[TMC] Why GPR-90s Look So Good
John Poulton
jp at cs.unc.edu
Wed Dec 10 10:09:50 EST 2014
You can measure the proportions yourself, without needing an actual
GPR-90 in front of you. There are some 'hidden' parts of the
TMCHistory website that you can easily get to that have beautiful b/w
photos of many of TMC's products. See, for example,
http://tmchistory.org/tmc_tables/rig_pix_db/gpr-90/
I'll get them all linked eventually.. :) The front panel of the
GPR-90 is much wider than the Golden Ratio, about 2.15:1, and the
tuning dials and central controls are a bit less at about 1.4:1.
It's not really possible to get a rack-mountable item's front panel to
conform to the Golden Ratio exactly, since its width is always 19" and
height is some multiple of "U" (1.75"). A 'perfect" front panel would
be somewhere between 6U and 7U, I suppose...
The GPR-90 is particularly handsome, but the reasons are
subtle--something about the symmetric layout of controls and the
proportions. Maybe the Golden Rectangle is hiding in there somewhere,
but it's not obvious where.
That said, most of TMC's products were elegantly designed and pleasing
to the eye. The internals were built to extremely high standards, and
the equipment worked very well and was extremely reliable, thanks to
conservative design. All of these aspects are, I think, what
attracted us collectors to TMC rigs, and the reason so many of these
beautiful machines are still on the air.
There's just something about TMC's 'look' that can shout to you all
the way across a crowded hamfest.. :)
73, John K4OZY
On Wed, Dec 10, 2014 at 8:48 AM, Woody Demitz <wdemitz at verizon.net> wrote:
> Some proportions are inherently pleasing to the eye. The Greeks and Romans knew this, and that is why at least some of their buildings remain beautiful to the eye, even in ruins. The principle the ancient architects followed has many names--the Golden Ratio, Golden Section or Divine Proportion--but it had to do with the ratio of the length of the rectangle formed by the building to its height. The ratio is 1.6180339887.. (Thank you, Wikipedia). The ratio can be applied to pictures as well , and that suggests that perhaps the agreed-to-by-all beauty of a GPR-90 front panel may benefit from the same design principle. I suspect that the perceived pleasing rectangle need not be the full panel, but the rectangles formed by its component parts as well--for example, the frequency dials plus tuning knobs.
>
> Or maybe I've had too much coffee this morning. Perhaps someone who owns a GPR-90 can test the theory.
>
> 73,
> Woody KO3S
>
>
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> On Dec 9, 2014, at 2:18 AM, "Richard Knoppow" <1oldlens1 at ix.netcom.com> wrote:
>
>>
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "w1nzr via TMC" <tmc at mailman.qth.net>
>> To: "Francesco Ledda" <frledda at att.net>; "Nick England" <navy.radio at gmail.com>
>> Cc: "Mike Durff" <mike at oldaudio.net>; "tmc collector's group" <TMC at mailman.qth.net>
>> Sent: Monday, December 08, 2014 6:33 PM
>> Subject: Re: [TMC] Why ?
>>
>>
>>> A lively, erudite and enjoyable discussion.....as long as you are a radio
>>> geek...thanks all...
>>>
>>> Brown Beezer
>> This is an unusual list because we have a couple of real historians on it who have done a lot of digging of the sort not often found John Polton is perhaps the main contributor since he has befriended the family who owned TMC. There is also something peculiarly attractive about TMC products, hard to say what. For instance, the GPR-90, which is, frankly, only a medium-good receiver, is one of the best looking and feeling ever.
>>
>>
>> --
>> Richard Knoppow
>> Los Angeles
>> WB6KBL
>> dickburk at ix.netcom.com
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