"Regenerative" Receivers: The Story - Ten-Tec 1253 Assembly And Instruction Manual

9-band shortwave
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So, the better you understand how this receiver works, the more
you learn about modern electronics!

"Regenerative" Receivers: THE STORY . . .

The "regenerative receiver" moved the world of radio reception
and broadcasting beyond the limits of crystal sets useful only
for hearing a strong local signal. For over a decade, these
magical, whistling, squawking, glowing boxes were the norm for
home listening as well as for the first generation of radio hams.
Receiver design evolved swiftly. The "superheterodyne"
became the norm during the 1930's. Regenerative receivers,
often called "Gennies," were left to tinkerers and beginners.
Even though these receivers were simple and quite sensitive,
they had a number of shortcomings: instability, touchiness,
difficulty in separating strong stations, a tendency to generate
interference to other receivers, and a general reputation for
making odd sounds that resembled everything from birds to
motorboats.
However, the sheer SIMPLENESS of the regenerative circuit
remained attractive to experimenters and beginners. ln fact, as
recently as the 1960's, one company marketed a $ 14 kit for
building a complete transceiver using only one vacuum tube: half
of the tube served as a regenerative receiver, and the other half
was a low-power crystal-controlled transmitter. In addition,
many thousands of engineering careers as well as ham radio
licenses were launched with the building of "my first shortwave
radio" from do-it-yourself regenerative receiver kits offered by
the major radio companies of several decades ago. (The fondest
daydream back then of most of these radio builders was to be
ab[e to afford to move up to a "superhet communications
receiver." Their fondest memory TODAY is that very first
receiver kit!)
From the late 1970's through the '80's, as consumer electronics
and new ham radio equipment became more sophisticated so
very rapidly, interest declined not only in regenerative receivers,
but-also in kit-building and even in shortwave radio listening.
One or two generations of Americans simply missed out on the
thrill and satisfaction of building and understanding a simple
radio set which could receive signals from around the world.
Today, both shortwave radio listening and building electronic kits
are again popular pastimes. Your T-KIT 1253 is a much better
receiver than the "classic" radio sets which attracted several
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