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05 May 1991

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F L U KE AND P H IL IPS - TH E GLOBA L AL L IANCE I N T E ST & M EASUR EM EN T

est.
AnaIol9taI dospiay
Volts. ohms. lOA &
mA(bolhlusedl..
_lest
0.3%basic de
accuracy
TouchHold'
conlinuity
A..
200J + hOU'
batte<yife
Mullc>t1Pose holsler
3-ywwarranly
FLUKE 77
$159'

Vols. ohms, lOA &
mA(bolhlusedl.
diode lest
conlir'<Jl1y

200J + hOlK
battery Ide
FLUKE 75
SlI9'
0.5% basic de
accuracy
'SuQoesIed US lost price
FLUKE PHILIPS
200J + hOlK
battery I,e
3-ywwarranty
FLUKE 73
$19'

Vols. ohms. lOA
(!used).diode lest
O.l%basic de
aetl>'acy
More than two million users agree: the
Fluke 70 Series handhelddigital multi meters
are simply the best.
These ori ginals have become classics. And
the reasonsare simple.
Theyare accurate andeasytouse. Features
made popular by the 70 Series- like fast
autorangi ng, continuity beeper, and quick
diode test-are now standards in the industry.
Other 70Series features stand alone. Touch
Hold, for example, locksthe reading on
thedisplayand signals youwithabeep. So
you cankeep your eyes on the circuit and
probes.
The70 Series are built without compromise.
All current ranges are fUlly fused. The
resi stancefunction is overloadprotectedto
500V. No detail hasbeenoverlookedin
makingtheseruggedand reli abl emeters
the first choice of two million professionals.
Made in the USA using state-of-the-art man-
ufacturing methods, every Ruke 70 Series
multimeter isbacked by a3-year warranty.
Another first inthe industry.
Choosing the best handheldmulti meter is
very simple. Pick up the Fluke70Series at
your Fluke distributor today. Or call
180044FLUKE, ext 33, for afree
brochure.
JohnFl ukeMfg. Co., Inc. P.O. Box 9090. Everett, WA98206. U.S.:
(206)3565400. Canada: (416)8907600. Other countries: (206)
3565500. 1990 JohnFlukeMfg. Co., Inc. All rightsreserved.
Ad. no. 0701FlO
FROM THE WORLD LEADER
IN DIGITALMULTIMETERS.
CIRCLE 121 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
May 1991
Vol. 62 No.5
VILD 7HIS
33 DRAM TESTER
Build an under-$60 DRAM unit that performs dynamic-RAM function,
speed, and margin tests.
Fred Hufft
41 PULSE-MATE
Our inexpensive single-shot and continuous-pulse generator offers
positive and negative pulses.
David Plant
44 USE YOUR TELEPHONES AS A HOME INTERCOM
SYSTEM
It's easy to do with our controller board and alert modules!
Frank Polimene
56 EXPERIMENTING WITH PCBASED TEST EQUIPMENT
Build your own low-cost PC-based test equipment.
James J. Barbarello
I
7ECHNOLOOY
49 INSIDE SWITCHING POWER SUPPLIES
Learn some applications of, and basic troubleshooting techniques
for, two switching regulator IC families.
Harry L. Trietely
61 PERSONAL COMMUNICATION NETWORK
Can PCN microcell technology make affordable mobile
communications a reality?
Roger P. Newell
PAGE 41
USE YOUR
TELEPHONES
ASAHOME
INTERCOM
I SYSTEM
g t ~ i i
I '
PAGE 44
DEPAR7MEN7S AND MORE
6 VIDEO NEWS
What's new in this fast-
changing field.
David Lachenbruch
65 HARDWARE HACKER
More on toner-cartridge
reloading and Santa Claus
machines!
Don Lancaster
72 AUDIO UPDATE
Audio Amplifiers: Do they
sound different?
Larry Klein
75 DRAWING BOARD
A si mple. inexpensi ve logic
probe .
Robert Grossblatt
77 COMPUTER
CONNECTIONS
Video standards.
Jeff Holtzman
96 Advertising and Sales
Offices
96 Advertising Index
12 Ask R-E
14 Letters
84 Market Center
28 New Lit
22 New Products
4 What's News
50A RE-Shopper*
CD
_____________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ --L ~
*Incl uded in selected issues onl y.
1
ON THE COVER
If you' ve ever had to expand your
PC's RAM capacity, troubleshoot a
memory problem, or upgrade the cy-
cle speed of a memory band, you've
had the need for a dynamic RAM
(DRAM) tester li ke the one featured
on page 33. Our DRAM tester pro-
vides an easy method of function
testing and measuring the speed
(access time) of DRAM IC's. You
could spend anything from $150 to
$1000 to buy a DRAM tester. Or you
could build our mu ltifuncti on unit-
which can function test, accurately
test speed, and automatically cycle
the tests under high-, low-, Or nor-
mal-voltage margins-for less than
$60!
Hugo Gems back <1 8841967) founder
Larry Steckler. EHF. CET,
editor-in-chief and publisher
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Brian C. Fenton, editor
Marc Spiwak, associate editor
Kim Dunleavy,
assistant technical editor
Terl Scaduto, assistant editor
JeHrey K. Holtzman
computer ed itor
Robert Grossblatt. circuits editor
Larry Klein, audio editor
David Lachenbruch
contribut ing ed itor
Don Lancaster
co ntributing edito r
Richard D. Fitch
contributing editor
Kathy Terenzi. editorial assistant
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COMING NEXT MONTH
THE JUNE ISSUE
GOES ON SALE
MAY 7.
BUILD A 50-MHZ LOGIC ANALYZER
Portable unit with its own LCD, can also be interfaced to you r PC.
BUILD AN ELECTRONIC COMPASS
A Hall-effect sensor shows you the way.
VOLTAGE-TO-FREQUENCY CONVERTERS
How to use them in your designs.
PCBASED TEST EQUIPMENT
More experiments teach the basics of PC-based test equipment.
As a servi ce to readers. RADIO -ELECTRONICS publ ishes available pl ans or inform ation relating to newsworthy products,
techniques and scie ntific and t echnologi cal developments. Because of possibl e variances in t he quality and cond it ion of
materi al s and workmanshi p used by readers, RADIO -ELECTRONICS di scl aims any responsi bili ty for the safe and proper
functioning of reader-bui lt projects based upon or from pl ans or informat ion publi shed in this magazine.
Since some of the equipment and circuitry described in RADIO-ELECTRONICSmay relate to or be covered by U.S. patents.
RADIO-ELECTRONICS disclaims any liabilityfor the infringement of such patents bythe making.using. or sellingofany such
equipm ent or ci rcuitry. and suggests that anyone int erest ed in such proj ects consult a patent att omey.
RADIOELECTRONICS. lISSN0033-7862) May1991. Published monthly by Gemsback Publications. Inc.. 5OO- B Bi-County
Boulevard. Farmingdale. NY11735Second-Class Postage paidat Farmingdale. NYandadditional mailingoffices. Second-Class
mail registrat ion No. 9242. aut horized at Toront o, Canada. One- year subsc ri pti on rate U.S.A. and possessions $17.97, Canada
$25.65 (includes G.S.T. Canadian Goods and Services Tax Registration No. R125166280). all other countries $26.97. All
subscript ion orders payable i n U.SA . funds only. via i nternati onal postal money order or check drawn on a U.S.A. bank. Single
copies $2.95. I!:> 1991 by Gemsback Publications. Inc. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
POSTMASTER: Please send address changes to RADIO-ELECTRONICS. Subscription Dept.. Box 55115. Boulder. CO
80321511 5.
A stam:r ed self-addressed envelope must accompany all submitted manuscripts and/ or artw ork or photographs if their return is
desire should they be rej ected . We di scl aim any responsibi l ity for the loss or damage of manuscripts and/or artwork or
photographs while in our possession or ot herwise.
ART DEPARTMENT
Andre Duzant, art director
Injae Lee. illustrator
Russell C. Truelson. illustrator
PRODUCTION DEPARTMENT
Ruby M. Yee, production director
Janice Box.
ed itoria l production
Karen S. Brown
advertising production
Marcella Amoroso
production assistant
CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT
Jacqueline P. Cheeseboro
circulation director
Wendy Alanko
circulation analyst
Theresa Lombardo
circulation assistant
Michele Torrillo. reprint bookstore
Typography by Mates Graphics
Cover photo by Diversified Photo
Services
Radio-Electronics is indexed in
Applied Science & Technology Index
and Readers Guide to Periodical liter-
ature.
Microfilm & Microfiche editions are
ava ilable. Contact circulation depart-
ment for details.
Advertising Sales OHices listed
on page 98.
Badio-Electronlcs Executive and
Administrat ive f f i ~ s
1-516-293-3000.
Subscriber Customer Service:
1-8002880652.
Order Entry for New Subscribers :
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WHAT'S NEWS
A review of the latest happenings in electronics.
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All-digital HDTV development
Major changes have occurred in
the US development of HOTV over
the past few years . Where NTSC-
compatible systems were the early
favorites , the FCC has indicated that
it will select a simulcast 6-MHz HOTV
broadcast standard in 1993-and it is
unlikely that the FCC will even con-
sider any analog systems.
After 18 months of cooperative
effort. Zenith Electronics Corpora-
tion (Glenview, IU, AT&TBell Labora-
tories , and AT&T Microelectronics
unveiled an all-digital high-definition
system that is said to solve many of
the problems associated wit h simul-
casting. Zenith handled system defi-
nition and transmission technology,
AT&T Bell Labs designed and imple-
mented a new video-compression
system, and AT&T Microelectronics
supplied the necessary semiconduc-
tor technology.
Interference now renders unusable
many standard 6-MHz channels in
the VHF and UHF broadcast spec-
t rum, includ ing those that are tar-
geted to carry HOTV simulcasts.
Building upon key elements of
Zenith 's previously proposed, par-
tially digital "Spectrum Compatible"
HOTV, the Zenith/AT&T system uses
an advanced digital filtering system
that prevents high-powered NTSC
signals from interfering with HOTV
signals, allowing use of those cur-
rently taboo channels. The system,
which uses a unique digital filter at the
HOTV t ransmitt er and a complemen-
tary filter in the HOTV receiver, is said
to offer interference- and noise-free
signals.
AT&T's research in digital video
compression, channel equa lization
(ghost canceling) , and advanced
high-speed processors rounded out
the system. A crit ical element is a
video-compressi on algorithm that is
used to squeeze the enormous
amount of HOTV data into a 6-MHz
channel without los s of resol ution.
The compression technique involves
mot ion compensat ion, analys is of
each frame to prepare it for transmis-
sion, and modification of the signal to
compensate for the properties of
human vision and the idiosyncrasies
of the 6-MHz channels. The HOTV
sys tem required high-speed digital
signal processors (OSP's), de-
veloped by AT&TMicroelectronics, to
perform the filtering , data encoding ,
and formatting functions.
The result of all that cooperation is
an HOTV system that transmits 1575
horizontal picture lines 30 times a
second (compared to 1125 or 1050
lines from competing systems). .It
uses progressive scan with square
pixels, making it easier to interface
with computer workstations and to
eliminate the jagged edges and other
artifacts. Zenith says the system pro-
vides "movie-theater-quality pictures
and four-channel compact-disc quali-
ty digital audio."
We'll learn if their system has what
it takes when testing of the five sys-
tems remaining in the HOTV race
(from an original field of more than
twenty) begins this fall by the Ad-
vanced Television Testing Center, Ca-
ble Television Laboratories Inc., and
the Canadian Communications Re-
search Center. After testing is com-
pleted , the FCC's Advisory Commit-
tee on Advanced Television Services
is expected to recommend one as the
standard in 1992 . The FCC is ex-
pected to consider their recommen-
We
want You
LISI'ENING
For ALi1etime__
THE EtA'S HEARING-SAFETY CAM-
PAIGN, launched in January at the Winter
Consumer Electronics Show, aims to edu-
cate consumers about the dangers of too-
high decibel levels.
dation and select a standard in the
second quarter of 1993.
National hearing-safety
campaign
The Electronics Industries Associ-
ation (EIA) , along with electronic-
equipment manufacturers and re-
tailers nationwide, launched a year-
long publ ic-service program at the
1991 Winter Consumer Electronics
Show to help Americans protect their
hearing through the safe use of con-
sumer electronics. Experts estimate
that 28 million Americans suffer sig-
nificant hearing problems, and that 10
million of those suffer hearing loss
due to excess noise. The EIA's " We
Want You Listening For a Lifetime"
campaign provides tips on safe
equipment use and general informa-
tion on potential hearing damage
caused by playing sound systems at
unsafe decibel levels.
High-speed quantum FET
A new device, developed by Valid
Logic Systems (San Jose, CM engi-
neer Gene Cavanaugh, is expected
to surpass the 0.2-fLm technology
that has been considered the prac-
tical limit for conventional semicon-
ductor technology. Called the quan-
tum FET, or QFET, the device
potentia lly increases logic speed ten
times , and simu ltaneously reduces
power requirements and size by ap-
proximately a factor of ten. Cav-
anaugh has applied for a patent and
has approached Texas Instruments,
IBM, and Intel concerning possible
licensing agreements to provide an
opening for actual QFET production.
The single-junction QFET's t ake
advantage of "quantum tunneling," a
physical phenomena that increases
speed by eliminati ngthe area of elec-
tronic conduct ion in which carriers
slow down by up to 3000 times . A
manufacturing process called rapid
thermal processi ng, or RTP, based on
ultra-fine layers of material , is used.
The device has potential application s
in developing design-automation
tools that benefit from high speed,
low power, and small size. R-E
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1991 THECOMPUTER BOOKCLUB Blue Ridge Summit, PA 17294-Q82Q
All books are hardcover unl ess number is followed by a " P" for paperback. (Publishers' PricesShown)
When it's newand important in business or personal computing,
The Computer Book Club has the information youneed
at savings of up to 50% offpublishers' prices!
Membership Benefits Big Savings. In addition to this introductory
offer, you keep saving SUbstantially with members' prices of up to 50% off the
publishers' prices. Bonus Books. Start ing immediately, you will be eligible for
our Bonus Book Plan, with savings of up to 80% off publishers' prices. Club
News Bulletins. 15 times per year you will receive t he Book Club News, describ-
ing all the current selections-mains, alternates, extras-plus bonus offers and
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withi n 10 days without obl igationl Exceptional Quali ty . All books are quality
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NEWS
Whats new in the fast-changing video industry
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Low-cost captions. In a hurry-
up effort to implement the recent
Congressional mandate to include
closed-caption decoders in al l TV
sets 13 inches and larger (Radio-
Electronics, October 1990), a spe-
cial Electronics Industries Associa-
tion (ElM task force recommended
new parameters that would make de-
coders inexpensive by building upon
the on-screen character-generation
systems already used in many sets.
The EIA plan, which would decipher
existing closed captions for the hear-
ing impaired , forme d the basis for an
FCC rule-making proposal. Members
of the task force said the proposed
system might add $2 or $3 to the
cost of a TV set.
The EIA plan envisions certain
compromises , mak ing some cur-
rently mandatory aspects of caption
decoding optional. Those include a
special full -screen "text" mode that
isn't widel y used at present, a second
data channel , and captions in color. In
exchange , the EIA proposes that
Field 2 of Line 21 of the vert ical blank-
ing interval be opened up for a bet -
ter-but optional-second channel,
and that the captions be capable of
locat ion anywhe re on the screen to
avoid interference wi th material in the
picture .
The proposal was approved by all
members of the EIA task force except
the National Captioning Institute,
which said its own system, currently
in use, could also come down to the
$2-$3 level when chips are available
in large quant ities from a variety of
sources. The EIA plan possibly can
be combined with another EIAproject
being explored by receiver- and cable-
engineering interests. That is a stan-
dardized "program identification sys-
tem," which would make poss ible on-
screen labeling of station call letters
and program titles, along with such
information as the running time of the
programand how much more remains
to be shown, at the push of a remote-
control button. Ulti mately, such infor-
mation could be combined wit h auto-
maticall y recording VCR's, t o tape
programs of specific interest-for ex-
ample, all non-scheduled news bul-
letins , or all operas .
The FCC was ordered by Con-
gress to promulgate final closed-cap-
tioning rules by April 12. New TV sets
made or imported on July 1, 1993 or
later must inc l ude caption de-
coders-but some manufacturers
are expected to add the decoders to
their sets some time this year if t he
simplified EIA-proposed rules are
adopted.
Digital HDTV. As in audio, "d ig-
ital" has become the magic word in
high -definition TV systems. Most
contenders for consideration as the
American system now haveshifted to
digital systems, although detai led en
gineering plans sti ll are scanty. Major
digital systems now incl ude those un-
der development by the ACTV Co n-
sortium, consisting of Thomson,
Philips, NBC, and the Sarnoff Re-
search Center; the Zenith-AT&T
combine; and General Inst rument.
In the latest development, the MIT
team, which had proposed an analog
system, is working wit h Genera l in-
strument on a combined digital tec h-
nology. There are some dissenting
voices in the digital race, however. Dr.
Wi lliam Schreiber, formerly of MIT
and a longtime TV authority who in
the past has questioned the consum-
er benefits of HDTV, has decried the
"stampede" to digital systems at a
time when digital transmission hasn't
been proven pract ical. He warned
that if all American proposals are dig-
ital and digital transmission proves
impractical, the 20-year-old Japanese
system could be the winner in the
U.S. by default.
Interactive video. The FCC has
started a rule-making procedure to
set aside frequencies for "interactive
video data service" (IVDS) , which
could be used for pay-per-view sys-
tems, home shopping, games, edu-
cational programming, and even for
programming VCR's. The Commis-
sion proposes to allocate 500 kHz in
the 218-MHz band to IVDS, and to
license two operators in each service
area to share in this servi ce from
home to TV station or cable system.
One interactive proponent said that
such a system could probably oper-
ate much like cellular phone net-
works, each cell site connecting up to
10,000 homes by radio and being ca-
pable of handling up to 600,000 mes-
sages per minute.
Multimedia Computing. What
is claimed to be the first mass-market
computer with int eractive multimedia
capabi lity wi ll be manufactured by
Emerson Technologies for Trac, At-
lanta, and designed to sell for less
than $2 ,000. The price breakthrough,
accordi ng to Emerson, is the result of
the availability of the" PC Video" chip
developed by Chips & Technologies
Inc., San Jose, CA. That single-chip
processor permits PC's to accom-
modate input from VCR's, camcor-
ders, TV sets , laser discs , and other
video sources, for display on the
monitor and storage in the PC's pro-
gram. It will even let computer oper-
ators watch and listen to on-screen
newscasts while involved in other-
wise serious labor. The PC Vi deo
chip initially is priced at $55 involume
and is claimed to reduce the cost of
adding multimedia to computers by
as much as 70%.
Instant Video. You may not want
to see a full-length movie in 15 sec-
onds, but Explore Technology, of
Phoenix, AZ., thinks that's all the time
that's needed to transmit it. Explore is
proposing a pay-per-view syst em,
based on its patent for data compres-
sion, which permits transmission of
programming in short bursts to a re-
ceiver which stores the informati on
briefly in memory, and then plays it
back with the proper timing. Explore
says the saving in transmissi on costs
wi ll make such programs competitive
with video rentals. The system is said
to be compatible with any transmi s-
sion medium, and includes a trans-
mitter and receiver th at can be
connected by fiber, satel lite, broad-
cast, coaxial cable, or even phone
lines. R-E
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One company measures up.
Write to Ask R-E, Radio-Electronics, 500-B Bi-County Blvd., Farmingdale, NY 11735
FIG. 1-APCKEYBOARD is a small computer in itself. This keyboard's circuitry is based
on an 8048 microcontroller that's specifically designed to handle and control I/O.
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PRINT-SCREEN INDICATOR
I'd like to modify my IBM-
style keyboard so it has an in-
dicator to show when I'm
using the print-screen func-
tion. Ideally it should be some-
thing similar to the CAPS LOCK,
NUM LOCK, and SCROLL LOCK LED's
t hat I currently have. Any
id e a s ? - T. Waller, Yorktown
Heights, NY
What you're asking is one of those
things that seem simple but is actu-
ally quite complex. It's a kind of "Why
is the sky blue?" type question.
The first thing to understand is that
the PC's keyboard is different from
the ones used by Apples and a few of
the other popular home computers.
The first difference is that it's not a
simple matrix keyboard in which each
keypress connects two or more wires
together to generate a series of highs
and lows on a multi-pin connector.
The PC keyboard is a serial device,
and the standard five-pin connector
carries the data, power, clock,
ground, and reset signals on sepa-
rate lines.
The second difference becomes
evident once you know of the first
difference, since you can't generate
serial data without a bunch of silicon.
As a result, the PC keyboard is really
a small computer in it sel f and, al-
though different keyboard manufac-
turers use different IC's , most of
them base the keyboard circuitry
around a microprocessor specifically
designed to handle and control I/O.
The 803X, 804X, and 805X micro-
processor series from Intel is a fairly
common choice . Figure 1 shows the
inside of such a keyboard .
Knowing those facts , you can see
that what you want to do has to in-
volve a lot more than piggybacking an
LED onto a couple of switches.
That isn't to say that what you want
to do is impossible. It' s an involved
project and would more than likely
require you to design some circuitry
of your own. Keep in mind that, if you
build something that sits inside your
keyboard and mon itors anythi ng
other than the output, you 'l l more
than likely be able to use the device
only on your own particu lar keyboard .
Different keyboards use different cir-
cuitry. There's not enough room here
to go into the details of building a
circuit like this but I can block out the
approach that I would follow.
There are two basic approaches to
the problem. The first is to monitor
the data going from the keyboard to
the computer and the other is to cap-
ture the particular combination of
switch closures in the keyboard be-
fore they reach the keyboard's con-
troller. I'm not going to take a guess
as to which would be easier but , if I
was doi ng this, I'd choose the first
alternat ive since I wouldn't want to
take any chance of damagi ng the key-
board circuitry.
If you do want to modify the key-
board itself, you could try to identify
the combination of highs and lows
sent on the keyboard's internal data
bus whenever you do a Print Screen .
Once you've found those, you could
buffer and decode them to drive an
indicator such as an LED.
CABLE TRACER
I'd like to trace the path of an
underground power cable.
One end is above ground and
the other end is lost some-
where below ground. Neither
end is connected to power.
Isn't there some sort of wave
generator I could build that
would provide a signal I could
trace with a receiver and an-
tenna?-D. Andrew, British
Columbia, CA
It's really terrific when a simple
question like this has a really simple
answer. I've faced this problem my-
self and I'll pass along the method I
used.
Most of the commercial equipment
that's designed for this purpose
works exactly as you described. A
signal is sent along the wire and a
special ly tuned receiver picks it up.
Depending on the amount of bells
and whistles, that sort of gear can set
you back an impressive number of
bucks. But there's an alternative.
As long as you're sure that both
ends of the cable aren' t connected to
anything, connect the above-ground
end to the 120VAC line (through a
fuse and ground-fault protector).
Once you've done that. connect the
noisiest appliance you haveto the line
and turn it on. The best ones to use
are those with motors that havea set
of old brushes in them. You can usu-
ally spot that by seeing whether lots
of sparks are created where the
brushes ride on the motor.
Each one of the sparks is generat-
ing a lot of RF noise that's being
transmitted down the cable. You can
detect the noise with a portable radio
since the noise spreads across a
wide band of the spectrum. All you
have to do is tune the radio between
stat ions (you may find the AM band is
bette r), turn up the volume, and fol-
low the static across the ground. This
may seem a primitive method but it's
exact ly the method used by the" high
priced spread."
KEYBOARD UPGRADE
How can I make a 101-key
keyboard from an IBM AT op-
erate with an IBM-compatible
WYSE PC+ model WY-1400-
201 I would be willing to build
some simple circuitry if it's
necessary.-B. Van de Ayr,
Chehalis, WA
While there's probably no reason
why you can 't do what you want,
there are a few problems in getti ng it
done. I'm not familiar with either the
Wyse-PC + or its keyboard but, just
because the computers are compati -
ble, there's no guarantee that the key-
boards are compat ible. (There are
different degrees of compatibi lity)
Not all models of IBM keyboards are
interchangeable with each other. The
keyboards designed for the Xl for
example, will not work wi th the AT.
If you're dead set on modifying or
adapt ing the Wyse keyboard for use
with your AT-compatible' computer,
you' ll need some very specific infor-
mation before you can get started.
You need a list of the scan codes
produced by the Wyse keyboard and
those required by the AT-compatible.
You need a schematic of the Wyse
keyboard that shows , among other
things , the pinouts of the output con-
nector and how the data is transmit-
ted to the computer.
Although not strict ly necessary,
make sure the scan codes for the
extended function keys (F11and F12)
are compatible with the IBM.
Be certain that both the power and
reset requirements of the Wyse key-
board can be suppl ied by the IBM.
There's one other thing to be aware
of since you're trying to use the key-
board with an AT, rat her than an XT. In
AT-class computers , the data from
the keyboard is handled by a pre-
programmed rnicrocontroller in the
computer itself. There are a few com-
panies (Phoenix , AMI, etc.) that can
supply that, but they are not all com-
patiblewith each other. That is usually
a consideration only for setting the
CMOS configuration memory of the
computer, but keep in mind.
Adapting the Wyse keyboard may
turn out to be something as tr ivial as
changing the connector on the end of
the cable but, considering the fact
that you can buy a keyboard for about
fifty bucks, you have to wonder it's
really worth the effort. R-E
Its no
fluke.
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LETTERS
written and comprehensive. It con-
tained a gratifying amount of basic
physics and pulled together a great
many ideas that are often hard to find
because they are scattered over sev-
eral different chapters in various text-
books.
Were it not for one fundamental
flaw, Table 1 would be an extremely
useful reference for students of sev-
eral academic disciplines. The author
used an obsolete and (now) non-
standard set of base (or principal)
quantities.
Intellectually and philosophically I
like the author's choice of charge as a
base unit and his derivation of dimen-
sional equivalents in terms of cou-
lombs. I also still "like" to use mhos,
micro-microfarads, milli-microamps,
and kilo-megacycles. Nevertheless,
those outdated standards are all con-
trary to the American Nat ional Stan-
dards that have been in effect for
some time now and really are the
ones that should be used.
If the author andyour editors would
check the IEEE Dictionary for "units
and letter symbols ," I believe they will
find that the electric base quantity Cin
the SI system) is current, not charge.
Charge is now properly described as
a "derived" quantity that has dimen-
sions of (current x time) or ampere-
seconds. Regrettable, that means
that in each of the author's " Dimen-
sional Equivalents" in Table 1, the
Coulomb (C) term should be re-
placed with (A x s), and the terms re-
collected.
I know this all seems perverse to
old-timers who learned to start with
the charge on the electron and to
calculate how many electrons it takes
to make a coulomb, but there is a
good practical reason for the change.
When you use current as the base
unit for electrical measurement, you
can define the ampere in terms of the
force exerted upon two parallel con-
ductors. That is evidently something
that is more directly measurable in
terms of mass, length, and time-and
more up-to-date.
LUCIUS DAY
Lakewood. CO
Write to Letters, Radio-Electronics,
500-B Bi-County Blvd., Farmingdale, NY 11735
TABLE THAT TABLE!
I read the article "1 Volt = ?" (Ra-
dio-Electronics, February 1991)
with considerable interest. It was well
MAC PLUS FIX
I would like to thank Radio-Elec-
tronics for the fine article on build-
ing a Mac clone (January 1991). My
Mac Plus nuked itself last week. I
removed the power board and, upon
taking the board to two Apple deal-
ers, I was told that it would cost $300
to fix-and I would have to put the
board back in the Mac and then bring
them the whole machine. No way! I
opened the magazine and called Pre-
Owned Electronics. They sent me the
board in two days for$119. I want to
thank you guys for all the help in locat-
ing decent merchants who want to do
honest business. Keep up the good
work.
RICHARD RUSSO
CIRCLE 117 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
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REMOVING IC'S
Thank you for the years of excel-
lent reading in the extremely diverse
field of electroni cs. I've been reading
Radio-El ectronics on and off for
some year s, and have enjoyed every
issue.
Now for the good news. Over the
years I have read lett ers from readers
about t he handling of IC's and the
questions concerning t heir abuse.
Well, here is some shocking news.
When chips CTLL's, CMOS, etc .) are
manufactured, they are dipped in a
molten material. Notice I said molten,
which means that the material is in
liquid state. The material used and
the temperature of that material must
give off heat during the change of
st at e from liquid to solid. Thinking
about t hat concept, I began to work
on a way to extract circuit -board com-
ponents without the use of desolder-
ing tools, and one that would save
plenty of time.
Try this out for size: Using a hot oil
bath as a desoldering fluid and keep-
ing the temperature down to a level
that the IC's could handle, I dropped
the board in, and within seconds
parts began to fall off the board. The
temperature of the oil bath should be
no lower than 370F and no hotter
than 380F. That temperature is with-
in an IC's tolera nce.
The only exception is electrolytic
capacitors, as they will explode and
send hot oil all over the place.
Use gloves and eye protection dur-
ing this process. I haveext racted hun-
dreds of useful parts that way and
have had an 80% success rate. I said
80% because some plastics cannot
withstand that temperature, and the
hot oil can break down some plastics
altogether.
I hope your readers can use this
information-but if you do, be sure to
observe safety first. And thanks
again forthe excellent reading materi -
al. Keep up the good work.
MICHAEL BROWN
Stockton, CA
Your method sounds a little dan-
gerous to us, but it does show that
where there s a will, there s a way/-
Editor.
AM PROBLEMS
Sin ce Ra dio-Electronics
printed the art icle "Whatever Hap-
pened to AM Radio" (September
199m, I thought t he editors and read-
ers might be interested in the reply I
received from my congressman in re-
ply to my suggestion that AM stereo
circuitry be mandatory in future AM/
FM stereo equipment. Congressman
Dale E. Kildee said, in part , " In recent
years, new technologies have been
employed that have led to a wide r use
of AM stereo components. At this
time, no legislation has been intro-
duced in the House of Represen-
tatives that would require stereo
manufacturers to place AM stereo
components in their equipment."
All three AM-only radio stations in
my area were sold at bargain prices
last year-one at auction, one in
bankruptcy court , and one to a
church. Only the latt er, a gospel sta-
tion, emerged with no major
changes . The first, which was a lead-
ing Top-40 station in the 60 's and
70 's, became a Christian station
whose last Arbitron rating was 0.0.
The second, formerly the leading
news and information station, switch-
ed to a satellite-fed, heavy-metal rock
format called "Z-Rock." Despite
adding AM stereo equipment, the
station was not successful, and went
off the air. The owner (who also owns
a mobile-home sales lot and added
another one on the radio-station
grounds) plans to try another format,
but as of this wr iting the station is sti ll
off the air.
It would appear that your article is
right on the mark concerning AM ra-
dio's problems.
GARY FLINN
Flint, MI
WRIST STRAPS
Steve Swanton's statement on
using a wrist strap when desoldering
static-sensitive devices (Letters, Ra-
dio-Electronics, September
199m, .....always use a ground strap
(a metal wrist st rap wit h a detachable
ground wire) and connect its wire to
ground.. .," needs further clarifica-
tion, lest someone fashion a home-
made wrist grounding strap from that
description.
Commercially avai lable wrist
strap/ground wires contain a current-
limiting resistor, usually 1megohm, in
order to protect the operator. One
should never connect oneself to a
hard ground when working around
sources of potentially lethal (e.q. ,
household) current.
JOHN L. HORNBY
Madison, CT
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15
XT-TO-AT UPGRADE
Having worked for a company that
manufactures floppy disks, I'd like to
make several comments concerning
the differences bet ween various disk
formats.
It's true that 5Y4-inch, high-density
(1 .2 MB) drives have twice as many
tracks as the regular 360K drives.
That doesn 't increase the chance of
crosstal k, however, because t he
track width (the width of the track
written or read by the head) is, of
course, also half as great.
It isn't a case of the write current
being decreased on high -density
(HD) drives. Instead, the write field is
increased. That is necessary be-
cause there is a fundamental dif-
ference between disks designed for
HD operation and non-HD operation:
The HD disks' coating material needs
a higherfield to reliably saturate G.e..
be fully magnetized one way or the
other).
The software on an AT can change
the write current on an HD drive.
There's a pin specifically for that on
the drive interface, and the BIOS can
flip it when requi red. Indeed, it has to
reduce the write current when writing
to 360K disks because otherwise the
excessive write field would cause
each transit ion, as it was being writ-
ten, to affect the previously written
transition.
The recorded level may seem low
when reading on a 360K drive a disk
wr itten on a 1.2-MB drive, but that is
because only one-half the normal
track width has been written, causing
a reduced signal output of approxi-
mately 70%. I have never had any
problems from that. since drives are
rated to work with dropouts to 45 %
remaining signal and below. However,
it is true that the loss of signal level
does reduce your operating margin
against problems like misalignment
and drift. Of course, HD drives are
rated to work with 360K-formatted
disks despite the reduction in avail-
able signal level.
Where problems most often arise
is when disks are overwritten by a
succession of different drives. Re-
member that HD drives can write only
half-width tracks (relative to a 360K
drive). So if a track is written "wide"
and overwritten " narrow," a "wide-
reading" drive will read both the new,
wanted, narrow track and the rem-
nant of the old wide t rack together.
Remember that the directory area
of the disk is rewritten whenever you
add a file! The above problem may
render every one of the files on the
disk inaccessible from the addition of
a single file, because the enti re direc-
tory has been corrupted.
For the sake of completeness, I
should mention that, while 3Y2-inch
HD disks have a different mate rial
from regular (720K) 3Y2-inch disks,
there is no difference in track widths,
ruling out the problem of overwriting.
Also , the coating materials are similar
enough that a 720K diskette can
often be formatted for 1.44 MB with-
out any errors reported during the
format. However, the non-HD disks
are highly marginal with the HD for-
mat, and you are highly likely to en-
counter reliability problems . Recent
1.44-MB systems have implemented
a sensor that detects the HD hole to
prevent non-HD disks form being in-
correctly formatted. It is probably
also undesirable to format 3Y2-inch
HD disks as 720K, but I haven't
checked into that.
DANNY WILLIS
Munich, Germany
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pare for yourself. Clearly the best
value inportable instruments. Why
pay just as much for a DMM, when
you can get ten test instruments
for one lowprice. Howmuchshould
you pay? Just $139.95, if you say
PROTO METERTM4000.
Order Yours Today!! $139.95
Global Specialties' A028
70 Fulton Terrace, New Haven, CT 06512
Telephone:(203)624-3103. Interplex Electronics, 1991.
17
AT-COMPATIBLE
COMPUTER
80286 CPU (12~ Z clock,
owait states), 1 meg RAM
(expandable to 4 meg),
1.2 meg high-density
floppy disk drive.
New! Training now includes
Ultra-X diagnostic
hardware and software
for quick, accurate
troubleshooting!
Now NRI takes your hands-on
computer servicing experience an
important step further: Now you
train with and keep the remarkable
R.A.C.E.R. plug-in diagnostic card
and QuickTech diagnostic software
from Ultra-X-professional diagnos-
tic tools that make computer
troubleshooting fast and accurate.
Using these state-of-the-art
tools, you learn to quickly identify
and service virtually any computer
HARD DISK DRIVE
The 20 megabyte hard
disk drive you instal1
internally gives you
greater dati storage
capacity and access
speed.
DIGITAL
ULTIMETER
Professional test
instrument for
quick and
easy circuit
measurements.
LESSONS
Clearcut, illustrated
texts build your
understanding of
computers step by
step.
move on to test the
circuitry on the main
logic board, install the
power supply and
5-W' high-density
floppy drive, then
interface your high-
resolution monitor. But
that's not all.
Your NRI hands-on
training continues as
you install a powerful
20 megabyte hard disk
drive-today's most-
wanted computer
peripheral-included
in your course to dra-
matically increase your
computer's dat a storage
capacity while giving
you lightning-quick
data access.
You get in-demand
computer skills as you
train with a powerful
AT-compatible computer
system-nowwith 1 meg
RAM and 20 meg hard drive
With NRI's exclusive hands-on
training, you actually build and
keep the powerful newAT-compat-
ible West Coast 10lOES computer,
complete with 1 meg RAM and 20
meg hard disk dri ve.
You start by assembling and
testing the "intelligent " keyboard,
No doubt about it . The best way to
learn to service computers is to
actually build a state-of-the-art
computer from the keyboard on up.
And that' s just what you do when
you train with NRI. As you perform
key tests and demonstrations at
each stage of assembly, you see for
yourself how each part of your
computer works, what can go
wrong, and how you can fix it.
Onl y NRI, the leader in career-
building electronics training for
more than 75 years, gives you such
practical, real-world computer
servicing experience. Indeed, no
other training-in school, on the
job, anywhere-shows you how to
troubleshoot and service computers
like NRI.
Only NRI walks you through the
step-by-step assembly of a
powerful AT-compatible
computer system you keep-
giving you the hands-on
experience you need to' work
with, troubleshoot, and service
all of today's most widely used
computer systems. With NRI at-home training, you get
everything you need to start a money-making career,
even a computer service business of your own.
No other training-
anywhere shows ou
service compu ers
inschool, onthe job,
howto troubleshoot and
like NRI
DISCDVERYLAB
Complete
breadboarding system
to let you design and
modify circuits,
diagnose and repair
faults.
MONITOR
High-resolution,
nonglare, 12" rn
monochrome monitor
with tilt and swivel
base.
TECHNICAL
MANUALS
You get "inside" your
ATcompatible
computer system with
exclusive NRI Training
Kit Manuals plus
technical specs direct
from the manufacturer.
-:
DIGITAL LOGIC
PROBE
Using your logic probe,
you get firsthand
experience analyzing
digital circuit
operation.
Noexperience
needed...
NRI builds it in
You need no previous
experience in comput-
ers or electronics to
succeed with NRl.
You start with the
basics, following easy-
to-read instructions
and diagrams, moving
step by step from the
fundamentals of
electronics to sophisti-
cated computer
servicing techniques.
With NRl's unique
Discovery Learning
Method, you're sure
to get the kind of
practical, hands-on
experience that will
make you fully pre-
pared to take advan-
tage of every opportu-
nity in today's top-
growth computer
service field.
You learn at your own conve-
nience, in your own home. No
classroom pressures, no night
school, no need to quit your present
job until you're ready to make your
move. And all throughout your
training you've got the full support
of your personal NRl instructor and
the entire NRl technical staff, always
ready to answer your questions and
help you achieve your training goals.
Your FREE
NRI catalog tellsmore
Send today for your free, full-eolor
catalog describing every aspect of
NRl's innovative computer training,
as well as hands-on training in video/
audio servicing, telecommunications,
industrial electronics, and other
growing, high-tech career fields.
If the coupon is missing, write
to NRl School of Electronics,
McGraw-Hill Continuing Education
Center, 4401 Connecticut Avenue,
NW, Washington, DC 20008.
AT is a registered trademark of Int ernati on al Business
Machines Corp orat ion. R.A.C.E.R. and QuickTech are
registe red trademarks of Ultra-X, Inc.
SEND TODAY FOR FREE CATALOG
Age
o Building Construction
o Air Conditioning, Heatin g,
& Refrigeration
o Elec trician
o Small Engine Rep air
o Locks mithing
o Bookkeeping & Acco unting
(please print)
o Computer Programming
o PC Systems Analysis
o PC Software Engineering Using C
o Deskt op Publ ishing & Design
o Word Processing Home Business
o Paralegal
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o Automotive Servic ing
For career courses I
o approved under GI Bill,
che ck for de tails.

