Neon John wrote: > For here is the treasure-trove for those of us who like old machines, > fire bottles and big hunking things that glow and make noise. > > http://www.pmillett.com/ > > In particular, > http://www.pmillett.com/technical_books_online.htm > Over a gig of scanned tube manuals, textbooks, reference books, etc. > > Among the goodies, note the Coyne Electrical School encyclopedia, > perhaps THE best all-in-one summary of industrial electricity > pre-solid state. Much is still applicable. I was gifted a set of > these when I was about 7 and commenced to memorize them :-) > > Also note one of the Radio Handbooks that has design information on > designing diathermy machines. Induction heating, anyone? > > John
Nice site. I've just downloaded a copy of "Antennas" by Krauss. I own a copy (paper) but it is useful to have it on a laptop. That said, I'd much rather read from paper, but its not too practical to carry these things around in paper format. _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list [email protected] https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
