The Secret Life of Machines (1988) s02e05 Episode Script

The Radio Set

[Door opens.]
[Footsteps.]
[Jazzy music: 'The Russians Are Coming' - Val Bennett.]
Tim: There's something rather magical about radio waves.
They're actually a sort of invisible energy.
This aerial can actually pick up enough of this energy to power this primitive receiver I made.
It has no battery.
It relies entriely on harnessing the energy of the radio waves in the air.
It's not very loud, so I'll have to put it straight on the microphone so you can hear it [Indistinct voice drowned out by radio whistling.]
I managed to pick up Radio Israel broadcasting from Jerusalem on this one night.
Although there's something quite wonderful about this little thing radio sets have been around for so long now that they've become rather ordinary, unglamorous contraptions.
Even the electronics inside now look rather familiar.
In this programme, I'm going to look at how these mysterious radio waves were discovered, and how radio receivers manage to pick them up.
Creating radio waves is actually very simple: Any electric spark emits them.
[Sparking.]
Each of these sparks is sending out radio waves.
You hear them on the radio as interference [Turns on radio - poorly tuned whistle.]
[Loud crackle from radio in time with sparks.]
That's why lightning makes radios crackle, and even the tiny spark inside a lightswitch is enough to produce a little 'pop' [Radio pops as light switches on and off.]
[Radio off.]
But without a radio set though, it's not easy to detect these waves, and most scientists didn't believe they existed until just over 100 years ago.
What finally convinced them was an experiment performed by the physicist Henirich Hertz in 1887.
It was first demonstrated in Britain by a scientist called Oliver Lodge, here in the Royal Institution.
Hertz used very big sparks, created by a machine like this, called an induction coil.
Would you turn it on, Bill? [Loud crackling from sparks.]
[Sparks stop.]
This was connected to these metal plates, with another spark gap in the middle.
And this acted as a sort of aerial.
This was Hertz's receiver; it's simply a loop of copper wire.
Well the big spark, er, creates radio waves with enough energy to make a tiny spark jump across the gap between these balls in the receiver, when they're held very close together.
So, um, if I hold these in position Okay, Bill [Loud crackling from transmitter spark-gap.]
[quieter crackling.]
If you look carefully, you can just see the spark jumping across the gap.
[crackling stops.]
These sparks are so tiny, that Hertz had to let his eyes get accustomed to the dark for 15 minutes and then watch the sparks through a magnifying glass.
His apparatus only had a range of a few metres, and he had no interest in finding any practial uses for it.
The first person to use radio waves for signalling was Guglielmo Marconi.
Marconi had been a difficult child.
His mother was a Jameson, from the Irsish whisky distillers, who'd run away to become an opera singer and married an Italian landowner.
She quickly got bored on his estate.
Anne Jameson: There's not much going on here, I think we'll go for a little jaunt.
Tim: The infant Marconi spent much of his childhood being dragged around Europe by his mother.
Marconi: Where are we going mama? Anne: Barcelona.
Or perhaps, Boulogne [Marconi sings in Italian.]
[Clanking of plates.]
Tim: He showed little interest at school, and constantly annoyed his father with ridiculous 'scientific experiments'.
Marconi: Ehoh.
la.
ehah.
Vavoom! [Bang!.]
[Plates shatter.]
Giuseppe Marconi: You breaka my plate! I smasha your face! Tim: Shortly after failing to get into university, he happened to read an article about Hertz's work.
Marconi: Oh! Tim: He immediately started obsessively experimenting and had soon managed to transmit the signals over a mile.
[Muffled sparking and explosion sounds.]
Still aged only 20, he arrived in England to try and sell his ideas.
[Rustling of kite.]
Marconi had found that fixing on side of the spark gap to a long vertical wire made a much better aerial than Hertz's.
This was further improved by connecting the other side of the spark gap to earth.
Apart from that, the transmitter was basically the same as Hertz's.
Any electrical spark will do: here it's being provided by the ignition circuit of Rex's pickup truck.
This primitive transmitter has a surprisingly long range.
Marconi also used a much more sensitive receiver, called a coherer.
This is based on a design by oliver lodge - this is my home-made version.
It's just a tube of nickel filings.
I made it by filing down a coin.
You fix one end to the aerial; another kite, and the other end to the earth.
And what happens is when it detects the radio waves, its electrical resistance falls dramatically so it acts as a sort of switch, and turns on a circuit.
The theory behind it's very complicated, and wasn't worked out for till many years later.
But it's quite simple to make it work.
The only slightly complicated thing is that you have to have something to shake it to restore its high resistance at the end of each signal.
