent channels, each of said channels comprising an amplifier tube, means supplying thereto a principal signal, means supplying thereto an auxiliary signal constant and continuous and having a frequency distinct from that of the principal signal, an amplifier tube amplifying both signals simultaneously, detector means selectively responsive to the amplified auxiliary signal on the basis of frequency, and an automatic gain control responsive to said detector and maintaining constant the gain of said amplifier tube simultaneously with amplification of the principal signal therein.

Landscapes

  • Circuits Of Receivers In General (AREA)

Description

y .1949- H. WI LK|E 2,477,028
DUAL CHANNEL GAIN CONTROL Filed Feb. 5, 1945 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 IN V EN TOR. H1916?! W/Zl/E my 9, M,
am... July as, 194
umra
DUAL CHANNEL GAIN CONTROL Harry Wilkie, Dayton, Ohio, assignor to the United States of America as represented by the Secretary of War ApplicationFebruary 3, 1945, Serial No. 576,096
2 Claims;
(Granted under the act of March 3, 1883, as
The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government for governmental purposes, without the payment to me of any'royalty thereon. I
This invention relates to a means for maintaining constant the gain of an alternating current amplifier, and more particularly to a means for maintaining substantially equal a plurality of radio frequency amplifier channels such as are used in radio directio finders and the like. In radio direction finders in use in the past, two independent loop antennas with separate radio receivers have been commonly used. The comparative strengths of signals that are intercepted by the loop antennas are indicated by two adjacent signal strength meters that com- "monly have their pointers crossed for ease in making comparative readings. Radio direction Tfinders of this type have lacked automatic means for maintaining constant the gain of the pin- 3 rality of alternating current amplifiers therein. Another type of direction finder in which two receivers are employed and in which the gains must be preserved equal and/or constant is disclosed in patent to Taylor, No. 2,361,436.
The objects of the present invention comprise the provision of an improved means for maintaining constant the gain of an alternating current amplifier; a means for maintaining substatially equal a plurality of radio frequency amplifier channels; a means for maintaining the gains of a plurality of alternating current amplifiers in substantially constant ratios with respect to one another; a means for maintaining substantially equal and constant the gain of radio receivers in a radio direction finder to impart improved functional advantages thereto; and a means for maintaining constant the gain of a radio receiver of an amplifier in certain forms of meters for measuring field strength.
The above objects are augmented by additional objects that will be apparent to those who are informed in the subject of radio devices from the following description of an illustrative embodiment of the present invention that is presented in the accompanying drawing, wherein:
Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a radio guide that embodies the present invention; and
Fig. 2 is a schematic and block diagram of a circuit that embodies the present invention and that forms a part of the radio guide that is shown in Fig. 1.
The radio guide that is shown in Fig. 1' and that comprises one type of physical device in which the present invention may be used, comamended April 30, 1928; 370 0. G. 757) prises a pair of loop antennas I and 2 that are fixed relatively to one another in intersecting planes and that preferably are vertically disposed. The loops l and 2 are mounted upon radio receivers 3 and 4, respectively, that have a meter 5 interposed therebetween and that receive output from a common audio oscillator 8 in accord.- ance with the teaching of my invention. The radio guide as a whole is rotatable about a vertical axis A-A. Operatively, signal that is inter:- cepted by the loop antenna l is fed to the radio receiver 3 where it is amplified and detected. A signal that is proportional to the strength of the radio signal that is picked up by the loop I is passed from the receiver 3 to a double signal strength meter 5 where a pointer 1 indicates the signal strength on a dial part thereof, In a similar manner, signal that is intercepted by the loop antenna 2 isfed to the radio receiver 8 and a signal that is proportional to the strength of the signal that is intercepted by the loop 2 is passed from the receiver i to the double signal strength meter 5 where apointer 8 thereof in-'- dicates the signal strength on a dial part thereof. The meter 5 comprises a pair of usual meters that are positioned so that preferably their pointers cross each other and preferably in their null positions are collinear and are oppositely directed. The radio receivers 3 and 4 each receive a common auxiliary gain control signal from an audio oscillator 6, by means of which the gains of the two receivers 3 and 4 are maintained constant and equal to each other. The present invention comprises means for maintaining the gain of the receivers 3 and 4 constantand equal upon the interception of signal by the antenna! l and 2, and a preferred circuit therefor is shown in Fig.2 of the accompanying drawing. The circuit that embodies the present invention and that is shown in Fig. 2 of the drawings is applicable to the individual receivers 3 and 6 that are shown in Fig. 1 and its presentation as a part of the receiver 3 may be taken as being illustrative of its application to other receivers, such as the receiver 4 or the like, as well as to its application in general. 1
In the circuit that is shown in Fig. 2, radio signal is fed to the receiver 3 thru the pair of antenna terminals III that connect directly to a radio frequency transformer primary winding II that is tuned by a variable condenser l2 and that is balanced to ground as shown. A transformer secondary winding I3 is inductively coupled with the primary winding 1 l, is tuned variably by a condenser l4, and is connected at one end to the grid of an amplifier tube II that has its cathode to ground. ,7
An auxiliary gain control audio oscillator 8 is connected to the receiver 3 thru a pair of terminals l8 that connect with a primary winding ll of an audio transformer wlthinthe receiver 3. The transformer primary winding I1 is shunted by a fixed condenser 18 and is inductively coupled with a secondary winding It.
The transformer secondary windings i3 and II are connected in series between the grid of the amplifier tube It and a grid bias supply lead 23. A capacitor 2! provides a by-pass for radio signal around the audio transformer secondary winding is and, if desired, providesa means for tuning the audio transformer to the frequency of the auxiliary gain control signal from the audio oscillator 8.
The interstage coupling between the amplifier tube 18 and the succeeding amplifier tube 22 is seen to be by transformer coupling through two transformers, one variably tuned radio frequency transformer 23. the other an audio transformer 24. The primary windings of such transformers are in series in the plate circuit of tube IS; the secondary windings thereof are in series in the grid circuit of amplifier tube 22 between the grid thereof and grid bias supply lead 20. Capacitors 21, 28 by-pass radio frequency current around the primary and secondary coils, respectively, of audio transformer 24 and may be used to tune audio transformer 24, if desired. The primary and secondary windings of the transformer 23 are preferably variably tuned by suitable means such as by the variable capacitors 23 and 28 or the like.
The output circuit of amplifier tube 22 is entirely similar to that of amplifier tube IS. The primary of a tuned radio frequency transformer 32 is connected in series with the primary of an audio transformer 33, the two being in series between the plate of amplifier tube 22 and the plate voltage supply 3+. Radio frequency current is by-passed about the primary coil of transformer 33 by a capacitor 38, which may also be used to tune audio transformer 33.