Addr ess
City/ State/ Zip Accredited Member, National Home Study Coun cil 3-051

:
lifCHECK ONE FREE
CATALOG ONLY
o Microcomputer Servicing
0 TV/Yideo/Audio Servici ng

0 Telecommunications
o Industrial Electronics & Robotics
0 Sec urity Electronics
o Electro nic Music Technology
0 Basic Elect ronics

Name

problem on XT, AT 80286/80386,


and compatible machines. You
discover how to use the R.A.C.E.R.
card to identify individual defective
RAM chips, locate interfacing
problems, and pinpoint defective
support chips. Plus you learn to use
your QuickTech diagnostic soft-
ware to test the system RAM and
such peripheral adapters as parallel
printer ports, serial communica-
tions ports, video display memory,
and floppy and hard disk drives.
Only NR1 gives you such confi-
dence-building, real-world experi-
ence. Only NRl gives you both the
knowledge and the professional
tools to succeed as today's in-
demand computer service technician.
.. ' '- , NEW PH
Use the Free Information Card for more details on these products.
CI RClE 16 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
CIRClE18 ON FREE
INFORMATION CARD
grabbing can also be init i-
ated under computer con-
trol via the serial interface.
The fr ame gr abbe r
comes with PGRAB soft-
ware, which runs on IBM-
PC and compatible com-
puters with CGA, EGA, or
VGA and at least 128K of
RAM. The software allows
nient, andaffordableway to
do gray-scale image cap-
ture from live video
sources . The unit is contin-
uously powered and ready
for frame-grabbing at any
ti me. The resultant image
has a reso lution of
320 x 320 pixels with 64
levels of gray. Squarepixels
are obtained with standard
NTSC or RS-170video sig-
nals from video cameras,
camcorders, VCR's, or TV
monitors .
The PFG- l can digitize
and store a video frame in-
dependently in Y60 of a sec-
ond. The captured image is
stored in internal memory
until overwritten by another
frame grab. The stored im-
age can be transferred to
any computer equipped
with a standard RS-232 in-
terface . There are no add-
on cards to install. Frame
PORTABLE VIDEO
FRAME GRABBER. With
a low-power design that al-
lows it to operate for up to
ten years on a single 9-volt
lithium battery, Portable
Technologies ' PFG-l pro-
vides a portab le, conve-
displays and files and can
list in Hex, Bin, ASCII, or
Dec .
The R3800 32-channel
logic analyzer costs
$3995.-Rapid Sys-
tems, Inc. . 433 North
34th Street, Seatt le, WA
98103 ; Ph o n e :
206 -547-8311; Fa x :
206-548-0322 .
sion problems . For porta-
ble use, the signal analyzer
can be powered by two
field -rec hargeable bat-
teries. A carrying case,
strand hook. and IEEE488
and RS-232 interfaces are
available as opt ions.
The FS74A Channelizer
Sr. TV-RF signal analyzer
costs $3495.-Sencore,
Inc., 3200 Sencore Drive,
Sioux Fall s, SD 57107;
Phone: 1-800-SENCORE.
.::.. .
. .
of four 32-bit data patterns,
trigger delay of up to 64K
clocks , four trigger levels
wit h data qualifiers, and a
zoom-display function . It
can load . save, and print
CIRClE 17 ON FREE
INFORMATION CARD
nel. Anot her patented fea-
ture, the automatic dB-
hum-level t est, measures
hum on any modulated
channel, and measures AC
and DC volts through the
RF input jack. The built-in
digital voltmeter also can
be used t o measure AC
and DC voltage, as well as
ohms. The unit's built-in
wideband (4-MHz) video
mo nitor shows picture-
quality and sync-compres-
CATV-RF SIGNAL ANA-
LYZER. The FS74A Chan-
nelizer Sr. from Sencore
includes an exclusive. all-
channel, microprocessor-
controlled tuner for testing
all standard and cable
channels to FCC accuracy.
including the return chan-
nels, sub-band, off-air VHF,
UHF, and FM. By selecting
FCC, HRC, or ICC carrier
shift tuning. the user can
simply dial in the channel
and read the video or audio
signal level displayed in mi-
crovolts or dBmV on the
fully-autoranging meter.
The FS74A also allows the
user to analyze the audio/
video ratio on any channel
wit hout calculat ions, by
setting the funct ion control
to the A/V pos ition and
reading the ratio in dB.
Sencore's patented on-
channel automatic signal-
to-noise rat io test elimi-
nates time-consuming sig-
nalcornparisons and cal-
culations that are usually
required when referencing
noise on an unused chan-
LOGIC ANALYZER. De-
signed for applications in
circuit design, digital test-
ing, ATEdevelopment, edu-
cation, microprocessor de-
sign and debugging, and
logic analysis, Rapid Sys-
tems' R3800 logic analyzer
features 16K data buffers
for each of 32 input chan-
nels, allowing users to cap-
ture long, high-speed dig-
ital signals at a 100-MHz
sample rate. Powerful PC-
based software simplif ies
setup and measuring, and
provides selectable sample
rates to 100 MH z. The
R3800 also offers complex
triggering with a sequence
(J)
a
Z
o
a:
f-
a
w
...J
W
o
o
<l:
a:
22
THE MODEL WTT-20IS ONLYTHE SIZE OF
A DIME, yet transmits both sides of a tele-
phone conversation to any FM radio with
crystal clarity. Telephone line powered- never
needs a battery! Up to Y. mile range. Adjusta-
ble from 70-130 MHZ. Complete kit $29.95
+$1.50 S+H. Free Shipping on 2 or more!
COD add $4. Call or send VISA, MC, MO.
DECO INDUSTRIES, Box 607, Bedford
Hills, NY 10507. (914) 232-3878.
CIRCLE 127 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
COMPUTER KITS, BOARDS & COMPO-
NENT' PARTS. Designed to the highest de-
gree of quality and reliability available today.
They're fun, easy to build, educational , IBM
compatible, very powerful, and at great
prices. All items are pre-tested, include a full
year warranty, step by step assembly manual ,
and free tech support. Assembly available at
no extra charge. For free catalog contact:
GENERAL TECHNICS, P.O. BOX 2676,
LAKE RONKONKOMA, NY 11779, or call
(516) 981-9473. VISA, MasterCharge, Ameri-
Can Express, COD.
CIRCLE 176 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
FREE CATALOG! ELECTRONIC TOOLS &
TEST EQUIPMENT. Jensen's new Master
Catalog, available free, presents major brand
name electronics tools, tool kits, and test in-
struments, plus unique, hard-to-find products
for assembly and repair and custom field ser-
vice kits available only from Jensen. All fully
described and illustrated. Enjoy freetechnical
support and rapid, post -paid delivery any-
where in the Continental USA. JENSEN
TOOLS INC., 7815 S. 46th St., Phoenix, AZ
85044. Phone: 602-968-6231; FAX:
1-800-366-9662.
CIRCLE 115 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
23
ZF2 ZF1
ZENITH TEST CHIP (ZF1). New improved
Data Injector Fullyactivates Z-tacs $29.95 No
jumpers to cut. Just solder 4 wires and plug
chip into socket. ZENITH TEST BOARD
(ZF2) Fully activates the 165 chip on the 288
chip's data stream. $49.95 Both units for test
purposes only, not for signal theft. PHONE:
800-722-9381
SIMPLYSNAP THE WAT-50MINIATURE FM
TRANSMITTER on top of a 9v battery and
hear every sound in an entire house up to 1
mile away! Adjustable from 70-130 MHZ. Use
with any FM radio. Complete kit $29.95 +
$1.50S+H. Freeshipping on 2 or more! COD
add $4. Call or send VISA, MC, MO. DECO
INDUSTRIES, Box 607, Bedford Hills, NY
10507. (914) 232-3878.
CIRCLE 127 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
APPLIANCE REPAIR HANDBOOKS-13
volumes by service experts ; easy-to-
understand diagrams, illustrations. For major
appliances (air conditioners, refrigerators,
washers , dryers, microwaves, etc.), elec.
housewares, personal-care appliances.
Basics of solid state, setting up shop, test
instruments. $2.65 to $7.90 each. Free
brochure. APPLIANCE SERVICE, P.O. Box
789, Lombard, IL 60148. (312) 9329550.
CIRCLE 84 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
IIiiiiI
CABLE TV CONVERTERS AND DE-
SCRAMBLERS SB-3 $79.00 TRI-BI $95.00
MLD-$79.00 M35B $69.00 DRZ-DIC
$149.00. Special combos available. We ship
COD. Quantity discounts. Call for pricing on
other products. Dealers wanted. FREE CATA-
LOG. We stand behind our products where
others fail. One year warranty. ACE PROD-
UCTS. P.O. Box 582, Saco , ME 04072 1
(800) 234-0726.
CIRCLE 75 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
CALL NOW
AND
RESERVE
YOUR SPACE
Call 516-293-3000 to reserve space. Ask
for Arline Fishman. Limited number of
pages available. Mail materials to:
mini-ADS, RADIO-ELECTRONICS, 500-
B Bi-County Blvd ., Farmingdale, NY
11735.
6 x rate $940.00 per each insertion.
Fast reader service cycle.
Short lead time for the placement of
ads.
We typeset and layout the ad at no
additional charge.
FAX: 516-293-3315
format ion about all signal
parameters and settings,
the mult ifunct ion backlit
LCD screen simplif ies op-
eration of the signal gener-
ators . Push-button-act i-
vated menus are used for
setting f requency, output
level , modulation mode,
and modulation param-
eters. The PM 5328 has a
large rotary-control knob
with variable resolution, for
quick select ion of the desir-
ed value. Frequencies and
levels can also be set by
step-by-step adjustments
or by direct numeric entry
of the value.
Both models can store
and instantly recall com-
plete front-panel setups.
The PM 5328 has memory
for 99 setups and the PM
5327 can store 10. Stored
settings can be called up
remotely, using the GPIB
interface. Output ampli-
tude ranges are from - 127
to -7 dBm for the PM
5327 and -127 to +13for
the PM 5328.
The PM 5327 and PM
5328 RF-signal generators
have base list prices of
$4900 and $5650, respec-
tively. The FM-stereo-mod-
ulation option has a list
price of $750.-John
Fluke Mfg. ce., Inc.,
P.O. Box 9090, Everett,
WA 98206 ; Phone :
800-44-FLUKE.
2-MHz SWEEP/FUNC-
TION GENERATOR. For
use in education, produc-
tion lines, repair shops, and
hobby or engineering de-
sign, Be/Merit's FG-150 is
a cost -effective way to ac-
quire a comprehensive
sweep/function generator
with bu ilt -in frequency
CIRCLE 20 ON FREE
INFORMATION CARD
RF SIGNAL GENER-
ATORS. With optional FM-
stereo-modulation ca -
pability, the Phi/ips PM
5327 and PM5328 RF-sig-
nal generators from John
F/uke Mfg. Co. are well
suited for use in the test
CIRCLE 19 ON FREE
INFORMATION CARD
and repair of consumer au-
dio electronics. The 180-
MHz instruments can be
used either as stand-alone
bench top tools or, using
the GPIB interface, in test
systems. The PM 5328
also features a built-in 200-
MHz frequency counter.
The signal generators'
standard modulation
modes include AM, FM,
and frequency sweep. A
high-stability frequency-ref-
erence option is also avail-
able to ensure accuracy in
higher-performance ap-
plications. Modulation can
be external as well as inter-
nal, and parameters such
as modulation frequency,
sweep width , and sweep
time are user-selectable.
By providing full, clear in-
the image to be displayed
on the screen, adjusted for
brightness and contrast,
printed directly to HP
l.aserjet II and compatible
printers, and saved either
as linear files or as TIFF
files that can be imported
to most desktop-publish-
ing applications. The PFG-l
also includes a DB9 serial
cable, a DB9-to-DB25
adaptor, an RCA video ca-
ble, and a 9-volt lithium bat-
tery as well.
The PFG-l portable vid-
eo frame grabber costs
$269.-Portable Tech-
nologies, P.O. Box
20763, Castro Valley, CA
94546; Phone:
415-537-4954.
RE-BBS
516-293-2283
Communicate withother
RE readers.
Try the
EIii,mn'Se
bulletin board
system
(RE-BBS)
516-293-2283
Leave your comments on
R-E withtheSYSOP.
We support 300 and 1200
baud operation.
Parameters: 8N1 (8data
bits, noparity, 1stop bit)
or7E1 (7data bits, even
parity, 1stop bit).
The more you use It the
more useful It becomes.
Add yourself to ouruser
Illesto increase your
access.
A6iC!
An ETCHED
circuit board
from a
Printed PAGE
in just S Hours
The ER-4 PHOTO ETCH KIT giv es you the tools. materials and chemicals
to make your own printed circuit board s. The patented Pos-Neq" process
copies artwork fr om magazines li ke this one without damaging t he page.
Use the ci rcuit patterns, tapes and drafting film to make your own 1X
artwork. Or tr y the Direct Etch " system (also included), to make single
ci rcuit board s without artwork. The ER-4 is stoc ked by many electroni c
parts distributors, or order direct. postpaid.
ER-4 PHOTO ETCH KIT (NJ and CA residents add sales tax) . .... $38.00
DATAK'S COMPLETE CATALOG lists hundreds of printed circuit products
and art patterns. Also contains dry transfer letter sheets and electroni c titl e
sets for professional looking control panel s. WRITE FOR IT NOW!
DATAKCorporation. 55 Freeport Blvd, Unit 23
Sparks, NV 89431
CIRCLE 187ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
ra: i\
CABLE TV
DESCRAMBLERS
WE'LL BEAT
ANYPRICE!
CALL TOLL FREE 1800
284-8432
JERROLD-TOCOM-ZENITH
HAM1IN-OAK-PI ONEER
SCIENTIFIC ATLANTIC
- 24 HOUR SHIPMENTS!
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MASTER CARD I AMEX I VISA I C.O.D.
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equipment used inyour area ready
1-800-284-8432
CABLE WAREHOUSE
4700 N. HIATUS ROAD,SUNRISE,FLA.33351
\.. __ _ _ J
CIRCLE 180ON FREE INFORMATIONCARD
24
en
o
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o
a:
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W
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15
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a:
counter i n one compact
case. The FG-150's gener-
ator section outputs sine,
square, triangle, ramp, and
skewed sine waveforms .
Its frequency is 0.02 Hz to
2 MHz, and impedance is
50 ohms 10%, 600 ohms
10%, up to 100 kHz. The
frequency variable range is
100:1 and the symmetry
variable range is 10:1 to
1:10. The FG-150 has lin-
ear/loga ri thmic sweep
modes. The internal coun-
ter has 1-Hz, 10-Hz, 100-
Hz, and 1-kHz resolut ion; a
4-digit LED with annun-
ciators; 100-ms, 1-second
gate times, and accuracy
of time base error plus one
digit. The external coun-
ter's frequency range is 1to
9999 kHz and its sensitivity
is 15 mV RMS.
The FG-150 sweep/
function generator with
built-in frequency counter
has a suggested list price
of $295 .-BeIMerit
Corporation, 14775 Car-
menita Road, Norwalk, CA
90650; Phon e :
21 3-80 2 - 366; Fax :
213-802-3298.
COMPONENT/HDTV
WAVEFORM MONITOR.
Designed to provide con-
venient, precise video-sys-
tem measu rements fo r

(jo ==:==---- : ..
T:Il:-
1:;_ iI
: 'h

CIRClE 21 ON FREE
INFORMATION CARD
525/60 and 625/50 com-
ponent, NTSC and PAL
composite, and HDTV
(11 25/60) signals, Leader
Instrumen ts' model 5100
component/HDTV wave-
form monitor features four-
channel output (three
transcoded to RGB from Y,
R-Y, and B-Y for 525/60
systems). Also featured
are overlaid display of four
signals, such as Y, R-Y, B-Y,
and composite, as well as
parade displays of three
channels. A vector display
of color difference or RGB
signals checks component
chrominance, while display
of t he unique "shark-fin"
signal provides a high-reso-
lution relative-timing read-
ing over a wide bandwidth.
The model 5100 provides
full raster line selection for
525/60 , 625 / 60 , and
11 25/60 signals. Cursor
operati on makes it easier
to make level measure-
ments and to preset mea-
sured parameters to spec-
if ied values . Powered by
either 12 VDC or 90-250
VAC, th e instrument is
co mpl et ely portable for
field use.
The model 5100 compo-
nen t/HDTV wave f o r m
moni to r co st s $ 3800.-
L e ad er Instruments
Corpor at i on, 380 Oser
Avenue, Hauppauge, NY
11788 ; Phone :
800-645-5104 ( in NY,
516-231-6900),
PEN-TVPE DIGITAL
MULTIMETER. Designed
for applicat ions where the
technician doesn 't have
much room to maneuver,
Beckman's DM73 is a pen-
style, hand-held digital mul-
timeter that features a 3Y2-
digit display with 0.5% ac-
curacy (DC 2V range) and
auto-ranging. Its compact
CIRClE 22 ON FREE
INFORMATION CARD
size, light weight , and sim-
ple slide switch for chang-
ing fu nct io ns make t he
DM73 easy to use for t rou-
PUTTHE PCIO INYOUR PC FORMORE COUNTERPOWER.
OPTOELECTRONICS does
it again - phenomenal power,
performance and price.
This is what sets our PC Based
Universal Counter apart from any
other counter available on the
market today...
Model pelO Universal Counter
Timer Boardfor the Pc.
IntroductoryPrice$339.
The PCIOhas on board 50 ohmRFinput
with amplifiersandprescalers to operate
as a stand alone 1MHz to 2.4GHz RF
counter. TTL level input signals can be
connected directly to the miniature25 pin
D connector on the mounting bracket.
For lowfrequency. high impedance
inputs,the Model APIOHcompanion
amplifiermust be used.
Model AP10H Dllal IliKhImpedance
Amplifier Head Unit (not shown),
Introductorv Price $299.
TheAPlOiI is the companion head unit
that supports all PCI OUniversal Counter
functions from 10Hz to IOOMHz with 1 megohm
inputs. Input attenuators, lowpassfi ltersand
trigger levels are software selectable.
Options: TCXO 10Precision Tempera/lire
Compensated Time Base $195.
O.2ppm2(f'4(f'C.Ippm - year aging,
Instant DirectTune - Set a communications
receiver such as rCOMR7000 to frequency
detected by counter. Patent pending.
Datalogging and data filecreation to keep
records or measure frequency drift.
Menu selection for Units includes CPM/RPM,
Hz, KHz, MHz, GHz, Sec, mS, uS and nS.
Software timebase calibration of IppmTCXO
timebase.
CIRCLE 188 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Windows 3.0operatingenvironment with fully
developedoperatingand signal conditioningcontrols
accessible through pull down menus.
In addition to these unique features, PelO is a
down right high performance counter...
10digit 10Hz to 204GHz frequency range.
Measurement Period (Gate Time) continuously
variable from 1milli-second to 28 seconds.
Reciprocal Countingfor high resolution
measurement.
Input sensitivityis less than IOmV from 10Hz to
over I.6GHz.
Directcount frequencies over 200MHzwith IHz
resolutionin 1sec.
"., in ,rl __
,.,. ."'.......""..
Toll Free Order Line:1-800-327-S912
FL(30S)771-20S0 ' FAX( 30S)771-20S2
5821 NE 14lh Avenue >Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33334
25
host computer. DSPerato
contains a full-length IBM-
PC prototype card that al-
ready has a bus decode
and buffer printed circuit.
The rest of the card has un-
committed 0.100 center-
plated through holes with
power buses and pads. The
56001 DSP and support
chips are wired and sol -
dered on those pads.
Two opt ional high-perfor-
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boards can be attached to
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CIRClE 23 ON FREE
INFORMATION CARD
the 8-bit video card uses
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ELECTRONIC
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HDTV: HIGH-DEFINI-
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Stan Prentiss. Pub-
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CIRClE 37 ON FREE
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the world . More than a doz-
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CIRCLE 78 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
TABLE 1
FIG. 1-256K DRAM PIN NAMES AND BLOCK DIAGRAM. DRAM's use multiplexed row
and column address inputs; this 256K DRAM requires 9.
t-- --t-Q
DATA IN
BUFFER
DATA OUT
BUFFER
Circuit description
The DRAMtester uses two volt-
age-regulat or IC's and onl y s ix
logic IC's, thanks to the use oftwo
PLD's (programmable logic de-
vices) which replace about ten in-
dividual IC's . Refer to the block
diagram in Fig. 4 and the sche-
PIN NAMES
AO-A8 .. ADDRESS INPUT
D DATAI N
a DATAOUT
W READIWRITEINPUT
RAS ROWADDRESSSTROBE
CAS COLUMNADDRESS STROBE
V
rx
POWER(+5V)
vss..GROUND
PINASSIGNMENT
1 A8 V
ss
16
2 D CAS 15
3 W a 14
4 1
5 RAS A6 12
6 AO A3 11
7 A2 A4 10
8 A1 A5 9
V
rx
A7
W- - - - - - -a---...

CAS- - - --.j
RAS- - - -.-j
AO
A1
A2
A3
A4
A5
M
A7
A8
start of the addressing, to the
ti me at which t here is valid data
at the output pin D. That is very
basically how the DRAM works.
Figure 3 shows a read-cycle tim-
ing chart for a 256Kx 1 DRAM,
and Table 1 explains what the
timing symbols mean.
Parameter
t
RC
RandomReador Write CycleTime
tRAC
AccessTime fromRAS
teAC
AccessTime fromCAS
toFF
Output Buffer and Turn-Off Delay
tRP
RASPrecharge Time
t
RAS
RASPulseWidth
teAS
CAS PulseWidth
tRco
RASto CAS DelayTime
t
ASR
RowAddress SetupTime
t
RAH
RowAddress Hold Time
t
ASC
Column Address Setup Time
t
CAH
Column AddressHold Time
tAR
Column Address Hold Time Referenced to RAS
t
RCS
ReadCommandSetupTime
Dynamic RAM
DRAM's use multiplexed row
and column address inputs; 64K
DRAM's require only 7 address
lines, 256K DRAM's require 9,
and I-MEG DRAM's require 10.
Figure 1 shows a block diagram
of a typical 256K x 1 DRAM, and
Fig. 2 shows a typical I-MEG
DRAM. Address decoding and ad-
dress latches are incorporated in
the DRAM.Thaddress the DRAM,
row-address data is put on all ad-
dress lines and clocked by the RAS
(row address strobe) signal, then
the column address data is put
on the address lines and clocked
by the CAS (column address
strobe) signal. DRAM's have a
READIWRITE input pin, usually la-
beled Vi, to control the type of op-
eration; a DATA INpin, D; and a
DATAOUT pin, Q.
Data is held in dynamic RAM
by the charge on internal capaci-
tors. Since the charge degrades
with time, the bits need to be "re-
freshed" or row addressed at ap-
proximately every 4 to 64 millise-
conds. That is typically done by a
RAs-only cycle through the row
addresses-a normal read or
write cycle will also accomplish
the refresh. A I-MEG DRAMmay
have a "tes t function" input (TF)
at pin 4 t hat allows it to be tested
4 bits at a ti me; we do no t use
t hat function so the TF input is
disabled by tying it to ground.
The timing of the address and
strobe inputs is critical. A
DRAM's "access time," or speed,
is the time from RAS, which is the
to and read back 4 times during
each test and a 64K DRAM re-
ceives the write/read test 16 times
in each pattern. If the CYCLE
switch is on, t he test does no t
stop and will continue until an
error is de tected. If the MARGIN
switch is on, the first two-pattern
test cycle will be run at low-mar-
gin DUT operating volt age and
the second cycle will automat-
ically switch to high-margin DUT
operating volt age. Should both
the MARGINand CYCLEswitches be
on, the tests will alternate from
low- to high-margin voltage. All
voltage and test signals are ap-
plied to both ZIF test sockets si-
multaneously, but only one
DRAM can be tested at a time.
DRAM's to be tested can safely be
inserted or removed from the ZIF
test sockets Wit h the power on.
en
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34
matic in Fig. 5. An AC power
adaptor supplies 9 volts DC at
150 rnA to a full-wave bridge rec-
tifier made up of 05-08, which
provide automatic input-polarity
protection. The 5-volt regulator,
rC7, supplies power to everything
but the OUT (device under test).
OUT power is supplied by IC8, an
LM317LZ adjustable regulator
which is controlled by logic in the
PLD, IC5. For a normal test, IC8
outputs 5 volts to the OUT. Other-
wise, 4.5 volts is supplied for the
low-margin test and 5.6 volts for
the high-margin test.
As mentioned before, IC5 and
IC6 are TTL PAL devices; IC5 is
an MMIIAMD PALI6L8B-2CN
low-power, 25-ns device that con-
tains the oscillator circuitry for
our system clock. Components
R15, R16, C12, and C5 are also
part of the oscillator. The addi-
tional components R14 , R5 (the
access-time potentiometer), R19
(the calibration trimmer), and
R17 (the dial-spread trimmer)
form the speed-test circuit which
varies the basic system clock.
The clock output at rC5 pin 15
is fed into IC6 pins 1and 6. When
the START TEST swi tch S 1 is
pressed, a STARTIRESET signal is
generated through R7, C2, and
R8 which resets IC2 and IC3 at
pin 11; the signal is also applied
as an input to IC6 pin 8. Logic in
IC6 will gate an output clock sig-
nal, designated cr.xi, at pin 14.
That drives pin 10 ofIC2 which is
part of a 24-stage ripple-carry
binary counter consisting of two
74HCT4040's (IC2 and IC3). As
the clock increments the IC2IIC3
ripple counter, the QO-Q7 and
QIO-Q17 outputs drive ICI and
IC4, which are 74HCT257 quad
2-input multiplexers.
Multiplexers ICI and rC4 each
select four bits of data from two
different sources under the con-
trol of a common select input at
pin 1. Logic in IC6 generates the
RAS signal which is input at pin 3
of IC5, present at pin 3 of test-
socket ZIFI and pin 4 of ZrF2,
and is also the input select signal
at pin 1 of ICI and rC4. The out-
puts of ICI drive address lines
AO-A3 and the outputs of IC2
drive A4-A7 of the OUT at test
sockets ZIFI and ZIF2. A 256K
DRAMrequires an additional ad-
dress line, A8, and a I-MEG
DRAM requires two additional
address lines, A8 and A9. To gen-
a
D
2048
DATA IN
BUFFER
MEMORY
ARRAY
COLUMN
DECODER
DATA OUT
BUFFER
SENSE AMP
I/OGATING
VALID
DATA
PIN NAMES
AO-A9 .. .. ADDRESS INPUT
D ..DATA INPUT
a DATA OUTPUT
W READIWRITE ENABLE
RAS- 'ROW ADDRESS STROBE
CAS "COLUMN ADDRESS STROBE
V
cc
POWER (+5V)
Vss GROUND
TF TEST FUNCTI ONENABLE
NC 'NOCONNECTION
----,lf4----
I
AR'- - -+i
....1---+-!cAs--.-I_-Io------
V
ss
18
0
17
CAS 16
A9 15
A8 14
A7 13
A6 12
AS 11
A4 10
RAS
VIII"
V
1L
'
CAS
V
1H

V
1L
'
1 0
2
W
3
RAS
4 TF
5 AO
6 A1
7 A2
8
A3
9 V
co
AO=,--,--J---J-J ,n
A1
A2
A3
A4
AS
A6
A7
A8
A9

TF----r...----t-----t---t--.
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Ri\S-----+i
_
_
IcAC
=l_
a(DATA OUT) VOH- HIGH z -
VOL"
FIG. 3-DRAM READ CYCLE AND TIMINGDIAGRAM for a 256K x 1DRAM. Table1explains
what t he t iming symbols mean.
FIG. 2-1 MEGDRAM PIN NAMESANDBLOCK DIAGRAM. Address decoding and address
latches are incorporated in t he DRAM.
35
FIG. 4-DRAM TESTER BLOCK DIAGRAM. The DRAM tester uses only six logic IC's,
thanks to the use of two PLD's.
IC2/lC3
IC1/1C4
24BIT

CdUNTER f--010
cl
J08' [19
ADR
J
01 i22
MUX'
'\./
USER 1C5/IC6
RAS
CONTROLS (PALS) (MUXSEl.)
START

MARGIN
LOGIC

CONTROL
I--RAS.
CYCLE
;,
A8,A9 /
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...--_. --.,.- - --
ZIF 1 ..
ACCESS (0)
AND
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00llT
ZIF 2
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DRAM
TEST
SOCKETS
LED IND.
IC8
VDI/T AND L.--.
V
our
f----
PASstrAlL
erate the A8 and A9 address
lines. Q8. Q9. Q18. and Q19 from
IC2 and IC3 are logic inputs to
IC6 which generates the A8 out-
put at pin 19 and the As output.at
pin 12.
Both PAL's (the 16R4 and the
16L8) are rated at 25-ns internal
gate propagat ion delay. That de-
lay is an integral par t of the sys-
te m t iming . a n d i s u s ed to
determine the timing of the low
CAS signal at pin 12 of IC5 about
40 ns after RAS goes low. The CAS
signal is appli ed t o t he DUT
which gates the column-address
data after the row-address data
has been gated. At the intersec-
tion of the row address and col-
umn address. we have the
selected bit location. Output Q20
(lC3 pin 12) from t he 24-stage
ripple counter will determine if
the operation will be a write or
read cycle in the DRAM.
From the start of the test. Q20
applies a low to the DUT READ/
WRITE inputs at ZIFI pin 2 and
ZIF2 pin 3. The low s ignal puts
the DRAM in the write mode for
the first half of the tes t . where we
cycle through all of the address
locations. Note that. as the ripple
counter gets to Q20. we have cy-
cled through all a ddr es s loca-
tions in a I-MEG DRAM once.
L

BOTTOM, OR SOLDER SIDE of the board.


