then a guy named Alexanderson came along. he had some experience with the very early radio transmitters made with these special alternators, and he figured out a way to dramatically increase the output power.
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then a guy named Alexanderson came along. he had some experience with the very early radio transmitters made with these special alternators, and he figured out a way to dramatically increase the output power. 25 comments
here's a cross section of the concept. the rotor shaft (not shown) would be along the bottom of the page. there are two sets of windings. windings "A" generate a large magnetic field, which loops around frame "D" and laminations "H". the disk has slots in it that act like a magnetic switch, modulating the field received by pickup coil "E" so now the maximum frequency is controlled mainly by the speed and the number of slots in the spinning rotor. and those can be packed together pretty tightly! it's very similar to how a Hammond organ works. the next big problem that Alexanderson had to solve was controlling the speed. any variation caused the output frequency to drift out of the range that the antenna could support. this circuit uses a closed-loop design with a resonant filter to control "saturation coils" (aka magnetic amplifiers) which regulate the power going into the motor that turns the alternator! the saturation coil works by using a DC control current to push what is basically an inductor into saturation--meaning it can't carry any more of a magnetic field--so the effective inductance decreases. since inductance is kinda like an AC resistance, this allows the main drive current to flow through it. the next problem was to *modulate* the signal with morse code. for that, Alexanderson used another saturation coil (mag amp). this one *detunes* the giant transformer that collects the current from all the pole windings and matches the impedance to the antenna array. turning off the key causes the frequency to shift enough to reduce the output power by over 90%. @tubetime I thought even at 100 kW, you start getting spooky effects like nearby metal fences having an appreciable voltage :D! @cr1901 @tubetime I remember back in the late 80s my Telecom Australia apprentice intake went to this AM broadcasting station and antenna https://maps.app.goo.gl/EM6Luyo98ve2NUeB9 and if you can't make it out to Sweden, there are virtual tours available: https://alexander.n.se/en/virtual-visit-to-saq-grimeton/ for further reading, here's a useful paper. https://www.navy-radio.com/xmtrs/vlf/alexanderson-mayes-1975.pdf @tubetime OMG it runs off 2-phase because it's from a very particular time and place in the US. @tubetime OMG the air-quenched relays are scary, and they're just right out there. @tubetime Thanks for posting this; on my list for my next visit to Scandinavia. @tubetime apparently someone made a modern receiver out of relatively equivalent-level technology http://www.wireless.org.uk/mechrx.htm @tubetime There are 400 kW AM transmitters now that are completely solid-state, no tubes even. https://www.nautel.com/content/user_files/2020/01/NX400-spec-sheet.pdf @tubetime (and those 500 kW AM stations only operated on an experimental basis; none were ever licensed for commercial broadcasting, because small radio operators had powerful friends in Congress and they worried that they would lose their audience and network contracts if the networks could cover the entire country with just the six stations they owned) @tubetime And when Fessenden broadcast voice in 1906, he just wired a carbon microphone in series with the antenna. @tubetime Does that mean it accidentally uses frequency-shift keying? |
he lightened up the rotor (the rotating part of the alternator), streamlining it to a thin disk.