History of wireless telegraphy and broadcasting in Australia/Topical/Publications/Australasian Radio World/Issues/1944 12

P.03 - Contents Banner
The Australasian Radio World

Devoted entirely to Technical Radio

and incorporating

All-Wave All-World DX News

Vol. 9. - DECEMBER, 1944 - No. 7.

P.03 - Publication Notes
Proprietor - A. G. HULL

Manager - Dudley L. Walter

Secretary - Miss E. M. Vincent

Short-wave Editor - L. J. Keast

For all correspondence: City Office - 243 Elizabeth St., Sydney -  Phone MA2325

Office Hours - Week-days: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Saturdays: 10 a.m. - 12 noon

Editorial Office - 117 Reservoir Street, Sydney

Subscription Rates - 6 issues 5/3, 12 issues 10/6, 24 issues £1, Post free to any address

Service Departments - Back Numbers, 1/- ea., post free; Reply-by-mail Queries, 1/- each

Printed by Bridge Printery Pty. Ltd., 117 Reservoir Street, Sydney, N.S.W., for the proprietor of the "Australasian Radio World," Elizabeth St., Sydney (Footnote P.36)

P.03 - Contents
CONTENTS:

CONSTRUCTIONAL -

Contest Was Keen. . . . 5

Pick-up Principles. . . . 13

Victorian Championship. . . . 17

TECHNICAL -

Aesthetics of Reproduction. . . . 19

Music While You Work. . . . 26

SHORTWAVE REVIEW -

Shortwave Notes and Observations. . . . 29

Notes From My Diary. . . . 31

New Stations. . . . 33

THE SERVICE PAGES -

Answers. . . . 34

P.03 - Editorial Notes
Editorial

Those of our readers who are enthusiasts on the subject of quality reproduction must be a little bewildered at the moment. We had hardly finished publishing an amplifier circuit "to end all amplifier circuits" when along came the cathode-follower scare. To add to the confusion, then came the results of the Victorian Amplifier Championship, indicating that beam power valves, even with inverse feedback, do not give the practical results which can be calculated for them by theory. Even direct-coupled enthusiasts were disappointed. In fact, it might be said that the Victorian contest puts us all back about fifteen years in our theories. To cap it all, along comes the latest issue of the famous Wireless World from London, with an article by well-known quality exponent H. A. Hartley, who now confesses that high fidelity reproduction is not desirable. The article is so complete in its coverage and so full of interest in every way that we feel bound to reprint it for the benefit of our many readers who are unable to obtain a copy of the English publication. At the same time we feel that some sort of explanation is needed to clarify our policy in these matters. Some letters have been received from irate readers who claim that we seem to be deliberately misleading them by publishing contradictory stories in quick succession. Briefly, our policy at the moment is to present all these theories as they come to hand. We leave it to you to use your own discrimination as to what you decide to follow.