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4/17/36
QUARTERLY JOURNAL ON RADIO OUT JULY 1
The first issue of the new " RCA Review, A Quarterly Journal of Radio Progress'1 will be published under date of July 1.
All of the articles in the "RCA Review" will be from the pens of RCA employees* many of them being reprinted from journals of radio, sound motion picture j acoustical and optical engineering societies. The magazine will be issued every three months by the RCA Institutes Technical Press, a new department of the RCA Institutes.
Charles J. Pannill, President of R. C.A. Institutes and Radiomarine Corporation of America, is Chairman of the Board of Editors, which also includes Ralph P. Beal, RCA Research Supervisor; H. H. Beverage, RCAC Chief Research Engineer; L. F. Byrnes, RMCA Chief Engineer; L. M. Clement, RCAM Vice-President in Charge of Research and Engineering; Victor Division; Dr.
Alfred N. Goldsmith, Chairman of the Board of Editors of I.R. E. ; Harry G. Grover, RCA General latent Attorney; 0. B. Hanson,
NBC Chief Engineer; Dr. Charles B. Jolliffe, Engineer-inCharge , RCA Frequency Bureau; Frank E. Mullen, Manager, RCA Department of Information; Dr. C. H. Taylor, RCAC Vice-President in Charge of Engineering; Arthur Van Dyck, Engineer, RCA License Labor¬ atories; and J. C. Warner, RCAM Vice-President, Radiotron Division, W. S. Fitzpatrick, R. C.A. Institutes, is Secretary.
In addition to the "RCA Review", the RCA Institutes Technical Press also will publish books and pamphlets on radio and kindred subjects from time to time. The subscription price for the new quarterly is $1.50 a year.
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NOVEL AERIAL ON NEW BRITISH STATION
A novel aerial is used on the new high-powered regional transmitter open by the British Broadcasting Corporation at Lisborn, Northern Ireland, late in March.
A 475-foot steel mast constitutes the aerial. It is surmounted by a sliding top mast which has an additional maxi¬ mum height of 75 feet. This top mast is adjusted in height to suit the wavelength on which the station operates. The top mast again is surmounted by a ring 26 feet in diameter, a combination which, to non-technica.1 eyes, BBC engineers explain, is "For the purpose of reducing the length of top mast necessary by about 25 feet. "
The new station, which operates on a wavelength of 307.1 metres with a power of 100 KW in the aerial, is designed mainly for the benefit of listeners in Northern Ireland, and replaces the 1 KW transmitter which has been in operation since 1924.
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