From: VWWall on 3 Sep 2009 13:58 Jon Kirwan wrote: > > I have some (all?) in PDF form that were made available on the web > back in 1998. I think I got them from here: > > http://cer.ucsd.edu/~james/notes/MIT%20OpenCourseWare/MIT%20Radiation%20Lab/ > > Just in case you don't mind PDF files instead of paper books. > > You can at least preview them, this way. > They are still available there. You can get an index, (Vol 28), to them all: (6.8M PDF) http://cer.ucsd.edu/~james/notes/MIT%20OpenCourseWare/MIT%20Radiation%20Lab/V28.PDF I have eight of the original volumes, but never got the complete index, (Vol 28). I started my engineering career, (1949), using instruments derived from this technology, or built by myself from it. -- Virg Wall, P.E.
From: Michael A. Terrell on 3 Sep 2009 15:05 VWWall wrote: > > Jon Kirwan wrote: > > > > I have some (all?) in PDF form that were made available on the web > > back in 1998. I think I got them from here: > > > > http://cer.ucsd.edu/~james/notes/MIT%20OpenCourseWare/MIT%20Radiation%20Lab/ > > > > Just in case you don't mind PDF files instead of paper books. > > > > You can at least preview them, this way. > > > They are still available there. You can get an index, (Vol 28), to them > all: (6.8M PDF) > > http://cer.ucsd.edu/~james/notes/MIT%20OpenCourseWare/MIT%20Radiation%20Lab/V28.PDF > > I have eight of the original volumes, but never got the complete index, > (Vol 28). > > I started my engineering career, (1949), using instruments derived from > this technology, or built by myself from it. I downloaded all of it: 793,587,848 bytes including the web page. -- You can't have a sense of humor, if you have no sense!
From: John Larkin on 3 Sep 2009 23:24 On Tue, 01 Sep 2009 07:05:05 GMT, Jon Kirwan <jonk(a)infinitefactors.org> wrote: >On Mon, 31 Aug 2009 18:38:57 -0700 (PDT), George Herold ><ggherold(a)gmail.com> wrote: > >>A recent discussion on SED >>http://groups.google.com/group/alt.electronics/browse_thread/thread/619161cbca82ab62/e983584e1acf3a5d >> >>Posted the following link to the MIT rad. lab series. >>http://www.jlab.org/ir/MITSeries.html >> >>I�ve read none of these, and I figure it�s time to lay in some reading >>material for those long winter nights that are coming shortly. >> >>I�ve ordered a copy of Volume 8 from the web. (I like Dicke and >>Purcell.) And I�m looking for other recommendations. (Volume 15 >>�Crystal rectifiers was referred to in the above SED thread.) Any >>other �gems�? >> >>George H. > >I have some (all?) in PDF form that were made available on the web >back in 1998. I think I got them from here: > >http://cer.ucsd.edu/~james/notes/MIT%20OpenCourseWare/MIT%20Radiation%20Lab/ > >Just in case you don't mind PDF files instead of paper books. > >You can at least preview them, this way. > >Jon V1, fig 1.3, is very cool. John
From: Phil Hobbs on 4 Sep 2009 14:50 John Larkin wrote: > On Tue, 01 Sep 2009 07:05:05 GMT, Jon Kirwan > <jonk(a)infinitefactors.org> wrote: > >> On Mon, 31 Aug 2009 18:38:57 -0700 (PDT), George Herold >> <ggherold(a)gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> A recent discussion on SED >>> http://groups.google.com/group/alt.electronics/browse_thread/thread/619161cbca82ab62/e983584e1acf3a5d >>> >>> Posted the following link to the MIT rad. lab series. >>> http://www.jlab.org/ir/MITSeries.html >>> >>> I�ve read none of these, and I figure it�s time to lay in some reading >>> material for those long winter nights that are coming shortly. >>> >>> I�ve ordered a copy of Volume 8 from the web. (I like Dicke and >>> Purcell.) And I�m looking for other recommendations. (Volume 15 >>> �Crystal rectifiers was referred to in the above SED thread.) Any >>> other �gems�? >>> >>> George H. >> I have some (all?) in PDF form that were made available on the web >> back in 1998. I think I got them from here: >> >> http://cer.ucsd.edu/~james/notes/MIT%20OpenCourseWare/MIT%20Radiation%20Lab/ >> >> Just in case you don't mind PDF files instead of paper books. >> >> You can at least preview them, this way. >> >> Jon > > V1, fig 1.3, is very cool. > > John > Doesn't come out well in the scan, unfortunately. Cheers Phil Hobbs -- Dr Philip C D Hobbs Principal ElectroOptical Innovations 55 Orchard Rd Briarcliff Manor NY 10510 845-480-2058 hobbs at electrooptical dot net http://electrooptical.net
From: John Larkin on 4 Sep 2009 16:26
On Fri, 04 Sep 2009 14:50:45 -0400, Phil Hobbs <pcdhSpamMeSenseless(a)electrooptical.net> wrote: >John Larkin wrote: >> On Tue, 01 Sep 2009 07:05:05 GMT, Jon Kirwan >> <jonk(a)infinitefactors.org> wrote: >> >>> On Mon, 31 Aug 2009 18:38:57 -0700 (PDT), George Herold >>> <ggherold(a)gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>>> A recent discussion on SED >>>> http://groups.google.com/group/alt.electronics/browse_thread/thread/619161cbca82ab62/e983584e1acf3a5d >>>> >>>> Posted the following link to the MIT rad. lab series. >>>> http://www.jlab.org/ir/MITSeries.html >>>> >>>> I�ve read none of these, and I figure it�s time to lay in some reading >>>> material for those long winter nights that are coming shortly. >>>> >>>> I�ve ordered a copy of Volume 8 from the web. (I like Dicke and >>>> Purcell.) And I�m looking for other recommendations. (Volume 15 >>>> �Crystal rectifiers was referred to in the above SED thread.) Any >>>> other �gems�? >>>> >>>> George H. >>> I have some (all?) in PDF form that were made available on the web >>> back in 1998. I think I got them from here: >>> >>> http://cer.ucsd.edu/~james/notes/MIT%20OpenCourseWare/MIT%20Radiation%20Lab/ >>> >>> Just in case you don't mind PDF files instead of paper books. >>> >>> You can at least preview them, this way. >>> >>> Jon >> >> V1, fig 1.3, is very cool. >> >> John >> > >Doesn't come out well in the scan, unfortunately. > >Cheers > >Phil Hobbs I suppose, when you think about it, the moon is still a big chunk of the sky, so bouncing a radar pulse off it isn't all that difficult. Still, it's impressive that they did that ca 1942, with point-contact diode mixers feeding tube IF amplifiers. Reading the index volume of the RadLab books is amazing... the birth of modern electronics. John |