So now if I signal to Rex [Engine starts.]
[click-click-click of spark.]
[buzz-buzz-buzz in time with ignition spark.]
[Engine revs up, drowns out noise of sparks.]
[continuous buzzing.]
[tick-tick-tick of engine fades out.]
[continuous buzzy sparking noise.]
This is marconi's original equipment that he brought to England with him.
This is his transmitter, with an induction coil like Hertz's.
And these balls that concentrated the energy of the spark - one end would have been connected to the aerial.
[sparking.]
This is his receiver; the aerial went on here.
This is his coherer, inside the glass tube - the filings are actually in the gap in the middle.
And this is the device to tap it.
[tap-tap-tap.]
Marconi would have been sending a combination of long pulses and short pulses, sending messages in morse code.
Well this original apparatus only had a range of about 3 miles.
But Marconi gradually increased the sensitivity of his coherers, and the size of his transmitters till he was sending messages hundreds of miles.
The larger transmitters had much larger spark gaps, which got very noisy.
So he had to take to putting them in enclosed boxes.
[Very loud buzzy sparking.]
Marconi's early systems had a big disadvantage: They couldn't be tuned.
[buzzing of spark transmitter.]
You can hear the signal from our spark transmitter all across the short, medium and long wavebands.
[buzzing continues.]
The reason is that sparks create chaotic waves of all sorts of different wavelengths.
[buzzing continues.]
[spark transmitter off.]
What was needed was a more precise transmitter than a spark.
This was the solution: The tuned circuit.
It suddenly starts to look like a proper radio, but the basic parts are still quite simple.
There's a coil of wire here called an inductor, and a series of overlapping metal plates here called a capacitor.
The electricity whizzes backwards and forwards from one to the other.
Oscillating thousands of times a second.
The valve acts as a sort of pump, keeping the whole thing going.
You can see a picture of the radio waves this tuned circuit is transmitting, on this oscilloscope that I've hooked up to a short aerial.
If I hold it near the tuned circuit and switch on You can see how regular the oscillations, or waves that it's transmitting, are.
Now if I compare this, er, with the spark machine [buzzing of spark transmitter.]
You can see just how chaotic its radio waves are.
[buzzing of spark transmitter.]
Once the tuned transmitter had been perfected, spark transmitters were quickly banned for polluting the airwaves.
With the problem of interference solved, radio seemed so miraculous that it could be capable of almost anything.
[morse code beeping over whistly radio noise.]
Early radios did still have one limitation: They couldn't transmit speech.
Only the simple pusles of morse code.
Morse code is still used for messages on the shortwave band, and pulse codes are also used for radio-controlled models.
[Brum whirrs and clicks pneumatically.]
[loud pneumatic clicking.]
Rex: I built this little car for a children's television series.
I've hooked the oscilloscope up to the transmitter, so you can actually see the stream of pulses that the car receives.
Er, If I work this switch That's the one that moves the headlights, you can see it just moves one pulse.
If I shift that one, which moves two pulses, which actually opens the door.
This one works the steering, from left to right.
You see it's moving four pulses.
This one is shifting five pulses, and that's the speed control, for forwards/backwards control.
Erm, and so forth.
Each series of pulses work a different function inside the car.
Tim: To transmit speech and music instead of simple pulses, you first have to convert the sound to an electrical signal with a microphone, and then combine it with, er, the radio waves.
In the radio receiver, it all gets seperated out again.
You can see this very clearly on an oscilloscope If I turn on this little radio Radio: (tinny voice) alternatives.
Tim: and I now plug the oscilloscope in, to the loudspeaker.
.
that's a bit large [radio voice continues.]
This is giving a picture of the sound signal, and you can see it roughly matches the sound that's coming out of the loudspeaker.
Radio: but if these countries Tim: Now if I plug it in further back on the circuit Radio: remained, largely, not entirely fulfilled Tim: This is the sound signal combined with the radio waves.
You can see the peaks still roughly match the sound that it's making and the radio waves are actually going rapidly up and down in the middle.
Now if I stretch this out a bit Radio: which nations make any firm new committments These are the actual radio waves, and you can see that what's happening is that that sound is constantly changing their size, or their amplitude.
And that's why this is called Amplitude Modulation, or AM, radio.
Radio: was the most important issues The man who designed much of the practical circuitry for AM radio, was an American called Edwin Howard Armstrong.
While in France during WW1, he invented the SuperHet circuit, which has been used ever since.
He then sold a patent to RCA, back in America.
Armstrong: I have an appointment to see Mr Sarnoff Secretary: He's expecting you, Mr Armstrong.