The variably tuned secondary winding of the radio frequency transformer 32 is connected in series with a load resistor 38 across a diode detector tube 39. The load resistor 38 is connected in parallel with a radio by-pass capacitor 31. The output'of the receiver 3 appears across a pair of terminals 40 that are connected to the ends of the load resistor 38. The output of the receiver 3 is a signal that is proportional tothe signal strength of the input radio signal that is intercepted by the loop antenna 1 and that is passed to the meter where it causes a deflection of the needle 8 part thereof to give a signal strength reading.
The secondary winding of the audio transformer 33 is tuned by a capacitor 4| that also serves to by-pass radio frequencyenergy, therearound, and is connected in series with a load resistor 42 in parallel with an audio by-pass capacitor 44, across a diode detector tube 43. An adjustable tap 45 at the end of the grid bias supply lead 20 and variably engaging the load resistor 42 provides a controlled grid bias supply to both of the amplifier tubes i5 and 22. The cathodes of the amplifier tubes [5 and 22 and of the diodes 39 and 43 are grounded as shown.
The circuit of the receiver 4 is substantially a replica of that of the receiver 3, receiving radio signal that is intercepted by the antenna 2 thru a pair of leads 43 and supply output thru the pair of leads 41 to the meter 8 where the output signal strength thereof is recorded by the position of the meter arm I. It is connected to auxiliary gain control audio oscillator 8 in parallel with receiver 3 and in similar fashion.
It will be seen that by interstage transformer coupling of two transformers with primaries and secondaries respectively in series, one transformer being at radio frequency, the other at audio frequency, the receiver system of receiver 3 amplifies simultaneously two signals, one radio the other audio. It is seen that the radio and audio signals are coupled into the system independently, they pass through independently, and each is detected independently. The detected radio signal forms the output signal of the radio receiver 3. The detected audio signal supplies the grid bias voltage. for the amplifier tubes l4 and 22, and operates" after the manner of a conventional automatic gain control voltage. For example, if the plate voltage supply to amplifier tubes 14 and 22 should increase, the resulting increased gain of the amplifier stages would effect an increase in the audio input to detector 43. and an increased direct voltage drop across load resistor 42. This, in turn, would increase the negative bias on amplifier tubes l3 and 22, which would introduce a decrease in gain and thus offset the initialing increase in gain. The gain of the receiver 3 for radio frequency signal would thus be maintained constant.
It is to be noted that while the customary operation of automatic gain control is to maintain a constant output signal for a varying input signal by automatic variation of amplifier gain,
' the operation of.my invention is to preserve constant the gainof the amplifier circuit in the presence of disturbing influences by the use of a constant intensity of auxiliary signal input and the use of the output signal corresponding thereto to maintain constant the gain of the amplifier.
The successful operation of my invention is based on the fact that the radio and audio signals may be passed through the system independently and without interaction, and that insofar as electronic factors are concerned the operation of the circuit is identical for both, and variations of the electronic factors afiect the gain of a receiver embodying my invention equally for both the radio and audio signal.
It will be noted that the frequency difference between the radio and audio signals need not be extreme; it is only requisite that the frequencies be readily separable by tuned filters'in the detector stages of the particular circuit involved.
Where desired, a volume control, not shown, may be disposed within the audio oscillator 6 whereby the amplitude of the auxiliary audio signal may be varied and, in turn, the set gain of the receiver 3. The increase of the auxiliary signal serves to decrease the gain of the receiver.
The circuit in the receivers 3 and 4 are substantially identical and are fed by the same auxiliary gain control signal from the audio oscillator 6, as previously stated. The radio signal that is supplied to the receiver 3 and 4 may be of the same frequency in which event the receivers 3 and 4 will be tuned alike, or they may be of different frequencies, in which event the receivers 3 and 4 will be tuned differently.
Since the receivers 3 and 4 are substantially alike in circuit, construction, and mode of operation, and since both of the receivers have their automatic gain controls controlled by auxiliary signal in common from the single source ofthe audio oscillator 6, the gains of the two receivers may safely be assumed to be equal, at least for a common frequency of radio signal.
When the two signals to be compared are of unlike frequencies, the gains of the receivers may be different due to variation of circuit Q with frequency. The variation of gain with frequency may be determined by well-known means and allowed for.
The output signals from the receivers 3 and 4 will, therefore, be in the same relative proportion as the input signals that are supplied thereto. This constancy of proportion between the two input signals and the two output signals will be consistently maintained even though the character of the auxiliary signal varies somewhat, because the gains of the two amplifiers for a radio signal would tend to be maintained alike even though not strictly constant. It will, therefore, be observed that the device that is contemplated hereby serves to compare the ratios of two radio signals that are too weak to be compared directly.
It is to be understood that the direction finder, the circuit and the particular circuit components that have. been described and disclosed herein have been submitted for the purposes of illustrating and describing one embodiment of the present invention and that the circuit that is disclosed herein may be adopted for use in devices other than the direction finder that is illustrated in Fig. 1 of the drawings and that similarly operating modifications and changes in the circuit and in the components thereof may be made without departing from the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
What I claim is:
1. A radio direction finder system including two independent channels, each of said channels comrising an amplifier tube, means supplying thereto a principal signal for amplification, means supplying an auxiliary continuous uniform signal superimposed upon the principal signal in said amplifier tube, detector means selectively responsive to the auxiliary signal, and automatic gain control means responsive to said detector and maintaining constant the amplification of said amplifier tube simultaneously with amplification of the principal signal therein.
2. A radio direction finder system including two independent channels, each of said channels comprising an amplifier tube, means supplying thereto a principal signal, means supplying thereto an auxiliary signal constant and continuous and having a frequency distinct from that of the principal signal, an amplifier tube amplifying both signals simultaneously, detector means selectively responsive to the amplified auxiliary signal on the basis of frequency, and an automatic gain control responsive to said detector and maintaining constant the gain of said amplifier tube simultaneously with amplification of the principal signal therein.
HARRY WILKIE.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Great Britain Oct. 22. 1940
US576096A 1945-02-03 1945-02-03 Dual channel gain control Expired - Lifetime US2477028A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US576096A US2477028A (en) 1945-02-03 1945-02-03 Dual channel gain control