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TOP,ORCOMPONENT SIDEof the DRAM tester PCboard . Parts
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four t imes in a 256K DRAM, and
s ixteen times in a 64K DRAM.
The Q20 output is also input to
pin 6 ofIC5, which will generate a
DIN s ignal, which will determine
the data bit (high = 1, 10w=0) ap-
pli ed to the DUT at ZIFI pin 1 and
ZIF2 pin 2. Signals QO and Q21
are also applied to IC5 at pins 1
and 7 respectively; QO is used to
alternate the bit pattern at every
other location as it is triggered
every cycle or clock time, and Q21
is used to change the pattern
from 010101 to 101010 during the
second write cycle. Every DRAM
location will have bo th a 1and a 0
written to it and read back 1 to 16
times per test, depending on the
type of DRAM.
During the read cycle , the ac-
cess time of the DRAMis the time
between the RAS and D
o UT
(valid
data out) signals, or the time
from the first address strobe un-
til valid data is at the Q output of
the DUT. The Q output is a t h ree-
state signal t h at switches to a
high-impedance mid-logic level
when the CAS s ignal goes inac-
tive. As each address is cycled
through during the read portion
of the test, the data bit read out is
applied to pin 11 of IC5 and com-
pared with the expected bit. If the
data does not match, an ERROR
signal is gener ated at pin 19 of
IC5 that goes to pin 9 of IC6
where the FAIL output will go high
and the C LK l output will stop.
That will halt t he ripple counter
and make pass/fail indicator
LED4 li ght a continuous red.
(LED4 should have been blinking
green during the test.)
The MARGIN switch S2 is "on"
when the contacts are open-
that removes the gr ou n d from
pin 5 of IC5, allowing pull-up re-
sistor R4 t o switch the input
high. The logic in IC5 will then
switch the low output from pin
17, which selected a normal DUT
operating voltage of 5.0V, to pin
16, wh ich selects a low-margin
voltage of 4.5V. Indicators LEDl,
LED2, and LED3 show which
DUT operating voltage is cur-
rently selected, an d will remain
illuminated after an er ror s top t o
indicate what ope rating voltage
was selected at the time of failure.
The Q22 input at pin 8 of IC5 will
switch the low-margin test to
high, and select the pin-18 out-
put of IC5 , which lights LED3 t o
indicate a high-margin operating
voltage of 5.6V.
The IC5 outputs that select the
appropriat e LED indicator al so
directly control the DUT voltage
by applying a grou nd to R12 via
pin 17, R13 via pin 16, or neither
when pin 18 (high margin) is se-
lected . That affec t s t he a dj u st-
ment pin regulator IC8 which
produces V
D UT
'
The CYCLE switch S3 is "on "
when the contacts are open, al-
lowing the pull-down resistor R3
to hold pin 7 of fCfi low The high-
est bit in our ripple counter, Q23,
is the STOP bit. When Q23 goes
high, the two-pattern test has
run twice. Switch S3 simply pre-
vents the high Q23 output from
reaching the logic input ofIC6. If
you prefer cycling the two-pat-
tern test once and stopping in-
stead of twice, simply disconnect
Q23 from 53 and connect Q22.
However, if that is done, the mar-
gin test would have to be run
All resistors are Y4-watt, 5%, un-
less otherwise noted.
R1-91 ohms
R2-3300hms
R3, R4, R8, R14-R16-10,OOO ohms
R5-1000 ohms, linear taper
potentiometer
R6, R18-not used
R7, R9, R1D-220 ohms, 1%
R11-560 ohms
R12-2000 ohms, 1%
R13-910 ohms
R17-5000 ohms, 4-turn trimmer
potentiometer
R19-2000 ohms, trimmer
potentiometer
Capacitors
C1, C3, C6, C8--C11, C14-0.1 fLF,
monolithic
C2-1 fLF, tantalum
C4, C7-100 fLF, electrolytic
C5, C12-15 pF, monolithic
Semiconductors
IC1, IC4-74HCT257 quad z-ehan-
nel three-state multiplexer
IC2, IC3-74HCT4040 12-stage
binary counter
IC5-AMO 16L8B-2 PAL
IC6-AMO 16R4A-4PAL
IC7-LM7805 5-volt regulator
IC8-LM317LZ low-power adjusta-
ble regulator
01-04-not used
05-08-1N40041-amp rectifier
diode
LE01-LE03-red light-emitting
diode, Ya-inch diameter
LE04-red/green 3-lead common-
cathode LED module
with the CYCLE switch also "on "
so that the high-margin tes t is
run. With actual usage , it is con-
venient to use the CYCLE switch
most of the time. Just increase
the access time until the DRAM
fails , then decrease t he s peed
slightly and restart t he test t o
quickly determine t h e s peed of
the part.
Capacitors Cl, C3 , C6, and
C8-C11 are for power bypass,
and Rl is used to limit t he cur-
rent flow through LED4 . Resistor
R2 limits the current through
LEDl, LED2, and LED3, which
are discrete red LED's.
Using PAL's
The programmable array logic
device, known as a PAL, was in-
vented about 15 years ago at a
company called Monolithic Mem-
ories, which is now part of AMD
(Advanced Micro Devices). The
PALprovides a way of combining
Other components
S1-normally-open pushbutton
switch
S2, S3-SPOT sub-mini slide switch
J1-2.1 mm DC power input jack
ZIF1-18-pin ZIF socket
ZIF2-16-pin ZIF socket
Miscellaneous: PC board, four 16-
pin ICsockets, two20-pin ICsock-
ets, knobfor R5, cabinet, 120-VAC-
to-9-VOC 300-mA wall adapter,
solder, etc.
Note: The following items are
available from Startek Interna-
tional Inc., 398 NE 38th St., Ft.
Lauderdale, FL 33334. For infor-
mation call (305) 561-2211, for or-
ders call (800) 638-8050, FAX
(305) 561-9133.
Complete DRAM tester kit in-
cluding programed PAL's (does
not include cabinet and AC
adaptor), KIT #DT-90K-$59.95.
Complete DRAM-tester kit in-
cluding programed PAL's, cab-
inet, and AC adaptor, KIT
#DT-90CK-$89.95.
PC board only, # DT-90PCB-
$18.00.
Programed PAL's-$7.50
each.
A factory assembled, cali-
brated, and tested DRAM test -
er-$119.00.
Add 5%shipping/handling charge
($4.00 minimum, $10.00 max-
imum.) Florida residents must
add sales tax. VISA, MC and
COD-CASHorders accepted.
FIG. 6-PAL PINOUTSAND LOGICEQUATIONS.6-a shows the pinout s for the 16L8 and 6-
b shows the 16R4. The logic equations are used to generate the outpu ts.
r: LOGICEQUATIONS**/
ASEL " IRAS;
A8 =IRAS s 08 # RAS & 018;
A9 = IRAS & 09#RAS & 019;
RAS " CKO & ICKIN;
PASS.D" IfAlL & 1018;
fAlL.D =ERROR& CKO # fAIL & IRST;
CK1 .D '" IRST &CK:1 &IFAIL &CYCLE;
b
/** LOGICEQUATIONS .*/
DIN = 1021 & 100 # Q21 & QO;
CAS = IASEl & RAS;
HIGHMARG. OE =MTEST & 022;
LOWMARG. OE = MTEST & 1022;
NORMMARG. OE = IMTEST;
HIGHMARG =Q22;
LOWMARG = 1022;
NORMARG =022# 1022;
ERROR " RD & RAS& (DOUT& lOIN# IDOUT &DIN);
CKOUTA " CKINA& ICKOUTB & I(CKINB & ICKOUTA);
CKOUTB = CKINB& ICKOUTA & I(CKINA & ICKOUTB);
a
r -----iC6---- -'
CKIN II 16R4A-4
20
1Vee
0812 191AB
09: 3 18: ASEL
I I
Q1814 171 PASS
1 I
01915 161 fAIL
CKIN l 6 15:(UNUSED OUTPUT)
ICYCLE17 14llCK1
RST:8 13l lRAS
1 I
ERROR 19 12l A9
I I
GND 110 11 110E ("OUTPUTENABLE" INPUT) L. ..J
odes, IC sockets (not including
the ZIF sockets), IC7 and IC8,
and then the capacitors. Follow
Fig. 9 for correct placement of
parts.
Next install power-jack JI, and
switches 51, 52 and 53. Be sure
52 and 53 are straight so that
they will properly fit in the cab-
inet openings. Next install poten-
tiometers R5 , R17, and R19; R5
mounts under the PC board with
the pins bent upward to fit the
connection holes from under the s:::
PC-board.
The two-color (red/green) LED (0
(LED4) is probably the most diffi-
ed logic connections.
i ----iCs- - --'
00 1
1
16L8B-2 20IVee
ASEl , 2 191 ERROR
1 I
IRASI 3 18l ' HIGHMARG
CKINA I 4 1711NORMMARG
1 I
MTEST 1 5 16II LOWMARG
1 I
RD ' 6 1511CKOUTA
1 I
02117 141DIN
1 1
02218 1311CKOUTB
I I
CKINBI 9 1211CAS
I I
GND 110 ll l DOUT L ...J
Assembly
The DRAM tester is easy to as-
semble. Parts are ins t all ed on
bot h s i des of a doubl e-sided
plated-th rough PC boa rd mea-
suring 3.35 x 3.8 inches. Pro-
gramed PAL's, as well as the other
parts including the PC board, are
available from the source listed
in the parts list. The profession-
al -looking case you see is also
available at extra cost. Parts as-
sembly order is not critical, how-
ever, it's recommended t hat you
install all res is t or s first, then di-
a number of discrete logic IC's in
a single custom-programed IC.
The PAL device has a program-
mable AND array followed by a
fixed OR array. In the DRAM-test-
er circuit we use two very com-
mon PAL's, a 16L8 and a 16R4.
Both are low-power devices, and
relatively inexpensive.
The use of PAL's results in re-
duced parts count and power
consumption, a smalle r PC
board, faster logic, increased re-
liability, and, usually. overall re-
duced cost. A reduced parts
count means less-complex PC
boards are required, and circu it
changes can frequently be made
in the PAL program without af-
fecting the PC board. On t h e
down side , designing wi t h PAL's
does require support tools con-
sisting of design software and a
device programmer. (Those ite ms
are needed by the circuit design-
er; the bu ilder does not require
those items, as programed PAL's
are available from the source
lis ted in the parts lis t .) The PAL
des ign software provides the link
between high-level logic expres-
si ons and the low-level program-
ming det a ils which the device
programmer uses.
In our circuit, IC5 (a 16L8 PAL)
has 10 dedicated inputs, 2 dedi -
cated outputs, and 6 co m-
binatorial input/output pins. IC6
is a 16R4 PAL which has a 4-bit
register, a clock register input, 8
de dicated inputs, 4 registered
outputs with an output-enable
pin, and 4 combinatorial input/
output pins. Both are 20-pin DIP
TTL devices, which are one-time
programmable by opening fuse
lin ks (with an appropriate device
programmer) to configure t he
AND and OR gates within the de-
vice. The PALdevices implement
the Boolean logic transfer func-
tion, the sum of the products.
The AND array creates custom
product terms, while the OR array
sums selected terms at the out-
puts of the device .
Figure 6 shows t he pinouts for
the 16L8 and 16R4 PAL'swith the
in pu t/ou t pu t signals and logic
equations used to generate each
output. Figure 7 shows the logic
diagram for the 16L8 and Fig. 8
shows the 16R4. A PAL is man-
ufactured with all "fuses, " or con-
nections intact. The undesired
fuses are blown open by the pro-
grammer, leaving only the desir-
39
1618
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FIG. 7-16L8 LOGIC DIAGRAM. This 20-pin DIP device is one-
t ime programmable by configuring the AND and OR gates within
t he device.
FIG. 8--16R4 LOGIC DIAGRAM. A PAL is manufactured with all
" f uses" intact. The undesired fuses are blown open by the pro-
grammer, leaving only the desired logic connections.
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cult component to install. Be
sure to observe polarity; the
slightly shorter lead is the red-
LEDanode ( +), the center lead is
t he common cathode (-), an d
the remaining lead is the green-
LED anode . Hold ing the LED
with the shorter lead on your left,
bend the center lead at a gO-de-
gree angle, snug against t he com-
ponent body, toward yourself,
and likewise bend t he other two
leads in the opposite direction,
spreading them slightly. Align
LED4 over the proper PC-board
location and bend t he three leads
down to fit the holes . Check for
proper alignment with t he cab-
inet before soldering.
Install LEDl, LED2, and LED3.
Not e that the flat side of the LED's
is the cathode. Allow the LED's to
stand about 7/ 3 2-inch above the
PC board. Install the two ZIF
sockets and insert ICI-IC6 into
the appropriate sockets. Recheck
all componen t con nect ions and
polarities. If you are satisfied that
everything looks correct, you're
ready to continue . Figu r e 10
shows a ph ot o of a completed
board. .
Checkout
Set R17 and RI g to midpoin t
adjustment. With no device in ei -
ther test socket, connect a g-volt
DC power supply, rated at 200 rnA
or more (the actual current draw
will be about 150 rnA), to J1. (The
polarity does n ot matter as we
have a diode-b r idge power in-
put.) A continuous red should be
displayed on LED4, the pass/fail
indicator.
Using a DCvoltmeter, make the
following measurements . (Note
that a ground pad is located in
each corner of the PC board.)
These voltages should be within
0.1 volt:
IC7 pin 3 (Vc cl should be 5.0V.
With the MARGIN switch (S2) off
(slider to right), measure V
D UT
at
TP1. It should be 5.0V.
With the MARGIN switch on, the
low-margin DUT voltage indica-
tor should be on and TPI should
measure 4.5V.
Place a DRAM IC in the appro-
priate ZIF test socket, turn the
access-time potentiometer (R5)
fully clockwise and press test-
switch S1. If the device under test
is good and the tester is working
properly, LED4 will blink green
and, if the MARGIN switch is on,
the tester should alternate be-
tween high- and low-margin volt-
ages. If you do not get a correct
indication, try a power off and on
reset. Turn on the CYCLE swit ch
(slider to the left) and the tester
should repeat the t est without
having to press the T E ST button.
When the high-margin volt age
indicator LED3 is on, the volt age
at TPI should be 5.6V.
If all of the above voltages check
out properly, only the "speed" or
access-time calibration remains .
If you have access to a 100-MHz
oscilloscope, look at TP4 with no
IC in eit her test socket . That is
the master clock and it should
run continuously. Allow the unit
continued on page 60
This single-shot and continuous-pulse
generator is inexpensive and easy to
build, yet it offers automatic level setting
and both positive and negative pulses.
PULSE-MATE
DAVID PLANT
THERE IS AN OLD AXIOMTHATA MAN'S
work is onlyas good as his tools-
and a good pulse generator is al-
ways a good tool to have. Those of
us who don't often need pulse
generators-the technician
working at home on a project, for
example--can usually get by with
a 555 timer added to a prototype
board and used as a trigger. But
there's not always enough room
on the board to do that, and it is
always a pain in the neck.
The solution to that problem is
our Pulse-Mate, a compact sin-
gle-shot and continuous-pulse
generator. The easy-to-use de-
sign has automatic level setting
and positive and negative pulse
output. It can be powered from
the device under test in the range
from 4.5 to 18 volts DC, and has
short-circuit protection for itself
and the device under test.
The circuit
Referring to Fig. 1, the circuit
basically has three sections.
Foremost is the actual pulse gen-
erator built around the ubiq-
uitous 555 timer, which can be
switched from monostable mode
(one shot) to astable mode by 52.
The value of R8 is selected to
create an approximate square
wave at mid frequency range and
Rll selects the actual rate desir-
ed. With 52 in the "astable" posi-
tion, Rll and C2 give a range of
about 5- to 200-Hz., which will
satisfy most needs. (Note that 52
is part of potentiometer Rll.) If
you need to generate higher fre-
quencies, a reduction of C2 can
bring the range up well above au-
dio, but at a loss of the low-fre-
quency pulsing which can be
quite handy.
With 52 in the "one shot" posi-
tion, pushbutton 51 will trigger
leI for as long as it is held down.
The timer's trigger input (pin 2)
is held high by Rl to prevent false
triggering from hand capaci-
tance. When the trigger pin is
brought to ground by 51 or keyed
by the discharge pin (pin 7) in the
astable mode, pin 3 goes high to
about 3,3 volts (when ICI is
powered from 5 volts). For better
circuit stability, power to ICI is
regulated.
The second section of the cir-
cuit consists of Ql and Q2 which
provide the high-rise-time pulse
required for digital work. When
Ql is turned on by the positive
output of ICl, its collector goes
low, giving a negative output
pulse at the probe if 53 is in the
"low" position. The low output
from Ql also turns Q2 off; Q2's
collector now goes high, which
provides a positive pulse at the
probe if 53 is in the "high" posi-
tion. Transistor Q2 also drives
Q3, which drives indicator LED1.
Because QI -Q3 operate at the
incoming supply voltage, we
strongly recommend that you use
2N4400 or equivalent transistors
rather than garden-variety
NPN's, as their base-emitter drop
is less and they have a faster rise-
time. The Pulse-Mate's output
waveform is shown in Fig. 2. The
probe current is limited to under
5 rnA by R6 to protect both the
device under test and the Pulse-
Mate.
The third section consists of a
voltage regulator consisting of
Zener-diode Dl and Q4. That
configuration was used rather
than the popular three-terminal
devices, such as the 7805, be-
cause, when powered from 5
volts, the regulator's internal
voltage drop wouldn't leave
enough to power ICl. As the sup-
ply voltage increases beyond 6.2
volts, the Zener diode conducts
and limits Q4's output to 6 volts
for ICl.
Construction
A parts-placement diagram is
shown in Fig. 3, and we have pro-
vided the foil pattern for the PC
board if you would like to make
41
FIG. 1-THE CIRCUIT HAS THREE SECTIONS: t he pulse generator built around the 555
timer, Q1and Q2 which provide the high-rise-time pulse required for digital work, and a
voltage regulator consisting of Zener-diode 01 and Q4.
PARTS LIST
All resistors are Y4-watt, 5%
R1 , R2-27,000 ohms
R3, R4-10,000 ohms
R5, R6-1000 ohms
R7-R9-470 ohms
R1D-180 ohms
R11-10,000-ohm linear potentiome-
ter with switch
Capacitors
C1, C3, C4-0.1 f.l. F, ceramic disc
C2-4.7 f.l.F, 16 volts, electrolytic
Semiconductors
IC1-LM555 timer
Q1-Q4-2N4400 NPN switchi ng
transistor
01-1N4735 6.2-volt Zener diode, or
equivalent
LE01-any color light-emitting diode
Other components
S1-momentary pushbutton switch
S2-SPST switch (part of R11 in
prototype)
S3-SPOT toggle switch
Miscellaneous: project case (Radio
Shack # 270-220 or equivalent),
knob for R11, 2-inch screw with
washer andnut for probeassembly,
red and black insulated alligator
clips, rubber grommet, heat-shrink
tubing, wire, solder, etc.
Note: The following items are
available from Project-Mate,
2727 West Manor PI., Suite 207,
Seattle, WA 98199 (206)
283-4700: A kit containing a PC
board and all parts including
probe hardware, grommet, heat-
shrink tubing, alligator-clip as-
semblies, and front-panel art-
work (does not include 51, 53,
project case, and knob) is $24.50
plus $2.50 shipping and han-
dling. A PC board only is $6.00
plus $2.50 shipping and han-
dling. WAresidents must add 8%
sales tax.
hole is made, it's there to stay.
The leads of R6 should be insu-
lated with h eat-shrink t ub ing,
I" 2 INCHES "I
HERE'S THE FOIL PATTERN for the Pulse
-Mate's single-sided PCboard.
+}
C4
.1~ 5 : ALLIGATOR
R10 18VOC CUPS
1800 -
01 -=
1N4735
-= 6.2V
R9
4700
Final assembly
The prototype is ins talled in a
case that fits well in one's hand.
However, any enclosure measur-
ing 2 x 4 inches or larger will do .
Also, because the case is a hand-
held s ize, the probe is mounted
directly to it . If you use a larger
case, you may want to mount the
probe off-board.
The probe is made from a 2-
inch s crew that is grou nd to a
point after firs t fitting on an ap-
propriate nut; removing the nut
will then deburr the screw after
the t ip is ground down. With one
washer fitted over the screw, it is
passed through a hole in the case
and the nut then secures it in
place (don't t ighten it ri ght now).
By the way, be careful when drill-
ing the holes in the case; once a
light , check t h e LED's polari ty
and the mounting of QI-Q4. Pin
8 of ICI should show 4 .5 VDC,
Qls collector should be low (100
mV or less), and Q2's collector
should be high (roughly 5 volts).
Now check the output pulse by
putting 52 in the "on" position.
The LED will flash at about 5 Hz,
and advancing potentiomet er
Rll will increase the flash rate to
the point where the LED will ap-
pear to be continuously lit. If
there is no flashing, check the
output of ICI pin 3 for a positive
pulse (or a continuous high of
about 3.3 volts if the 51 inputs
are shorted).
01
2N4400
R2
27K
Sl
..L
..k R01-+---"l
- 27K
ONESHOT'\.
r-e-t-__-----:A.;:: Sc:.:. TA:.::; B=LE:.u".:'5- - - ..,
,--__-+- S_2.., :
I
C1 : 04
.1 ' 2N44
your own-there's also a drilled
and pl ated PC board available
separately or as part of a ki t.
With t he exception of 51, 53,
and the probe, all parts mount on
the PC board. Note that LEDI is
mounted on the foil s ide of the
board s o that it can protrude
through the front panel as shown
in Fig. 4. (Mount the LED 3/ 16 -
inch above the board so t here is
room t o s older it.) Note that Rll -
52 is als o mounted facing up
from the foil side. You don't have
to connect 51 ,53, and the probe
at this time. Take a minute to in-
spect you r work; if eve ryt h ing
looks alright, t he proj ect is ready
for initial testing.
Observing proper pol arity, con-
nect 5 volt s DC to the board. With
Rll -52 in the "off" posi tion,
LED1 should be off. 5horting the
51 input s with a cli p lead will
turn on the LED. If there is no
FIG. 2-THE 2N4400 TRANSISTORS have
a fast rise-time; here's what the output
waveform looks like.
en
a
Z
o
a:
f-
a
w
...J
W
6
is

a:
42
FIG. 4-1T'S A TIGHT FIT, but you end up with a neat littl e handheld i nst rument. Notice
how LED1 is mounted on the foil side of the board and protrudes through the front panel.
FIG. 3-PARTS-PLACEMENT DIAGRAM. Note that LED1and R11-S2 mount on the foil side
of the board .
Application
The device can be tested using
a spare LED. For a pos iti ve-pul se
test, connect the cathode of an
LED to ground and connect the
probe to its anode. Pressing S l
will ligh t the diode. For a nega-
t ive-pulse test, connect the LED's
anode to 5 volts and its cathode
to t he probe and press Sl to light.
(Note that the LED will not light
to full brightness in this part of
t he test because R6 li mits the
probe current to 5 mA.)
If you want to further tes t the
device, build the simple circuit
shown in Fig. 5 using a 74LS74
positi ve-edge-tr iggered flip-flop.
When power is applied, one of the
LED's will li ght. Stroking t h e
clock input with +5 volts in se-
r ies with a lK res is tor s h ould
cause the LED's to change state .
(They will , but in an er rat ic way
because it 's Virtually impossible
to generate a clean clock pulse by
hand. Now connect the Pulse-
Mate's probe (positive mode) di-
rectly to the circuit and the LED's
will switch back and for th predic-
tably. You now have a useful piece
of t est equipment for t r ou - s::
bleshooting, proj ect building, ?<
digital experimenting, and what- m
ever else you can think of. R-E <0
43
board is secu red t o the front pan-
el of the case by the mounting
hardware of potentiometer Rll
and the wiring to S3. You can also
use separate mounti ng hardware
if you like.
You may want to make a name-
plate as a fini shing touch for t he
proj ect , although it 's b es t to
make sure the circuit is working
properly before labeling. At any
r at e, t he one on the prototype
was made using an aluminum
nameplate kit sold by Kepro Cir-
cuit Systems , Inc . (630 Ax-
minister Dr., Fenton, MO63026).
Wit h it , a fu ll-sized positive is
ma d e b y transferring black
press-on type and other des igns
to a clear piece of acetate. A blue
pan el (cut to 1/2" over-size) is
co ntact exposed- like a p h o-
tosensit ized PC board-and de-
veloped. The unexposed portions
under the transfer patterns are
washed away leaving a bl ue panel
with white lettering. Of course la-
beling can also be done in a vari-
ety o f ot he r ways inclu di ng
engraving, rub-on decals, adhe-
s ive labels, etc.
R6
PROBE
83
LOW
HI GH
except for the en ds; one end is
secured between t he head of the
probe screw and the washer, and
the nut can then be tightened.
The other end of R6 is soldered
directly to the common ter minal
of S3. Leaving t he sharpened t ip
of the probe screw exposed, cover
the length of it with heat-shrink
tubing.
Connect S3 and S 1 to the
board; the lead length depends
on the case you u se. The power
leads on t he prototype a re ar-
bitrarily 24 inches long. They are
soldered to the board then
passed through a grommet in the
case. Attach the alligator clips to
the power leads ; use re d and
black insulat ors for posit ive and
negative, respectively. The circu it
4
PRE Q1-"'5_ ----, 2 0 Vee
IC1
1/ 2 74l S74
o-..-t-"-i
3
elK n6
R1
10K
R3
1K
+5V
CLOCK
82
FIG. 5-THIS TEST CIRCUIT uses a
74LS74 posit ive-edge-t ri ggered flip-flop.
Triggering the clock input by hand causes
t he LED's to change st ate in an erratic
manner. Triggering it with t he Pulse-Mate
causes the LED's to swit ch back and forth
predictably.
USE YOUR
TELEPHONES
ASAHOME
INTERCOM
SYSTEM

It's quick and


en easy to add an
o
intercom feature
a:
to your existing
-'
6 home telephones.
o
.FRANK POLIMENE
44
I NT ERCOMS HAVE BEEN AROUND FOR
many years. providing a valuable
tool in communications for home
and industry. Unfor tunatel y.
thes e systems either require add-
ed hardware or hours oflabor in-
s tall ing wires . Responding to
demand. many manufacturers
have incorporated the intercom
as an added feature in their tele-
phones. However. repl acing you r
existi ng equ ip ment is a n ex-
pense that usually ou tweighs t he
justification.
The Phone-Com project we will
d e s c rib e may b e u s ed c o n -
curre n t ly wit h any t ouch-t one
phone system. an d it provides
features that make it practi cal.
easy to use. and inexpensive. Be-
cause it connect s t o your exis ti ng
telephone equ ipment. there are
no unsi ghtly boxes to clutter u p
you r desk.
How it works
To engage the intercom at any
ti me. all you have to do is pick up
any phone and press the"#" key.
That causes on e or more alert
modules t o so u nd an alarm. s ig-
nalling other peopl e in t he home
to pi ck up a phone. If you answer
a cal l t hat comes in for someone
else. pressing t he "#" key will
place t he call on hold. and the
alar m will sou n d on the a lert
modules s ignalling someone else
in the home to pick up t he phone.
That so meone else may then re-
leas e the call on hold by pressing
the " #" key or talk to you in pri-
JUNCTION
BLOCK
TOCONN. J1
ON
MAIN CONTROL
MODULE
TO HOUSE WIRING
FIG. 1-THE PHONE-COMTAKES ADVANTAGEof a device called a " network interface,"
installed in most newer homes; it is simply a connector box that separates the outside
phone line from your internal wiring.
vate before answering the call.
Since the system is voice oper-
ated (VOX), the intercom will dis-
engage and return to normal
operation after approximately 30
seconds if no conversation is
heard.
The Phone-Com takes advan-
tage of a device called a "network
interface," installed in most new
homes over the past 10 years. De-
spite the complicated name, it is
simplya connector box that sepa-
rates the outside phone line from
your internal wiring (see Fig. 1).
Since a network interface is used
by the phone company to deter-
mine whether problems are in ter-
nal or external, a substantial
premium service charge may be
imposed if you don't have one.
Therefore, it is h ighly recom-
mended that one be ins t all ed ,
even if not for this project.
Th eory of oper at ion
Take a look at the schematic in
Fig. 2. In the stand-by mode, re-
lay RY1 is not energized and the
only connection to the phone line
is the coupling-capacitor Cl , The
IN
12VAC
..1'REDOJI-3
BLACK 0 JI-4
OUTPUT
FROM MODULAR PLUG ON
NETWORK INTERFACE
YELLOWOJ1-1
GREEN Jl-2
+V
08
l N4148
13
11
R3
56K
04
1N4148
16
03
17 1N4148
C6:r
.01 -=
IC2-a
1/6 MC14049
8
10 15
R7
56K
+V
02
lN4004
C1
.01
01
1N4004
Rl0
560n
J2-3 RED
1C2-e
1/6 MC14049 1/6 MC14049
J2-40 BLACK
r------lNPur--- ------- -------- - - - - - - - - - - - -- ------ --- - - -- - ----1
: FROM MODULAR JACK ON :
: NETWORK INTERFACE :
I J2-1 0 YELLOW I
: RY1-b I
I +V
I
I .oL..{-o
L J J2-2
: RY1-e
I
I
: ~ I < ....,
~ J
I
I
I
!RY1.. d ~ o _ _ ---l
I
I ~
L__ --:
I +V
I
I
I
FIG. 2-CONTROLLER SCHEMATIC. The SSI202P is a telephone tone decoder whose
BCD output is dependent on which tones are present at pin 9.
(0
(0
45
FIG. 4-PARTS-PLACEMENT DIAGRAMfor the controller. It can be installed in any kind of
case you can find.
}
12VAG
IN
..,
17
9
16
IG1 4
SSI202P 7
10
15
02 03
1N4004 1N4148
Network Interfaces may be pur-
chased at Radio Shack or most
electronic suppliers for around
$5.00.
R5
56K
Gl
.01
R3
10MEG
R4
220K
R1
2.2MEG
01
1N4004 (SEE rsxn
PARTSLIST-ALERT MODULE
All resistors are Y4-watt, 5%, un- PL1-4-wire modular phone plug
less otherwise noted. Miscellaneous: 9-volt battery con-
R1-2.2 megohms nector, PCboard, project case, etc.
R2, R4, R8--220,OOO ohms Note: The following items may be
R3-10 megohms (see text) purchased from BCT Elec-
R5-56,OOO ohms tronics, 8742 Belair Road, Bal-
R6-33,000 ohms timore, MD21236(301) 256-0344.
R7-680,000 ohms MCIVISA, AX, and DISCOVER
R9-1 megohm accepted. Add $2.50 S&H for
R1o--100 ohms (see text) each total order.
Capacitors Drilled, etched, and screened
C1-0.01 fLF, 500 volts, ceramic disc controller PC board-$7.95
C2-1 fLF, 16volts, electrolytic Drilled, etched, and screened
Semiconductors alert module PC board-$4.95
IC1-SSI202P telephone tone SSI1202P 1e-$11.95
decoder Complete controller kit (in-
Q1 , Q2, Q4-MPSA14 or equivalent eludes PCboard and all compo-
Darlington transistor nents except phone jacks and
Q3-2N5401 or equivalent PNP housing)-$39.95
transistor Complete alert module kit (in-
01-03-1N4004 diode eludes PCboard and all compo-
04, 05-1N4148 diode nents except phone plug and
Other components housing)-$24.95
B1-9-volt alkaline or 7.2-volt Ni-Cd
battery (see text)
XTAL1-3.58 MHz crystal
BZ1-100-dB Mallory Sonalert
module
PHONE
LINE
REO
PHONE
LINE
GREEN
L
FIG. 3-ALERT MODULES plug into any phone jack; the circuit is only active during an
"off hook" condition to conserve battery power.
PARTS LIST-CONTROLLER
All resistors are Y4-watt, 5%, un-
less otherwise noted.
R1-600 ohms, Y2-watt
R2-1 megohm
R3-R7-56,OOO ohms
R8--220,OOO ohms
R9-10,OOO ohms
R1o--560 ohms
R11-10 ohms
Capacitors
C1-Q.01 lLF, 200 volts, ceramic disc
C2, C3, C5, C6, C11-Q.01 f-lF, 50
volts, ceramic disc
C4-22 fLF, 16 volts, tantalum
C7-Q.1 fLF, 50 volts, ceramic disc
C8, C9-1000 fLF, 16 volts,
electrolytic
C1O--10fLF, 35 volts, electrolytic
Semiconductors
IC1-SSI202P telephone tone
decoder
IC2-MC14049 hex inverting buffer
IC3-MC14013B dual O-typeflip-flop
IC4-LM555N timer
IC5-7805 5-volt regulator
Q1-Q3-MPSA14 or equivalent
Darlington transistor
03,04, 07, 08--1N4148 diode
D1 , 02, 05-1N4004 diode
LE01-red light-emitting diode
BR1-3N246 full-wavebridge
rectifier
Other components
BZ1-100-dB Mallory Sonalert
module
XTAL1-3.58-MHz crystal
RY1-0POT mini relay, t-amp
contacts, 12-volt coil
T1-600/600 ohm audio isolation
transformer
J1, J2-modular telephone jack
Miscellaneous: 12-VAC 500-mA
plug-in transformer, PC board,
project case, etc.
SSI202P (lCl) is a telephone tone
decoder whose BCD output is de-
pendent on which tones are pres-
ent at pin 9. The two most-sig-
nificant bits (pins 16 and 17) will
only be high during a "#" key de-
pression. The high on pin 7 of
IC4 and pin 4 of IC2 allow Q3 to
turn on, thereby energizing the
audible alarm. The alarm will re-
main on for as long as the"#" key
is depressed.
Pin 6 of IC2 is now low, which
sends a clock pulse to IC3. That
transfers the high at IC3 pin 2 to
the output at pin 1, which ener-
gizes the relay through Q1, R5 ,
CIJ and IC2. The trigger input ofIC4,
o also being low, starts the VOX-
timer IC4. The clock pulse to IC3
is delayed slightly by R7 and C2
&:l until the output of IC4 pin 3 has
u:J enough time to remove the reset
o signal at IC3 pin 4. When the "#"
key is released, pin 11of IC3 goes
a: high and toggl es the output of
46
FIG. 5-THE FINISHED CONTROLLER BOARD is very neat and compact, so it doesn't
take up much space.
FIG. 6-PARTS-PLACEMENT DIAGRAM
for the alert module. It's good to have at
least one on every floor in your home, in a
cent ral location.
IC3 pin 13 to a low state, prevent-
ing the alarm to sound during
the next depression of the"#" key
(manual turn off).
If conversation continues, IC4
is prevented from time-out
through C7 and Q2. If con-
versation stops for more than 30
seconds, C4 charges to the
threshold voltage at IC4 pin 6 and
IC4 pin 3 returns to a low state.
That places a high on the reset
pin (pin 4) and the set pin (pin 8)
of IC3, which turns off RYI, re-
turning the system to the stand-
by mode. Any calls in process are
held by maintaining central-of-
fice loop current through RI
while in intercom mode.
Alert module
Alert modules plug into any
phone jack (see Fig. 3), and can
be powered by either a 7.2-volt
rechargeable Ni-Cd or 9-volt al -
FIG. 7-A FINISHED ALERT MODULE. It
can plug into any ordinary phone jack;
use a T-connector if you must connect
both a phone and an alert module to the
same jack.
kaline battery. However, the cir-
cuit is only active during an "off
hook" condition to conserve the
battery. During normal opera-
tion, there is approximately 50
volts on the phone line. That al-
lows base current to flow through
RI which turns on Q1 and holds
Q2 in an off state preventing
power to ICI and the audible
alarm. When the line voltage falls
below 10 volts, as evident in an
off-hook condition, Q2 turns on,
thereby placing ICI in the stand-
by mode.
Telephone tones are decoded by
ICI as previously discussed. A
"#" key activation will activate
the alarm. Diode DI is importan t
in that it protects ICI and the rest
of the semiconductors from
damage when the AC ringing
voltage is present on the phone
line. If you're using a rechargea-
ble battery, charging current is
supplied through R3 during on-
hook conditions.
Construction
The Phone-Com controller is
built on one PC boar d, and the
ale rt modules are bu ilt on sepa-
rate boards. Determine t h e
number of alert modules you will
need including the master con-
trol unit. The modules are loud
enough to cover approximately
1000 square feet each, even when
placed behind fu rniture . It is rec -
ommended that one module be
installed in a central locati on on
each floor of your house. Con-
struction is straightforward,
however, care should be taken
when handling the static-sen-
sitive decoder chips.
We have provided foil patterns
for both boards, although the
project can be built using point-
to-point wiring. Double check
your wiring before connecting
the modules to the phone line if
you don't use the boards. Figure
4 is a parts-placement diagram
for the co ntroller board. Th e
finished board, shown in Fig. 5,
can be ins talled in any kind of
case you see fit .
The values for R3 and RIO de-
pend on what type of battery you
are using. Use 10 megohms for
R3 and 82 ohms for RIO for a 9-
vo lt a lkaline battery. If a re- s:
chargeable battery is used, ?<
change the value of R3 to 82K cD
and RIO to 10 ohms. Any audio
47
-,
0
:
0
0
0
/0
0 0
0
0
0
0 0 0
o 0
0
~
0
0
0
0
~
I.... 4
1/aINCHES
-------- - ----.J
THE CONTROLLER BOARD is double-sided; here's the component side shown at actual
size.
L 0
face . Connect that wire to Jl on
the main control module. Make
sure all phones on the same ex-
tension are on-hook, and con-
nect the controller to a 12-volt AC
source. Pick up a telephone re-
ceiver and press the"#" key. The
alarm will sound and the LED
should be on. You will also be able
hear yourself talk through the
handset. Hang up the phone.
The LED should remain on for
approximately 30 seconds, then
turn off.
Connect the remaining wire
from the main control module to
the j a ck on the network inter-
face . Pick up the receiver again
and initiate a call to determine
normal operation. If you are un-
able to dial out, the red and green
wires (tip and ring) have been re-
versed somewhere in the system.
Remember that positive phone-
line voltage must be present at J2
pin 2.
It may be necessary to toggle
the "#" key once or twice to get
everything going when the sys-
tem is first installed or after a
power failure . Install the alert
modules and determine the cor-
rect polari ty by measuring a
positive volt age at the anode of
D1. Reverse the wires in the mod-
ule if it turns out to be necessary.
If a rechargeable battery is used,
you should allow it to charge for
at least 24 hours before activat-
ing the system. R-E
FOIL PATTERN for the alert module, also
shown at actual size.
Installation and check out
Determine where your network
interface is by locating the area
where the phone line enters the
house. In some cases, the device
is mounted on the outside. It is a
small box with a short wire loop
connecting to a modular jack. Re-
fer back to Fig. 1on howto install
a network interface if it's not al-
ready present. During the next
few steps, your phone system will
be inoperative until installation
is complete.
Disconnect the short wire from
the jack on the network inter-
o
!.------------4
1
/aINCHES- - - - - - - - - - --..1
L
I"
r
SOLDER SIDE of the controller board shown at actual size.
transformer with approximately
a 500-ohm primary may be used
for T1.
Figure 6 is a parts-placement
diagram for the alert module,
and Fig. 7 shows a finished unit.
Again, the board can be installed
en in any case you like.
o Follow the red/green color code
~ shown in Figs. 2 and 3 when con-
cc necting the system to the phone
~ line. A"T" adapter may be used if
u:J you need to connect additional
o equipment to the same jack.
o Velcro strips offer an easy way to
~ secure the modules to a wall .
48
Inside
SWITCHING
POWER
SUPPLIES
HARRY L. TRIETLEY
of each cycle, the oscillator pulse I
momentarily forces both gates
low, protecting against the pos-
sibility of both transistors being
on at the same time.
The current-limit amplifier
protects against current over-
loads. lts output is an open-col-
lector type-open-circuit when
high. pull-down to ground when
low. The current-limit amplifier
and the shutdown transistor can
be used to force the comparator
output high. shutting down both
transistors.
Figure 2 shows the 8G3524 in
a simple DC-DC converter. The
oscillator frequency of about 60
kHz is set by R5 and C2. (The flip-
flop divides the push-pull output
frequency to 30 kHz.) The cur-
rent-limit amplifier goes low
when its input exceeds 0.2 volts.
limiting Rll's current to 2 amps
in case of overload or transformer
The SG3524/5/6/7 rc
Figure I shows the internal cir-
cuit of the SWitching regulator IC
SG3524. In that circuit. the os -
cillator produces both ramp and
pulse outputs. Ignoring the cur-
rent limit (CL) and shutdown cir-
cuits for the moment, the
compa rator 's output goes high
when the ramp exceeds the out-
put of the error amplifier. The
NOR gates then go low, turning
the output transistors off.
Each NOR gate can be high only
when its three inputs are low.
The oscillator output toggles the
flip-flop, enabling one gate, and
then the other to respond to the
comparator. That action gates
one transistor on at a time,
provldtng push-pull operation.
The selected transistor turns on
at the start of each cycle, and
turns off as soon as the ramp ex-
ceeds the error signal. At the end
We'll take an
in-depth look at two
switching regulator Ie
families, with some applica-
tions, andguide you through
basic troubleshooting techniques.
IN OUR LAST l':D1TION. WE EXAM INED
the basics of switching regulator
power supplies. Now we'll dive
into some real -world applica-
tions. We'll examine the 3524/5/7
and 3842 IC families in detail.
summarize others, and show
some typical circuits. In the pro-
cess we'll study how to select
components for those circuits
and learn more about how
switching regulator IC's are pro-
tected against such problems as
startup current surges, under-
voltage, and overload. We'll finish
up with some basic troubleshoot-
ing hints.
Let's first start off with an ex-
planation of the standard no-
menclature used in naming the
IC's we will discuss in this article.
The first digit ''1'' indicates full
military temperature range of
- 55 to 150C, "2" indicates an
industrial temperature range of
- 25 to 85C, and "3" is a com-
mercial temperature range of 0 to
70C. Hereafter, we will refer only
to the commercial version IC's,
with prefix "3." Keep in mind that
all those IC's are also available in
military and industrial versions.
A suffix of "A." "B, " or "C" indi-
cates an enhanced version of the
IC. which we will discuss in more
detail later in this article.
Manufacturers may use many
different prefixes, some of which
include
SG-Signetics. SGS-Thomson,
Motorola, and Linear Technology
C5-Cherry Semiconductor.
XR-Exar.
CA-GE-RCA.
IC-IPS.
LTSG-Linear Technology.
LM-National Semiconductor.
UC-Unitrode, Motorola, Linear
Technology and Signetics.
UD-SGS-Thomson.
IP-IPS.
LAS-Lambda.
4g,
FIG. 2-THE SG3524, TWO SWITCHINGtransistors, atransformer and afew components
create a complete S-volt push-pull switching regulator.
r----------------------------l

V -,' , REFERENr.r: ' ... V
IN 5V REGULATOR ..... ;:
I
INV INPUT 1, :
I

NIINPUT--( 2 12 ..... COLLECTOR 1
"T' -= "r'
:
:

