I was explaining how I went about troubleshooting a recent repair to the new guy in the shop that farms out some of their tube work to me yesterday and it brought up something I've wondered about in the past. If you think about the component level, and even deeper into the theory of operation of electronics, there are some very magical things that happen. To some they may not be "magical", but to those of us that are young enough to have missed the early days of electronics, it certainly is.
For example, what made someone think by wrapping paper and foil into a cylinder that it would not only filter certain frequencies, but also block DC yet let AC through in certain situations? Seriously, who would have made that connection? How about knowing that electrons, something you can't see with the naked eye, would flow from a negatively-based point to a positive-based point? And then you could use a grid to control that flow? You can't see them without an electron microscope and you can't measure them without a meter, so where did the idea for a meter come from?
And don't get me started on how AC and DC can flow down the same wire.
Just some thoughts to make the synapses fire a little more.
For example, what made someone think by wrapping paper and foil into a cylinder that it would not only filter certain frequencies, but also block DC yet let AC through in certain situations? Seriously, who would have made that connection? How about knowing that electrons, something you can't see with the naked eye, would flow from a negatively-based point to a positive-based point? And then you could use a grid to control that flow? You can't see them without an electron microscope and you can't measure them without a meter, so where did the idea for a meter come from?
And don't get me started on how AC and DC can flow down the same wire.
Just some thoughts to make the synapses fire a little more.
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