Secretary: You're welcome.
Tim: he became a millionaire overnight, and fell in love with the chairman's secretary.
Armstrong: How about you come for a spin in my motor? Secretary: Okay Armstrong: Hop in there.
Secretary: Oh! It sure is a big one! Tim: He bought a huge Hispano-Suiza and climbed his tallest aerial to impress her.
They were married soon afterwards Armstrong: WILL YOU MARRY ME? Secretary: Oh, Howard, my hero! Tim: The fundamental principles of radio have remained unchanged.
This is the BBC transmitter at Brookman's Park, broadcasting medium-wave radio to SE England.
Inside, the engineers have restored the BBC's very first transmitter; built by the Marconi company in about 1920.
This end of it actually creates the radio waves.
.
and this end of it combines them with the sound signal, the amplitude modulation.
It's basically a series of giant tuned circuits.
With the valves, the coils of wire of the inductors, and the overlapping metal plates of the capacitors.
Well, this generates about 2 kilowatts.
This may sound a lot, but this modern transmitter is rated 150kW, and it's all much more sophisticated.
This one's actually broadcasting Radio 3 on AM, all over south-east England.
[opera plays from monitor speaker.]
Inside though, the basic components are sill remarkably similar.
The inductors have remained exactly the same, and the valves and capacitors, although they're now more enclosed still work on the same principles as well.
Transmitters like these, broadcasting sound, first appeared in WW1.
They were used for sending messages, by radio telephony.
Broadcasting radio to entertain people was first started after the war by enthusiastic Marconi engineers.
[silent film.]
The BBC was then set up by the government in 1922, and listening to the radio rapidly became very popular.
[silent film.]
At first, most listeners had very simple receivers, crystal sets like the Rexophone.
They needed enormous aerials, because, like my radio at the start of the programme they had no battery, and relied entriely on the energy of the radio waves in the air.
Radio: (whistly) on the literature they've been taught in these academic institutions, they found it wasn't their literature.
Tim: It' easier to see how they worked on this home-made version.
Radio: century [loud crackling.]
Tim: Instead of a coherer, it has a lump of crystal, and a fine wire called a cat's whisker.
Electricity will only flow one way through the contact between the fine wire and the crystal.
[crackling.]
And this has the effect of seperating out the sound from the radio waves.
[whistling.]
Like the coherer, the theory behind the cat's whisker is very complicated, but it's quite simple to make it work.
The imperfect contact between teeth and fillings can occasionally have the same effect.
Causing a few unfortunate people to hear the radio inside their head all the time.
This is the modern equivilant of the cat's whisker; the germanium diode.
If i put it under a magnifying glass, you can see it's an enclosed version of the same thing.
You can see the whisker jus touching the lump of germanium.
The primitive radio I had at the beginning of the programme worked with one of these.
And in fact most modern transistor radios use them as well.
Much of the radio's evolution has been preserved by Gerald Wells at the Vintage Wireless Museum.
Tim: If you wanted something better than a crystal set, what sort of thing would you have had? Gerald: Well, you'd have had something like this, which is three seperate units, hence it was called a wireless, or radio, set - because it was a set of parts.
It would have consisted of a tuned circuit and RF amplifier detector stage, and a power output stage.
And that would have got you most of the local stations with earphones or a modest loudspeaker.
Tim: What happened after that, was the next stage Gerald: Well the enxt stage was they decided to stick it all in one box, to make it less wires and make it neater.
And this was a bit more elaborate as well.
More stations were coming onto the airwaves so more elaborate tuning was needed.
So they brought in series-parallel switching for the aerials and tuned circuits, variable condensor, reaction condensor.
An RF stage to amplify the signal.
A detector stage to take the place of the old-fashioned cat's whisker, and two stages of LF amplification.
That would be quite an elaborate set.
But you could, by moving these bars around do away with those stages, and listen with earphones on there, and save a lot of battery power.
Tim: When did they start enclosing all the working parts of the radios? Gerald: Well certainly by the mid 20s, when they decided that this wasn't really very nice in the living room and they started building them into familiar objects, like the medicine chest, for instance.
Where it could be easily disguised, and that wouldn't disgrace any respectable home.
Tim: What other shapes Gerald: Well the most famous of all, is the smokers' cabinet.
Every home had a smokers' cabinet.
You'd have your pipe-racks and your bits at the top - smoking was a big industry - you'd have your drawer at the bottom where you'd have your pipe-cleaners, your matches and your tobacco.
And it would all fold away and look innocent.
It didn't scream 'Wireless!' at you.