CURRENT " , ,
+LIMIT 1
1
CURRENT -t 5' '13"..... COLLECTOR 2
- LIMIT SENSE ",' 'j'
I
, , I
SHUTDOWN-t 10 I
',' I
,1,
C;...{ 7' 14 2
", JUUL"T'
, I
OSCILLATOR
RT---( 6 3 r: OUTPUT
''T' "T
I , , I
L---------------t 8
'r'
GND
FIG. l-1NTERNAL BLOCK DIAGRAM of the SG3524 switching regulator IC.
The enhanced SG3524A
Figure 3 shows the enhanced
version SG3524A, which is pin-
compatible and interchangeable
with the non-A version. The en-
hanced version adds an under-
voltage lockout circuit which
disables the regulator until its in-
put rises above 8 volts. That
holds current drain to standby
levels during turn-on. guarding
against problems during startup.
surges. and brownouts. A pulse-
width modulator latch is also
added. which eliminates multi-
ple pulsing in noisy environ-
ments. Set by the comparator
and reset by the clock pulse. it
can switch only once per com-
parison cycle.
Further protection is provided
by thermal protection circuitry
(not shown). Performance speci-
fications also are improved-the
5-volt reference is trimmed more
closely (1%) and the error am-
plifier's output can swing up to
the 5-volt rail.
Let's look at one more member
of this family, and an application.
Figure 4 shows the workings of
the SG3525N7A. The 3525Aand
3527A differ only in their output
logic; the 3525A is low when off.
while the 3527Ais high when off.
(The pinouts of the 3525N7A do
not match those of the 3524 IC
series.)
Operation is similar to the
3524. but with added features.
The oscillator has a sync input,
making it easy to lock the fre-
quencies of several supplies.
eliminating problems with beat
frequenci es in multiple-supply
boards or sys t ems . The s h u t-
down circuit (also included in the
3524A) and soft-start feature
simplify the design of protective
circu it ry. as will be seen in the
next application. The totem pol e
(push-pull) outputs, rated at
maximum 500 rnA. provide fast.
used for D1 and D2 . Because the
output is balanced, the trans-
former core does not need to be
gapped. a small ferrite core will
do.
At high frequenctes , the equ iv-
alent s er ies resi stance (ESR) of
filter capacitor C5 is higher than
its capacitive impedance. Lowse-
ries-resistance electrolytics
should be used. preferably capac-
itors designed specifically for
switching supplies.
is reduced back to 5 volts. Since
the feedback voltage and ground
are directly connected. input-to-
output isolation is not provided.
Resistors R6 and R7 limit the
current through the internal
drive transistors. which are used
to switch Q1 and Q2. Frequency
compensation for closed-loop
stability is provided by RIO and
C3. Transistors Q1 and Q2
should be high-speed SWitching
power transistors rated at least 5
amps and 60 volts. Shottky or
fast-recovery diodes should be
saturation. Transistors Q1 and
Q2 are used for switching trans-
former current. (The on-chip
transistors are rated at only 100
rnA.) Supply pulses produced by
the circuit are filtered by C4.
(f) The output of the error ampli-
fier is proportional to the dif-
a ference between the reference
g: input (pin 2) and the feedback
(pin l). If the output increases.
uJ the error voltage drops. The ramp
o then reaches the error voltage
more quickly and the transistors
a: turn off sooner. until the output
50
FIG. 3--THE SG3S24A IMPROVES the basic device by adding undervolt age lockout, a
pulse-width modulator (PWM) latch, thermal protection, and improved reference ac-
curacy.
r--------------------------------,
,.1, ,.1., V
V
m
4 15 .... 5V 16'" Ref
',.' REFERENCE 'r'
,..1., REGULATOR I
I
3 , VOLTAGE POWER TO I
'T SENSOR INTERNAl I
,.1, CIRCUITRY,.1,
R
T
.... \6, ,12,t-CA
T T
.1 I
CT-i' 7 ,..1.,
" T ' ,,11}-EA
,.1, ,I,
COMP-4 9 13 ""'C
B
'T' VIN ->
INV , .&., I
INPUT4 1 :
I
I .1
'14'''''' E
B
' T' R1 "T'
.L 1K ,J,
+CURREt!1' 4"-I 10 .....SHUT
LIMIT ' .. ' C1 R2 'r' DOWN
SENSE I
E
on-, 10K 563524A ,..L,
- CURR '!!t 5 + ,.---i 8 "'- GND
LIMIT 'T' ':" '* '.,.'
SENSE I - I
L
charge transistor (pin 7) allows
control of the discharge time at
the en d of each ramp. That pro-
vides a n ensu red s toptime be-
tween output pulses so that, even
with switching delays, both tran-
s istors cannot be on at once. A
47-nanosecond time constant is
provided by RI6-C2.
The 5-volt reference (pin 16) is
con nected to t h e noninverting
input (pin 2) by current limiting
resistor R3, while C9 provides
high-frequency bypassing. Nega-
tive feedback voltage is divided by
RI-R4, dividing the 6-volt output
down to 5 volts. The basic theory
of operation is s imilar to that of
Fig. 2; the ramp is compared to
the error signal to control the on-
off switching of the outputs. On
each cycle. the internal flip-flop
selects either output A or B. The
selected output is switched high
at the start of each ramp and re-
set to low by the latch when the
ramp voltage exceeds the er ror
amp's output. As in Fig. 2, the
direct feedb ack connection
means there is no input to out-
put isolati on .
Compensation for closed-loop
stability is provided by R6 , R7
and C4. SWit ching spike cur-
rents are limited by RlO, RIl , and
R12 in the output stages. Compo-
nents C5 and R17 act as a "snub-
ber," limiting switching tran-
sients from the primary.
When input power is firs t ap-
plied, Ql will be off and soft-start
capacitor C3 will be discharged.
As C3 is charged from the inter-
nal 50-fLA current source, its
voltage will rise, gradually in-
creasing the voltage to the pulse-
width modulator (PWM) control's
bottom inpu t . That gradually in-
creases the amount of time per
cycle that the output is turned
on, providing a "soft " rise of the
output voltage, which allows the
filter capacitors to charge slowly,
reducing startup current surges.
If R9's current exceeds about 3
amps (0. 7-volt drop) , Ql will turn
on, energizing the sh u t down cir-
cu it which pulls pin 8 low and
discharges C3. As the current
drops below 3 amps, Ql turns off,
C7 discharges, the shutdown in-
put goes low and the soft-start
capacitor provides a "soft" recov-
ery for the power supply.
Power transformer Tl i s
wound on an EE25 ferrite core u:
(0.25-inch center leg). It feeds a
S"
Figure 5 shows a 15-watt DC-
DC conver ter. The 200-kHz fre-
quency (l00 kHz final output) is
set by R2-C2. The internal dis-
VREf OSC OUTPUT
,..1.., ,.1.,
r --------', 16,... ..\ 4 ,... ---- --- - - -------..,
I r-- -- - -- ..., ,,1.,
I I I ,13 r: V(;C
I I I T
,.1, I I I OUTPUT
+V1N415 I , J. , A
'1' 11 .....
r-.n. GNO.....(12' I I
'T' ':" I I
, .L, I I
SYNC-1 3 : I
I I
,J., flIP Q I I
6 I ,J.,OUTPUT
'T' flOP Q 14r- B
, .1, : ' r" n
5 I I --1 L
'T' I I
, ..1., i I
OISCHARGH , 7, __...J :
.,. I SG3527A I .L
,J., ':' I OUTPUT I , ,
COMPENSATION-1 9 I SOOE 13,..... Vrx
'T' I : 'T
, .1., I I .1 OUTPUT
INVINPUT"'""\. 1, I ' 11'1- A
,. V
REF
I 'r"
,J., I I
NI INPUT-1 2 I I .., I
' r ' I I U
,.1., I I
SOFT-START-i 8 : :
',." I I
, .1, 5K I 1
SHUTDOWN -i 10 , ,OUTPUT
'1' I 141- B
'1'
I 20K 5K I I I -.., r
I I I I U
I I ':' I I
I ':' L I
L .1
FIG. 4-THE SG3S2SA AND SG3S27A PUSH-PULL switching regulators provide SOo-mA,
totem-pole outputs and oscill ator synchronization.
solid switching for high and low
transitions. The 3524's separate
current-limit amplifier has been
omitted.
+12V
CS
+
FEEDBACK +
C1
J 100l1F
R5 R8

R4
1.2K 3900 + SV
1.5K
Rl 0
V
F8
100
+ SV
3 4 15 13
.,..
10
8YN 08C VIN Vee SHUT
IC1
INV
SG3525A
B 14
RS CMP GNO REF NI Cr OIS
R
T 88
470K 9 12 16 2 5 7 6 8
R7
R2
3.3K
5.SK
R14
- SV
5.6K
C4 Rl
C3
.01 8.2K 11lF
..,.
FIG. 5-A PUSH-PULL SWITCHING REGULATORproduces plus and minus 6 volts at 15
watts.
FEEDFORWARO LINE REGUlMION
CLOCK
L

FET ruuLJ1
Feedforward line regulation is
illustrated by the waveforms
shown in Fig. 7. With a fixed load,
the input voltage suddenly in-
creases. On the very next pulse,
FIG. 7-FEEDFORWARDcompensation of
input variations is ach ieved when the
ramp rate of the transformer's primary
current increases as the input voltage in-
creases.
+5V
Rl
LLL
8 0
FLIP
01
FLOP
0
REFERENCE
AND
REGULATOR
..,.
CLOCK

FET


COMPARATOR I I
er than the reference voltage, the
error signal will increase or de-
crease accordingly, increasing or
decreasing the on time until the
proper voltage is restored.
Current-mode regulation of-
fers two major advantages; pulse-
by-pulse current limiting, and
feedforward line regulation .
Notice that the circuit in Fig. 6
contains no current-sensing
comparator. Instead, each cur-
rent pulse ends as soon as it ex-
ceeds the level set by the error
amplifier. No matter what the
cause of overload, whether trans-
former saturation, an output
short, or input overvoltage, the
circuit will limit current in-
stantly. Pulse-by-pulse limiting
also eliminates the need for a sep-
arate soft-start circuit.
FIG.6-A CURRENT-MODE comparator uses the cur rent feedback signal as the ramp,
providing pulse-by-pulse current li mit ing.
Current-mode regulators
We nowturn to a different class
of switching regulators-current
mode. Although the basic operat-
ing theory remains the same
(pulse-width modulation), cur-
rent-mode switching regulators
differ in that the internal ramp is
eliminated. In its place, the
ramp-like increase in the trans-
former's inductive current is
used for control.
Figure 6 shows the basics of a
current-mode comparator. The
pulse from an R-C clock sets the
flip-flop, producing a high out-
put. FET Ql turns on and trans-
former current begins to flow. As
the inductive current ramps up-
ward, the feedback from current-
sensing resistor R2 increases.
Eventually, the feedback voltage
equals the error amplifier's out-
put, at which point the com-
parator resets the flip -flop, Ql
then turns off until the next clock
pulse.
As with previous regulators,
the feedback voltage, V
F B
, repre-
sents the filtered output. If the
feedback becomes lower or high-
conventional full-wave bridge,
providing + and - outputs.
Coupled inductor T2, consisting
of two coils wound on a cylin-
drical ferrite core, and the output
capacitors filter the output to 50
millivolts peak-to-peak. Tran-
sistors Q2 and Q3 are 50-volt, 5-
amp, N-channel power
MOSFET's. Fast-recovery diodes
must be used in the rectifier due
to the high frequency; are
100-volt, 8-amp diodes with 35-
nanosecond recovery.
en
o
z
o
a:

o
W
-l
W
a
o

a:
52
FIG. 8-INTERNAL BLOCK diagram of t he UC3842 current-mode switching regulator IC.
The UC3843 IC is similar but operates with a lower undervol tage lockout.
FIG. 9-THIS OFF-LINE CURRENT-MODE regulator produces isolated +5 vol ts and 12
vol ts from 117-volt li ne power.
03
lN3613
27 watts.
The term "off-line" means that
the regulator is on the primary
side of the transformer and oper-
ates directly "off the line." The
primary advantage of such a cir-
cuit is that large amounts of
power can be coupled through a
small, high-frequency trans-
former. Line operation requires
high-voltage transis t ors and di -
odes, and prevents direct cou p-
ling between the output and the
feedback circuit . s::
The line voltage is rectified and
filtered by BRI and Cl. Initial CD
startup current to the IC is pro-
C9
3900pF
01
1N3612
R12
4.7K
R2
56K
RS C14
lS0K100pF
R3
20K
R1
SO
CS
,01 C6
4700pF
117VAC
An off-line flyback converter
Figure 9 shows an SGS-Thom-
son UC3842 IC in an "off-line"
flyback regulator. The circuit pro-
vides +5 volts at 4 amps and 12
volts at 300 rnA, and can deliver
r- --------------------------------..,
J. 3842 l
V
, ,, I
I
T' I
I I
I I
I ,1,
I 8 flV
, 1, 'v' SOmA
5 I
...L..' , I

1 01 j
I
L
. , ,
C1 I
- I 02 I
, J. , I
VF8--l 2 03 -= I
' 1' ERROR I
,.1., AMPLIFIER I
COMP--l 1 R2 :
'1/ I
1 -= I
CURRENT-f3" I
SENSING ' 'C
Intended for use at lower volt-
ages, it operates at 8.4 volts, and
drops out at 7.9 volts. UC3844
and UC3845 (not shown) have
one added feature; a flip-flop
which disables the output on al-
ternate clock cycles. That guar-
antees the duty cycle will always
be les s than 50% for circuits
where that is critical.
the inductive cu r ren t, I, ramps
more qutckly due to the in-
creased transformer voltage.
Since the feedback and the error
s ignal have not changed, the lim-
it is reached more quickly and
the puls e width becomes shorter.
Changes in line volt a ge are,
therefore, compensated before
they have a chance to affect the
ou tpu t.
UC3842/3/4/5
Figure 8 shows the block di -
a gr a m of current-mode PWM
controller IC UC3842. Compared
with t h e circuit in Fig. 6, the
UC3842 adds an undervoltage
lockout and an output NOR gate.
The undervoltage lockout , with
hysteresis, disables the output
pulses until Vee rises above 16
volts . Once s t arted, it will not
drop out unless Vee goes below
10 volts, a feature which prevents
constant toggling between "oper-
ate" and "lockout." When dis-
abled, the output (pin 6) goes to a
h igh -impedance state. A
"bleeder" resistor should be con-
nected from pin 6 to ground to
prevent leakage current from
turning the SWitching FET on.
The output N OR gate imple-
ments lockout, but also serves
another protective function.
When the oscillator pulse is high,
the NOR output will be low, t he OR
output high, and pin 6 low. The
output cannot go high until the
clock goes low: The clock is set up
so that timing capacitor Cl
charges through Rl , and d is -
charges through the constant
cu rren t sink. By choosing a
larger capacitor and smaller re-
sistor, the charging time (clock
low) can be decreased and the
discharge time (clock high) in-
creased. That allows you to estab-
lish the maximum on time, or
duty cycle, which is especially im-
portant in circuits where duty cy-
cles higher than 50% can lead to
transformer core saturation.
The D2-D4-RI-R2 network be-
tween the error amplifier and the
cu rren t -sen s ing comparator re-
duces the error signal so that ex-
cessive power is not lost in the
cu rrent-sensing r esis tor. The
one-volt Zener diode clamps the
er r or s ig n a l s o the maximum
turn-off level will never exceed
one volt.
UC3843 is s imilar to the 3842
but has a lower lockout voltage.
53
vided by Rl , The UC3842's under-
voltage lockout circuitry prevents
startup until the voltage on C2
reaches 16 volts. The 50-kHz op-
erating frequency is set by R6-
C6, with a maximum duty cycle
of about 95%. The internal 5-volt
supply is filtered by C5 to elimi-
nate switching spikes. Current-
mode feedback is provided by
RIO, while C14 and R5 are used
for frequency compensation.
Once the circuit has started,
voltage feedback comes from the
lO-turn control Winding. The
voltage at pin 2 is compared to
the internal 2.5-volt reference.
The voltage difference increases
or decreases the duty cycle until
the voltage at pin 7 equals 13.1
volts. Allowing for diode voltage
drops, that corresponds to a peak
voltage of about 14.6 volts on the
control Winding. The control-to-
secondary turns ratios are
chosen to produce 5- and 12-volt
DC outputs. Notice that control
is from the control Winding's volt-
age, t he outputs are only indi-
rectly regulated. Power losses due
to cu rrents in the windings, di-
odes and inductor will affect the
outputs. Five-volt regulation is
10% accurate, while the 12-volt
regulator has 5 % accuracy.
Transistor Ql is a 500-volt, 5-
amp power MOSFET. The diodes
are fast-recovery diodes. A"snub-
ber" network is formed by D3-C9-
R12 to hold turn-off spikes below
Q1s breakdown voltage. Snubber
D4-C8-Rll slows the turn-off rise
time u n til Ql's current has had a
chance to decay.
Transformer design is impor-
tant; t he air gap must be large
enough to prevent core satura-
tion but small enough to main-
tain the required inductance.
(Note that an air gap is not
needed in balanced push-pull cir-
cuits.) In the Fig. 9 circuit, an
EC35 ferrite core is used (3fs-inch
dia . center leg, Ferroxcube
EC35-3C8) with a 0.5 mm gap in
the center leg.
The primary winding consists
of 45 turns of 26 AWG wire. The
U) 12-volt Windings are each 9 turns
o of 30 AWG wire, wound together
(bifllar), The 5-volt secondary is
g: only 4 turns, but instead of using
frl a heavier gauge wire, four bifilar,
u:J 4-turn windings of 26 AWG wire
6 are used, with their ends con-
nected in parallel. The control
II: (feedback) winding consists of
54
two bifilar, parallel lO-turn 30
AWG Windings. Now let's take a
look at how an optoisolator can
be used in a switching regulator.
Optocoupled feedback
Optocouplers provide a conve-
nient way of coupling isolated
feedback. Figure 10 shows a cir-
cuit in which the 5-volt second-
ary of a switching regulator is
controlled. If the output goes
above 5 volts, the inverting input
decreases below 2.5 volts and the
optocoupler's LED current de-
creases. That decreases the cou-
pler's output transistor current,
increasing V
F B
until the isolated
output returns to 5 volts.
FIG. 10-0PTOCOUPLER FEEDBACK al-
lows precise control of an isol ated output.
A wide selection of Ie's
Once a new IC technology is es-
tablished, the offerings multiply
as designs advance and the mar-
ket expands. Switching reg-
ulators are no exception. Voltage
mode, current mode, single-end-
ed and push-pull IC's cover a wide
variety of power levels and user-
specific applications.
Table 1 summarizes some of
the many IC families available.
Most of the devices shown can be
multiple-sourced. The part
number prefixes vary from man-
ufacturer to manufacturer, and
many offer additional, proprie-
tary devices.
It's not possible to fully de-
scribe all devices in an abbrevi-
ated table, but the listing should
help direct you to data sheets for
IC's to meet your needs. The 8-
pin devices tend to be simpler to
apply, while the 16-pin and larger
IC's generally offer more compli-
cated protective and "housekeep-
ing" features.
The 3524/5/7 and 3842-7 fam-
ilies have been fully covered in
this article. The 4191-3 family,
with its low operating voltage
and 200-f1A current drain, is ide-
al for battery and micropower ap-
plications. Companion micro-
power device 4391 provides
regulated negative outputs from
positive supplies. LTl070 is the
only IC in the listing housed in a
power IC package.
Troubleshooting hints
When troubleshooting switch-
ing regulators, always begin with
the obvious . Check for input
power and output shorts, broken
wires, defective connectors, sol-
der bridges, defective solder
joints, bad copper traces,
scorched components, and so
on. It's surprising how often a
good visual inspection can un-
cover a problem.
Make sure you have a data
sheet, pinouts of the control IC,
and a circuit schematic, prefera-
bly with voltages and waveforms.
There is such a wide variety of
IC's and operating modes that it's
difficult to troubleshoot on an in-
tuitive basis. Figure 11 shows a
"generic" block diagram, which
may help you to think through
the circuit function-by-function.
When breadboarding tempo-
rary components, remember that
switching regulators produce
fast, high-current pulses. Con-
ductor size and lead dress are im-
portant. The input filter capaci-
tor should be close to the IC, not a
foot away. If the main source of
power is at a distance, add a sev-
eral hundred microfarad input
bypass capacitor next to the IC.
Even though you may under-
stand the operation of switching
regulators, troubleshooting
them can be difficult. The IC and
its circuitry perform many func-
tions, and the failure of one can
cause improper operation of the
rest. For example, failure of the
feedback circuit may lead to over-
voltage, overcurrent, and shut-
down by one of the protective
features. Is the circuit dead, un-
stable or out of regulation? That
alone may often narrow the
search to one particular part of
the circuit.
The following hints may help
you pinpoint the problem to a
specific area of the circuit. After
the visual inspection, check the
output for shorts or overloads
and check the input source, rec -
tifier, filter, and transformer.
TABLE 1-A SUMMARY OF SELECTED SWITCHING REGULATOR IC'S
Output
(Single
IC Mode or Push-
lOUT
Family Manufacturers' Vor I Pull) Package Supply Max Reference Comments
3524/5/7 CS, ERIC, EXAR, V
pop
16 Pin 8-35V 100mA 5 or 5.1V See Article.
GE, IPS, LT, MOT,
NAT, SGS, SIL,
SLG, TI, UNI
3842-7 CS, ERIC, IPS, I S 8 Pin 8 (or 16)-25V 1A 5V See Article.
LT, MOT, SGS,
SIG, TI, UNI
4191-3 MAX, RAY V S 8 Pin 2.4-30V 150mA 1.31V Micropower for battery
applications, 200JLA
quiescent supply
current.
4391 MAX, RAY V S 8 Pin -4 to - 30V 100mA 1.25V Inverting, micropower
for battery applications,
250JLA supply at 4V.
5560 CS, IPS, SIG V S 16 Pin 10.5-18V 40mA 3.72V Full-featured,
5562 20 Pin 10 16V 100mA 3.80V flexibl e.
5561 V S 8 Pin 10.5V-18V 20mA 3.75V Lower cost , fewer
housekeepi ng
functions.
493/4/5 CS, EXAR, V
pop
16 or 7-40V 200mA 5V
593/4/5 GS, IPS, 18 Pin
MOT, NAT,
TI, UNI
JLA78S40 MOT, NAT V S 16 Pin 2.5-40V 1.5V 1.24V Universal subsystem IC.
125/7 IPS, SIL V
Pop
16 Pin 8-35V 100mA 5.1V
33060/ IPS, MOT V S 14 Pin 7-40V 500mA 5V
34060/
35060
1060 IPS, PLES V S 16 Pin 20mA into 5V 40mA 3.7V
shunt
regulator
LT1070 LT I S 5 Pin 3-40V 5A 1.24V Self-contained power
Power IC.
'Manufacturers: CS = Cherry Semiconductor, ERIC= Ericsson, EXAR = Exar, GE= GE/RCNHarris, GS= Gold Star, IPS= Integrated Power
Semiconductor, LT = Linear Technology, MAX = Maxim, MOT = Motorola, NAT= National Semiconductor, RAY= Raytheon, SGS = SGS-Thom-
son, SIG = Signetics, SI L= Silicon ix, SLG= Silicon General , TI =Texas Instruments, UNI =Unitrode
FIG. 11-THIS "GENERIC" BLOCK DIAGRAM of a switch ing regulator is useful in sorting
out the funct ions whi ch make up the circuit.
Sometimes a fail ure which looks
like it might have been caused by
output overload is actually
caus ed by a low input voltage.
When the input voltage drops.
t he r egulator's duty cycle in-
cre as es. raising the input cur-
rent. The increased cur rent may
further drag down the voltage, re-
su lt ing in even higher current
drain, until an input fuse or cir-
cuit breaker trips or something
burns out.
If the output is dead. check the
rectifier and filter. the drive tran-
sistors a n d the output trans-
former or inductor. Before replac- s::
ing damaged componen ts check
any snubber or surge-suppres- <0
continued on page 64
t-t----<)SHUT DOWN
REGULATED
INTERNAL
SUPPLY
EXTERNAL TRANSISTORS L1
ORFETS = ...
1-+-t-t...J - --,
I : D1 I OUTPUT I

: RECTIFIERI
r:::;;;;::J I I AND :
: :v
r
..J.. OUTPUT :
I I I
_ _ _ J
I -
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
L- + J
I I
L .J
I
I
I

I
SOFT'START:
CAPACITOR I
-= I
I
I
I
55
and the capacitor can then be re-
measured.
II I
r:.
u,
:: " I .... . 11
It
10
? I
..
..
...
..
PcIC
Test Fixture
The PC connection
The capacitance meter at -
taches to your PC via three lines
(plus ground) of a standard par-
allel port. The AUTOFO signal con-
nects to ICI's TRIGGER input (pin
2) to initiate the timing cycle. The
ACK line from the port connects to
ICI's output (pin 3). In operation,
our software drives AUTOFO
momentarily low and then high
again to trigger ICI. While the PC
counts the time interval, the ca-
pacitor charges until ICI's inter-
nal comparator drives its output
from low to high. At that time,
ACK senses the end of the timing
cycle and alerts the PC to stop
counting. The software then con-
verts the elapsed time interval to
a capacitance value.
The 06 line from the parallel
port drives the bilateral switch.
Initially, the switch is on, which
places R2 in parallel with RI, and
allows you to measure the high
range (0.1-20 J.LF). If the resul-
tant count is less than a specified
value, the software switches R2
out of the circuit, obtains a new
count, and then scales it for the
low range (20 pF-O.II-LFl.
Because the software depends
on a timing loop, it must be cali -
brated before use. Calibration
consists of making two readings:
one accounts for stray circuit ca-
pacitance; the other involves
measuring a known capacitor to
provide a standard. The circuit
PC-based capacitance meter
The first project is a capaci-
tance meter. It will be incorpo-
rated into the next project, a
combined voltmeter, ohmmeter,
and capacitance meter on a PC
board, but it can also be used as a
stand-alone test instrument.
First let's discuss the details of
hardware operation.
. The circuit. shown in Fig. I,
consists of two IC's: a 555 timer
(lCI) and a quad bilateral switch
(lC2). The 555 is the heart of the
circuit. When configured in the
astable (one-shot) mode, the
length of the pulse generated at
pin 3 is directly proportional to
the value of the timing resistor
(RI) and the timing capacitor
(C
x)'
With a fixed timing resistor,
the duration of the output pulse
will be directly proportional to
the value of the timing capacitor.
Thus, by connecting a known re-
sistor and an unknown capacitor
to ICI, triggering it, and then
measuring the length of the re-
sultant output pulse, we can cal-
culate the value of the capacitor.
We wanted to obtain an effec-
tive meter range of20 pF to 20 I-LF.
To achieve such a wide range, we
had to use two different timing
resistors-and that's where the
4066 comes in. By driving pin 12
of IC2 high, the IC effectively par-
allels a second resistor (R2) with
the main timing resistor (RI).
Doing so makes it easier to mea-
sure large-value capacitors. With
R2 switched in, the effective
range of the meter is 0.1 I-LF to 20
J.LF. If the value of the unknown
capacitor is less than 0.1 I-LF. R2
can be switched out of the circuit
(automatically by the software)
contains a data-logging function
that allows us to maintain a rec-
ord of each vendor's quality histo-
ry, which is useful in selecting
vendors.
In future articles, we will de-
scribe different components of
the CIS hardware and software.
This time we'll present a $15 two-
IC circuit that lets you use your
PC as a capacitance meter. Later
installments will include com-
plete details for building sophis-
ticated component and IC test-
ers. When space is available, we'll
provide the software listings (all
of which are in QuickBASIC);
compiled programs and source
code are also available.
S
ch ools and colleges teach
many things-but they
don't teach electronic-
equipment manufacturing. Most
of us pick up that type of knowl-
edge through on-the-job experi-
ence or through our hobbies. (In
fact, hobby magazines like Ra-
dio-Electronics probably are the
most common teachers of prac-
tical design and construction.)
However, many engineers gradu-
ate from school and enter the
work force with little or no prac-
tical experience.
Recently I had to set up a train-
ing center to instruct young engi-
neers at my company in basic
manufacturing processes. My
task was to create a small man-
ufacturing factory where stu-
dents would build an electronic
product. In the process, they
would experience every stage of
the manufacturing process: in-
terpreting engineering draw-
ings, buying parts, testing them,
building the product, and ship-
ping it to the customer. The proj-
ect was dubbed the Manufactur-
ing Technology Facility (MTF).
With a limited budget and lim-
ited time in which to teach more
than 400 people, I searched for
automation aids that would
speed up the mundane work
without attenuating the man-
ufacturing experience we were
trying to impart. One area I at-
tacked was incoming inspection.
In a normal manufacturing
plant, parts are bought from
many sources. When they arrive,
they are tested to ensure they
work, because it can cost more
than $10 to find and fix a bad $1
part in a finished product.
The product we built had more
than thirty different types of elec-
tronic parts, which fell into five
groups: resistors, capacitors, di-
odes, transistors, and IC's. What
I needed was a low-cost way for
students to inspect the parts
quickly, but with minimum
chance for error. The result was
what we now call the Component
Inspection System (CIS). It incor-
porates a capaci tance meter, an
IC tester, and a computer-con-
z trolled voltmeter used for testing
resistors and diode and tran-
o sister junctions. The CIS soft-
ware includes a database con-
w
6 taining each component's speer-
o ficattons, complete with pass/fail
ri criteria. In addition, the system
56
EXPERIMENTING WITH
PC-BASED
TEST EQUIPMENT
JAMESJ.BARBARELLO
Buildyour own
low-cost PC-based
test equipment
You use the second program,
CAPFAX, to create a data file (CA-
PFAX.DAT) that contains infor-
mation required by CAP. (CAP-
FAX is shown in Listing 2.) Five
values are required: zero offset,
low factor, high factor, picofarad
limit. and microfarad limit. Zero
offset is the count obtained with s:
no capacitor connected to the cir-
cuit. In operation, CAP subtracts <:c
this value from the count ob - (C
parallel printer port. That is nec-
essary because some cards don't
address their printer ports at the
standard location (0378h or 888
decimal). In Listing I, line 16 lo-
cates the address and stores it in
variable C. (Note that line num-
bers are optional in QuickBASIC;
they are shown here for reference
only.) Variables B and A. which
are derived from C, are used to
read ICI 's output and to operate
IC2, respectively.
The measuring function be -
gins in line 18, which switches in
the lOOK resistor. The next line
initializes the counting variable,
X. The next line contains two
functions. The first. consisting
of the OUT statements, generates
a negative-going pulse to trigger
ICI. The WHILE/WEND loop then
con t in u ally increments X until
pin 3 of l eI goes low.
The remainder of the program
determines if R2 should b e
switched in, converts the count
to a capacitance value, and dis-
plays the value in an appropriate
form (pF or fLF) .
. . . .. . .. . . .. .. . . .. . ... ... .. ..
. ... . . . .. .. .... .. . .. .. .. . . .. . ..
.. .. .... ..... .... ..... ....... . . .. .
1 : . : ::: ::: :: : ": :::: ::: :: : : ::
must be recalibrated if the PC's
operating speed changes (e.g.,
via a turbo model. or if you con-
nect the meter to another PC.
Software
The simplicity of the hardware
is made possible by the software.
Although we won't discuss all the
details here, there are a few
points you should be aware of in
the event you wish to modify the
software. First. there are two pro-
grams, CAP and CAPFAX; CAP is
the main program and CAPFAX
helps calibrate the software.
Both programs are written in Mi-
crosoft's QuickBASIC. The soft-
ware must be compiled; inter-
preters (including BASICA and
GWBASIC) do not run quickly
enough to measure capacitors
less than I fLF. If you want to use
the software as is, you don't need
to own a copy of QuickBASIC; a
compiled version is available
from the author, as mentioned in
the parts list. However, to modify
the software, you will need a copy
of QuickBASIC.
Now let's talk about CAP. Before
doing anything else, the software
locat es the I/O address of your
. ... ......... .. ........ . . . . . . .
.. .. .. .. ...... . .... . .... . ..... .
57
LISTING 1
1 REM** **********************
2 REM** CAP. BAS *
3 REM** V900 11 4 *
4 REM************************
5 REM
6 REM** NOTE: THI S PROGRAM MUST BE COMPLIED WI TH QUICKBASI C 4 . 0 PRI OR TO
7 USE
8 REM
9 DEF SEG = 64 : DEFINT A- C, I , K: DEFLNG X
1 0 OPEN ur", I, It c ap f a x 4d a t
ll
, 50
11 FI ELD 1, 10 AS 01$ , 10 AS fl $ , 10 AS f h$, 10 AS pf$, 10 AS uf $
12 GET 1, 1
13 offset l 0 = VAL(ol $): FACTORLO! = VAL(fl$) : FACTORHI! = VAL(f h$)
14 apf '" VAL(pf $) : auf = VAL( uf $)
15 CLOSE
16 FACTORLOPFj# = FACTORLO! I 1000000: f a etorhipf # = FACTORHI ! I 1000000
17 GOSUB Sl : C = PEEK(8 ) + 256 * (PEEK(9 + 2 : B '" C - 1: A '" B -1
18 RESTART:
19 OUT A, 64
20 X = 0 : LOCATE 12 , 31 : PRINT " MEASURI NG.. . " .
21 OUT C, 2 : OUT C, 0: WHILE (INP(B) AND 64) : X = X + 1 : WEND
22 SELECT CASE X
23 CASE I S > auf
24 measuredvalue '" X I FACTORHI!
25 LOCATE 12 , 31 : PRINT SPACE$(18);
26 LOCATE 24 , 1 : PRINT "Hi - uf";
27 LOCATE 12 , 36 : PRINT USI NG " lI#1l1. # uf"; measuredvalue
28 GOTO SKIPIT
29 CASE ELSE
30 OUT A, -O
31 END SELECT
32 OUT C, 2 : X '" 0: OUT C, 0 : WHILE (INP( B) AND 64) : X = X + 1 : WEND
33 SELECT CASE X
34 CASE IS > a pf
35 mea s u r e dva l ue = ( X - of fset lo) I FACTORLO!
36 mea s u r edval ue = INT(measuredvalue * 10000) I 10000
37 LOCATE 12 , 31: PRINT SPACE$(18 );
38 LOCATE 24 , 1: PRI NT "Lo - uf";
39 LOCATE 12, 36 : PRINT USING "'. H ii u f"; measuredvalue
40 GOTO SKI PIT
41 CASE ELSE
42 AA = 0 : XX = 0
43 REDO:
44 OUT C, 2 : X = 0 : OUT C, 0 : WHI LE (INP( B) AND 64) : X'" X + 1 : WEND
45 IF AA < 5 THEN AA = AA + 1 : XX = X + XX: FOR i = 1 TO 100: NEXT i :
46 GOTO REDO
47 mean '" XX I 5: X = mean
48 LOCATE 12 , 31 : PRINTSPACE$(18);
49 measuredvalue = ( X - offsetlo) I FACTORLOPF#
50 LOCATE 24, 1 : PRINT " La - pf" ;
51 LOCATE 12, 36: PRINT USING " H H pf" ; meas ur edval ue
52 END SELECT
53 SKIPI T,
54 LOCATE 24 , 62 : PRINT SPACE$( 17) ; : LOCATE 24, 62 : PRINT "Count:"; X;
55 COLOR 7 , 0: LOCATE 20 , 29
56 COLOR 0, 7: PRI NT" M ,, ; , COLOR 7, 0: PRI NT " easure, or ";
57 COLOR 0 , 7: PRINT " E "; : COLOR 7, 0: PRINT " nd . .. " ;
58 Tryagain:
59 ReplY$ = UCASE$(INPUT${l
60 SELECT CASE Reply$
61 CASE "M"
62 LOCATE 12, 37 : PRINT SPACE$(6)
63 GOTO RESTART
64 CASE "E"
65 CLOSE : END
66 CASE ELSE
67 BEEP: GOTO Tryag ain
6S END SELECT
69 END
70 s i s
71 CLS : LOCATE 3 , 23 : COLOR 0, 7 : PRINT SPACE$(35)
72 LOCATE 4, 23 : PRI NT " PC CAPACI TANCE METER
73 LOCATE 5 , 23 : PRI NT " ( e ) 1990 , J J BARBARELLO
74 LOCATE 6 , 23 : PRI NT SPACES(35) : COLOR 7 , 0
75 LOCATE 11, 30 : PRI NT CHR$ ( 222); STRING$(19, 22 3) ; CHR$ (2 21)
76 LOCATE 12 , 30 : PRI NT CHR$( 222): LOCATE 12, 50: PRINT CHR$ ( 221)
77 LOCATE 13 , 30 : PRINT CHR$(22 2); STRING$(19, 220) ; CHR$(22 1)
78 RETURN
+5V
R2
R1
lOOK
6 10MEG
14
1 13
'::"
4 12
2
ICl
7 5
IC2
11
555 4066
3 6 6 10
7 8
CX<'T'
SEE -:b
TEXT -
FIG. 1- SCHEMATIC DIAGRAM. The ca-
pacitance meter consists of two IC's: a555
running in the astable mode, and an ana-
log switch that allows the software to per-
form automatic range switching.
tained during measurement t o
eliminate the effects of stray cir-
cu it capacitance. Low factor and
high fac to r are reference values
t hat tell CAP what t he cou nt
s hould be for a 0.100 J.LF capaci-
to r in t he low an d high ranges.
Us ing those factors , CAP calcu-
lat es the value of the u nknown
capacitor. Picofarad limit and mi-
crofarad limit are values that CAP
uses to determine when t o switch
ranges , and how to format the
measu red val ue for present ati on
on t he screen . CAPFAX is used
du ri ng calibration, and any t ime
you change t he circu it layout, PC
operating speed, or the PC it s elf.
Construction
The circu it's simplicity allows
just about any co nstruction
method to be used. The easiest
approach is to us e a solde rless
breadboard. You'll also n eed a
sou rce of 5-volt DC power; in a
pinch you could power t he circu it
with three batter ies in series (the
4.5 volts produced should be ade-
quate to ge nerate the re quired
TTL logic levels. ) If you u s e a
CMOS 555, the batteries will last
a long time.
CIJ As shown in Fig. 1, several pins
o of IC2 must be grou nded to en-
sure proper switching operation.
If those pins are not grounded,
o the meter may operate erratically.
To connect the unknown ca-
lJ.J
a pacitor, you could insert it di -
is rectly into the solde rless bread-
board . For more convenien t
58
access, you could us e a pair of
b indi n g pos t s connected via
short lengths of wire. Although
doing so adds stray capacitance
to the circuit, it can be canceled
during calibration .
After building t he circuit, wire
a s hort cable fro m a stan dar d
DB-25 mal e con nector and four
lengths of wire. Con nect the ap-
propriate pins on the connector
to the circuit, and the DB-25 end
to your PC's parallel port.
Calibration
Calibration must be performed
prior to using t he meter. To per-
form t he calibration, you need a
LISTING 2
PARTS LIST
FIG. 2-CAPFAX.EXE calibrates and sets the range-switching values for the main pro-
gram, CAP.EXE.
1 REM** CAPFAX. BAS
2 REM** REVISE CAPFAX. DAT ENTRIES
3 REM** V900 114
4 CLS : OPEN ur n, 1, " c a p f a x. d a t
lt
, 50
5 FIELD 1 , 1 0 AS ze ros , 10 AS low$, 10 AS h i.qns , 10 AS pf$ , 10 AS uf$
6 GET 1, 1
7 LOCATE 1 , 30 : PRI NT " REVI SE CAPFAX.DAT FILE"
8 LOCATE 3, 1 : PRINT " Zero Of fset : "; zeroS
9 LOCATE 4,1: PRINT " Low Factor : " ; low$
10 LOCATE 5 , 1 : PRINT "High Factor : " ; h i ghS
11 LOCATE 6, 1 : PRI NT " p F Limi t : "; pf$
12 LOCATE 7, 1 : PRI NT " u F Li mi t : "; u f$
13 LOCATE 9, 1 0 : PRINT " Ch a n ge (YI N) ? " ;
14 GOSUB yesno : IF a$ = " N" THEN GOTO endit
15 z$ = z eroS : 1$ = lowS : h $ = h i ghS : p$ = pf$ : u$ uf$
16 ge t n e wo n e s:
17 VIEW PRINT 3 TO 23: CLS : VI EW PRI NT
18 LOCATE 3 , 1 : PRI NT " Ze r o Of fset : "; z$
1 9 LOCATE 4 , 1 : PRINT " Lo w Fac tor : " ; 1 $
20 LOCATE 5 , 1 : PRINT "Hig h Factor : " ; h $
2 1 LOCATE 6 , 1 : PRINT "pF Li mit : " ; p$
22 LOCATE 7 , 1 : PRINT " u F Limi t: "; us
23 LOCATE 9 , 10 : LI NE I NPUT " Ne w Zero Offset ... " ; z$
24 I F z$ = "" THEN z s = zeroS ELSE LSET zeroS = z$ + "
25 LOCATE 9 , 28 : PRINT z$
26 LOCATE 1 0, 10 : LI NE IN PUT " Ne w Low Factor .. . " ; 1 $
27 IF 1$ = "" THEN 1$ = low$ ELSE LSET l o w$ = 1$ + "
28 LOCATE 10 , 27 : PRINT 1$
29 LOCATE 11, 10: LINE INPUT " Ne w High Factor . . . " ; h$
30 IF h$ = "" THEN h $ = highS ELSE LSET h i g h S = h$ + "
31 LOCATE 11 , 28: PRI NT h$
32 LoCATE 12, 10: LI NE INPUT "New pF Limit . . . . "; p $
33 I F p $ = "" THEN ps = pf$ ELSE LSET p f$ = p$ + "
34 LOCATE 1 2, 28 : PRI NT p$
35 LOCATE 13, 10 : LI NE IN PUT " Ne w u F Limi t " ; us
36 IF u$ = "" THEN u $ = uf$ ELSE LSET uf$ = u$ + "
37 LOCATE 13, 28: PRI NT u$
38 LOCATE 1 5 , 10 : PRI NT " Cha ng e (YI N)? " ;
39 GOSUB y e s n o : I F a$ = "N" THEN GOTO e ndit ELS E GOTO getnewones
40 endi t :
41 VIEW PRINT 3 TO 23 : CLS : VIEW PRI NT
42 LOCATE 3 , 1: PRINT " Ze r o Offset: " ; zeroS
43 LOCATE 4,1: PRINT " Low Factor: " . lowS
44 LOCATE 5 , 1 : PRI NT "High Fac tor : It; h i.qhs
45 LOCATE 6 , 1: PRINT " p F Limit : " ; p f$
46 LOCATE 7 , 1: PRINT "UF Limit :"; uf$
47 LOCATE 1 5 , 10: PRIN T " Sa v e (YIN)? " ;
48 GOSUB yesno : I F as = " N" THEN CLOSE : PRI NT " NO SAVE" : LOCATE 18 . 1 :
49 END
50 PUT 1 , 1 : CLOSE : PRINT " Ne w Data Saved . " : LOCATE 18 , 1 : END
51 yesno :
5 2 a $ = UCASE$(INPUT$( I
53 SELECT CASE a$
54 CASE " Y"
55 RETURN
56 CASE " N"
57 RETURN
58 CASE ELSE
59 GOTO y e s n o :
60 END SELE CT
0.1 /LF capacitor for which you
know the exact value. Ifyou don' t
have one, us e a capacit or marked
0.1 /LF with the bes t tol erance you
can find (at least 5 % or 10%).
Be gin b y exe c u ti ng CAP-
FAX.EXE; you'll see a screen like
t hat shown in Fig. 2, except that
the five values will all be 0 .0 . To
change values, press Y, and then
All resistors are %-watt, 5%, un-
less otherwise noted.
R1- 10 megohms
R2-100,OOOohms
Semiconductors
IC1-555 timer
IC2-4066 quad bilateral switch
Other components
P1-25-pin male Dconnector
Miscellaneous: 0.1 J.LF high-toler-
ance capacitor for calibration, sol-
derl ess breadboard, five-volt power
source, wire, solder, etc.
Note: The following is available
from JJ Barbarello, RD#3, Box
241H, Tennent Road, Manalapan,
NJ 07726: Compiled version of
the software (CAPand CAPFAX),
with datalogging, on 5%-inch
double-density PC diskette,
$8.00. The author will be happy
to answer any questions. Please
include a self-addressed stamp-
ed envelope for reply.
enter t he following values as a
s tar ti ng point.
Zero Offs et: 0
Low Factor : 1
High Fac tor: 1
pF Limit: 1000
/LF Limit : 10000
After en ter ing those values, re-
spond by pressing N (No) to the
Change question. Respond Y
(Yes) to the Save question to
cre ate the initi al CAPFAX.DAT
file.
Now con nect the circuit to your
PC's printer port, but make sure
there is no capacit or connected
to the test points. Apply power to
the circuit and start the software
by typing the command CAP at
the DOS prompt.
The screen will display some
value of capacitance, and a count
in the lower ri ght hand corner.
Press M to measure again. Dis-
regard the value displayed, but
note the count, which should be
between 5 and 100, depending on
you r parti cular PC a nd circu it
construct ion ). That value is the
zero offset.
Next con nect the known 0.1 /LF
capacitor an d press M to mea-
su re . Again, di sregard the value
displ ayed, but not e t he cou n t .
Multiply that number by 10 to ob-
tain the low factor. For example, if
the coun t is 123456, the low fac-
tor is 1234560. Leave the 0.1 /LF
capacit or in the circuit.
Execute CAPFAXagain and en-

