I was surfing the web looking for interesting projects the other day when I ran into [SkyKing’s]. He mentioned that they were “Alfred P. Morgan-style” and that brought back a flood of memories about a man who introduced a whole generation to electronics and radio.
(1954), The Boys' First Book of Radio and Electronics (Charles Scribner's Sons). (1996), The Science of Radio (American Institute of Physics). National Radio Institute (1945), Various Radio Service Manuals (National Radio Institute). Nibler, F., Ed. (1996), High-Frequency Circuit Engineering (Institute of Electrical Engineers). I was 14 or 15 when I stumbled upon Alfred Morgan's book 'The Boy Electrician' in our Jr. High School library. I was fascinated with that book! I attempted to build my first induction coil from the plans in that book and I was introduced to Nikola Tesla and the Tesla coil.
[Morgan] was born in 1889 and in the early part of the twentieth century, he was excited to build and fly an airplane. Apparently, there wasn’t a successful flight.
However, he eventually succeeded and wrote his first book: “How to Build a 20-foot Bi-Plane Glider.” In 1910, he and a partner formed the Adams Morgan company to distribute radio construction kits. Eenadu epaper edition. We probably wouldn’t remember [Morgan] for his airplanes, but we do recognize him for his work with radio. By 1913, he published a book “The Boy Electrician” which covered the fundamentals of electricity and magnetism (at a time when these subjects were far more mysterious than they are today). [Morgan] predicted the hacker in the preface to the 1947 edition. After describing how a boy was frustrated that his model train automated to the point that he had nothing actually to do, [Morgan] observed: The prime instinct of almost any boy at play is to make and to create. He will make things of such materials as he has at hand, and use the whole force of dream and fancy to create something out of nothing.
Download attack the tank java game.jar.dedomil. It can get repetitive having to simply beat everyone up however.
Of course, we know this applies to girls too, but [Morgan] wrote this in 1913, so you have to fill in the blanks. I think we can all identify with that sentiment, though. However, [Morgan’s] best-remembered books were from the 1950’s and 1960’s. The first one was titled “The Boys’ First Book of Radio and Electronics.” You can guess the successive titles (just replace the word “First”). The first book covered some basics about how [Hertz] performed experiments and theory but aimed at young people. [Morgan] was adept at making the topics accessible. He’d studied at MIT, so he knew the complexities of the subject, but he also knew his audience.
The books talked about subjects of interest at the time like how “underwater sounds” (SONAR) helped to win World War II. Chapter 5 and beyond of the book, however, was the part that got dog-eared from constant examination. Here’s the start of Chapter 5: For less than one dollar you can buy a marvelous scientific device–namely a “tube” for a radio receiver. This inexpensive creation of scientific research does its work with a precision and a certainty that are astonishing. If you were a kid who’d stared into the holes at the back of your family TV and saw those glowing thing inside, this chapter was a revelation.
I was surfing the web looking for interesting projects the other day when I ran into [SkyKing’s]. He mentioned that they were “Alfred P. Morgan-style” and that brought back a flood of memories about a man who introduced a whole generation to electronics and radio.
(1954), The Boys' First Book of Radio and Electronics (Charles Scribner's Sons). (1996), The Science of Radio (American Institute of Physics). National Radio Institute (1945), Various Radio Service Manuals (National Radio Institute). Nibler, F., Ed. (1996), High-Frequency Circuit Engineering (Institute of Electrical Engineers). I was 14 or 15 when I stumbled upon Alfred Morgan's book 'The Boy Electrician' in our Jr. High School library. I was fascinated with that book! I attempted to build my first induction coil from the plans in that book and I was introduced to Nikola Tesla and the Tesla coil.
[Morgan] was born in 1889 and in the early part of the twentieth century, he was excited to build and fly an airplane. Apparently, there wasn’t a successful flight.
However, he eventually succeeded and wrote his first book: “How to Build a 20-foot Bi-Plane Glider.” In 1910, he and a partner formed the Adams Morgan company to distribute radio construction kits. Eenadu epaper edition. We probably wouldn’t remember [Morgan] for his airplanes, but we do recognize him for his work with radio. By 1913, he published a book “The Boy Electrician” which covered the fundamentals of electricity and magnetism (at a time when these subjects were far more mysterious than they are today). [Morgan] predicted the hacker in the preface to the 1947 edition. After describing how a boy was frustrated that his model train automated to the point that he had nothing actually to do, [Morgan] observed: The prime instinct of almost any boy at play is to make and to create. He will make things of such materials as he has at hand, and use the whole force of dream and fancy to create something out of nothing.
Download attack the tank java game.jar.dedomil. It can get repetitive having to simply beat everyone up however.
Of course, we know this applies to girls too, but [Morgan] wrote this in 1913, so you have to fill in the blanks. I think we can all identify with that sentiment, though. However, [Morgan’s] best-remembered books were from the 1950’s and 1960’s. The first one was titled “The Boys’ First Book of Radio and Electronics.” You can guess the successive titles (just replace the word “First”). The first book covered some basics about how [Hertz] performed experiments and theory but aimed at young people. [Morgan] was adept at making the topics accessible. He’d studied at MIT, so he knew the complexities of the subject, but he also knew his audience.
The books talked about subjects of interest at the time like how “underwater sounds” (SONAR) helped to win World War II. Chapter 5 and beyond of the book, however, was the part that got dog-eared from constant examination. Here’s the start of Chapter 5: For less than one dollar you can buy a marvelous scientific device–namely a “tube” for a radio receiver. This inexpensive creation of scientific research does its work with a precision and a certainty that are astonishing. If you were a kid who’d stared into the holes at the back of your family TV and saw those glowing thing inside, this chapter was a revelation.