Everything Radio Book: Now You're Talking!: All You Need to Get Your First Ham Radio License (Now Youre Talking, 5th Ed)
Now You're Talking!: All You Need to Get Your First Ham Radio License (Now Youre Talking, 5th Ed)

Everything Radio Book: Passport to World Band Radio: 2004 (Passport to World Band Radio, 2004)
Passport to World Band Radio: 2004 (Passport to World Band Radio, 2004)

Everything Radio Book: 40 Watts from Nowhere : A Journey into Pirate Radio
40 Watts from Nowhere : A Journey into Pirate Radio

Everything Radio Book: World Radio TV Handbook 2004: The Directory of Global Broadcasting
World Radio TV Handbook 2004: The Directory of Global Broadcasting

Everything Radio Book: Say Again, Please: Guide to Radio Communications
Say Again, Please: Guide to Radio Communications

Everything Radio Book: Radio: An Illustrated Guide
Radio: An Illustrated Guide

Everything Radio Book: Darwin's Radio : In the next stage of evolution, humans are history...
Darwin's Radio : In the next stage of evolution, humans are history...

Everything Radio Book: Trans-Sister Radio
Trans-Sister Radio

Everything Radio Book: The Voice on the Radio
The Voice on the Radio

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Guides: Radio - Articles - Transistor radio - Wikipedia

Transistor radio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The transistor radio (or transistor) is a small, often handheld, radio receiver.

The first transistor radio, the Regency TR-1, was introduced in 1954. It cost $49.95 (the equivalent of $334 in year-2003 dollars).

Originally introduced by Texas Instruments as a demonstration of the transistor, TI lost interest in the products and a new round of devices was soon 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. 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 9V battery.

Transistor radios did not become popular until the early sixties, when costs came down. Although usually equipped with headphone jacks, the most common way listeners used them to them was to hold the entire radio directly against the side of the head, with the speaker against the ear. These radios, of course, were monaural and limited to the FM 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 transistor radio remains the single most popular and prevalent communications device in existence. Some estimates hold that there are at least seven billion of them in existence, almost all tunable to the common AM band, and an increasingly high percentage of those also tunable to the FM band. Some get shortwave service as well. Most operate on battery power. They have become increasingly small and cheap due to improved electronics which pack millions of transistors on one integrated circuit or "chip". The prefix "transistor" basically now means an old or cheap radio.

The ability to set up low power radio stations for community radio and pirate radio has also promised to breathe new life into the older radios and bands.

See also: broadcasting

Everything Radio Book: Now You're Talking!: All You Need to Get Your First Ham Radio License (Now Youre Talking, 5th Ed)
Now You're Talking!: All You Need to Get Your First Ham Radio License (Now Youre Talking, 5th Ed)
  Everything Radio Book: Passport to World Band Radio: 2004 (Passport to World Band Radio, 2004)
Passport to World Band Radio: 2004 (Passport to World Band Radio, 2004)
  Everything Radio Book: 40 Watts from Nowhere : A Journey into Pirate Radio
40 Watts from Nowhere : A Journey into Pirate Radio
  Everything Radio Book: World Radio TV Handbook 2004: The Directory of Global Broadcasting
World Radio TV Handbook 2004: The Directory of Global Broadcasting
 
Everything Radio Book: Say Again, Please: Guide to Radio Communications
Say Again, Please: Guide to Radio Communications
  Everything Radio Book: Radio: An Illustrated Guide
Radio: An Illustrated Guide
  Everything Radio Book: Darwin's Radio : In the next stage of evolution, humans are history...
Darwin's Radio : In the next stage of evolution, humans are history...
  Everything Radio Book: Trans-Sister Radio
Trans-Sister Radio
 
Everything Radio Book: The Voice on the Radio
The Voice on the Radio
   
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transistor_radio
◄◄ Jump  More→ 1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8|9|10|11|12|13|14|Radio Links|More Guides Everything Radio Radio Directory

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