ter the appropriate values into
the Zero Offset and Low Factor
fields . Also. change the fLF limit
to 1. Save the .n ew data and re-
execute CAP. Press M to measure.
Disregard the value. but note the
count. and multiply it by 10 to
obtain the high factor. For exam-
ple. if the count is 1234, the high
factor is 12340. Execute CAPFAX
one more time to enter the high
factor and change the fLF limit
back to 10000. Save the revised
data.
Use
Using the PC-based capaci-
tance meter is straightforward.
With your PC on and the meter
connected to the printer port. ap-
ply power to the meter. At the
DOS prompt. type CAP and press
Enter. Insert the capacitor to be
measured, and press M. The val-
ue appears in the middle of the
screen, and the bottom indicates
the range (pf, fLF low, fLF high),
along with the timer count. To
end the program, press E.
The fLF limit and pF limit fac-
tors are used to determine how to
format the measured value. If you
measure a capacitor that dis-
plays 0 .00 fLF, but has a count
greater than 0, you are in a "no-
man's land" between the two lim-
its. Execute CAPFAX and in-
crease the pF limit factor. Doing
so increases the pF formatting
range and allows the measured
value to be displayed properly.
Remember that if you vary the
meter circuit or your PC, you
should recalibrate the software to
maintain accuracy.
Next Time
In the near future we'll incor-
porate the capacitance-measure-
ment circuitry into a combina-
tion instrument that measures
resistance, capacitance, and volt-
age . The device allows you to
measure resistors, capacitors.
diodes. and transistors. Because
it is computer controlled, it can
be the heart of an automated in-
spection system for your shop or
business. You can save a lot of
troubleshooting time by ensur-
ing that the IC's you plan to use in
a: a project function properly before
f-
o you use them. The last project in
this series is an IC tester that al-
w
o lows you to verify operation of
o most 14- and 16-pin TTL and
C? CMOS ICs. R-E
60
DRAM TESTER
continued from page 40
to operate a few minutes for max-
imum stability. set R5 at 100 ns
on the dial, and adjust RIg for a
..J
..
/
.I.e,
FIG. 1Q-THE FINISHED BOARD is neat
and compact-and, of course, quite
useful.
-
-
_.
The R17 and RIg adjustments
will interact somewhat. so adjust
by small increments. and again
calibrate RIg at the 100-ns dial
setting with R5 after each change
to R17. This adjustment should
be easy; both potentiometers
should end up somewhere near
midrange.
If you do not have a scope im-
mediately available to calibrate
the access-time control, set R17
and RIg to midrange. which
should be near calibration, and
use the speed test for a relative
indication; the function and volt-
age margin tests should work
fine. All you have to do now is
install the unit in an appropriate
case and put it to good use. R-E
ERSONAL
Can microcell technology of PCN's
make mobile communications truly
affordable for everyone?
ETWORKS
How it works
In some ways PCN's are similar
to cellular telephones. In each
case, the radio telephone trans-
mits signals to a fixed base sta-
tion, which then connects the
call to another subscriber, or the
public-switched telephone net-
work. The fundamental d tf'- co
ference is that PCN's use ex-
handset and the monthly
charges for the service, 40% of all
households surveyed were likely
to subscribe to PCN's, assuming
monthly service charges of $10
per month over the consumer's
current telephone bill, and a
handset price of $100. When the
service premium increased to
$40 per month, and handset
prices to $250, 14% of all house-
holds indicated the willingness
to buy PCN service-and that's
only the residential market. Be-
tween 25 and 35 % of all busi-
nesses were likely to subscribe to
PCN's.
A.D. Little concluded that the
interest in PCN's is nearly double
that of most other new services.
It also found that annual reve-
nues from personal communica-
tions will range from $10 billion
in the first year or two to over $30
billion as the service matures.
That's enough to make even a
telephone company's mouth
water, and explains the current
high interest in personal com-
munication networks.
ommunication
Market demand
The desire for communica-
tions mobility is strong. A.D. lit-
tle, a respected marketing con-
sultant firm, has done market re-
search that indicates that a large
fraction of the nation's house-
holds would gladly subscribe to a
PCN. Although market demand
depended on the price of the
than a line from the phone com-
pany's central office) the PCN will
be able to ensure that the cus-
tomer is always able to be
reached in an instant.
A more basic system, called
Telepotnt, operates as a radio
pocket payphone, allowing calls
to be placed whenever the user is
within radio range of a base sta-
tion installed by the Telepoint op-
erator. When a subscriber wants
to make a call, he or she goes
within radio range of a public
base station installed by the Tele-
point operator, opens the hand-
set and punches in a personal
identification number (PIN). The
base station will validate the PIN,
and accept the dial information.
The call is then extended through
the public telephone network.
The base station collects infor-
mation on the caller's identity
(transmitted by the handset) and
the duration and distance of the
call. The Telepoint company will
send a bill to the customer for all
calls that happen to have been
made during the month.
A NEW ERA OF PERSONAL COMMUNI-
cations may be just over the hori-
zon. Imagine the freedom and
mobility of making and receiving
calls away from your desk and
home-in the street, roaming
around your office, or even on the
golf course. This new service will
be provided by Personal Commu-
ni ca ti on s Networks (PCN's),
which are radio-telephone net-
works designed to run parallel to,
a n d compete with, the Public
Switched Telephone Network
(PSTN) that we are all familiar
with .
PCN's are intended to provide
mobile te lephone service with
quality and reliability equivalent
to wi reline. The handset is a dig-
it al radio designed to permit pri-
vacy and security that meet the
standards of a fixed network,
with usage rates that are com-
parable, or only slightly higher,
than those charged by wireline
services. Those advantages can
come on ly if t here is a large
n umber of subscribers. Afurther
objective of PCN's is to make effi-
cient use of the radio spectrum in
order to have as large a capacity
as possible.
ROGER P. NEWELL*
What is a pe N?
A generally accepted definition
of a PCN is that it is a complete
telephone system, running paral-
lel to (and competing with) the
tradi tional fixe d te lephone sys-
te m. A PCN cons ists of pocket ra-
d io telephones communicating
with fixed base stations in the
street or in bu ildings . PCN's will
permit any person to make or re-
ceive telephone calls, no matter
where he or she might be-at
h ome, on the street, or in the of-
fice. Us ing digital radio tech-
niques in combination with a
low-cost pocket-sized handset,
t he PCN will provide a fu lly
mobile service wi th enhanced
quality and all the features and
functions of a standard tele-
phone system. The underlying
idea is that calls should be made
to a person, not a place. By as-
signing a personal telephone
number to an individual (rather
- Roger P. Newell is a telecommunications attorney
practicing in New York City. He is also editor of
Microcell Report, a monthly newsletter on microcell
technology.
61
PNSEQUENCE
GENERATOR
(3,8,5...7...)
DIGITAL
FREQUENCY
SYNTHESIZER
RECEIVER
FREQUENCY
INPUT
Operating Companies, plan to
hedge their bets by testing every-
thing in sight. At this time, most
of the testers are still in the pre-
paratory stage, and that is the
reason why few results have been
publicly reported.
CT2 systems
One system, called Cordless
Telecommunications, 2nd Gener-
ation (CT2l, is drawing interest
because it uses comparatively lit-
tle spectrum. It can be used for
Telepoint , residential cordless
phones, and wireless PBX's for
use in offices. The technique
uses frequency-division multiple
access (FDMA) to divide four
megahertz of spectrum into 40
channels of 100 kilohertz each.
The handset checks each of the
40 channels at 750 millisecond
intervals, and if it finds another
channel with less interference, it
will switch to the new channel.
When used for residential cor-
dless telephones, CT2 has mar-
keting advantages over current
analog cordless telephones, since
CT2 telephones tend to be small-
er, have a greater range, and are
more difficult to be overheard by
one's neighbors.
CT2 operates in the 800-1000
MHz range, but only three mega-
hertz of spectrum remain unas-
signed in that range, and those
frequencies were promised to
FREQUENCY
INPUT
TRANSMITTER
DIGITAL
FREQUENCY
SYNTHESIZER
PN SEQUENCE
GENERATOR
(3,8,5...7...)
v
Jl '1
o 0

SIGNAl F3 F8 F5 F7 F3 F8 F5 F7 BASEBAND
SIGNAL
RAPIDLY
CHANGING
CARRIER
FREQUENCY
SEQUENCE
FIG. 1-A FREQUENCY HOPPING SYSTEM. Pseudorandom noise sequence generators
in the transmitter and receiver are used to output the same frequency-hopping sequence.
INITIAL
SIGNAl
I t I
for a PCN service simply by real-
locating a slice away from current
users; but past experience has
shown that trying to remove a
slice of the spectrum is like walk-
ing into a buzzsaw.
As an alternative, spectrum
could be assigned to PCN on a co-
primary (sharing) basis, or on a
secondary basis, requiring PCN
operators to defer to the primary
users of the spectrum. But shar-
ing leaves the operators unsure
of whether their spectrum is suf-
ficiently solid to warrant the high
investments needed to set up
their systems. Either method
would involve bloody battles in
the halls of the FCC between the
spectrum haves and have-riots,
and would take several years to
resolve.
So companies throughout the
telecommunications industry
are exploring ways to bring to
consumers the benefits of low-
cost mobile phones, despite the
shortage of frequencies . Over 50
applications for experimental li-
censes for PCN's and Telepoints
have been filed in the U.S., and 13
in Canada, seeking to test a vari-
ety of technologies. For example,
one company which owns a net-
work of interbuilding microwave
systems in NewYork City, will test
its use as the backbone distribu-
tion network for a PCN. Manyap-
plicants,especially the Bell
tremely low power for the radio
link between the handset and the
base station-about 10 milliwat-
ts peak power compared with
600 milliwatts for cellular porta-
bles, and 3 watts for a car tele-
phone. Low power means short
range, which would seem to be a
severe drawback for a radio tele-
phone, but is actually the reason
for the current intense interest in
PCN's. With a short range, it is
necessary to have very large num-
bers of base stations, each cover-
ing a microcell whose radius is
from 200 meters to perhaps half
a kilometer. In comparison, cel-
lular cells are usually several
miles wide.
Since the spectrum can be re-
used in each of those microcells,
PCN's are more spectrum effi-
cient than cellular phones, and
can provide service to many more
people. With such a large capaci-
ty, the investment cost per sub-
scriber can be kept extremely low:
The initial cost of a PCN is ex-
pected to be about $300 per sub-
scriber, compared with $800 for
cellular and $1,600 for wireline
networks.
In addition, the use of low
power also brings manufactur-
ing advantages into play. If the
handsets broadcast at low power,
less power is needed in the bat-
tery, which means smaller bat-
teries, and therefore, smaller
terminals and micro-mini-
aturized components are used.
All that translates into longer talk
time, with lower prices available
to the public.
Spectrum scarcity
Microcell technology has the
potential to change the way we
communicate, and to be a pro-
digious revenue-producer for
those supplying the equipment
and service. Yet PCN's are not
springing up all over the land-
scape. The reason is that an es-
sential element is in short
supply-the radio spectrum for
handset-to-base transmissions.
Virtually all of the technically ap-
C/) propriate spectrum has been al-
C) located to users who guard it
with the intensity of a bear pro-
tecting her cubs. The Federal
fa Communications Commission
m (FCC) and industry are attempt-
6 ing to find a path through the
spectrum thicket. The FCC
cc could, in theory, clear spectrum
62
Spread spectrum
Vast numbers of radio devices
operate today with no license at
all under the FCC's Part 15 reg-
ulations for low-powered devices,
including such things as garage-
door openers and existing analog
cordless telephones. A personal
communications system operat-
ing at 10 milliwatts or less of radi-
ated power would fall under the
power limitations of Part 15, and
would be allowed to operate at
any frequency, but would have to
accept interference from existing
and future licensed operations,
as well as any other Part 15 de-
vices . That's a very uncertain
foundation for a large invest-
ment.
One potential solution is to
share spectrum through "spread-
spectrum" technology. Several
experimental PCN's have been set
up to explore that option, includ-
ing PCN's to be built in Houston
and New Orleans by a subsidiary
of Millicom, Inc. If successful,
they will pave the way to establish
a personal communications ser-
vice despite the frequency
crunch. Results are expected by
the end of 1991. Although spread
spectrum has been criticized as
expensive, and untried in public
telephony, it may offer the only
hope in the U.S. of getting a PCN
service off the ground.
Spread-spectrum modulation
was originally developed by the
military to permit jam-proof and
undetectable radio communica-
tions . Those are the qualities
that permit low-power radio links
without interference to or from
other radio transmissions. By
spreading signal strength over a
wide bandwidth, the energy
transmitted anyone frequency
in the band is low, which effec- s:::
tively reduces the chance of
harmful interference.
Using spread-spectrum tech-
that a cellular operator would
take precious spectrum away
from the higher-priced cellular
services. The hitch is that fre-
quencies used for PCN's would
have to be taken away from the
profitable cellular service. Never-
theless, NYNEX has announced
that it would use a portion of its
cellular frequencies to build
PCN's in New York and Boston,
and is expected to be operational
by 1992.
DATA
OUTPUT
Cellular frequencies
Dr. Stanley also pointed out
that under a recent FCC order,
cellular operators are free to use
their allotted spectrum for auxili-
ary services, providing the pri-
mary service of cellular telephony
is not affected. Up to 50 MHz of
cellular spectrum could be used
for a PCN-type service, assuming
.. I
cies are being used by microwave
channels and would block those
frequencies off from the hand-
sets.
The FCC's Chief Engineer, Dr.
Thomas Stanley, presented the
possibility that the 4 MHz being
considered for allocation to the
air/ground telephone service
could be shared by microcell
users. That may be feasible since
the air/ground use is not likely to
be heavy in anyone location at
any given time.
CARRIER
INPUT
MIXER MIXER
CARRIER
INPUT
PN
SEQUENCE
GENERATOR
DATA
INPUT
o
b
o
c
V
1
5(1) + 0(1)
FIG. 3-DIRECT SEQUENCE uses multiple matched filters to reduce noise and increase
successful correlation between the receiver and transmitter. Decision logic selects the
filter output that is most likely to be correct.
0(1)
V
1
CT2 plus
Another possibility lies in the
use of a more spectrum efficient
version of CT. Northern Telecom
has proposed that the 3-MHz
slices in the 900-MHz band be
used for control channels, while
actual communication will take
place over a 3D-MHz band, oc-
cupying parts of the spectrum
not being used by point-to-point
microwave operators in any par-
ticular location. Interference
with microwave operators would
be avoided by use of "smart" base
stations which would have the
ability to sense which frequen-
FIG. 2-SPREAD-SPECTRUM SIGNAL. The carrier signal (a) is modulated by a noise
signal (b), resulting in a summed signal, with an expanded bandwidth.
other mobile phone users. An as-
signment to a Telepoint service
would, however, run into intense
opposition from companies al -
ready in the market that had
hoped to use the spectrum for
other mobile uses.
63
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5
c
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J
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i4
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ED 2-10 Bull Data Systems, Inc.
CIRCLE 193 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
ntques, information is transmit-
ted over a wide bandwidth using
a pseudorandom pattern. User-
specific codes are transmitted by
each sender to permit the intend-
ed receiver to select out the rele-
vant tr ans miss ion . There are two
primary methods that are tradi-
tionally used to do that; they are
frequency hopping and direct se-
quence.
Frequency hopping is con-
ceptually very simple. In trans-
mitting a traditional narrow-
band signal, the carrier frequen-
cy is changed, or "hopped, " to
one of a great many frequency
slots many times per second over
a large number of channels. The
resulting signal has an expanded
hopped bandwidth, which is
often in the order of a few hun-
dred MHz.
The hopping pattern may seem
to be an unpredictable sequence,
but is actually controlled by a pre-
determined pseudorandom noise
(PN) generator. The PN sequence
generator is used to determine
the varying hop slot. The intend-
ed receiver and the transmitter
simultaneously hop to the same
pattern and thus can hear one
another. Ablock diagram of a typ-
ical frequency-hopper system is
shown in Fig. 1.
The pseudorandom nature of
the hops has several benefits.
Some of those benefits include
1. An eavesdropper will have a dif-
ficult time listening unless he
has the code which determines
the hop pattern.
2. A deliberate jammer will not
know where to put his transmit-
ter on the band of frequencies
since the frequency hopper
dodges the jammer.
3. Multiple, uncoordinated fre-
quency hoppers will collide only
occasionally and therefore will
experience only a small amount
of interference. Therefore, as
more and more users come on,
th e quality of the signal degrades
slowly rather than creating a
hard limit on the capacity of a
network.
Direct sequence, sometimes
referred to as "signal shredding,"
accomplishes the same goals,
but uses different tactics. In the
sophisticated technique of direct
sequencing, the carrier (infor-
mation) signal is digitally modu-
lated by the noise signal. Figures
continued on page 74
SWITCHING SUPPLIES
continued from page 55
sion components. Failure of
those will a ll ow high voltage
spikes, possibly destroying
switching transistors or rectifier
diodes. Incidentally, always use
identical or approved replace-
ment parts for diodes and
switching transistors . Slow
"garden variety" components will
fail quickly, possibly taking other
components with them.
Before replacing the IC, go
through the circuit function-by-
function. Try to narrow the prob-
lem to one area of the circuit and
see if any external components
have failed. Is the IC's internal
regulated voltage correct? If not,
the failure almost certainly is in
the IC. Is the oscillator running?
If not, check the resistor and ca-
pacitor before replacing the IC.
Check the soft-start capacitor
and the external shutdown in-
put, if your circuit has them.
Check any compensation compo-
nents, especially if the output is
oscillating or unstable.
If all of the above are working
but the output is incorrect, the
problem is most likely either the
ICor the voltage feedback circuit-
ry. A malfunctioning feedback
circuit is always tricky to trou-
bleshoot, especially in a device as
complex as a switching regulator.
The best advice is to start at the
output and go step-by-step
through the feedback circuit.
The voltage divider's input-to-
output ratio should be correct,
even if the voltage isn't. An op-
amp or comparator's output
should be high if the positive in-
put is higher than the negative
input; otherwise, it should be
low. (Note, though, that the IC
connects two amplifiers and
other circuitry together in a
wired-OR connection. Anyone of
several problems can bring the
error amp's output low.) Check
any feedback windings and rec-
tifiers, optocouplers, and so on. If
you still haven't found the prob-
lem. replace the IC.
Troubleshooting switching
regulators can be tricky. Just re-
member to go through the circuit
step-by step, and keep the basics
in mind when you encounter
problems. R-E
HARDWARE HACKER
More on toner-cartridge reloading and Santa Claus
machines, and some VHF and Microwave resources.
DON LANCASTER
E
very now and then. it seems a
good idea to go back over
some of our older Hardware
Hackersubjects and bring them up to
date. Certainly one of the most popu-
lar topics ever found on our helpline
involves...
Toner cartridge reloading
PostScript and other laser printers
are fast becoming a major industry.
There are many millions of units now
in use. By far the best and the most
popular versions use several styles of
laser engines made by Canon. These
engines were originally intended to
accept a throwaway plug-in cartridge.
Inside the cartridge is a source of
toner, a photosensitive drum, and a
spent-toner holding tank.
Played according to the rules, you
buy these cartridges for $120, use
them for 4000 copies. and end up
with a per-page toner cost of three
cents.
As we have seen before, you can
easily reload these cartridges your-
self dozens of times. Today. you can
do so in two minutes for a cost of
$6.50 or less, and can easily reduce
your per-page toner costs to 0.2
cents per page. a whopping 15:1 cost
improvement.
Besides saving big bucks on your
own printer, you could also resell re-
charged cartridges for as much as
$15 or even $19 each. as part of an
ongoing neighborhood service .
There's lots of exciting new things
happening in the toner recharging in-
dustry. so I thought we might pick up
some fundamentals and then bring
you up to date on the newest and the
best insider secrets.
What is toner? Well. it is a mixture
of (usually) black stuff and hot glue.
Specifically, toner is a fine powder
which has very precisely controlled
magnetic, electrostatic, thermal . and
visual properties. Most toners are
basically a mixture of ferric oxides,
polyethylene, and lubricants.
Toner starts out in the cartridge's
fresh toner tank. A magnetized roller
then picks up a very uniform layer of
toner. Meanwhile, a nearby pho-
tosensitive drum gets flooded with
light and then electrostatically
charged. It next gets selectively dis-
charged by a laser beam, leaving a
charge pattern on the drum. As the
drum rotates. it passes very near the
magnetic roller and the toner selec-
tively jumps onto the drum, sticking
by electrostatic forces only where
you want an image.
As your drum rotates further. it
passes very close to a highly charged
piece of paper, and the toner particles
then jump onto the paper. Any re-
maining toner that was left on the
drum gets scraped off and routed to a
spent-toner holding tank. The pho-
tosensitive drum then continues on
its way for another cycle.
Meanwhile. you now have your im-
age on the paper. But it is only held
there by gravity and by rather weak
electrostatic forces. It will easily
smear if you touch it. The paper then
goes on to a fusion roller assembly.
Heat and pressure will melt the toner
and force it into the paper, giving you
a fairly durable final hard copy.
One very important part of most
fuser assemblies is the wiper pad.
The wiper pad has a small amount of
silicon oil on it that both lubricates
and cleans up any remaining toner on
the pressure rollers. Wiper pads are
usually replaced whenever a car-
tridge is recharged. Note that just
washing a wiper pad is a no-no.
Our first rule: Toners vary from ma-
chine to machine. Most Canon laser
NEED HELP?
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Don Lancaster
Synergetics
Box 809
Thatcher, AZ. 85552
(602) 428-4073
printers use what is known as a black
write system. since laser diodes will
last much longer this way. On the
other hand, all but the newest and
most expensive copiers use a white
write system so that light ends up as
white and dark as black.
Thus: Copier and Laser-Printing
toners must NEVERbe interchanged
or substituted for each other! There
are usually mechanical interlocks that
prevent you from plugging a copier
cartridge into a laser printer and vice
versa. If you attempt to defeat those
interlocks, you will end up using the
wrong toner. At the very least, that
gives you useless copies, and at
worst, it can cause serious damage.
Similarly, toner chemistry varies
from printer to printer, especially be-
tween manufacturers. Our second
rule: The refill toner you use must be
pretested in and rated for the exact
cartridge you are refilling.
So where do you get refill toner and
the wiper pads? My two favorite
sources are Don Thompson and
Lazer Products. There is also one
outfit called Black Lightning that
stocks specialty toners for T-shirt and
fabric printing uses.
The toner industry has its own
trade journal. It is called Recharger,
and is chock full of supplier ads and
useful industry info. There are also at
least a dozen recharging associa-
tions who do have lots of seminars
and conventions. Details on those
usually appear in Recharger.
The big news today in toner refilling
involves new third-party hard coated
drums. For some reason or another,
the factory stock drums are made
needlessly soft . The third-party
drums instead are ultra-hard and can
easily be used for dozens of reloads.
One leading importer of hard drums
is CowMate Products.
Let's look at some specific refilling
details. Certainly the most popular "
cartridges are those used in the )
Canon CX. SX, and LX engines. Fig-
ure 1lists many popular laser printers
6
FIG. 1-HERE'S A LISTof all the most popular PostScript laserprinters, their equivalent
servicemanuals, and the style of toner cartridges they use.
HP MANUAL HP PRINTER APPLE PRINTER QMS PRINTER
I
02686-90920 LaserJet I LaserWriter PS800
1
(CX Engine) LaserWriter Plus
33449-90906 LaserJet II
I
LaserWriter NT
PS810& TurboI
(SX Engine) LaserJet III LaserWriter NTX PS820& Turbo
33459-90906 LaserJet 110
I
---- ----
1
(SX Engine) LaserJet 1110
f33471-90904 I Personal LW NT
PS410 LaserJet liP
1
(LX Engine)
and the specific engine used in each
one. Figure 1 also reveals to you the
outstanding Hewlett-Packard repair
and service manuals involved. The
manuals, and all major parts, can be
had overnight via VISA/SOD.
For some reason which I simply
cannot fathom, Apple Computer ab-
solutely insists that you use the HP
NEW FROM
DON LANCASTER
service manuals to keep your Apple
LaserWriter printers alive. As near as
I can tell, this is some sort of a top-
secret rebate policy.
At any rate, you can recognize the
older CX cartridges by their large
three-inch drums, their red-yellow-
green end dial, and their obvious
lunchbox handle. While the original
LaserWriter and all similar printers
using them are rather dated, they do
remain useful, especially when print-
ing lots of heavier stock. Many used
bargains are now cropping up involv-
ing these machines . Two sources are
Don Thompson and The Pr inter
Works.
Non-PostScript laser printers, of
course, are an utterly useless ripoff,
so be absolutely certain that you r
used machine can speak genuine
Adobe PostScript.
Before we begin, note that the pho-
tosensitive drums must never be ex-
posed to strong light, or to any light at
all over any long period of time . Never
get fingerprints on the drum. Cotton
gloves are a good idea.
Toner is an ultra fine powder that
can end up all over everything. It is
sometimes best to work outside,
possibly wearing a mask. Toner can,
in theory, explode a vacuum cleaner,
but that rarely will happen. But do be
careful.
The general steps in refilling any
cartridge are fivefold:
en Remove and discard any waste
toner from the spent toner holding
tank . Do not reuse the spent toner.
(2) Refill your fresh-toner supply tank
with a new bottle.
(3) Lubricate the drum with a light
dusting of Pixie Dust (see below),
(4) Replace the oiled wiper felt on the
fusion assembly elsewhere in the
printer.
(5) Update accurate life and service
records on a suitable label.
Figure 2 shows you those CX refill-
ing details. There is really never any
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Box 809-RE
Thatcher , AZ 85552
(602) 428-4073
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Incredible Secret Money Machine 12.50
CMOS Cookbook 24.50
TTL Cookbook 19.50
Active Filter Cookbook 19.50
Micro Cookbook vol I or II 19.50
Lancaster Classics library 109.50
Enhancing your Apple I or II 17.50
AppleWriter Cookbook 19.50
Apple Assembly Cookboo k 21.50
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Enhance I or II Companion Disk 19.50
AppleWriter CB or Assy CB Disk 24.50
IQT
Drill a 5/8 i nch hole using
a '3 Vise Grip Unibil ;
carefully clear all chips.

Drill 318 ir'lch Mle using
iI t3 Vi se Gri p UnltMt;
carelull y clear III chips.
A second CX hole is needed to let you empty the spent toner holding tank.
fhis area is found underneaththe cartridge.. .
To refill an older CXcartridge with the punch-and-gomethod, you first
snap off the cardboardlabel and thendrill a toner filling hole...
FIG. 2-THE CX CARTRIDGE is easily recognized by its large drum and its obvious
"Iunchbox" handle. Here aremy "punch-and-go" refilling secrets.
VISA/MC
POSTSCRIPT STUFF
Ask The Guru Reprints I, II or III 24.50
LaserWriter Secrets (lie/Mac/PC) 29.50
PostScript Show & Tell 39.50
Intro to PostScript VHS Video 39.50
PostScr ipt Beginner Stuff 39.50
PostScript Cookbook (Adobe) 16.50
PostScript Ref. Manual (Adobe) 22.50
PostScript Progr am Design (Adobe) 22.50
Type I Font Format (Adobe) 15.50
LaserWriter Reference (Apple) 19.50
Real World Postscript (Roth) 22.50
PostScr ipt Visual Approach (Smit h) 22.50
Thinking in PostScript (Reid) 22.50
The Whole Works (all PostScript) 299.50
FREE VOICE HELPLINE
(J)
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66
SECOND, pull these pins to
remove the fresh toner tank
for easy refilling.
FIRST, remove this spring
using a homemade "J" tool.
ilarly used to accept a bottle of new
toner and then resealed.
Figure 3 shows you the SX car-
tridge recharging. The LaserWriter
NTX is a typical machine that uses
this cartridge. The SX cartridges have
a one-inch drum and are rather flat
looking, being much wider than thick .
Should you decide to tear down the
cartr idge or upgrade to ahard drum, a
different glompenstractor is needed
having a narrower snout.
The details of my punch-and-go re-
fill method remain pretty much the
same. First time around, you drill a
suitable filling and emptying hole .
Once again, the #3 Vise-Grip Unibit
in a variable-speed hand drill is ideal
for this. Torefill, drain and discard the
spent toner and reseal. Then fill the
fresh toner tank and reseal.
Figure 4 shows you the newest LX
cartridge recharging. The personal
laser printers, such as the QMS
PS-410, use this cartridge . The LX
cartridge is recognized by its small
size, an obvious spring , and its
"white trim" gears and bearings.
No holes are required. To access
the tank, pull the two pins by using
ChannelLock #357 end pliers. The
tank can then be refilled through the
existing Caplug. To change the drum
or drain the spent toner, remove the
four Phillips screws on those nylon
drum bearings and pul l the drum.
.1J./I/iJ
Be certain thai the new
hole is cantered belween
Ihe die sink marks!
THIRD, Remove the screws
to change the hard drum or
drain out the spent toner.
But be EXTREMELY careful not to touch the photosensitive drum or expose il
10 any strong light or ANY light of long duration.
The LX cartridge does not need any modifications before any refill, hard drum
upgrade, or any spent toner draining...
s::
?<
FIG. 4-THE SMALLER LX CARTRIDGE is used in the "personal " 4-PPM printers and is
easily spotted by its obvious spring and the "white trim." NEVER use copier toner in a
laser printer.
while producing a single and easily
grabbed chip.
After drilling the holes, the spent
toner is shaken or vacuumed out. You
can reseal the hole with plain old
Scotch Tape (be VERY careful to get
a secure seall), or else use a nickel
Caplug. Your fresh-to ner hole is sim-
Drill 5/8 inell hole using
a .3 Vise Grip Unibi1:
carefully clear all chips
Drill 3/8 Inch hole using
a .3 Vise Grip Uniblt ;
carefully clear all chips
One or more spent toner drain holes must also get added to the SX
cartridge. The plastic is thin, so use a conical step drill. ..
The SX cartridge punch-and-go refilling process is similar to the ex,
except for the hole locations. The filler hole is shown here ...
FIG. 3-THE SX CARTRIDGE is wider than it is high, has a small drum, and is the most
popular cartridge for the larger 8-PPM PostScript laser printers.
reason to tear down a excartridge,
except to substitute a hard drum. The
original factory drums are big enough
that you can often get four or five
refills as is. For most people most of
the time, a total teardown will cause
many more problems than it wil l sol-
ve. Remember that your ultimate goal
should be minimizing all of your per-
page toner costs, not maximizing the
number of recharges for each drum.
An extra recharge is pointless if it
costs the end user more per page to
do so.
If you absolutely have your heart
set on taking a ex cartridge apart.
you'll need two special tools . One is a
special tamperproof Torx bit. This is
EVCO part number #9458700 and is
available from Jensen Toolsas well as
most refilling supply houses. The
second is a special pin-pulling tool
called a CX Glompenstractor and
available once again through Don
Thompson.
Should you use my punch and go
method. you will have to drill two
holes in the cartridge on your first
reload . That is best done using a
rather unusual step-drill called a #3
Vise Grip Unibit. They are available
from Jensen Tools or from any larger
electrical contracting supply house.
When used with a variable-speed
hand drill, the Unibit cleanly cuts a
perfectly round hole in brittle plastic,
67
FIG. 5-A "SANTA CLAUS" MACHINE for producing large display letters. The poly-
ethylene bead fromthe glue gun isprogrammed to build upthe entire letter one strandat a
time. While slow, there are no mold charges and the size and style can be instantly
changed. Logos and custom characters are a snap.
Spent toner can be simply vacuumed
or shaken out.
After a recharge , it's a good idea to
very lightly dust any drum with a suit-
able lubricant . Many of them are
based on plain old zinc sterate. Only
don't substitute baby powder since
the perfume and oils will do you in.
The usual name here is Pixie Dust.
Pixie dust is available through most
recharging supply houses at very low
cost. You can make a "duster" from
the toe of a child's athletic sock and a
rubber band.
Once again, the wiper pad on the
fusion assembly should get replaced
every time you change the cartridge.
You normal ly keep the old wiperwand
and drop a new peel-and-stick oiled
nomex felt strip in place.
While you can obtain toner-tank re-
sealing strips, travel of any kind is
extremely rough on toner cartridges. I
do not recommend ever moving a car-
tridge further than you can gently and
personally hand carry it. Nor do I rec-
ommend ever swapping your own car-
tridges for unknown outsiders . I
strictly limit my personal recycling
service to a si x-mile radius. Yours
also should be.
Reuse of toner removed from
spent-toner holding tanks is not in the
least recommended, nor is recycling
your own wiper pads.
There does remain plenty of "zoo"
aspects to toner recycling. Certain
irresponsible manufacturers have be-
gun some high-profile national "recy-
cling" programs which in fact destroy
the cartridges rather than recycling
them. The hope here is to perma-
nently get the cartridges out of cir-
culation before they could be refilled
and reused. Only an absolute idiot
would participate in any program of
this sort .
If you do nothing else, you can sell
your empty cartridges locally for $5
to $10 each, and then contribute as
much of the proceeds as you care to
to your favorite environmental group.
Any salesman that tells you that
normal use of a properly recycled car-
tridge automatically voids your printer
warranty is telling you an outright lie
for which they can be criminally pros-
z ecuted . Some others are literally gold
plating stuff that does not in the least
o need to be gold plated. Yet others
substitute shoe polish for proper
UJ
o hard-drum recoating .
(5 Those recharge/repair schools run
the gamut from outstanding high-
68
quality bargains down to outright
ripoffs. To tell one from another, ask
the school for a list of all previous
students in your area. Then call one
or two of them.
So, you will have to pay careful
attention to details . But the toner re-
charging industry is fast maturing and
now offers all sorts of exciting and
cost -saving new hardware-hacking
opportunities.
A great telephone book
I'm often asked how I can usually
find helpline names and numbers so
fast. Well, I have built up my own re-
source data base over the years, and
that is where I will often look first.
Physically, this is just a big black note-
book with lots of stuff that keeps fail-
ing out of it. Most of this data base
appears in the Hardware Hacker re-
prints, and a downloadable and anno-
tated selection of the best of the best
appears on my GEnie PSRTlibrary as
file #80 MYFAVOR.TXT.
But the number-two place I always
go to is the Electronic Industry Tele-
phone Book from Harris Publishing.
While it lists for around $50 per year,
sometimes you can get a free one or
promo copy from a sales rep.
This national coverage gem works
just like any other phone book, with
alphabetical white pages and by-topic
yellow classifieds. Their listings are
very thorough, and I am continually
amazed by how often this one volume
can solve so many problems .
Santa Claus again
Several times now, we've taken a
look at the new Santa Claus ma-
chines that create instant desktop
prototypes at a tiny fraction of the
time and cost of traditional methods.
As we have seen, all the stuff out
there so far is primitive, klutzy, and
horrendously priced. At least so far.
We've also seen some outstand-
ing new hacker opportunities here,
that range from low-cost desktop
prototyping alternatives to offering
your own prototyping service bureaus
using the commercial systems.
While the best possible desktop
prototyping solut ion remains "none
of the above ," let's look at a pair of
new alternatives .
Have you ever played around with
your glue gun? While not readily avail-
able, you can get polyethylene rods
to use as glue st icks. That gives you a
method for encapsulating compo-
Anderson Power Products
145 Newton Street
Boston, MA 02135
(617) 787-5880
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Black Lightning
RR 1-87 Depot Road
Hartland, VT 05048
(800) BLACK99
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Caplug
2150 Elmwood Avenue
Buffalo. NY 14207
(716) 876-9855
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CopyMate Products
20F Robert Pitt Drive
Monsey. NY 10952
(800) 457-0074
CIRCLE 304 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Cory Laboratories
Box 261, 823 5th Street
Menominee, MI 49858
(906) 863-9336
CIRCLE 305 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Crystek
2351/2371 Crystal Drive
Ft Myers, FL 33907
(813) 936-2109
CIRCLE 306 ON FREE INFORMATI ON CARD
EVCO
PO Box 36339
Birmingham, AL 35236
(205) 822-5381
CIRCLE 307 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
nents in high-quality plastic or making
your own custom connectors. Or of
doi ng plast ic casting at a tiny fract ion
of the usual mold costs.
Let's carry this one step further as
shown in the crude system of Fig. 5.
Say yo u wanted to produce some
large display letters in various styles
and sizes . Just take a modified glue
gun on a linear stepper and a no-stick
base on a second linear stepper, and
you should be able to put a plast ic
bead down that follows the shape of
the lett er. Repeat the process unti l
the entire lett er is created. The host
computer traces out the proper path
to bui ld up the letter one bead at a
time.
NAMES AND NUMBERS
GEnie
401 North Washington Street
Rockville, MD 20850
(800) 638-9636
CIRCLE 308 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Harris Publishing/EITD
2057-2 Aurora Road
TWinsburg, OH 44087
(216) 425-9000
CIRCLE 309 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Hewlett-Packard/Manuals
19310 Pruneridge Avenue
Cupertino, CA 94014
(800) 752-0900
CIRCLE 310 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Lazer Products
12741 E Caley Avenue #130
Englewood, CO 80155
(303) 792-5277
CIRCLE 311 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
LSI Logic
1551 McCarthy Blvd
Milpitas, CA 95035
(408) 433-8000
CIRCLE 312 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Maxim
120 San Gabriel Drive
Sunnyvale, CA 94086
(408) 737-7600
CIRCLE 313 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
National Sandblast
4421 Prospect NE
Albuquerque, NM 87110
(505) 883-1151
CIRCLE 314 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Admittedly, this is a rather crude
system which is limited to thin two
dimensional objects. And we haven' t
properly addressed t he third dimen-
sion at all. But it is a good starting
point that could lead to some exciting
new developments.
One suitable stepper would be the
Hurst model SLS. I've been meaning
to work up some more detai ls on this
and on Hurst' s new EPC-015 control-
ler. Maybe in a future column .
There is a commercial variation of
the " hot glue gun" desktop prototyp-
ing method. This is the brand new
Stratasys 3-0 Modeler. They refer to
their process as Fused Deposition
Modeling, or FDM .
Printer Works
3431 Arden Road
Hayward, CA 94545
(800) 235-6116
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Recharger
3870 La Sierra Avenue S266
Riverside, CA 92505
(714) 359-8570
CIRCLE 316 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Rohm
8 Whatney
Irvine, CA 92718
(714) 855-2131
CIRCLE 317 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Rotary Flight International
5555 Zuni SE, Ste 281
Albuquerque, NM 87108
(505) 298-9362
CIRCLE 318 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Sony semiconductor
10833 Valley View Street
Cypress, CA 90630
(714) 229-4195
CIRCLE 319 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Statek
512N Main Street
Orange, CA 92668
(714) 639-7810
CIRCLE 320 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Stratasys
7411 Avenue S
Minneapolis, MN 55439
(612) 941-5607
CIRCLE 321 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Don Thompson
23072 Lake Center Drive #100
EI Toro, CA 92630
(714) 855-3838
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The system starts with a large roll
of .020 or .050 diameter plastic or
wax filament. The filament is heated
just enough to make its outside tacky.
The filament is then laid down into an
existing pattern in the same way you
can do artsy-craftsy stuff with string
soaked in glue .
A three dimensional object is then
built up, literally one string at a time.
While they have an elaborate CAD
software s ystem based upon
NURBS splines, the PostScript lan-
guage and any old word processor
should be able to do a vastly better
job far faster and much cheaper.
The FDM method seems es- u;
pecially well-suited for mode ling con- ::
69
Radio Research Instruments
584 North Main Street
Waterbury, CT 06704
(203) 792-6666
CIRCLE 335 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Plessey Semiconductor
13900Alton Pkwy, Ste 123
Irvine, CA 92718
(714) 455-2950
CIRCLE 334 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Nuts & Volts
Box 1111
Placentia. CA 92670
(714) 632-7721
CIRCLE 333 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Motorola
5005 E McDowell Road
Phoenix, AZ. 85008
(800) 521-6274
CIRCLE 332 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
MICROWAVE RE- SOURCES
Mini-Circuits Labs
PO Box 350166
Brooklyn. NY 11235
(718) 934-4500
CIRCLE 331 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
VHF AND
ARRL Handbook
225 Main Street
Newinqton , CT 06111
CIRCLE 323 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Fair Radio Sales
POBox 1105
Lima. OH 45802
(419) 227-6573
CIRCLE 325 ON FREE. INFORMATION CARD
M/ACom Semiconductor
43 South Avenue
Burlington. MA 01803
(617) 2723000
CIRCLE 327 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Defense Electronics
6300 South Syracuse Way, Ste 650
Englewood, CO 80111
(303) 220-0600
CIRCLE 324 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Hewlett-Packard
POBox 10301
PaloAlto, CA 94303
(415) 857-1501
CIRCLE 326 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
tainers and other hollow packaging
products. But sharp edges appear
tricky to do, especially gear teeth .
Ultimate costs should be low, since
no lasers, fumes . high temperatures,
costly materials, or exotic chemicals
are involved. The typical speeds ap-
proach 1000 inches per minute.
One big problem with the system:
Some prototypes can end up looking
like something that missed hitting the
reject bin in the arts and crafts class.
Finer filaments can cure this, but build
more slowly.
I'm wondering if a better prototyp-
ing solution might not involve two
steps. Homes are usually built in a
" rough" and "finish" stage. And ma-
chinists often work with near net
stock to try and minimize their total
production time . And modelers wil l
often build their model first and then
superdetail it later.
So perhaps the solution is some
system that gets the shape pretty
near the way you want it quickly and
crudely. A second step would then
measure and modify what you haveto
give for your final precision fit and
finish. Let's have your thoughts on
this.
VHF and microwave
resources
There are all sorts of interesting
things going on in those VHF and
microwave frequencies found above
several hundred megahertz. Amateur
television, weather fax reception, ca-
ble services, satellite downlinks, cel -
lular phones, sports radar, remote
controls. radio astronomy, emergen-
cy services . garage doors, al-
timeters, instrumentation, microwave
ovens, and video links are a few ex-
amples of hackable opportunities in
the VHF and microwave frequency
areas.
Unfortunately, all of the hacking
rules change in the VHF and micro-
wave range. First . you no longer have
individual resistors, capacitors, and
inductors.
Instead , the individual resistance,
capacitance, and inductance of each
component has to be uniquely taken
into account , and often done so in a
z distributed manner. Circuit st rays can
quickly become totally intolerable.
b Tolerances of a few thousandths of
an inch can make or break a circuit's
w
o performance.
Ci Second, testing and measurement
r? often has to be indirect, because
Microwave Journal
685 Canton Street
Norwood, MA 02062
(617) 769-9750
CIRCLE 328 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Microwave Product Digest
34 Evergreen Place
Tenafly, NJ 07670
(201) 568-5835
CIRCLE 329 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Microwaves & RF
611 Route #46 West
Hasbrouck Heights. NJ 07604
(201) 393-6286
CIRCLE 330 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
many attempts to directly measure a
microwave circuit could severely dis-
rupt what you are trying to measure.
Not to mention the high frequenc ies
and weak signal levels involved. Most
suitable test equipment also tends to
be very specialized, arcane, and quite
expensive. and hard to justify.
Third, VHF and microwave parts
can be ridiculously costly, since most
of them are aimed at gold-plated low-
volume military uses.
Fourth, the math, the field theory,
Rogers
100S Roosevelt Avenue
Chandler, AZ. 85226
(602) 961-1382
CIRCLE 336 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
SGS-Thomson Microelectronics
211 Commerce Drive
Montgomeryville, PA18936
(215) 362-8500
CIRCLE 337 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
Surplus Trader
Winters Lane Box 276
Alburg. VT 05440
(514) 739-9328
CIRCLE 338 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
and the advanced technical skills
needed to do anything useful at these
frequencies goes way beyond elec-
tronic fundamentals. A lot of useful
microwave information tends to re-
quire advanced skills, can be hard to
find, and is often classified.
And finally, much of microwave de-
sign work is far more art than sci-
ence. To this day, black magic can be
involved, and you either havethe right
feel for what you are doing, or your
circuits simply will not work.
70
WARNING:
SCO
Electronics and
RXII dealers do
not encourage
people '0 use
the Digital
Video Stabilizer
to durlicate
renta movies
or copyrighted
video tapes.
RXII is in-
tended to stabi-
lize and restore
crystal clear
picture quality
for private
home use only.
( Dealers Welcome)
No Florida Sales!
For Qur Record
I, the undersigned, do hereby declare under penallyor per-
jury that all products purchased, nC10N and in the future, will
onlybeused on Cable1Vsystemswith proper authorization
rrom local offidals or cable offidals in accordance

