Hello All:
When the Aircraft Radio
Corporation built the superhets we call SCR-274 (or ARC-5) it was all
because the British Admiralty felt the high cost of RDF (etc) was
justified. Read all about it below.
From Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superheterodyne_receiver#RDF"
RDFThere
was one role where the regenerative system was not suitable, even for
Morse code sources, and that was the task of radio direction finding, or
RDF."
"The regenerative system was highly non-linear, amplifying
any signal above a certain threshold by a huge amount, sometimes so
large it caused it to turn into a transmitter (which was the entire
concept behind IFF). In RDF, the strength of the signal is used to
determine the location of the transmitter, so one requires linear
amplification to allow the strength of the original signal, often very
weak, to be accurately measured."
"To address this need, RDF
systems of the era used triodes operating below unity. To get a usable
signal from such a system, tens or even hundreds of triodes had to be
used, connected together anode-to-grid. These amplifiers drew enormous
amounts of power and required a team of maintenance engineers to keep
them running. Nevertheless, the strategic value of direction finding on
weak signals was so high that the British Admiralty felt the high cost
was justified."I found the above when hunting for a little history of the development of the superhet. My first reaction was to send it to "our" resident historian (Hue). I admire his extensive knowledge of radio history and enjoy reading his postings here. Then I thought others may find the role of the British Admiralty "interesting" and so I sent it here instead.
I must seek information about the development of the superhet elsewhere, it seems.
Best 2023 to all
Leslie