Tim: Of course all these early radios were powered by batteries, weren't they? Gerald: Well yes, there was very little electricity around.
And the early radios required: A 2 Volt accumulator - sometimes 4 or 6, but usually 2 - which had to be charged up every week, so that meant you had two of 'em, one being charged, one in use.
And you'd need a high-tension battery you'd need a grid-bias battery.
Grid-bias battery lasted about a year, and cost 9 pence.
That would last you about 3 months, and cost you 7 and sixpence.
Tim: So it was quite expensive then.
Gerald: It was an expensive business.
And it took a lot of rigging up - you had to have an elaborate aerial and earth system.
And all the bother of getting the accumulator charged every week Admittedly it was only 3 pence, reasonably cheap, but it did mean you had to be careful.
You had about 20 hours listening a week.
So when you went to your radio shop there was usually a Radio Times provided on the counter, that saved you buying one.
With the aid of the bakelite fountain pen and a pad, you could make notes of what was worth listening to during the following week.
You could pick your programmes and plan your meals around the wireless set.
You didn't just hear it, you actually sat down and listened to it, and gave it all your attention.
You had to, it had cost you so much to rig up.
And of course, when you came in with your accumulator every week There was all the other old tearaways and ratbags in there as well, and you would discuss the programmes.
So the reputation of wireless programmes was made and lost in the wireless shop.
Tim: By the 30s, the appearance of radios had started to change dramatically with the introduction of the new material, Bakelite.
Pioneered in Britain by the Ekco company, this could be moulded to almost any shape.
It's one drawback was that it was easily breakable.
Voiceover: See these two portable radios? Well watch this.
let her go, Betsy! [smash!.]
Sorry friend, you old-style portables have to go.
But look at our new RCA-Victor portable radio! Man: Came through without a chip.
Voiceover: RCA-Victor's non-breakable impact case means [bang.]
No chipping [bang.]
No cracking [bang.]
No breaking And hear that tone! It's RCA-Victor's great golden-throat sound.
See the world's only portables with the non-breakable impact case, as low as $27.
95 at your RCA-Victor dealer.
Tim: The biggest change in broadcast radio since the war has been the introduction of FM.
The great advantage is that it's much less susceptable to interference.
[hum of untuned AM radio.]
The spark which drowns out AM radio [spark causes loud click on radio.]
Is hardly audible on FM FM Radio: Mrs Thatcher why she'd used the phrase 'geurilla warefare' [spark makes barely audible click on radio.]
Tim: FM stands for Frequency Modulation.
The principle behind it's really quite simple: instead of the sound altering the amplitude of the radio waves, as in AM, it alters their frequency.
FM radio was yet another invention of Howard Armstrong.
He started in the early 30s, with a missionary zeal to produce true Hi-Fi radio.
After encouraging tests with RCA, the company suddenly pulled out.
Armstrong: Sarnoff! Well why have you cancelled my project? [indistinct argument.]
Sarnoff: Get off my back! We never promised you nothin'! We're into TV now When FM radio was becoming establised, Armstrong and RCA started a lengthy battle over the patents.
"We invented this FM radio.
" "You have stolen my ideas!" "You did not!" "I was the inventor!" "Certainly not!" Tim: This had a disasterous effect on his health.
And on his marriage.
Armstrong: God, I've had such a terrible day! Wife: By the way, I'm leaving [Door slams.]
Armstrong: This is the last straw! I can't take any more! AAAAaaaaaaaggggggh! [loud plane engine.]
FM has now become firmly established, and is invaluable for radio communications, as well as broadcasting.
Rex: When I fly my little aircraft, I use radio.
I personally wouldn't fly without one.
This enables me to keep in touch with air traffic control, and other air users and also airfields, to tell them of your intentions.
And if you do happen to get lost, air traffic control can help you find your way.
And it also is a navigation radio: I can tune in to various fixed beacons throughout the country.
I can fly directly to and from these beacons.
And that helps immensely to find your way around the country.
Tim: Domestic radios have also become much more sophisticated.
Many now have automatic push-button tuning, and the sound quality can be very impressive, particularly in stereo FM.
But despite this improvement, radio has really been eclipsed by television and other modern marvels.
And radio sets aren't the important, prized posessions they once were.
In fact, the whole idea of a seperate radio set is rather disappearing.
Radios now tend to be combined with cassette tape recorders, or alarm clocks, or Hi-Fi systems.
Radio is so taken for granted today, it's hard to think of it as magical any more but I hope in this programme I've managed to persuade you that it still is.
[Jazzy music: 'Take 5' - Dave Brubeck.]

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