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r 0 0
great stuff on A/D and 0/A convert-
ers . From Rohm, there's an Electronic
Components Catalog which includes
details on their FM stereo broad-
casters and lots of other goodies.
From LSI Logic, there's a new
group of LR64700 Video-compres-
sion chips that should revolutionize
both still- and moving-picture image
storage and transmission.
I get lots of calls asking about
hacker-friendly sources for custom
crystals. Two of my favorite sources
are Statek for low frequencies and
Crystek for higher frequencies. Both
have catalogs, data sheets, and ap
notes available.
A new detailed bibliography on
magnetic refrigeration is available
through Jerry Hagen at his Cory Lab-
oratories. Our unusual hacker maga-
zine for the month is Homebuilt
Rotorcraft from the Rotary Flight In-
ternational folks, whi le that free
Maxim Engineering Journal has all
sorts of semiconductor goodies in it.
Especially for audio/video switches
and power supplies that work off a
single AA cell .
Free samples of Powerpole con-
nectors are available from Anderson
Power Products Inc. These are both
snap-together modular and sexless .
They should be ideal for such things
as solar panels.
An interesting sandblasting cata-
log is available from National Sand-
blast. This is one quick way to spruce
up any metal on your prototypes.
Turningto my own products, forthe
fundamentals of digital integrated cir-
cuits, do check into my TTL Cook-
book and CMOS Cookbook. Or to
pick up all the goodies at once, try my
Lancaster Classics Library.
We also now have the Hardware
Hacker 11/ reprints available, which
has the latest and best of all these
columns in them. All edited, revised,
corrected, and indexed .
Finally, I do have a new and free
mailer for you which includes dozens
of insider hardware hacking secret re-
sources. Write or call for info. Our
usual reminder here that most of the
items mentioned appear either in the
Names and Numbers or in the
Microwave Resources sidebars.
As always, this is your column and
you can get technical help and off-
the -wall networking per that Need
Help? box. The best calling times are
weekdays 8-5, Mountain Standard
Time. Let's hear from you. RE
For this month 's resource sidebar, I
have tried to gather together some
VHF and microwave stuff you might
find of interest. Obviously, you'll want
to start with that Radio Amateur's
Handbook published by the ARRL.
Many of the ham magazines and club
activities will also involve the VHF
and microwave frequencies. Per a re-
cent rule change, certain new ham
licenses don't require Morse code.
By far the leading surplus house
carrying microwave radar goodies is
Radio Research Instruments. How-
ever, these folks tend to concentrate
on whole systems and refuse to
show prices in their flyers. Alternate
places to look include Fair Radio
Sales, Surplus Traders, and in the
Nuts and Volts shopper.
While utterly ancient, McGraw
Hill's MIT Rad-Lab series should still
be scrounging around on the dusty
back shelves of the larger technical
libraries. Volume One in particular,
Ridenour's Radar System Engineer-
ing has been reprinted a number of
times and remains highly useful to
this day. Another more recent classic
is Merrill Skolnik's Introduction to
Radar Systems
As with any field, the free trade
journals are your foremost day-to-day
resource. While there are several
dozen, four I've found useful include
Microwaves and RF, the Microwave
Journal, Microwave Product Digest,
and Defense Electronics.
Be sure to check out Mini-Circuits
Labs for their low- cost broadband
amplifier chips, and Plessey for their
unusual Satellite Cable and TV Inte-
grated Circuit Handbook. They also
have lots of info on frequency syn-
thesis and high-speed dividers .
Hewlett Packard, of course, makes
all kinds of microwave components,
as well as high-performance micro-
wave and VHF test instruments. And
Motorola has a wide variety of high-
frequency semiconductors and ap-
plication notes available.
Two other chip sources include
SGS and MIA Com, whi le Rogers
supplies printed-circuit materials and
dielectrics useful for microwaves.
Well , that should be enough to get
you started. Please let me know what
else you think should be added to our
resource files.
New tech literature
From Sony, there's a new Memory
Data Book. They also have lots of
CIRCLE 179 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD 71
AUDIO UPDATE
Japan: The Evolution of an Audio Colossus
LARRY KLEIN
A QUALlTYCONTROL STATIONin Yamaha's Hamatsu Plant.
I
t may seem strange to audio new-
comers, but in the early days of hi-
fi-the 1950's-there were no
Japanese components in the U.S.
There was, however, a Japanese do-
mestic audio market. I remember
reading about the hi-f coffee houses
with sophisticated sound systems
that dotted Tokyo. As further evi-
dence, Audio magazine ran intermit-
tent ads from a Tokyo company called
Fukuin Electric. Their Pioneer brand
products included various drivers
plus ':An Ideal All-Purpose Amplifier
for Home High Fidelity Systems" that
was actually an AM/FM shortwave
receiver. Neither a price nor a U.S .
source was mentioned in any of the
ads, so one can assume that Fukuin
was trying to attract distributors
rather than mail-order customers.
True, there was a line of Japanese
open-reel tape recorders being sold
by a California distributor called Su-
perscope: few knew or cared that
they were being made by Sony, an-
other unknown Japanese company.
And so things went for several years.
The Japanese invasion
The Japanese entry into the audio
market started relatively slowly. In
1966, as Technical Editor of Stereo
Review, I arranged for the first lab
test of a Japanese receiver. Made by
Kenwood, it appeared to have nothing
terribly innovative about its circuitry,
but it was a fine performer and very
well made by U.S. standards. We
judged it to be an excellent value.
Within six months of our report, an
upgraded model appeared with four
times the power and greatly improved
FM performance. The kicker was that
it sold for exactly the same price
Z ($239.95) as the earlier unit! If I had
been an American audio rnanufac-
:..:> turer at the time, I would have be-
come very nervous!
There was another aspect of the
:5 Kenwood review worth mentioning.
Bear in mind that this all took place
long before the FTC became involved
in amplifier specifications, and most
audio manufacturers were, let us say,
somewhat " opt imistic" when report-
ing their specs. When Mr. Kasuga of
Kenwood called to ask how the report
was coming, I told him that it was fine
and the unit easily met all its specs
except for a slight rise in distortion
below 50 Hz.
To my surprise, Kasuga became
upset and stated that his receiver
was free of such problems. I asked
our lab to retest the unit; the results
were the same. After a great deal of
back-and-forthing it turned out that
one of our lab meters had developed
a fault that caused the spurious large
distortion reading. I hadn't originally
given the out-of-spec distortion a
second thought because virtually all
previously tested U.S.-made re-
ceivers showed far higher distortion
at the same frequencies.
Quality control
A quality-control engineer once
said to me that quality is not some-
thing you inspect into a product after
it's built-it should be designed in
right from the outset. I later learned
that this was one of the prime pre-
cepts of W. Edwards Deming, who is
generally regarded as the father of
quality-control methodology. Com-
paratively unknown in the U.S., in the
early 1950's Deming started teaching
Japanese managers and engineers
how to manufacture quality compo-
nents. Deming was subsequently
awarded a medal and a citation by
Emperor Hirohito that credited himfor
the rebirth and worldwide success of
Japan's industry.
The quality concept was one that
the Japanese obviously took to heart
early on in all aspects of their audio
(and camera) manufacturing careers .
For example, during my first visit to
Japan in the early 1970's, I bought,
among other items, a prerecorded
cassette from a street display outside
a Ginza department store. The cas-
sette was chosen simply because I
was amused by its jacket showing
what appeared to be a Japanese
country-and-western rock group.
When I went to play the cassette at
home I immediately noticed two
things: CD It was not Dolby encoded,
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and (2) it was quieter than most of my
prerecorded cassettes that included
Dolby noise reduction.
My subsequent experiences with
Japanese LP's and prerecorded
open-reel tapes were similar. The
Japanese tapes were quieter, the rec-
ords were flatter and had better sur-
faces, and both had lower distortion
and a wider frequency range than the
usual U.S. products. And when I first
visited Japan, I was so impressed by
t he clarity, detail. and color of their TV
t ransmissions that I assumed that
they were using some system other
than the U.S.-standard NTSC. How-
ever when some U.S. -made pro-
grams were broadcast , it became
apparent that the superiority of the
Japanese picture was due solely to
t he care exercised in its production.
So, too, with the records and tapes. It
was evident that Japanese engineers
and production people gave a damn
about their products, an attitude that
apparently was and is somewhat rare
in the U.S. In short, Deming 's quality-
control methodology provided the
tools, the Japanese workers and
management provided the attitude-
and the rest is history.
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Japanese marketing
When Japanese audio products
began to appear in the U.S. , they
were mostly brought in by U.S. dis-
tributors , such as Superscope men-
tioned before. Some American
marketeers did a creditable job;
others didn't seem to realize exactly
what they had. For example, I re-
member a company called Nivico
whose product line included several
models of German fake fi replaces
complete with a bar, glasses, and a
" hl-fi" system. This less-than-high-
tech company also distributed JVC's
top-of-the-line audio equipment. I re-
member seeing a JVC preamplifier
with pink -noise source and multi -
band equalizer on sale in Macy's ra-
dio department. I have no idea how
many were sold-and whether the
buyers were told that they would also
need a power amplifier, speakers,
and a tuner in order to hear music.
In any case, most Japanese man-
ufacturers ultimately bought them-
selves back from their distributors,
some came over on their own, and a
few bought U.S. hi-f companies such
as Fisher-via Emerson Radio-and
proceeded to design and manufac-
turer the products in Japan. Some
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brands, Sansui for one, in effect
came to the U.S. via Vietnam, where
they were best sellers in the military
PX's. At some point intime, the Japa-
nese began to emulate U.S. auto
makers by bringing out new models
every year. Their self-imposed rules
demanded that each new model in-
clude some spec improvement-
however minor-and/or a new circuit
with wondrous properties. For exam-
ple, during a visit to the Osaka Tech-
nics factory, the engineers showed
me a chart on which they had listed
thei r upcoming "breakthrough" im-
provements for each of the next 5
years!
Audio today
One aspect of the Far-Eastern au-
dio scene that I've not ment ioned is
their extens ive private-labeling enter-
prises. A friend who owns a U.S.
company and manufacturing plant
based in Washington state produces
a wide range of audio' equipment,
some of which is built inthe Far East. I
asked him what determines which is
made here and which is made there.
His answer was simple: When he ex-
pected to sell large numbers of a
product-such as his medium-priced
receiver- "economies of scale "
made it far cheaper to have it man-
ufactured overseas. On the other
hand , limited-product ion compo-
nents such as his very high-powered
amplifiers can prof itably be made in
his U:S. plant.
That explains why the limited pro-
duction, "esoteric" audio products
are mostly built in the U.S. or Great
Britain, while high-volume products
are made in the Far East. Of course,
there are still a few American man-
ufacturers who put out quality com-
ponents at both affordable and
somewhat high-end prices . So if you
are the type of person who insists on
buying American, you still can. How-
ever, it cannot be denied that the bulk
of the electron ics industry now be-
longs to the Far East. I guess all of
this has worked out pretty well for the
U.S. audio consumer, in that you can
(/) get more bang for your audio buck
than ever before. But for the Ameri-
o can manufacturers, or ex-manufac-
II:
o turers, of audio components (and
television sets , cars , and dozens of
6 other categories) , the Japanese
15 manufacturing juggernaut has been
an economic disaster. R-E
74
peN
continued from page 64
2-a-c show how a modulated
spread-spectrum signal used in
direct sequencing is generated.
When a carrier signal (a) is mixed
with a noise signal (b), a broad-
ening of the RF carrier occurs,
resulting in a modulated spread
spectrum (c). Modulation is ac-
complished using the exclusive
OR logic operation. The effect of
modulation is to reverse blocks of
the wideband noise bits. Because
the noise signal is much higher
in frequency than the informa-
tion signal, the resulting bit se-
quence still appears to be
random. The modulated signal is
actually the sum of the noise and
signal bandwidths.
You 're probably wondering
how the original information can
be decoded at the receiving end.
The information signal can be re-
covered by modulating (exclusive
OR) a second time with the same
noise waveform. Instead of mod-
ulating the information signal
with random noise, a PN gener-
ator is used, which possesses
many properties of wideband
noise, but is exactly reproducible
at remote locations. In order to
remove unintentional noise in
the receiver, multiple matched fil-
ters are normally used. A block
'diagra m of a typical direct se-
quence is shown in Fig. 3.
Even though signal spreading
appears to be an inefficient use of
spectrum for a single user, the
theory suggests that many such
transmitters can operate at the
same time, on the same wide
band, and in the same area, since
each transmitter's intended re-
ceiver will see only its code and
ignore all others. In essence, this
is code-division multiple access
(COMA).
A spread-spectrum signal
looks like low-level noise to a tra-
ditional narrowband receiver,
and can be designed so that it
doesn't interfere with the tradi-
tional receiver. In turn, a spread-
spect r u m rec ei ver ca n be de-
signed to ignore the interference
of even multiple transmitters op-
erating within its broad band-
width. That resistance to inter-
ference can apply to intentional
interferers, such as other users
of the spectrum, as well as spu-
rious RF emissions created by
many common household and of-
fice appliances.
The technique can be viewed
as similar to a concert hall with a
hundred pianos, each playing a
different tune, and each member
of the audience listening for one
particular tune. As long as the
listener can isolate that melody, it
doesn't matter how many pianos
there are (until the listener is
deafened).
Transmit power would gener-
ally be at 1milliwatt, but by using
a technique called adaptive
power control (APC), each base
could monitor and adjust power
levels of handsets to the mini-
mum necessary to achieve com-
munication without inter-
ference. A reduction in emitted
power through APC will permit a
far larger number of simulta-
neous users, so that at one milli-
watt, one hundred simultaneous
calls can be handled in a micro-
cell within a 600-foot radius.
TDMA
Another technique being con-
sidered is time-division multiple
access (TOMA). TOMA works by
dividing each second into 100
ten-millisecond slots (as an ex-
ample), and dividing each time
slot into a number of frames, typ-
ically 24. Half of those frames are
then allocated for transmission
from base stations to mobile
units; and the other half are de-
voted to transmission in the re-
turn direction. Therefore, 12
handsets could broadcast at the
same time and place using the
same frequency. That technique
is used by PCN's in the United
Kingdom, and is a technique that
has been adopted for the cellular
telephone systems in the United
States when they become digital
over the next few years. The dis-
advantage of the technique is
that it requires extremely precise
timing and sophisticated elec-
tronics.
The FCC is now considering
what action to take. Last June it
launched an i n q u l ry into
whether PCN's are needed, what
they will accomplish, what spec-
trum should be allotted, if any,
and how the new phenomenon
should be regulated. Comments
poured in from 110 companies,
continued on page 92
DRAWING BOARD
Let's build a simple, inexpensive logic probe for the
home workbench.
. I:' . I
E
ven though the main reason for
spending time at the bench is
to wind up with a working cir-
cuit , there are other good reasons for
spending hours and hours hunched
over a breadboard. Nothing ever
works out the way you want it to, and
that's especially true at the test
bench. Dealing with unexpected (or
perhaps expected) design glitches is
what makes bench time a great way
to stretch your brain.
Working your way through a proj-
ect is agood learning experience, but
only if you have the right equipment.
For instance, a logic analyzer can in-
stantly give you a window into the
nitty gritty of a complex design. But
there aren't many of us that can justi-
fy parting with the kind of cash that's
necessary to get your hands on a
logic analyzer-or any other kind of
exotic test equipment for that matter.
That's especially true when the proj-
ect has nothing to do with generating
income.
While there's no argument that
hiqh-tech designs can really be de-
bugged only with high-tech equip-
ment, you can do a lot of work with
much simpler and less expensive test
gear if you're willing to do a bit more
work with your brain. High-speed cir-
cuitry can be slowed down, gated
latches can be added to catch
pulses, and othersimilartricks can be
pulled to snoop around a circuit.
An extremely useful. but relatively
inexpensive addition to any test
bench is a logic probe. Now there are
all sorts of different logic probes, and
just how useful it can be depends on
how many bells and whistles it has. A
simple two-LED probe is about the
bottom line, and the sort of informa-
tion it can give you is just basic, bot-
tom-line informat ion.
When designing a logic probe, you
haveto provide a way for the probe to
operate with different logic families.
That can complicate things slightly
because each family-TIL, CMOS,
etc.-has its own idea of what volt-
ages constitute a high or low. Not
only that, but some of them, such as
TIL, also haveabout a one-volt dead
band in which the whole idea of logic
levels gets a bit murky.
When you get right down to it, a
logic probe is simply a circuit with the
ability to detect and react to particular
voltage levels. Anytime you're de-
signing something like this and you
plan on buildinq it out of parts that are
cheap and easily available (as we
are), your mind should immediately
turn to voltage comparators.
A voltage comparator is really
nothing more than an op-arnp with a
built-in hysteresis that makes it react
sharply to voltages that cross a par-
ticular threshold. You can build one
out of any standard op-amp, but its a
lot easier to use a part like an LM339.
The pinouts for the chip are shown
in Fig. 1, and you should be struck by
how much they look like op-amps.
Just about the only pins that are
missing are the ones for frequency
compensation and offset adjust-
ments . Those aren't needed in a
comparator since the chip is de-
signed to operate more like a switch
than anop-amp. The gain is extremely
high, the chip can be driven by a sin-
FIG.1-THE LM339 VOLTAGE-comparator
Iecontains four comparators on the same
substrate. Weneed only two comparators
for a logic probe, so we'll have an extra
pair.
gle-ended supply, and the output can
typically sink as much as 16 mA.
The Simplest circuit for a logic pro-
be is shown in Fig. 2. As you can see,
we've tied together two of the pins;
one on each of the comparators.
Those are the pins that are going to
receive the input voltage from the
probe. Since we want the output of
both the high and low detectors to go
high when they're turned on, we have
to make the low detector inverting
and set the high detector to be non-
inverting. That's why we've con-
nected the non-inverting input of IC1-
a, the high detector, to the inverting
input of IC1-b, the low detector.
Now that we've decided where we
want to put the input signal. the next
step in the design is to work out the
reference voltages that are going to
be applied to the other input pins of
the comparators. The easiest way to
do that is by building a resistor volt-
age divider-and that brings us to our
first real problem.
If we were going to use the logic
probe only with CMOS, the design of
the divider would be relatively Simple.
Since CMOS changes state halfway
up the power rail, we could use two
equal-value resistors for the divider.
But that would seriously affect the
versatility of the design so I'm only
mentioning it as an aside. We haveto
do more than that because we also
want it to be able to work with the
standard TIL levels of below 0.8 volts
for a low and above 2 volts for a high.
The way to do that is to use three
resistors in the divider chain, as
shown in Fig. 2. By separating the
high and low reference inputs of the
comparators with a resistor, we can
have our design account for the TIL
deadband voltage range between 0.8
and 2 volts. In Fig. 2, the output of
IC1-awill go high if the appliedvoltage
at pin 6 is more than the reference
voltage at pin 7, and the output of IC1-
b will go high if the applied voltage at
pin 5 is lower than the reference volt-
(D
age at pin 4.
75
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equal to the sys tem voltage.
Since we know that the voltage
drop across R1 has to be 3V, the
combined voltage drop across the
other two resistors will be 2V. We
also know that we want the drop
across R3 to be O.8V since that's the
value of the reference voltage we're
aiming toward. Some simple arith-
metic tells us that the R2 drop has to
be 1.2V.
Once we've taken the analysis this
far, we've also calculated the relat ive
values of the resistors. Since the re-
sistors are in series, the same current
is flowing through all of them and that
means the resistor values are going
to be directly proportional to the volt-
age drops. Rl is going to be % of the
total , R2 is going to be 1.2/5 of the
total, and R3 is going to be 0.8/5 of
t he total. Putt ing thi ngs in simpl er
terms, if R
T
is the total value of the
three resistors, R1 has to be 0.60R
T

