|
|
Transistor radio |
The transistor radio (or transistor) is a small radio receiver. RCA demonstrated a prototype transistor radio in 1952. The first commercial transistor radio, the Regency TR-1, was announced on October 18, 1954 by the Regency Division of Industrial Development Engineering Associates of Indianapolis, Indiana and put on sale in November of 1954. It cost $49.95 (the equivalent of $361 in year-2005 dollars) and sold approximately 100,000 units. Originally introduced by Texas Instruments as a demonstration of the transistor, TI lost interest, leaving the transistor radio to be popularized by Sony. The use of transistors instead of vacuum tubes as the amplifier elements meant that the device was much smaller and required far less power to operate than a tubed radio. The typical portable radio of the fifties was about the size and weight of a small laptop computer, and contained several heavy (and non-rechargeable) batteries: one or more A batteries to heat the tube filaments and a large 45 to 90 volt B battery for plate voltage. By comparison, the "transistor" was about the size and weight of today's cassette-playing Walkman and operated off a single compact 9 V battery. (The now-familiar 9 V battery was introduced specifically for powering transistor radios). Transistor radios did not become popular until the early sixties, when costs came down. Although usually equipped with earphone jacks, the most common way listeners used them was by holding the entire radio directly against the side of the head, with the speaker against the ear. These radios, like the tube-based portable radios of the day, were monaural, and received only the 540–1600 kilocycle[1] AM broadcast band. Holding the radio to the ear minimized the irritatingly "tinny" sound, commonly attributed to their tiny speakers, but equally due to the use of inadequate coupling capacitors. The available earphones of the day were single earphones
that inserted into one ear. They generally used piezoelectric crystals,
a cheap technology that lessened the already-low fidelity of the AM broadcasts
they reproduced. They were not ergonomically designed and were uncomfortable.
The listening experience was telephone-like. Nevertheless, teenagers,
with an earphone plugged into one ear, immersed in a private musical world,
became a familiar sight, and one that made Ray Bradbury's description
of "seashell radios" in his 1953 Fahrenheit 451 seem prescient.
To consumers familiar with the earphone listening experience of the transistor
radio, the first Sony Walkman cassette player, with a pair of high-fidelity
stereo earphones, would come as a revelation. index page1 page2 page3 page4 page5 debt settlement company | ipod accessories | florida vacation home rentals | Auto transport | health insurance california | villa near Disney | disney vacation villas | sell your house fast | california health insurance | india travel kerala |
bravenet.com