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US576096A US2477028A (en) 1945-02-03 1945-02-03 Dual channel gain control

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2477028A true US2477028A (en) 1949-07-26

Family

ID=24302964

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US576096A Expired - Lifetime US2477028A (en) 1945-02-03 1945-02-03 Dual channel gain control

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2477028A (en)

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2804590A (en) * 1953-06-20 1957-08-27 Tanaka Isokazu Apparatus applicable to comparison of electric devices
US2809290A (en) * 1953-06-26 1957-10-08 Vitro Corp Of America Function generator
US2848615A (en) * 1956-05-21 1958-08-19 Philco Corp Frequency control system
US2853601A (en) * 1954-05-03 1958-09-23 Hughes Aircraft Co Automatic gain control
US2890442A (en) * 1951-05-11 1959-06-09 Sperry Gyroscope Co Ltd Failure warning systems for navigational apparatus
US2929060A (en) * 1957-03-20 1960-03-15 Seismograph Service Corp Radio location system
US2943317A (en) * 1955-04-27 1960-06-28 Robert A Zachary Automatic gain control for monopulse radar
US2974224A (en) * 1956-08-28 1961-03-07 Gilfillan Bros Inc Apparatus for automatic gain control
US2999238A (en) * 1954-10-28 1961-09-05 Henry H George Automatic error sensitivity control for radar receiver
US3064195A (en) * 1960-05-05 1962-11-13 Benco Television Associates Lt Signal distribution system
US3164831A (en) * 1956-05-09 1965-01-05 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Automatic gain control circuits for directive receiving systems
US3262057A (en) * 1960-01-11 1966-07-19 Marconi Co Ltd Gain control systems