R2 has to be 0.24R
T
, and R3 has to
be 0.16R
T
.
Knowing the resistor ratios is only
part of the answer since it's st ill short
of knowing the actual values. In theo-
ry, any combinat ion of resistors in the
correct rat io will work for us but there
are some ot her t hings we have to
take int o considerat ion to come up
wi t h the final resist or values .
When we get together next time,
we 'l l take care of that, add a few sur-
prises to the ci rcuit, and get to talking
abou t some other test gear you can
bui ld yourself. R-E
mo re co mplex when we calculate the
individual values for R2 and R3 since
those two resistors don't see the 5-
volt system voltage. The voltage divi-
sion has to be based on the voltage
appearing at pin 7 of IC1-a.
Let's be a bit mo re rigorous about
working this out. The voltage drop
across the enti re resist ive chain is
about equal to the system voltage.
I'm saying " about " because t here is a
slight drop due t o presence of the
comparator, but the impedance of the
inputs is so high that we can forget
about it fo r all pract ical purposes .
Since the three resistors are in se -
ries, the sum of the voltage drops is
/
*.R3
GNO
Now t hat we've got the basi c con-
figuration worked out , the next step
is to calculate the values for the re-
sistors. As we go t hrough this, we'll
be aiming for the 0.8- and 2-vo lt
thresholds but, since we 're going to
be using standard-va lue resistors
(t hings have to be cheap and avai l-
able, rernernber") , we'll probably
miss the exact numbers by a little bit.
Since we wan t the reference volt -
age for IC1-a to be 2 vol ts (assuming
a system vol tage of 5 volt s), we' re
aiming for a 3-volt drop across R1 -a
f inal ratio of 3/5. That means the val -
ue for R1 has to be 60 % of the total
value of R1 +R2 +R3. Things are a
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parator. Those pins will receive the input voltage from the probe . The low detector is
a: inverting and the high detector is non-inverting.
76
COMPUTER CONNECTIONS
Video standards
JEFF HOLTZMAN
M
y first video terminal con-
sisted of a 4800-baud
MicroTerm terminal , wi t h
ASCII keyboard, driving a 5" Sony
black-and-white portable TV, through
a custom video interface suggested
in a book by a guy named Don Lan-
caster. Resol uti on was 16 lines by 64
characters ; needless to say, bit -map-
ped graphics were not even a dream.
Today, about 12years later, I havea
19" NEC Multi Sync XL with a non-
interlaced graphics resolution of 768
lines x 1024 rows, in an esse ntially
infinite variety of colors.
What happened in the interim? And
what's comi ng up next?
Memory ys. 1/0 mapped
Back in the early days of persona l
computers. user interaction was con-
sidered periphera l to the main func-
t ion , computation . (By contrast,
today some heret ics believe that
computation is peripheral to user in-
t eraction) In line wit h that type of
t hinking, user input and output was
handled a byte at a time, usually
through an RS-232 interface that
commu nicated with the CPU via a
single 1/0 port .
Of course, t here were early excep-
tions from Apple and Commodore.
Those companies built memory-map-
ped displays for the Apple II. t he C64 ,
and their successors. However, reso-
lution was so low that sustained pro-
fessional use produced eye strain . So
most business mach ines centered
around Z80's and serial ASCII termi-
nals running under the CPIMoperat-
ing syst em.
In August of 1981, IBM introduced
its version of the personal computer.
The IBM PC was based on a relatively
new microprocessor, the 8088, that
had 16 times the memory space of
the Z80 machines prevalent at the
time.
In that seemingly boundless ad-
dress space, IBM chose to imple-
ment a memory-mapped video
system, including bot h a character-
based black-and-white system with
reso lution sufficient for sustained
use in word processors,
spreadsheets, and database man-
agers, as well as a bit-mapped color
system for entertainment. The two
systems were assigned different
memory addresses and 1/0 ports for
control, so they could coexist in t he
same machine simultaneously, a fea-
ture useful for programmers who use
one screen for program output and
the other for debugging. Some CAD
systems also put drawings on one
screen and menus on another.
Inone of the greatest ironies of this
industry, and one that we continue to
pay for every day, even though the PC
was designed wit h memory-mapped
video hardware, IBM's BIOS imple-
mented an interface that mimicked
the old ASCII terminal approach. Per-
formance was truly lousy; early PC
word processors ran more slowly on
a PC thanvia a 19,200-baud ter minal.
Programmers eventually devised
more efficient interfaces to the video
hardware, but created the problems
of portability and compatibility that
haunt us to this day, and that wi ll con-
tinue to haunt us until the PC archi-
tecture has been laid to rest. But
that's another story.
Color and pixels
The first bit -mapped graphics sys-
tem for t he PC was called the Colorl
Graphi cs array, or CGA for short . In
addition to several fuzzy text modes,
CGA has two graphics modes: a
" high-res" 640 x 200 in black and
white, and a " low-res" 320 x 200 in
four colors. (Table 1 summarizes im-
portant video modes and resolu-
tions) The primary market for CGA
adapters was game and educational
software.
Busi ness users working in 1-2-3
cou ld display graphs on a CGA
monitor, but not on the t ext -only
monochrome display adapter (MDA).
IBM missed a marketing opportunity
and in stepped Hercules, whose
monochrome graphics adapter quick-
ly became a pseudo-standard whose
reign lasted unti l very recent ly, when
VGA became king of the hill.
The Hercules card brilliantly solved
several problems, including support
of decent text -mode reso lution, a
separate graphics mode with resol u-
tion exceedi ng that of the CGA and
the abi lity to work with standard
monochrome monitors, which cos t
about 20-25% of CGA monitors at
the time .
But IBM did not sit sti ll. In 1984, the
company introduced the Enhanced
Graphics Adapter (EGA) . wh i ch
maintained backward compatibility
with the CGA and added new text
and graphics modes. The text mode
ran in 16 colors , and had resolution
sufficient for day-in and day-out
usage. The new graphics modes al-
lowed more colors (16) as well as
more resolution (350 lines; columns
remained constant at 640 pixels). Al-
though sti ll relatively expensive, the
EGA proved that bit-mapped color
displays could be useful for things
other than arcade games.
(For purposes of this discussion,
I' m ignori ng several IBM offerings
that never took off, including the Pro-
fessiona l Graphics Contro ller
(PGC))
Then. in the spring of 1987, IBM
introduced the PS/2 series, which in-
cluded a new bus (t he Micro Chan-
neD, a new versi on of DOS (3.3) ,
1.44MB floppy disks , and the next
video standard, the Video Graphics
Array (VGA). DOS 3.3 quickly be-
came standard . It took a littl e longer,
but eventually the new disk format
became widespread . The jury is st ill
out on the ultimate acceptance of the
Micro Channel architecture. How-
ever. in recent years VGA has taken
off faster than a stream of electro ns
inside a CRT. VGA maintains com-
patibility with CGA and EGA and s:
adds several more higher-resolution
text and graphics modes . In addition , <D
from the beginn ing VGA included
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81
TABLE 1-PC VIDEO MODES
In hexadecimal
T=Text only, G=Graphics only, T/G=Bit-mapped text
... C= CGA, E= EGA, V= VGA, S= Super VGA, M=MDA, H= Hercules
Mode Mode Adapter*** Horiz. Res. Vert. Res. Max.
No.* Type** Colors
0 T/G CEVS 40 25 16
1 T/G CEVS 40 25 16
2 T/G CEVS 80 25 16
3 T/G CEVS 80 25 16
4 G CEVS 320 200 4
5 G CEVS 320 200 4
6 G CEVS 640 200 2
7 T CEVSHM 80 25 2
D G EVS 320 200 16
E G EVS 640 200 16
F G EVS 640 350 2
10 G ENS 640 350 4/16
11 G VS 640 480 2
12 G VS 640 480 16
13 G VS 320 200 256
6A G S 800 600 16
100 G S 640 400 256
101 G S 640 480 256
102 G S 800 600 16
103 G S 800 600 256
104 G S 1024 768 16
105 G S 1024 768 256
106 G S 1280 1024 16
107 G S 1280 1024 256
built -in gray-scaling capabilities , so
you can plug either a monochrome or
a color monitor into a given adapter,
and yo ur software will run un -
changed.
Beyond VGA
VGA is nice, but it' s not the end of
the sto ry. As soon as IBM int roduce s
a product to the PC market, othe r
vendors quickly seek to improve it,
and VGA was no except ion. Third-
party vendors quickly pushed resolu-
tion up t o 800 x 600, 1024 x 768 ,
and other intermediate resolut ions .
At first , each vendor implemented it s
hardware and software in di fferent
ways . Soon, however, the industry re-
alized it was headed for chaos, so the
en Vi deo Electronics Standards As soci-
o
z ation (VESA) formed to def ine stan-
dards for beyond-VGA modes. VESA
o membership i nc ludes vi rt ually all
manufacturers of monitors and video
w
6 ada pt ers-exce pt IBM, Hercules ,
o Compaq, and a few others.
Wh at VESA has done is st an-
82
dardize hori zontal and vertical sweep
frequencies, and assign BIOS mode
numbers for standard resolutions, as
shown in the bottom half of Table 1.
These standards should make it easi-
er to write software drivers and as-
sure customers of compatibility.
Beyond Super VGA
Super VGA is really nice-but it's
not the end of the story either. The
reason is that the VGA architect ure is
dumb, dumb, dumb. It requi res the
host CPU to do all of its bit twiddling.
To draw a line, the host CPU must
wri te directly to memory, oft en a sin-
gle memory locat ion for each af-
fected pi xel. At low resol ution,
performance may not be affect ed
much by letting the host CPU do ev-
eryth ing. But as resolution increases,
the host CPU must spend an increas-
ing proportion of it s time tending to
the screen, whi ch slows down the
rest of the system.
Wouldn't it be nice if the host CPU
could delegate some responsibility
and free itself up for other types of
tasks? Well , it can. The trick is to put
some intelligence on the video adapt-
er 'card itself. Then the host CPU can
tell it, " Draw a line from eX1,YD to
(X2,Y2), and let me know when
you're done," and meanwhile go on
and do something else like tend to a
background pri nt spooler, recalculate
a spreadsheet. reformat or spell-
check a document, or accept charac-
ters from a modem.
IBM's first entry in the world of
intelligent graphics adapters was the
8514/A, introduced shortly after the
VGA in 1987. Unfortunately (for
IBM), the company shrouded the
8514/A in a vei l of secrecy by not
publishing hardware-level specs, as
the company had for all previous
adapters. So third-party vendors had
to reverse-engineer on-board IC's,
which slowed development of clones
and software support, hence accep-
tance in the market. In addition, the
8514/A is really a half-breed that pro-
vides only partially intelligent control
over the video buffe r. Further, IBM's
8514/A produces an interlaced dis-
play that many people (including me)
find visually st raining. The main justi-
ficat ion for interlaced monitors is that
they are slower, hence cheaper, than
non-interlaced mon itors. Although
the 8514/A provides comparable res-
olution and better performance than
the better Super VGA boards, it
seems unlikely that it will ever attain
the importance of VGA.
Beyond beyond-Super-VGA
Wh ile IBM floundered, Texas In-
struments released the 34010 graph-
ics coprocessor and a robust,
general -pu rpose software interface
to it. The 34010 is a full-fledged mi-
croprocessor with a powerful instruc-
tion set containing many graphics -
specific commands. At first, support
for the 34010 was sparse, but with
the increasing popularity of graphical
user interfaces, support is increas-
ing, competit ion is heating up, and
board pr ices are falling. (See the
sidebar for a discussion of Hercules'
new 34010 boardJ
Of course, IBM doesn't give up
with out a fight. In the fall of 1990, Big
Blue introduced its next-gene ration
video controller, the Extended Graph-
ics Array (XGA). XGA differs from
8514/A in several significant re-
spects. First, it's 100% VGA-com-
patible. Second, it's more intell igent
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CIRCLE 61 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD CIRCLE 189 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
tha n t he 85 14/A, so it should be fast-
er. Third, it runs only on Micro Chan-
nel PS/2's, whi ch limits its potential
market. Fourth, it requires a 386 or
486 to run, which also limits it s poten-
t ial market. Fif t h, like t he 8514/A, the
XGA produces an interlaced display,
so it's subject to flicker.
A t present it's hard to see, given
t he falling prices of 34010 boards,
how the XGA is going to have any
significant impact on the market. (For
a technical overview of the XGA, see
Jake Richter 's arti cl e in the Febru ary
issue of By te.)
Color and resolution
In this discussion so far, I've most ly
ignored the issue of color. CGA al-
lowed a maximum of fou r in it s low-res
mode; EGA increased t he maximum
to 16; and VGA increased the max-
imum t o 256, but wit h that many col -
ors t he resolution dropped back to
the low-res CGA level. (Even so, 256-
col or images at t hat reso lut ion are
much more realistic than 16-color im-
ages at much higher resolutionsJ In
the meant ime, th e Super VGA
boards developed support for 256
colors at all resolut ions up t o 1024 X
768.
256 colors are nice-but it really
ta kes about 16 mill ion (2
24
) co lors for
t rue photo-realistic imaging. Special
wo rks tations have had that type of
imagi ng for awhile, as have high- end
Macin t oshes . But now these " t rue-
color" boards are drift ing over t o the
HERCULES' GRAPHICS
STATION CARD
You can sum up the 3401O-based
Hercules Graphics Station card in
three words: speed, speed, speed. I
tested it in a 33-MHz 386 under Win-
dows 3.0, and it roughly doubled
screen redraw speed . For example,
Word for Windows ran about as fast
as atext-mode word processor under
DOS. The card provides full hard-
ware-level VGA emulation, a 512 x
480 true-color mode , and a 1024 x
768 256-color mode. Sample true-
color images included with the board
are breathtaking. The board is well-
built, and comes with drivers for Win-
dows 3.0, AutoCAD 11, and others.
Installation and documentation are
a bit rough, and I encountered the
rudest technical-support person I've
run across in years while ironing out a
driver upgrade problem. But after
overcoming those hurdles, I really
enjoyed using the Hercules Graphics
Station Card. It really puts some zi ng
into Windows, and the company ex-
pects to improve performance as
Windows learns how to take advan-
tage of intelligent graphics sub-
systems.
The card lists for about $1000, but
is available through mail-order chan-
nels for about $700. Highly recom-
mended for heavy Windows and
AutoCAD users . Hercules Computer
Technology, Inc., 921 Parker Street,
Berkeley, CA 94710. (415) 540-6000.
CIRCLE 41 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
PC environment. However, they' re
very expensive ($4000 and up).
What's ahead
HDTV cont inues to loom just
beyond the horizon . In terms of the
way I spend my time, I don't much
care about it for entertainment , but I
do care about it in the way it could
affect computer-monitor pricing if the
technologies converged. The least-
expensive 19" 1024 x 768 monitors
now go for about $1500, but if the
same technology were used in HDTV
displays, that price could easily drop
by two thirds. Of course, a strong
U.S. presence in HDTV would do
much for our economy, the t rade defi-
cit , semiconductor manufacturing, ...
you name it. Let's hear it for a strong
U.S. presence in HDTV!
What to buy
The re is no reason not to buy VGA.
During the past year the price of a
plain VGA adapter card has dropped
to abo ut $100, and monochrome
VGA monitors are available for under
$150. Color VGA monitors now go
for about $350, Super VGA monitors
for about $500, and Su pe r VGA
board /monitor c ombinat ions ca n
also be had for about $500. Bought
as part of a system, color VGA typ-
ically adds about $300 to t he overall
cost. Don 't buy anyt hi ng les s than s::
mon ochrome VGA, and if you run :!<
Windows, aim for 800 x 600 Super cD
VGA as a minimum. R-E ~
83
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TYPE AD: $4.70 per word prepaid. Entiread in boldface, $5.60 per word. TINT SCREEN BEHIND ENTIRE
EXPANDED TYPE AD: $5.90 per word. TINT SCREEN BEHIND ENTIRE EXPANDED TYPE AD PLUS
ALL BOLD FACE AD: $6.80 per word. DISPLAY ADS: 1" x 2Y4'-$410.00; 2" x 2Y4' -$820.00; 3" x
2Y4'-$1230.00. General Informat ion : Frequr ,cy rates and prepayment discounts are available. ALL
COPY SUBJECTTO PUBLISHERS APPROVI _. ADVERTISEMENTS USING P.O. BOXADDRESS WILL
NOT BE ACCEPTED UNTIL ADVERTI SER SUPPLIES PUBLISHER WITH PERMANENT ADDRESS
AND PHONE NUMBER. Copy to be in our hands on the 5th of the third month preceding the date of the
issue. (i.e., Aug. issue copy must be received by May 5th). When normal closing date falls on Saturday,
Sunday or Holiday, issue closes on precedi ng working day. Send for the classified brochure. Circle Number
49 on the Free Information Card.
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CABLE TV converters: Jerrold, Oak, Scientific At-
lantic, Zenith & many others. " New MTS" stereo
add-on: mute & volume. Ideal for 400 and 450
owners! 1(800) 826-7623, Amex, Visa, MIC accept-
ed. B & B INC., 4030 Beau-D-Rue Drive, Eagan,
MN 55122.
TUBES, new, up to 90% off, SASE, KIRBY, 298
West Carmel Drive, Carmel, IN 46032.
TOCOM VIP converters w/remotes from $299.00.
TOCOM PREMIUM SUPER CHIPS from $49.00
turn on everything, guar anteed. Phone (219)
935-4128, evenings 6-12PM EST.
YOU can find anyone! Obtain confidential postal
and DMV records, birth/death, credit, etc. $17.95.
PSSST PRODUCTS, Box 2501, Huntington Beach,
CA 92647.
Card Number
Please Print Name Signature
Expiration Date
WIRELESS CABLE RECEIVERS 1.9TO 2.7 GHz
30CHPARABOLICOISH SYSTEM $173.90
30CHRODANTENNA SYSTEM S193.90
30CHCRYSTALCONTROl lEDSYSTEM S294.95
SUNMICROWAVEINT'L. INC. SEND lUll FllR
PO. BOX #34522 CATAlOGON THESE
PHOENIX, AI. 85067 AND OTHER FINE
(60212300640 VIDEO PRODUCTS
OUANTITY DISCOUNTS
TEST equ ipment pre-owned now at affordable
pri ces. Signal gener ators from $50:00, os-
cilloscopes from $50.00. other equipment, including
manuals available. Send $2.00 U.S. for catalog,
refunded on 1st order. J.B. ELECTRONICS, 3446
Dempster, Skokie, IL 60076. (708) 982-1973.
CABLE TVconverters & descramblers for Jer-
rold and Scientific At lanta . Low prices, one year
warranty. We Ship COD. BAY STATE ELEC-
TRONICS, PO Box 103, Boston, MA02188. 1(800)
359-9806.
CAR stereos, equalizers, amplifiers, speakers,
woofers, tweeters, speaker box supplies, alarms,
DJ mixers, more. Large catalog $1.00. ELEC-
TRISONIC-Kl , 8400 Alameda, EI Paso, TX 79907.
ANTIQUE RADIO CLASSIFIED
Free Sample! ~ o
Antique Radio's
Largest Circulation M o ~ t h y ~
Art icles, Ads & Classit lecs.
6-Month Trial: $13. 1-Yr: $24 ($36-1st Class).
A.R.C., P.O. Box 802-L6, Carlisle, MA 01741
DISCOUNT computer books: Thousands of titles
available. Including recent releases. Please call or
write for our free catalog. BOOKWARE, 344 Water-
town Road, Th omast on , CT 067 87. 1 (800)
288-5662. (203) 283-6973.
CABLE TV converters and descramhlers.
We sell only the best. Low prices. S8-3
$79.00. We ship C.O.D. Free catalog. ACE
PRODUCTS, PO Box 582, Dept. E, Saco, ME
04072. 1 (800) 234-0726.
PRINTEDcircuit boards etched & drilled. Free deliv-
ery. K & F ELECTRONICS, INC., 33041Groesbeck,
Fraser, M148026. (313) 294-8720.
CABLEdescramblers (Jerrold) from$40.00. Tocom
VIP test chip. Fully activates unit. Also Zenith test
board. Fully activates Z-Tacs. $50.00. Call (213)
867-0081.
T.V. notch filters, phone recording equipment, bro-.
chure $1.00. MICRO THine. , Box 63/6025, Mar-
gate, FL 33063. (305) 752-9202.
TECHNICIANS. The ultimate test lead, jumper ca-
bleswith switch$14.95 each. MHA, POBox152797,
San Diego, CA 92195.
INFRARED remote controlled RF and AN
switches. Write or call to order or get additional
information about Infracon's complete MediaMaster
series of infrared controlled switches: MediaMAster
RF-5X2 and Medi aMAster AV-4X4. INFRACON,
PO Box 1205, Richardson, TX 75085-1205. (214)
437-3366.
PHOTOFACT folders under # 1400 $5.00. Others
$7.00. Postpaid. LOEB, 414 Chestnut Lane, East
Meadow, NY 11554.
CABLE TV DESCRAMBLERS!
BARGAIN HEADQUARTERS!
- JERROLD' - TOCOM -HAMLIN
-OAK -ZENITH
-SCIENTIFIC ATLANTA
6 month warranty! We ship C.O.D.!
Lowest retai l/wholesale pr ices!
FREE CATALOG :
Global Cab le Network
1032 Irving St. Suite 109
S.F., CA 94122
NO CALIFORNIA SALES!! !
ORDER TODAY! 800-327-8544
THIS ISABOLDFACE EXPANDED AD. If you
likethisformat the cost is $5.65per word.
DESCRAMBLERS
CABLE TV
100
$43.
Each
50
TB-3 (Tri-Bi) or SA-3
Quantity Prices
10 20
$39. $35.
Each Each
$48.
Each
Hours open 10:00 am to 4:00 pm Eastern time
Minimum order 5 units 55.00 ea.
Dealers wanted. We ship COD.
King Wholesale
1-800-729-0036
Fax number 6173400053
"No one beats the King's prices!"
Leave your comments on
REwith the SYSOp.
bulletin board
system
RE-BBS
516-293-2283
Try the
(RE-BBS)
516-293-2283
Communicate with other
R-E readers.
Addyourself to our user
files to increase your
access.
Themoreyouuseit fhe
moreuseful it becomes.
Wesupport300 and1200
baudoperation.
Parameters: 8N1 (8 data
bits, no parity, 1 stopbit)
or 7E1 (7 databits, even
parity, 1 stop bit).
STOP prank phone calls Electronic device dis-
plays phone number of person calling you, $89.95
(assembled), brochure $1.00, surveillance catalog,
$5.00, EDE, POB 337, Buffalo, NY 14226.
WIRELESS CABLE - IFTS- MMOS - Amateur 1V
Ultn HighGain 5lIdb(+)' Tuneable1.9 .. 2.76hz.
36-ChannelSyslemComplete $149.95
12-ChannelSystem Complete $114.95
Call or write(SASE) for " FREE" Catatog
PHILLIPS-TECH ELECTRO.ICS
P.O. BOI 8533 Scottsdale, lZ 85252
LIFETIME (602) 947-7700 ($3.00 Crod"all phon.anlors)
WARRANTY .MasterClrd Vln COD' , QuantityPricing
PARTS at bargain prices. Free flyer. NETWORK
SALES, 90 Turner, Elk Grove, IL 60007. (708)
952-1115.
DESCRAMBLERS, wholesal e prices, examples
X-12 Oak descrambler $49. 00, RTC-56 combo
$135.00, Tocom 5503 combo $199.00, 4040 SB
combo $125.00 S.A.C. , info (702) 647-3799, orders
1 (800) 622-3799.
CABLE descramblers, new X-12 Oak descrambler
CH-2-3 $49.00 10-$39.00 20-$29.00, Oak RTC-56
CH- 2-3 with remot e $12 5. 00 10- $115 .00
20-$100.00, M-35-B $49.00 10-$39.00 20-$29.00,
Tocom 5503 wl r $199.00 10-$189.00 20-$175.00,
SYL 4040 replaces Jerrold 400-DIC wlr $125.00
10-$100.00 20-$75.00, 4040 with internal tri-bi su-
perfast wl r $165.00 10-$150.00 20-$125.00 with in-
tern al S-A descrambl er $165.00 10-$150.00
20-$125.00, with int ernal Hamlin descr ambl er
$125.00 10-$100.00 20-$75.00, MLD-1200, SA3B,
Super-Tri -Bi , sa me low pri ces, Ze nit h Z-TAC
$225.00 C.O.D. OK MOUNT HOOD ELEC-
TRONICS (503) 253-0459.
SECRETS of data encryption standard $7.00, se-
cure microprocessors explai ned $5.00, "smart
cards" explained $5.00. Details free. Sent first class.
BBB, Box 637, Polk City, FL 33868.
ADULT video tapes 90 min. VHS current color vid-
eos assorted titles 1 - $10.00 3 - $25.00. Free
shipping. STRINGSOFT, Box 915-R, Old Bridge, NJ
08857.
85
=
=. ".
SATELLITE TV
SURVEILLANCE elec tronics, pl ans, kits , as-
sembled. Catalog $4.00. S & S ELECTRONICS,
PO Box 36505-123E, SanJose, CA 95158.
AUDIO! Plans/products - inexpensive, profession-
al, amps, mi xer s, more! Liter atur e/cassett e -
$3.00! DAVISOUND, Box 521, Newberry, SC 29108.
POWERFUL single-chip FM voice transmitter, size
of a postage stamp, transmits to any FMradio up to
one mil e away. Complete kit $19.95 postpaid.
HERTZ MICRODEVICES, Box 41771-B, LA, CA
90041-41771.
Jerrold, Zenith, Hamlin. Sci. Atlanta, Pioneer
& MORE! OUR PRICES ARE BELOW WHOLESALE!
CABLE-+- PJLUS
14417 Chase St. #481-A Panorama City, CA 91402
1-800-822-9955 Other Info. 1-818-785-4500
NO CALIF. SALES - DEALERS WANTED
SURVEILLANCE transmitter kits! Four models of
each; tel ephone, room, comb inat ion telep hone/
roomtransmitters tune from 65 to 305 MHz. Catalog
with Popular Communications and Popular
Electronics book reviews of " Elect ronic Eaves-
dropping Equ ipment Design, " $2 .00 .
SHEFFIELD ELECTRONICS, 7223 Stony Island
Ave., Chicago, IL 60649-2806.
HYPNOTIZE or Relax electronically! Alpha/medita-
tion goggl es. Complete kit $53.00. Free information.
MARK WORLEY, Box 261113, San Diego, CA
92196.
ayCJRl)liJtJNC CAlLi TVEQt1IPMiNT J."FDMM.D. IiUiC'Il/ONICS 1Hi PUltCllASiJt
AGlUiiS lOCQ.\.CPLYWOH AllSTATE AND FEIEKAL lAWS 1tIiGAP..DINGPRlVAtt
OWNEJtSHIP OF CAllIi TV1iQlJII'MlIT. IF YOU AItIi UNSUllE OF LAWS
arr.a: WIllI)'OUR. lOCAL ClFP1C1A1.S.
-
.
EXCELLERAroaz,
CABLE CONVERTERS
WHEN QUALITY COUNTS
IJ75 so. 72nd St.
Omaha, NE 68tI4
For Information Call
402-554-0417
To order or request a free catalog
1-800-624-1150
New Dynatrack'P' fine tuning-provides unmatched picture quali ty
550 Mhz tuner provides 83 channel capacity
Sleep timer for automatic shut off within 15-90 minutes
2/3 switchable lIRC I IRC I Standar d Switchable
2 Year warranty, Last channel recall, Favorite channel select, Scan
Doubl e vent ed high efficiency tr ansformer for cool perf ormance
Stargate-2QOl $99.00
Stargate-550XL $119.00 With Volume Control
Don't settle for anything less.
CEJ C.O.D.
p
'ii-();

Your best buys and warranties for
cable converters and descramblers
start wit h a FRE E catalog from MD
New Auto Tri-Bi guar anteed no Ilashlng $165.00
SB-3................ $99.00 ZENrIH SUFER
TRIMODE $109.00 SAAVl... $199.00
HAMLIN......... $99.00 n)COM $319.00
SCIENTIFIC- EAGLE $119.00
ATLANTA...... $119.00 COPY GUARD $59.95
OAK M35B.... $99.00 STARGATE 2000 $88.00
ZENITH $175.00
M.D. Electronics will match or beat any
advertised wholesale or retail price.
CIRCLE 53 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
FREE catalog - Lowest prices worldwide, save 40
- 60%. Systems, upgrades, parts, all major brands
factory fresh and warrant ied. SKYVISION, 2009
Collegeway, Ferg us Fall s, MN 56537. 1 (800 )
334-6455.
BUY BONDS
VIDEOCIPHER II manuals. Volume 1-Hardware,
Volume 2 - Software - either $34.95. Volume 3
- Projects/Software, Volume 5 - Documentation
or Volume 6 - Experimentation $44.95 each. Vol-
ume 4 - Repair $99.95. Volume 7 - 0321Hacking
$54.95. Cable Hacker's Bible - $34.95. Clone
Hacker's Bibl e - $34.95. Catalog- $3.00. CODs
(602) 782-2316. TELECODE, PO Box 6426-RE,
Yuma, AZ 85366-6426.
FREE CATALOGI
18006487938
JERROLD HAMLIN OAK ETC
CABLE TV
DESCRAMBLERS
Special Dealer Prices!
Compara our LCN/ Retail Prices!
Guaranteed Prices & Warranties!
Orders Shipped Immediately!
REPUBLIC CABLE PRODUCTS. INC.
.::;;;;;;I 4080 Paradise Rd. #15, Dept RE591
t::=I Las Vegas, NV 89109
For all other informati on (702) 362-9026
VIDEOCYPHER II descrambling manual. Sche-
matics, video and audio. Expl ains DES, Eprom,
Clonemaster, 3Musketeer, Pay-per-view (HBO, Cin-
emax, Show1ime, adult, etc.) $16.95, $2.00 postage.
Schematics for Videocypher Plus, $20.00. Sche-
matics for Videocypher 032, $15.00. Collection of
software to copy and aller Eprom codes, $25.00.
CABLETRONICS, Box 30502R, Bethesda, MD
20824.
DIGITAL V.O.M.lD.P.M.
SALES-SERVICE-PARTS
FLUKE-BECKMAN-SIMPSON-ETC.
u.s. MADE ONLY. QUOTATION PRIOR TO WORK. FAST
SERVICE. 90 DAY WARRANTY. STANDARDS
TRACEABLE TO NBS. SINCE 1948. CALIBRATION
CERTIFICATE AVAILABLE.
INDUSTRIAL INSTRUMENT WKS. INC.
5745 SALMEN, HARAHAN, LA 70123 5041733 8355
CONTROL timing plans: 3 designs for programma-
ble control of relays, power supplies, and more.
$8.95. Free info. RON DAY, 1625 Kirkwood Dr.,
Garland, TX 75041.
ROBOTICS! Engines! Invent ions! Muscle wires
cont ract with surprising st rength when powered .
Send business SASEfor latest flyer. MONDO-TRO-
NICS c/o RE, 2476 Verna Ct., San Leandro, CA
94577.
PCB and schematic CAD software. Easy multilayer
rubberband zoom pan and more. CGA EGA IBM
compatibles. $195.00. NUMBER ONE SYSTEMS,
10565 Bluebird Street, Coon Rapids, MN 55433.
Demo Disc. (612) 757-8584.
HOW TO use surface mount techniques. Build ultra
miniature projects. Included free, two sets plans.
infra red remote control, and light display. Send
$15.00 to CHARLIE'S VIDEO, Dept. SMT, PO Box
7782, LaSi erra, CA 92503.
CATALOG: hobby/broadcasting/HAM/CB: Cable
TV, transmitters, amplifiers, surveillance devices,
computers, more! PANAXIS, Box 130-F5, Para-
dise, CA 95967.
PLANS AND KITS
DAZER II personal protection device! Plans $8.00.
Lasers! Transmitters! Detectors! More! Kits or as-
sembled! Catalog $2.00. QUANTUM RESEARCH,
16645-113 Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta T5M 2X2.
DESCRAMBLlNG, new secret manual. Build your
own descramblers for cable and subscript ion TV.
Instructi ons, schematics for SSAVI, gated sync,
sinewave, (HBO, Cinemax, Show1ime, UHF, adult)
$12.95, $2.00 postage. CABLETRONICS, Box
30502, Bethesda, MD 20824.

CODE SCANNER

compactunitcopies Morse, RTTY, ASCII
codes from your radio on 32 character

LCD display. Tendaymoney back.
Iii
c=;:
Model CSCAN....... $189.00 +$5 S&H
fj' -
MICROCRAFT P,O, Box 513R
.- _C:
Thiensville, WI 53092
Telephone (414) 241-8144
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SURVEILLANCE - Audio/video/infra- red/ laser
equipment. Industrial or private. 500 item catalog
$7.00. SECURITY SYSTEMS, 3017G Hudson,
New Orleans, LA 70131 .
CABLE TV descrambl ers wholesale DRX- 3 DIC
with remote $60.00 each for 20 pieces. CHICAGO
CABLE VIDEO, 923 South Main Street, Algonquin,
IL 60102. 1 (800) 442-9653. No Illinois orders.
RADIO tubes. Scarce new, used. Extensive listings.
Capacitors, etc. Illustrated flyer $1.00 (deductable).
DIERS, 4276-E7 North 50th Street, Milwaukee, WI
53216-1313.
86
Start home. spare time. Investment knowledge or
experience unnecessary. BIG DEMAND assem-
bling electronic devices. Sales handled by profes-
sionals. Unusual business opportunity.
FREE: Complete ill ustraiedliterature
BARTAREOO Box 248
Walnut Creek. Calif. 94597
BIG
PROFIT
ELECTRONIC
ASSEMBLY BUSINESS
EASY work! Excellent pax! Assemble products at
home. Call for information (504) 641-8003 Ext. 5192.
MAKE SSS! Become an American electronics deal-
er! Profit oppor tunities since 1965. Call SCOTT
PRUETT, l (800) 872-1373.
WANTED
DISTINCTIVE RINC SWITCH
Addadditional phonenumbers to asinglelinewith
the newDistinctiveRinging servicefromthe phone
company. RingDirector detects ring patterns and
routescallsto phones, answeringmachines, FAX's
or modems. 2-port $89. 4-port $149. S/ H $5.
1-800-677-7969 FAX516-676-9225
EXCELLENTTECHNOLOGY
69 Smith street, Glen Head, NY11545
INVENTORS: We submit ideas to industry. Find out
what wecan do for you. 1 (800) 288-IDEA.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
MAKE $50/hr working evenings or weekends in
your own electronics business. Send for tree facts.
MJME INDUSTRY, Bo x 531 , Bron x , NY
10461-0208.
YOUR own radi o station! AM, FM, TV, cable. li -
censed/ unlicensed. BROADCASTING, Box 130-
F5, Paradise, CA 95967.
LET the government finance your small business.
Grants/loans to $500,000. Free recorded message:
(707) 449-8600. (KS1).
IMPOSSIBLE
CABLE SYSTEMS!
ZenithPZ . Pioneer Cube. Starcom6&7. StandardUnits
NewGeneration of & S8'S.
Quantity pricesstart at :p'25 each.
DealersonlyCall 1-800-933-2242
12igital z;qui pment L'ompany of3merica
MAKE $75,000 to $250,000 yearly or more fixing
IBM color monitors (and most brands). No invest-
ment. Start doing it from your home. (A telephone
required .) Information, USA, Canada $1.00 cash.
US funds. other countries $8.00 RANDALL DIS-
PLAY, Box 2168-R, Van Nuys, CA 91404 USA.
INVENTIONS/ new product s/ideas want ed: call
TLCI for free information 1(800) 468-7200 24 hours/
day - USA/Canada.
NEED help with your electronic project, PCB as-
sembly/artwork? Write to T.S., PO Box 5275, Flint,
M148505.
TUBES - 2000 TYPES
DISCOUNT PRICES!
Earl y, hard-to-find, andmoderntubes.
Also transformers, capacitors and
partsfor tubeequipment. send $2.00
lor 28 page wholesa/e catalog.
ANTIQUE ELECTRONIC SUPPLY
6621S. MapleAve. Tempe, AZ85283 6021820-5411
INVENTORS! Your first step is important. For free
advi ce, call ADVANCED PATENT SERVI CES,
Washington, DC, 1 (800) 458-0352.
TRAVEL! High income! Radio officers wanted for
shipboard employment. Must have FCC second
telegraph license. Rae Echols, AMERICAN RADIO
ASSOCIATION, 5700 Hammonds Ferry, Linthicum,
MD 21090.
Be a TV/VCR
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SCHiiiiCOF TVNCRREPAiR;iieP'i.'"ADE04i 5
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I
Please send me full information and color brochureon howI canI
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I thereisnoobligationand nosalesmanwill visit me. I
Name Age__1
I Address Apt # __
ICity/State zip 1

SOURCE NO. RE-70
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If all you want is a huge assortment of high-quality
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650 CONGRES S PARK DR.
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87
CIRCLE 87 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
PERFECT CABLE CONNECTION !!
All Jerrold, Oak, Hamlin, Zenith, Scientific
Atlanta, Magnavox and all specialized cabl e
equipment available for shipment with in 24
hours. For fast service MC/ VISA or C.O.D.
tel ephone orders accepted (800) 648-3030
60 Day Guarantee (Quant ity Discounts)
8 A.M. to 5 P.M. C.S.T. CLOSED WEEK-
ENDS. Send self-addressed Stamped enve-
lope (60 postage) for Catalog.
EDUCATION & INSTRUCTION
BUILD a VCRextender in less than an hour! Play
TVgames in living room, while others watch movies
in bedroom. Use existing telephone wires to trans-
mit picturein home; Security, remote control, LAN's,
and more. Instructions, complete with theory of op-
eration. $19.95. JZO RESEARCH, Box 28131, Min-
neapolis, MN 55428.
EC.C. Commercial General Radiotelephone li-
cense. Electronics home study, Fast, inexpensive!
"Free" details. COMMAND, 0-176, Box 2824, San
Francisco, CA 94126,
No one faces cance r alone .
There is evidence that
diet and cancer are ed it ed.
Follow these modifi cations in
your w ily diet to reduce
chances ofgetting e mcee:
1. Eat more hi gh-fi ber foods
such :IS fruits and vegetables
and whol e-grain cereals .
2 . Include dar k green and
deep yellow frui ts and vegc ta-
bles rich in vitamins Aand C.
3. Include cabbage, broccoli,
brussels sprouts, kohl rabi and
cauli flower.
4. Be moderate in consump-
ti on of salt-cured. smoked, and
nitr ite-cu red foods.
5. Cut down on tot al far in-
take from animal sourc es and
fats and oils.
6. Avoid obcsltv
7. Be mod cr2lc' in co nsump-
tion of alcoholic beverage s.
THISSPACECONTJlIllUTEDASAPUBLICSERVICE
Adefense
against cancer
can be cookedup
inyour kitchen.
6 months 100% parts & labor
24 months warranty available
Full technical support
On-line computer system
30 days money back guarantee
Most order s shipped within 24 hours
Visa. M C. AMEX 5%
Dealers welcome
C.O.D.
WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY ADVERTISED PRICE
IN THIS MAGAZINE,
PERFECT CABLE CONNECTION
702-358-2763
2209 Oddie Bl vd., Suite 321
Spark , NV 8943 1
Perfect Cable Connection is totally committed
to customer satisfaction. Our primary concern
is to provide you with the highest quality
converters and descramblers at the lowest cost
We employ full time technicians to insure hass le
free service and troubleshoot any situat ion. Call
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UNICORN - YOUR I.C. SOURCE!
MK4027 .59 .56 .50 4464-100 2.99 2.84 2.56
4116-120 1.39 1.32 1.19 4464-120 2.79 2.65 2.39
' 116-150 .99 .94 .85 4464-150 2.29 2.13 1.96
4116-200 .89 .85 .77 41256-60 2.99 2.84 2.56
4116-250 .59 .56 .50 41256-80 2.79 2.65 2.39
4164-100 1.89 1.80 1.63 41256-100 1.99 1.89 1.70
4164-120 1.69 1.61 1.55 41256-120 1.89 1.80 1.63
4164-150 1.59 1.51 1.36 41256-150 1.79 1.70 1.53
4164-200 1.39 1.32 1.19 51100Q..70 6.49 6.17 5.55
4416-120 1.99 1.89 1.70 511000-80 5.99 5.69 5.12
4416-150 1.79 1.70 1.53 511000-100 5.49 5.22 4.70
EPROMS
STOCK# 1-24 25-99 100+ STOCK # 1-24 25-99 100+
STOCK# 124 2599 100+ STOCK# 1-24 25-99 100+
1702 4.59 a.as 3.92 2764A 3.49 3.32 2.99
2708 6.49 6.17 5.55 TMS25S4 5.79 5.50 4.95
2716 3.29 3.13 2.82 27C64 3.29 3.13 3.28
2716-1 3.79 3.60 3.24 27128-20 4.99 4.74 4.27
TMS2716 5.79 5.50 4.95 27128 4.79 4.55 4.09
27C16 3.99 3.79 3.41 27128A 4.79 4.55 4.09
2732 4.19 3.98 3.58 27C128 4.79 4.55 4.09
2732A-2 3.79 3.60 3.24 27256-20 5.29 5.03 4.53
2732A 3.69 3.51 3.16 27256 4.79 4.55 4.09
2732A-4 3.19 3.03 2.73 27C256 4.29 4.08 3.67
TMS2532 5.79 5.50 4.95 27512-20 6.49 6.17 5.55
TMS2532P 1.99 1.89 1.70 27512 5.99 5.69 5.12
27C32 3.79 3.60 3.24 27C512 5.99 5.69 5.12
2764-20 4.29 4.08 3 67 27Cl0 24 12.99 12.34 11.11
2764 3.99 3.79 3.41 68764 13.99 13.29 11.96
2764A-2O 3.99 3.79 3.41 68766 12.99 12.34 11.11
DYNAMIC RAMS
PRICE
$199.99
100 10 Canoga Ave., Unit B- 8 Chatswort h, CA 91311
OUTSIDE CALIFORNIA: (800) 824-3432 (Orders Only)
IN CALIFORNIA: (818) 341-8833
ORDER BYFAX: (818) 998-7975
Mini mum Order $15.00 24-hour orderin g avail abl e
STOCK #
LSPOINT
Ou tput: 3.5 mW
Wavel ength: 670nm
Power Suppl y: 2xAAA
Batter ies (I ncluded)
Beam: Appro x. 3"
@ 100 yards
Qu antity Dis count s Available
Out pu t: 3mW
Current: 85100 rnA
Ope rat i ng Vol t age: 2.3- 3.0V
Wavelength: 670 nm
STOCK # PRICE
LS9200 $49.99
Input: 115/230v
Size 7" L x 5Vl' W x 2'17 H
Output: +5 vol t s @ 3.75 amps
Output: +12 volts @ 1.5 amps
Out put: - 12 vo lts @.4amps
STOCK # PRICE
PS1003 $19.99

', .
; ..
LASER DIODE
(VISI BLE RED)
LASER
POINTER
POWER SUPPLY
PRICE
$19.99
PRICE
$39.99
STOC K #
LS022
Output: 4 mW (max.)
Cu rrent: 20 mA
Ope rati ng Volta ge : 2.2-3.0V
Wavelengt h: 665nm
STOCK # PRICE
LS3200 $99.99
Output: 10 mW (ma x.)
Current: 90-150 rnA
Operat in g Volta ge : 2.2-2 .5V
Wavelength : 820nm
STOCK # PRICE
581053 $9.99
Output: 5 mW (ma x.)
Current: 65100 rnA
Op erat ing Vo lt age : 1.75-2.2V
Wavelen gth: 780nm'
STOCK #
581052
Output: 2.5 mW (max.)
Current: 90- 150 rnA
Op erating Vo ltage: 2.2- 2.5V
Wave lengt h: 820 nm
Colli matio n: .18mrad (ty p.)
Size: 11mm diameter
A UNICORN

LASER DIODE
(VISIBLE-RED)
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Cf)
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locom 5503(A) co nverters... $159 .00 . Tocom
(add-on) descramblers $79 .00. Tocom (550300VIP
& 5507) "turn-on" chips $49 .00. Tocom 5507 se-
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$72
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$69
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(1-3) (" -up)
#RD-290-147
, 2" woofer made in the USAby Eminence.
Paper cone and dust cap with treatedcloth
surround. 80 oz. magnet. 2-1/2" vented
voice coil. 8 ohm. 170WRMS, 235Wmax.
40-4.5KHz response.
12" CAST FRAME
WOOFER
$16
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$27
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TITANIUM COMPOSITE
TWEETER
The advantages of
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SPL=90 dB lW/1M
50W RMS, 70W
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Poiydax
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fs=28Hz.
10" POLY WOOFER
$54
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$49
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SUBWOOFER XOVER
Duai voice coil. 40 oz. magnet. 6 ohm
imp. 100WRMS, 140Wmax. Response:
20-1.2KHz. Resonant frequency: 21Hz.
SPL=93dB l W/1M.
15" SUBWOOFER
200W RMScrossover designed
specifically for use with dual voice coil sub
woofers. 12dB per octaveroll-off at
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21/2" SANYO TWEETER
#RD-27Q-010
2" DOME MIDRANGE
SUPER HORN TWEETER
#RD-271-020
Paper cone withgold tone
dust cap. 8 oz. magnet.
8 ohm. 1/2" ferro fluid
voice coil. Power
handling: 50W RMS,
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sponse: 3K-20KHz.
jEl;'?J.
340 E. First St., Dayton, Ohio 45402
Local: 1-513-2220 173
FAX: SI3-222-(64 (
Original piezo tweeter
made by Motorola.
SPL=94 dB 2.83V/' M.
Response: 4KHz-
27KHz. Handles ap-
proximately50 watts.
Textile dome
midrange made by
Philips. 8 ohm.
SPL=90 dB 1WI' M.
30W RMS, 40W
max. Response:
550-5KHz.
I #RD-28Q-210
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CABLE TV
DESCRAMBLERS
LASERS AND SCIENTIFIC DEVICES
VRL2K 3mwVis R.d Laser Diad. Sysl . mKit $159.50
LliS I K Laser B. am"Bounc. list.n.r Kil.. ....... .. .........$199.50
LHC2K Visibl. Si mulated 3 ColorLaser Kil.. ... .... .... .. .......$44.50
LC7 40 Watt Burning Cutting taser Plans.. .... ............$20.00
RUB4 Hi Pow. r.d Pulsed DrillingLaser Plans.. ... ..... .. ....$20.00
LGU40 1 to 2mwH. N. Vis R. dLaser Gun Ass.mbl . d .......$199.00
LLSl Laser lit. Show- 3 M.thods Plans .. .... .... .. ... ... ....$20.00
SD5K S i nthe Darl< Kit ... .... ..... ... ..... .. .......... ..... ...$299.50
EMl1K Hectromaqnetic Coil Gun Kit.. $69.50
MCPl Hi V. locity Coil Gun Plans ... .... .. ..... ....... ............$15.00
LEVl LevltatlnquevlcePlans......... .... ... ....... ... .. ......$10.00
EHl EI. ctronic HypnotismTechniques Plans .... .. ..........$10.00
HIGH VOLTAGE ANDPLASMA DISPLAY DEVICES
HVM7K 75.000Volt DC Variabl. Dutput LabSourceKit .. .....$149.50
IDG3K IonRay GunKit. project.n.rgy withoutwires $69.50
NIG9K 12V/115VAC Hi OutN.g Ion Generator KIt.. $34.50
EMA1K Telekinetic Enhanc.rlEl. ctric ManAss.mbl. d $99.50
LG5K lightn ingDisplay Glob. Kit $54.50
BTCIK Worlds Smallest Tesla Coil Kit.. $49.50
BTC3K 250KVTabl. TopT. sla Coil Kit $249.50
BTC5 1.5 Million Volts Tesla Coil Plans $20.00
JL3 Jacobs Ladder- 3 Mod.ls Plans $15.00
GRAl Anti GravityGenerator Plans $10.00
PFS20 Plasma Fir. Saber Assembled $69.50
DPL20 DancingPlasmato Music and Sounds Assembl.d $79.50
SECURITY AND PROTECTION DEVICES
ITMI 0 100.000Volt Intimi dator upto 20' Ass. mbl.d $129.50
IPG70 Invisible Pain Fi. ld Blast Wave senAssembled $74.50
PSP4K Phasor SonicBlast Wave Pistol Kit.. $59.50
lIsn o Inl i nity xmtr, listenin ViaPhone Assembl. d $199.50
TAT30 Automatic T. I RecordingD.vic. Assembled $24.50
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EASY ORDERING PRDGEDURE TOLLFREE 1-80G2211705
or24HRSON1-603-673-4730orFAXiTTO 16036725406
VISA. MC.CHECK. MO INUSFUNDS.INCLUDE 10%SHIPPING.ORDERS
S100.00& UPONLYADO$10.00. CATALOG $1.00OR FREE WITH ORDER.
* We specialize in
large quantity discount
* Call us for pricing
on 50 and 100 lot
* We will not be undersold
on large quantities
* Please have the make and model
number of the model you need when
calling for information
K.D. VIDEO
P.O. Box 29538, Mpls. , MN 55429
TOLL FREE 1-800-327-3407
Qly 1 10 20
Jerrold (Type) SB-3 89.00 56.00 48.00
Jerr old (Type) FTB- 3 99.00 69.00 54.00
Scient if ic At lanta SA-3 99.00 69.00 54.00
Hamlin MLD- 1200 99.00 50.00 45.00
Oak N-12 99.00 59.00 58.00
Tocom 5501 169.00 139.00 125.00
Eagl e PD- 3 119.00 64.00 60.00
COMBINATION UNITS
Jerr old (Type) DRX-3DI C 169.00 109.00 89.00
Jerr old (Type) Starcom 6 279.00 239.00 209.00
Scient if ic At lanta 8535 229.00 209.00 199.00
Scient if ic At lanta 8580 299.00 269.00 259.00
Oak M35B 99.00 59.00 49.00
OTHER TYPES ARE OFTEN AVAILABLE
(f)
o
Z
o
II
I-
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W
-I
W
6
o

