BC-342

The BC-342 was a World War II U.S. Army Signal Corps high frequency radio receiver. It was a 115 Volt AC version of the BC-312 receiver that used the RA-20 rectifier instead of the BC-312's DM-21 dynamotor. It was used primarily as part of field installations such as the SCR-188A, but could be used with mobile sets such as the 2 1/2 ton mounted SCR-399. First designed at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey by the U.S. Army Signal Corps, it was built by various manufacturers including RCA. Many of the later units that are encountered today were manufactured by the Farnsworth Television and Radio Corporation of Fort Wayne, Indiana. Its low frequency counterpart is the BC-344 radio receiver that is almost identical to the BC-342.[1]

BC-342 radio receiver

Specifications

BC-342 radio receiver seen at bottom center, in use by Signal Corps operator in New Guinea

The BC-342 could be operated from fixed and mobile positions.

  • Power - An internal RA-20 AC rectifier power supply unit is fitted providing 250 volts DC and 12 volts AC for the receiver tube filaments (three pairs of the 6 volt tubes are wired in series and three in series / parallel).
  • Manual Reference: TM 11-850[2]
  • Components: RA-20 Power Supply
  • Weight: 58 lbs.
  • Frequency Range: 1.5-18 MHz
  • Power Input: 110 VAC 60 Hz
  • Part of: SCR-197, SCR-237, SCR-277, SCR-299, SCR-399, MRC-1

10 vacuum tubes[3] included:

  • RF amplifiers - 6K7 (2)
  • Mixer - 6L7
  • Local oscillator - 6C5
  • IF amplifiers - 6K7 (2)
  • CW oscillator (BFO) - 6C5
  • Detector/1st AF - 6R7
  • Audio output - 6F6
  • Rectifier - 5W4

The BC-342 was similar to the BC-348. Heavy chassis design was employed to minimize drift and oscillator instability due to temperature changes and vibration.[4][5]

BC-312

(note also SCR-210 In stand alone configuration)

  • 12/24 volts DC power requirements. 6 volt tubes (Valves) connected in series with filament strings.
  • 12A6 audio output tube in series with a resistor.
  • Dynamotor B+ supply.[1]
gollark: Inconveniently enough, both of them rely heavily on mutable state and are hard to test.
gollark: https://github.com/TomSmeets/FractalArt/blob/master/src/Main.hs vs https://pastebin.com/diwDBnvA.
gollark: I don't know either. I mostly ported it from Haskell and guessed roughly what each bit did.
gollark: See, I don't mind the bit which is green as much as the fact that it still randomly includes purpley blotches.
gollark: Cool unflawed output.

See also

References

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