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1677224A (en) * 1926-03-23 1928-07-17 American Telephone & Telegraph Carrier-receiving system
US1927128A (en) * 1931-12-02 1933-09-19 American Telephone & Telegraph Gain control apparatus
US2170835A (en) * 1933-11-10 1939-08-29 Jennie S Simon Navigational system
US2208617A (en) * 1939-02-11 1940-07-23 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Signal transmission system
GB528061A (en) * 1939-04-21 1940-10-22 Peter William Willans Improvements in or relating to radio direction finding apparatus
US2249425A (en) * 1940-03-27 1941-07-15 Rca Corp Phase and frequency modulation diversity receiving system
US2318338A (en) * 1938-06-02 1943-05-04 Radio Navigational Instr Corp Radio direction finder

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1677224A (en) * 1926-03-23 1928-07-17 American Telephone & Telegraph Carrier-receiving system
US1927128A (en) * 1931-12-02 1933-09-19 American Telephone & Telegraph Gain control apparatus
US2170835A (en) * 1933-11-10 1939-08-29 Jennie S Simon Navigational system
US2318338A (en) * 1938-06-02 1943-05-04 Radio Navigational Instr Corp Radio direction finder
US2208617A (en) * 1939-02-11 1940-07-23 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Signal transmission system
GB528061A (en) * 1939-04-21 1940-10-22 Peter William Willans Improvements in or relating to radio direction finding apparatus
US2249425A (en) * 1940-03-27 1941-07-15 Rca Corp Phase and frequency modulation diversity receiving system

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2890442A (en) * 1951-05-11 1959-06-09 Sperry Gyroscope Co Ltd Failure warning systems for navigational apparatus
US2804590A (en) * 1953-06-20 1957-08-27 Tanaka Isokazu Apparatus applicable to comparison of electric devices
US2809290A (en) * 1953-06-26 1957-10-08 Vitro Corp Of America Function generator
US2853601A (en) * 1954-05-03 1958-09-23 Hughes Aircraft Co Automatic gain control
US2999238A (en) * 1954-10-28 1961-09-05 Henry H George Automatic error sensitivity control for radar receiver
US2943317A (en) * 1955-04-27 1960-06-28 Robert A Zachary Automatic gain control for monopulse radar
US3164831A (en) * 1956-05-09 1965-01-05 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Automatic gain control circuits for directive receiving systems
US2848615A (en) * 1956-05-21 1958-08-19 Philco Corp Frequency control system
US2974224A (en) * 1956-08-28 1961-03-07 Gilfillan Bros Inc Apparatus for automatic gain control
US2929060A (en) * 1957-03-20 1960-03-15 Seismograph Service Corp Radio location system
US3262057A (en) * 1960-01-11 1966-07-19 Marconi Co Ltd Gain control systems
US3064195A (en) * 1960-05-05 1962-11-13 Benco Television Associates Lt Signal distribution system

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2477028A (en) Dual channel gain control
EP0029027B1 (en) Antenna low-noise q spoiling circuit
US2259982A (en) Radio distance meter
GB536917A (en) Improvements in or relating to modulated-carrier signal receivers of the homodyne type
GB1170522A (en) Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectrometers
US2186182A (en) Frequency measuring device
GB1190459A (en) A Circuit Arrangement for Automatically Tuning a Communication Apparatus.
US2879382A (en) Field strength meter
US2311522A (en) High frequency receiver
US2403955A (en) Electron tube circuit
US2173231A (en) Measuring instrument
FR1337030A (en) Raid transistor receiver
GB574933A (en) Improvements in or relating to radio systems for landing aeroplanes
US3167719A (en) Phase locked detector
US2525780A (en) Electrical frequency discriminator circuit
US2810826A (en) Saturable reactor tuning of superheterodyne receiver with differential control of saturation for tracking
US2546307A (en) Limiter circuit for telemetering systems
US3200399A (en) Distance measuring system and apparatus
US2062906A (en) Direction finder
US2685648A (en) Apparatus for measuring frequency deviation
US3204229A (en) Signal transmitter
US2159159A (en) Method of and means for indicating direction
US2511014A (en) Diversity receiving combination
US2120303A (en) Gain control device
US1660108A (en) Radio apparatus