II
90
PAY TVAND SATELLITE oESCRAMBlING
ALLNEW 1991 EDITION
WARNING!
CABLE BOX DEALERS
Consider the facts before you buy
aft er-market cable equipment
An industry standard defines 25% of all
after-market cable boxes do not work when
first tested...
All wholesalers advertise low prices...but
low prices are not enough. Any price is too
high if you're without technical support or
quality control.
Now consider that your success as a
dealer depends on the satisfaction of your
customers.
Wholesale Cable Supply offers services
that are near a defined science. And we
guarantee 100% satisfaction.
Monthly Special Guaranteed Low Prices
TB-3 or SA-3B State-of-the-Art technical support
10 lot 48 Top Quality Tested Products
20 lot - 43 Dealer Market Support
50 lot - 39
100 lot - 39 WHOLESALE CABLE SUPPLY
Z-TAC Low Price is only the beginning
10 lot - 149 1-800-962-6836
723 CAMINO PLAZA, STE. 108, SAN BRUNO, CA 94066
When someone
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Among our regular serv ices
we provide information and
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transpo rt patients to and from
treatme nt . supply home o re items
and assist pat ients in their retu rn
to everyday life.
Lifeis what co ncerns us.
So you em see we are even
more than the research organl-
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THISSPACE CQNTfll 8UTEOAS It PUOl IC SERVICE
No one b ees c;mee r :lIone.
Scrambling News, 1552 HertelAve.,
Butlalo, NY, 14216. COO'SARE OK. (716) 87420BB
................ PRESENTING ................
CABLE TV
DESCRAMBLERS
.................... STARRING ....................
JERROLD, HAMUN, OAK
ANDOTHER FAMOUSMANUFACTURERS
FINESTWARRANTYPROGRAM AVAILABlE
LOW ESTRETAIL!WHOLESALE PRICES IN U.S.
ORDERSSHIPPEDFROMSTOCKWITHIN24 HRS.
ALLMAJ OR CREDITCARDS ACCEPTED
FOR FREE CATALOG ONLY 1-800-345-a927
FOR ALL I NFORM ATI ON 1-818-709-9937
OUf bestyet Thevery latestin descrambling circuits. bypasses, turn-ensfor
cable. wirelessandsatellite. Only514.95. Other payTVeditions. Vol. 1(BaSICS
of AllSyst ems)$14.95. 1989EdItIOn$14.95. BUi ldsatellrtesystemsunder S600
512.95. WIreless CableHandbook59,95. Arry 31$29.95or 51$44,95. Scrambli ng
New's Monthlyhasall infoonthenew"Plain Vanilla
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descrambler s whichem-
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THIS IS AN EXPANDED TYPE AD. Notice
how it stands outon thispage. To get your ad
set inthistype stylemark your classifiedad
order, "Expanded-type ad." and calculate
your cost at $4.70 per word.
THIS IS AN ALL BOLDFACE AD. If you want your
entire ad in boldface t he cost i s $3.65 per wor d.
91
S6500
20.85
26.20
35.00
33.Bl
38.00
46.14
27.24
23.00
KIT ASSEMB.
PRICE
................. S22.85
.... .. .......... 27.50
........ . 32.80
...... 35.80
.........2925
S1565 S21.76
.. .. 1565 21.76
...... 16.75 2365
MATCHING
I A800MK2. I AB02. TA820A. TAl000A. TA1500..
TR503. TA323A. TA400. TA300. TA377A .
TA477 .
TA120MK2....
TR355B .
TR355A .
TA3600
DESCRIPTION
28Vx 26Ato 30Vx 2 6A
36Vx23A
40Vx 2 6A
24Vx26A
26Vx 23A
18Vx 2 5A
53Vx28A
REGULATORS
METAL CABINETS WITH ALUMINUM PANEL
015V5ARegulated DCPower Supply (nocase & x'tormer) ...
Q-30V3ARegulated DC Power Supply (no case & xtormen ...
Q50V3ARegulated DCPower Suppl y (no case & x' former) ...
POWER TRANSFORMERS
DESCRIPTION
3 ChannelColor lig ht Controller * .. . S
Stereol oudspeaker protector a . 14.85
FMWireless Mcrcpnone e, . .. .. 11.25
ACiDC Quartz Digital Clack.. .. . 19.00
Sound I TouchControl Switch ... . 12.00
Infrared Remote Control Unit (w/Case) .. _ 22.00
Bar I Oat l evel Meter .. 24.15
3
1
h DIOl lal Panel Meter 29.00
20 StepsBar I Dot Audio l evel Display 38.45
Superior Electronic Roulette 19.46
80Vcaoacuor (Suggested tor TA3600. TA477,TAl OOOA& TA802) .
H' x W' x O' MATCHING
3' 12' 7' TA2800. TA377A.TA2200
4' 16' 8' TA323A. TA377A. TA2200.
4' 19' 11'1, TA802. TA 1500.TA120MK2. TA800 MK2. TAl 000A
5' 19' 11'1, TA477. TA800. MK2. TA1 500. TAl000A. TA3600
2" .19' 8' TA377A.. TA2800. TA2200. TA120MK2 ..
MOOEL
001
002
003
004
005
006
007
MOOEL
TY23B
TY25
TY35
TY36
TY-38
TY41MKV
TY42
TY43
TY45
I Y47
10.000u/l
MODEL
l G 1273
lG1684
l G1924
LG1925
LG1983
TR355A
TR355B
TR503
17.20
18.71
42.80
29.00
78.00
42.80
7500
34.93
85 00
59.72
'8058
95.81
5824
9600
68 80
6357
3850
110 00
3880
14500
75.00
34.00
225.00
KIT ASSEM8,
.... .. .. 65.00
............ .. 26.00
DIGITALMffiRS AND COUNTER
OESCRIPTION
Digital VOiceMemo .. . ... S30.00
MultiPurposeMelody aeneratcra .. . ..12.84
Multi-PurposeMelody(Happy Birthday. Wedding March, etc.) Generator .. 13.65
35WClass' A' Main Power Mono Amp. ...... .. 31.50
30WMultiPurposeSlOgIeChannelAmp 20.00
60W. 60WStereo Power Amplifier (With Mlc. input) 67.00
30WX2 StereoPre-mainAmp .. .. 31.50
State of theArt Fully compiementarvSymmetrical FET PreAmp 59.95
40WSolidStateMono Amp. .. 28.00
120WMosfet Power Mono Amp. .. 68.00
120W+ 120Wlo w TImPra-MamStereoPower Amp. ...... .. .. 63.92
80W. 80WPureDCStereoMain Power Amp 45.94
l00WDynamicClass -A- MalOPower Mono Amp..... .. 59.69
lOOWX2Class' A' DCStereo Pre-MainAmp. ........ . .. 73.70
DCFetSuper Class ' A" DCPre-Amp. ... .. 47.70
ElectromcEcho & ReverberationAmp. * .
HQPre-Ampwf10 bandgraphic equalizer * ..
BI-FET Ie Pre-Ampwf3way tonecontrol . 4890
StereoSimulator (ForMonoTV or AnyMonoSource) . 27.00
300WHQHI-FIPower MonoAmp . . 85.00
7Band HIFI Graphic Equahzer e, .. .. . 26.80
4Channel Prctessmnat Color li ght Controller ..
AudloNldeoSurround Sound Processor ........ *
Dynamic NalseReduction .
Universal AudloNl deoKARAOKE Mixer. Pre-Amp. * ....
~ Multr-Functmnal l ed O_P.M. (w/ABSplasnccase) S3450
41,': HI-PreCISian0 PM _........ . 38.00
4h Hr-PrecrsicnD.PM. (w/ABSplastic case)......... . 41,20
3
1
,': Mulll FunctlOnal LCDD.MP. (wn-told Funct IOn)..... . 36.00
150MC DigitalFrequency Counter _ _........ . 79.00
1GHz Frequency Counter * .......
MODEL
TA28MK2
TA50A/ B
TA50C
TA120MK2
TA300
SM302
TA323A
TA377A
I A400
TA477
TA800MK2
I A802
IAl000A
IA1500
IA2200
TA2400A
I A2500
I A2800
TA3000
I A3600
SM222
SM328
SM333
SM666
SM888
AMPLIFIERS
Due to this specia l oHer & low price, we can only exchange or repair any of these units (TA-3600, TA-477, TA-B02
& TA- 1000A) within 15 days of your receipt.
The above prices are for the complete set s. For separate unit price. please see below.
CIRCLE 93 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD
REPRINT
BOOKSTORE
peN
con tin ued from page 74
Total priceof merchandise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ _
Sales Tax (New York State Residents only) $ _
ShippingCharge(see chart) $ _
for the most part favor ing the set-
asi de of s p ect r u m fo r PCN's
(providing it comes from some -
one else's allocat ion ). It will take
at least three to four years (and
that's optimistic) until the dust
set tles a n d permanent alloca-
tions to PCN's are made. If the
tests show that spread spectrum
is indeed a feas ible way of intro-
ducing PCN's without treading
on the toes of the cu r rent spec-
t r u m u s ers , t h e FCC's problem
will be largely sol ved. Otherwise,
it will have to clear spread spec-
trum by or de r ing occupants to
move to a higher band. After that,
the FCC t hen has to consider the
r ather large-and perhaps over-
whelming- problem of how to li-
cense PCN's.
One pos sibility of licensing
PCN's is the cellular paradigm.
The FCC divided the country up
into ove r 700 markets, urban
and rural, and allotted two licen-
sees to each , one for t he te le-
phone company in the area, and
one awar ded by lottery. Whil e the
process led to a lot of people get-
ting extremely rich, especially
t hose involved in preparing ap-
plications for licenses, results
were less than satis fact ory, s ince
two cellular compan ies have not
provide d adequ at e compet iti on
(cellu lar u sage prices have not
fallen since services were inaugu-
rated in the mid-80's). Another
poss ibility is to have two to four
national li cens e es or, a lte r-
nat ively, l i c ens e s could be
gran ted on a regional basis with
two or t h ree licensees in each re-
gion . If the FCC chooses that ap-
proach, there will be a feverish
scr amble for whatever lic enses
are offere d and there will cer-
tainly be several sore losers .
The upshot of all this is that
many of America's largest compa-
nies will be scu r rying frantically
in t he next few years to ensure
that when t he dawn arrives, they
will have secu red their share. The
ultimate beneficiary will be the
commu n icat ions user, who will
have a new-fou n d freedom to go
anywhere without sacr ificing the
ability to keep in t ouch with any-
body at any time. R-E
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92
We Have QUALITY PARTS We Have DISCOUNT PRICES We SHIP FAST
L.E.D. FLASHER KIT
Build this variable
..
sequentially at - 0 '1:' .....
what ever speed
you set them for.
Easy to build Ind udes pc board ,
parts and instructions. Ideal for special
lighting effect s. cost umes. etc. Op..--
ates on 3 to 9 PC board Is5" X
2.25". A great OI1e hour proj ect.
CATt AEC $8.50 each
STEPPING MOTOR
CONTROLLER KIT
Learn about
stepping -"1-.
mot ors while .
building this
si mple circuit .
Includes board. stepping motor
and all parts exoept 12 Vdc power
supply. CATt SMtOT $l S.oo each
METRONOME KIT
This sifTllle device can be set to click
Ir om 20 to 1,000 beats per minute.
Easy to buil d. ind udes circult boar d. all
corrponent s and Instruct ions. Oper-
ates on a 9 volt banery (not induded).
CATt METRO $3.75 each '
Two L.E.D.'s fl ash In ,\ 11, , \I,
unison when a 9 /
batte ry Is anached.
This Includes a
p.c, bOaId. all tM parts
and Instruct ions to make a simple flash-
er A qui ck and easy proj9Cl for
anyone with basic solderin g ski lls.
CATt LEDtOT $1.75 per
LE.D. CHASER KIT
Fixture for single mini bl-pin 6",4 wan fluores
cent lamp. Start er sockets and bal last
are mount ed on 7 114' X 3 114" metal plate.
Indu des S fool powe r cord wit h strain relief.
Use standard fluorescent lamp for displ a
lighting or wit h for special ef-
f9ClSor EPROM erasure. U.L. listed.
CAn FLX-l $3.00 each
12 Vdc , SPST N. O.
Pon... & Brumfi eld '
T91R5D22-12-01
12 Vdc, 155 ohm coil ,
S.P.S.T. normally ope n con-
tacts rated 30 arres.
CATt RLY-32 $2.00 each
10 for $18.00
, "
,
INFORMATION (818) 904-0524
12 Vdc 1 Amp . power pack . 8 ft,
2 conductor pwoer cord on input.
22" cord with stripped and tinned pigtail
leads on output. 3.2" X 2.3" X 1.9" .
CAn DCTX-121 $5.75 each

FLASH ASSEMBLY
The following lLJ
relays all have - , ....
p.c. pins for
both inpul and
output as well
as quick-conn9Cl termi nals
on the output. 1.5" X 1.05"
XLOS". UL & CSA listed.
12 Vdc, SPOT
Pon... & Brumfi eld '
T91R5D22 1202

12 Vdc, 155 ohm coil,


Normally open contacts rar-
ed 20 arrps.Normally closed
contacts rated 10 amps.
CATt RLY-31 $2.50 each
10 for $22. 50
100ft. or 200 It. rolls
of RG ll/U 75 ohm RED CATt LED-l
cable terminated to 10 for $1.50 ' 100 for $13.00
heavy duty F GREEN CATt LED 2
connectors. Includ es 10 for $2.00 " 100 for $17.00
75 ohm t... minator ana -1111:11Ii==I YELLOW CATt LED-3
F-61 spl icer on one end. 10 for $2.00 100 for $17.00
New cables manuf actured for IBM PC FLASHING LED
networks. IBM PIN 1501908 COM/SCOPE.
CATt RG-l1.1 100 ft. roll $15.00 W/ in fl ashing ci rcuit
CATt RG-ll.2 200 ft. roll $27.50 operation. T 1314
(5mm)
RED $1.00 each
CATt LED-4 10 for S9. 5O
GREEN S1.ooeach
CATt LED-4G 10 for $9.50
YELLOW $1.00 each
CATt LED-4Y 10 for $9.50
New eorroact flash \ J ""
assemibyfrom a
U.S. manufacturer of rill _. _.
cameras. Operates ):-t; . - \ -
on 3 Vdc and measures .
2 112"x 1 1/4". Ideal for use as a strobe,
warning light or anent ion gener. Indudes
hook-up diagram. CATt FSH 1 $3.75 each
10 for $35.00 ' 100 for $325.00
/l SS4 1
Tiny. solid state switch
reacts instantly to
proxlmity of magneti c fi eld.
Operates at extremely high speeds . up to
100 khz. Case size: 0. 12" X 0.17" X 0.06"
thick. 4.5 Vdc to 24 Vdc supply vohaqe.
lO rna. sink type dighal output. Operat ing
gauss 15 to 40. P.C. leads.
CATt HESW3 $1.00 each 10 for $9.00
100 for $85.00' 1000 for $750.00
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6 foot BlACK, SPH-386 jack to 3
prong molded A.C. plug . Fits most
computers, computer terminals and
test equipment.
CAn LCAC-C6 $3.00 each
PHOTOFLASH
CAPACITOR
AAA SIZ $1.50 each
1.2 volts 180 mAh
CATt NCBAAA
M SIZE $2.00 each
1.25 volts 500 mAh
CATtNCBAA
M SIZE $2.20 each
WITH SOLDER TABS
CATt NCB-SAA
C SIZ $4.25 each
1.2 volts 1200 mAh
CATtNCB-C
D SIZ $4.50 each
1.2 volts 1200 mAh
CATtNCBD
High rrolded
ABS instrument
endosur es. Integrated
PC board standoffs
and two sets of
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Availab le in beige. Ivory, black . and blue.
Pa.... ht. CAn
21/4' CATIIo.B-A $7.50 eIl 10 lor SS5.00
2!'>1S" CATI "B-B $7.75 eIl 10 lor SS7.50
3- CAT.MB-C $3 .00 each 10 IDe$70.00
Please specWy color.
6 Volt 1 Amp/Hour
Jaoanstor... : .
Portalac
PE6Vl <
6 1 Ah
rechargeable
sealed lead-acid
(gell 2" X 1.635" X 2" ht.
Baneries are prepped whh 5"
black and red leads terminat-
ed with 2 pin connector.
$4.75 each
10 for $42. 50
Nickel-Cad
RubiconCE
210 Mfd 330 ven
photoflash
capacitor.
0.79" dla.
X "," high. These are new
capacitors that have been
prepped 1.4" black and
red wire leads soldered to the
terminals. CATt PPC-210
$1.25 each, 10 for $11.00
100 for $100.00
Large quantities available.
Call lor pricing.
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,n De motor.
91061.112050
g with no load:
jc@5 ma-tes RPM
jc @ 5 ma 94 RPM
slon gear molor.
lned for 24 Vdc.
ates on 12-24 Vdc. 30 :1 gear reduction
. 2.07 long X ", S" square rrountlng brack-
s mounting holes on 0.97" centers. Motor
1000 torque when used at 24 Vdc.
CAn MOTG-15 $12.00 each
LEPHONE KEYPAD
SWITCHES
MAIL ORDERS TO: ALL ELECTRONICS CORP P.O. BOX567 VAN NUYS, CA 91408
OPTOSENSOR
Dip r.c. Pushbutton
Schadow
ss SE
D.T. momentary
,bunon. Mounts In
in DIP configu ration.
for low current awl..
ms, Grey keycapIs 0.68" X 0.67".
CAT. PB-28 $1.00 each
10 lor $9.50 100 for $85.00
rcury Tilt Switch
diameter
65" long
cury switch . S.P.S.T.Closes
n switch Is tmed approx. 5 degrees .
CAT' M5-3 $1.00 each
10 for $9.50' 100 for $85.00
tsry BCD Switch
:O.231O-02G
) 10 posjtlon
I1'f DIP configuration In
ldard Spin I.C. socket. Right angle
s, Screwdriver actuat ion . 0.42" elba.
CAn RDI P-2 $1.75 each
10for$16.oo loofor$145.oo
Mlnlsture Toggles
Rated: 3 alTlJ8 @ 120 Vac
: D. To (ON-ON) P.C. mount
r, MTS-4PC $1.00 each 4
or $9.00 - 100 for $80 .00
: D. To (ON-ONj solder l ugs
r, MTS-4 $1.35 each '
'or $12.50 100 for $110.00 .
'.D. To (ON-ON) sold ... lugs
r, MTS-a $1.75 ea . 10 for $15.00
'.D. To (ON-ON) P.C. mount
ru.trs-apc $2.00 ea. 10 for $17.50
button telephone
pad. Ivory finish.
3" x 2.2" x 0.58" thick.
lrix encoded.
aI for telephone or
:urity keypad .
T, KPT-l $1.00 each 10for $9.00
WlOptron /I OPB54472
omitter/sensor pair In . ,,_
etangular packagewi th "\
, color coded leads.
nOSR-4210r $1.oo
CIRCLE 107 ON FREE INFORMATION CARD 93
Top Performance
GoldStar 20MHz Oscilloscope Global Specialties Protoboard Design Station
XY999
Two debounced push-button switches
Two SPDT slide switches, all leads
available and uncommited
A total of 2520 uncommited tie-points
Potentiometers: one 1Kn and one 10K:
Includes power supply, instrumentation
and breadboarding
XY1683..................................... ........ .... $69.95
30 Wall Electronic Temperature Controlled Desoldering
Station Electronic temperature control from 212
0
to
842F Self contained high rotary vacuum pump
60 Wall Analog Display Soldering Station Electronic
temperature control from 200
0
to 878F Cartridge heat-
ing element for a longer life of the soldering tip
Soldering and Desoldering Stations
Programs all current EPROMs in the2716 to Erases all EPROM's Erases 1 chip ir
27512 range plus t he X2864 EEPROM 15 minutes and 8 chips in 21 min
RS232 port Software included UV intensity: 6800 UW/CM
2
EPP............................$199.95 DE4..............................$79.
EPROMs - for your.programming needs
Part No. Price Part No. Price Part No. Pri
TMS2516 $4.25 2764-20 $3.95 272560TP $3.
TMS2532-35 9.95 2764-25 3.75 27256-15 5.
TMS2532A 7.95 2764-45 3.49 27256-20 5.
TMS2564 5.95 2764A-20 3.95 27256-25 4.
TMS2716 5.95 2764A-25 3.25 27C256-15 5.
1702A 3.95 27C64-15 3.95 27C256-20 4.
2708 4.95 27C64-25 3.25 27C256-25 4.
2716 3.49 271280TP 2.95 275120TP 4.
2716-1 3.95 27128-20 6.95 27512-20 6.
27C16 4.25 27128-25 4.95 27512-25 5.
2732 4.95 27128A-15 5.95 27C512-15 6.
2732A-20 3.95 27128A-20 4.49 27C512-20 6.
2732A-25 3.49 27128A-25 4.25 27C512-25 5.
2732A-45 2.95 27C128-15 5.95 27C010-15 11.
27C32 3.95 27C128-25 5.75 68766-35 9.
PB503 ... . .... .... $299.
A.R.T. EPROM Programmer UVP EPROM Eraser
...---
r:-. t .r
Features:
Ideal for analog, digital and microprocessor
circuits
Triple DC regulated power supplies, +5V,
+15V, -15V
8 logic indicators
Function generator with sine, square,
triangle and TTL waveforms
3.5 digit LCD with automati c polarity indication
AC/OC voltage measurement up to 500 volts
AC/DC current measurement up to 200mA
Resistance measurement up to 20Mn Con-
tinuity checker with audible tone Diode and
logic tester Auto/manual range and dat a hold
functions All range protection and function in-
dications
M3650 & M4650 only:
Also measur e frequency and capac itance
General Specs:
Handheld. high
accuracy ACIDe
voltage, AC/DC
current. resistance.
diodes. continuity.
transistor hFE
Manual ranging wI
overload protection
Max Frequency 80MHz Minimum detectable
pulse: 1Dns 120Kn input impedance Max.
supplyvoltage: ' 25V TI Lthreshold: (Lo).0.8V
, O. W (Hi) . 2.3V ' 0.2V CMOS threshold:
(Lo) 30% VCC ' 10% (Hi) 70%VCC , 10%
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Part Dim. Cont act Binding
M3610 3.5DigIt Multimeter,....................$59.95
No. L" xW" Point s Post s Pric e M3650 3.5DigitMullimeter wlFrequency&
Capacitance............." " " ""...".$74,95
JE21 3.25 X2.125 400 $4.95 M4650 4.5DigitwiFrequency, Capacitance
JE23
6.5x2.125
830 $6.95
and Data HoldSWitch ..................$99.95
JE24
6.5x3.125
1,360 $12.95
JE25 6.5x4.25 1,660 $17.95
Handheld Multimeter
JE26
6.875x5.75
2,390 $22.95
JE27
7.25x7.5
3,220 $32.95
PROTOTYPING PRODUCTS Metex Digital Multimeters
Jameco Solderless Breadboards
LP540 $16.95 MS104 $24.95
M4650only: Datahold switch , 4.5digit
Features:
6" rectangular ~ display, internal graticule & scale
Phase difference measurements between two signals using
x-vscope or Dual Trace
Two different scale probes: x1 and x10
Bandwidth from DC to 20MHz
Includes: Two 40MHz probes, two fuses, power cord, operation manual,
schematics and block and wiring diagrams
High sensitivity: 1mV/div
Two-year manufacturer's warranty
GS7020.. .. .. ...... .$499.95
Jameco Logic Probe
~ t
Compati ble with TIL, DTL, RTL, HTL,
HNIL, MOS and CMOS ICs. 1MQ Sync
input impedance Pulser mode output
current: 10mA Square wave current
output: SmA Audible tone
94
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Additional items that Jameco offers:
Hard
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Conner (16bit IDE)
CP3044 40MB 3.5' LowProfile $469.95
CP3184 BOMB 3.5HH $649.95
CP3 104 100MB 3.5HH $699.95
ADP20 HostAdapter $29.95
Rellsys 14" VGA
Color Monitor
Max resolution: 720x 480
Bandwidth: 30MHz
Input: DB1S-pin (analog)
RE9513 $449.95
Jameco 16-bit VGA Card
Assemble Your own Computer Kit!
Jameco 16MHz 80386SX Desktop Computer Kit
l ilding your own co mputer provides you with a better understanding of
mponent s and the ir functions
depth assembly instructions incl uded
aveyour new compute r assembled and runni ng in an evening,
,jng common too ls
i ttware included
i rchase computer ki ts configured by Jameco or design your own
irneco 16MHz80386SX
esktop Computer Kit
udes :
1386SX Motherboard with
AB RAM (expandable to 8MB)
11-key enhanced key board
ulti I/O Card
is hiba 1.44MB, 3.5" DSHD
ippy di sk dri ve
aby sized desktop case
lOWan power supply
R DOS 5.0 by Digital
esearch and Diagsoft's
APlus di agno stic software
Supports VGA, EGA, CGA, MDA and
Hercules modes Comes with 256KB
video RAM upgradable to 512KB (eight
41464-80) Capable 01 640 x 480 with
256 colors, 800 x 600with 16colors
VG2000........................$149.95
Integrated Circuits Miscellaneous Components
I No. 19 10+ Part No. 1-9 10+
Potentiometers
0 $.29 $.19 7472 $.39 $.29
Values available (insert ohms into space marked -XX-):
2 .29 .19
7473 .39 .29
500n, 1K, 5K, 10K, 20K, SOK, 100K, 1MEG
43PXX 3/4 Watt,15Turn................................................. $.99
4 .29 .19
7474 .39 .29
63PXX ' /2 Watt, 1Turn...... ..... ................ ............. ....$. 89
5 .35 .25 7475 .49 .39
Transistors And Diodes
6 .39 .29
7476 .45 .35
7 .39 .29 7483 .69 .59
PN2222.... .... $.12 11N4735 .... ....$.25 12N4401..... .$.15
PN2907...........12 2N3904 ........ ...12 1N4148.........07
8 .35 .25
7486 .45 .35
1N4004.......... .10 1N751 ......... .... 15 2N3055 ....... . .69
0 .29 .19 7489 2.95 2.75
2N2222A ....... .25 C106B1 ........ ..49 1N270....... ... .25
1 .35 .25
7490 .49 .39
Switches
4 .35 .25
7493 .45 .35
JMT1 23 SPDT, On-On (Toggle) ............................ $1.25
7 .35 .25
74116 1.19 1.09 206 -8 SPST, 16-pin(DIP)....... ........................... $1.09
:0 .29 .19
74121 .39 .29 MPC121 SPDT, ()n{)ff-{)n (TaggIe) .... .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. $1.19
:7 .29 .19 74123 .49 .39
MS102 SPST, Momentary (Push-Button) .......... ....... $.39
:0 .29 .19
74125 .49 .39 D-Sub Connectors and Hoods
:2 .39 .29 74151 .39 .29
DB25P Male, 25-pin .:.... $.65 1DB25H Hood....... ... $.39
:a .39 .29
74160 .59 .49
DB25S Female,25-p,n... $.75
12 .49 .39
74161 .69 .59
LEOs
15 .75 .65 74192 .79 .69
XC209R T1, (Red) ....... $. 14 1XC556R T1
3
/4, (Red) ... $.12
16 .89 .79
74193 .79 .69
XC556G T1 3/4, (Green) .. .16 XC556Y T1
3
/4, (Yellow).. .16
17 .89 .79 74194 .79 .69
IC Socket s
Dynamic RAMs
Low Profile Wire Wrap (Gold) Level 112
8LP............. ..............$.11 8WW........................... $.49
4-100 lOOns, 64K x t $1.95 41256100 t OOns, 256K x1 $2.29 14LP......... ............ ..... .12 14WW.... ................. .... .. .65
4 120 12Oos, 64K x1 1.89 41256-120 t 2Oos, 256K x1 2.19 16LP....... ....................13 16WW............................69
4-150 15Ons, 64Kx1 1.75 41256-150 tSOns, 256K x1 1.99 24LP .......... ......... ....... .19 24WW......................... 1.05
56-60 6005, 256Kx1 3.25 511000P-80 BOns, 1MBxt 8.95 28LP ....... ................... .22 28WW......................... 1.29
:5680 BOns,256Kx1 2.75 511000P-10 lOOns, 1MBx1 8.49 40LP ........... .............. . .28 40WW ............. ...... ...... 1.79
Cali for a complete listing of IC's Soldert all Standard & Header Plug Sockets Also Available
:ustomer Service'Technical Assistance' Credit Department All Other Inquiries (415) 592-8097 7AM - 4PM P.S.T.
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The SPEC-COM Journal 13
Wholesale Ca ble 91
U.S. Cable 71
Unicorn 88
Test Probes 73
Star Ci rcuits 26
Viejo Public ation s 27
RE Repr int Bookstore 92
SCO Electro nics 71
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191
179
185
186
181
92
123
178
Page
Mouser 14
Parts Express 89
Perfect Ca ble 88
Per ipheral Technology 83
Pomona Electronics 7
Rad io Shack 32
NRI Schools 21
Matsushita Service Co 14
Microp rocessors Unltd 83
Optoelectronics 25
MD Elect ronics 86
Ma rk V. Electronics 91
King Wholesale 85
MCM Electr onics 87
Hi-Tech Electronics 23
Jameco 94,95
Jan Crystals 16
J ensen Tools 23
Ca ble Ready Compa ny 96
Ca ble Warehouse 24
Comma nd Prod uctio ns 13
Beckma n Indu strial 13
Appliance Service 23
Banner Technical Books 26
C&S Sa les CV3
CIE 3,31
Ace Prod ucts 23
All Electron ics 93
Amazing Concepts 90,96
AMC Sales 16
189
101
78
188
56
114
104
115
87
53
93
190
61
117
Grant ham College 15
Electronics Book Club 5, 81
192 Global Specialties 17
183 Electro nic Goldmine 89
86,193 Heathkit 27,64
121 Fluke Manufacturing CV2
176 Gener al Technics 23
127 Deco Industries 23
187 Datak Cor poration 24
182 D&D Electro nics 73
ADVERTISING INDEX
58 Cook's Institute 16
180
84
67
98
109
107
RADIO-ELECTRONICS does not assume any responsibility for errors that may appear in
the index below.
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" ,1' . ,'4' ;
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ATR1 AUTOMATIC TELEPHONE RECORDING
DEVICE tapes telephone co nv ersa tion all
automatically $19.50
ALL THREE OF ABOVE FOR , S69.50
CALL OR SEND VISA, MASTER CHARGE ,
MONEY ORDER, ETC.lOAMAZINGCONCEPTS, .
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TELX1 TELEPHONE FM XMTR (3 MI) auto-
mat ically operates when phone is used. Crystal
clear clar ity with fi ne tune and range cont rol.
Non detectable $34.50
' FMX-1 LONGRANGE (3 MI) ULTRA SENSITIVE
FM VOICE XMTR with fine tune, range control
plus $34.50
CABLE TV DESCRAMBLERS,
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48 HOUR ELEN CO & HITA CHI PRODueTS 48 HOUR
SHIPPING A T DISC 0 UNT PRICES SHIPPING
HITACHI COMPACT SERIES SCOPES
This series provides many new funct ions such as CRT
Readout, Cursor measurement s (V-l 085110651665), Fre-
quency Ctr (V-l085), Sweeptime Autoranging, Delayed
sweep and Tripper Lodt using a 6-indl CRT. You don't feel
the compactness in terms of per1ormanoe and operation .
V-660 - 60MHz, Dual Tr ace $1,195
V-665 60MHz, DT, wlcursor $1,345
V-l060 -100MHz, Dual Trace $1,425
V-l065 - 100MHz, DT, wl cursor $105l mo
V-l085 - 100MHz, QT, wlcursor---$125Imo
V-l100A - 100MHz, Quad Trace---$125Imo
V-1150 - 150MHz, Qu ad Trace-==$115Imo
SCOPE PROBES
P-I 65MHz, I x, lOx $19.95
P-2 lOOMHz, lx, lOx $23,95
Hitachi Portable SCopes
DC to 50MHz, 2-Channel, DC offset func-
tion, Alternate magnifier function
V-525 - CRT Readout, Cur sor Meas . $1, 025
V-523 - Dela yed Sweep - $995
V-522 - Basic Model $895
V-422 - 40MHz $795
V-223 - 20Mhz delayed sweep $695
V-212 20MHz $42 5
LEASINGAVAILABLE
For all Hitachi Scopes - Call for defall s
Based on 24 months except V-1150, VC-6045, VC-
6145 (36 months)
Dual Trace
Component Tester
. 6' CRT
X-VOperation
TV Sync
2 p,-1 Probes
20MHz Elenco Oscilloscope
$375
MQ-1251
Elenco 35MHz Dual Trace
Good to $495
SOMHz
MO-1252
High luminance6' CRT
1mVSensitivity
6KVAccelerationVoltage
lOns Rise Time
X-VOperation. Z Axis
Delayed Triggering Sweep
Includes 2 P-l Probes
All scopes incl ude probes, sdlemat ics, operators manual and 3 year (2 yrs for Elenco scopes ) world wide warranty on parts & labor. Many accessori es available for all Hltachi
scopes. Call or writ e for compl ete specfica tions on these and many other fine oscilloscopes .
Hitachi RSO Series
(Porta ble Real-ti me Digi t al Storage Oscill oscop es)
VC-6023 - 20MHz, 20 MSIs $99 / mo
VC-6024 - 50MHz , 20MSIs $ 120lmo
VC-6025 50MHz, 20MSIs $ 1351mo
VC-6045 - 100MHz, 40MSIs $125I mo
VC- 6145 - 100MHz, 100MSI s $200Imo
RSO's from Hitachi feature roll mode, averaging. save
memory, smoothing, interpolation, pretriggering, cursor
measurements. These scopes enable more accurate,
si rnplier observation of complex waveforms, in addition to
such functions as hardcopy via a plotter inter1ace and
waveform transfer via the RS-232C inter1ace. Enjoy the
comfort of analog and the power fo digital.
TrueRMS 41/2
Digit Multlmeter
M7000
$135
.05% DCAccuracy
.1% Resistance
Freq. Counter
and DeluxeCase
FLUKE
MULTIMETERS
All Models
Available
Call for special price
Multimeter with
Capacitance 8<
Transistor Tester
$55 CM-1500B
Reads Ohms
Current, Capacitors,
Transistors and
Diodes I with case
Big l ' Display
AM/FM Transistor
Radio Kit
with Training Course
Model AMlFM 108
$26.95
14 Transistors _ 5 Diodes
Makes a great school project
Measures:
Coils 1uH-200H
Caps .1pf-200uf
Res .01-201.4
Digital LCRMeter
LC-1801
$125
Triple Power Supply XP-620
Assembled $65
Kit $45
2 to 15V@lA,
2to -15V@lA
(or 4 to 30V@ lA)
and5V@3A
All the desired features for doingexperiments.
Features short circuit protection, all supplies
Digital Capacitance Meter
CM1550B
$58.95
9 Ranges
.1pf20,OOOufd
.5%basic accy.
Zerocontrol wi Case
Big l' Display
Fully regulated and short circuit protected
Quad Power Supply XP-580
$59.95
2-20V @2A
12V@lA
5V@3A
5V@.5A
Call for special price
B+K
TEST EQUIPMENT
All Models Available
Funclion Sine, Triangular,
Square wave forms
Frequency adjustable in live ranges
uomt te 100KHZ
FIne frequency adjull
adju$l
OCotlsel
MoO.i lation FM-A1A
OIGI TAL - SECTION
Eight data switches
Two no bounca lOgiCswecees
Eight LED readouts TIL, buffered
Clod frequency 1 to , GOKHZ
Clock 5VPPsquare wave
BREADBOARDS
XK-500 DIGITAL / ANALOG TRAINER
A complete for building, fe$tlng, prototyplng analog and digital cIrcuits
Elenco's Digit al I Analog Trainer Is specially deslgnod lor school projects, with 5 buill- In power supplieS,
Includes a function genorator with continously variablo. sine, triangular. square wave lonns. An power
suppl ies are regulatod and proteclod against shorts.
POWER SUPPLIES
Variable Power Supply
. 1.25 102OVDC @ .5Amp
(+1.25 10 15VDC @1 Amp)
- - 1.25 to - 2QYOC@ .5 Amp
H .2510-1SVDC@ lAmp)
.1ZVDC@1Amp
- 12VDC @ 1 Amp
.SVDC @ l Amp
30VAC Centenapped @ 15VAC
al 1Amp
. 2 Brnctloards, . ach contain:
8-40 lie points (10(;111. 680)
ANALOG SECTION
Wide Band Signal
Generators
Provides sine, triangle, square
wavefrom1Hzto 1104Hz
AMor FMcapability
SG9000 $129
RFFreq 100K-450MHz AM Modula-
tion of 1KHzVariable RF output
SG- 950 0 wi Dig ital Di spl ay &
150MH z built- in Counter $249
Learn to Build and Program
Computers with this Kit
Includes: All Parts, Assembly and Lesson Manual
Model
MM-8000
$129.00
GF-8016 Function Generator
with Freq. Counter
$249
Sine, Square, Triangle
Pulse, Ramp, .2 to 2104 Hz
Freq Counter .1 1 0MHz
Startingfromscratchyoubuildacompletesystem.Our
t-Ai c:ro-Master trainer teaches you to write into RAMs,
ROMs and run a 8085 microprocessor, which uses
similar machine language as IBMPC. '
Robotics Kit for above (MM8010) 71.95
GF-8015 without Freq. Meter $179
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Introducing a new companion to your
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