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==Japanese history in the market==
==Japanese history in the market==
While on a trip to the United States in 1952, Masura Ibuka, founder of Tokyo Telecommunications, discovered that AT&T was about to make licensing available for the transistor. Ibuka and physicist, Akio Morita, convinced the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) in Japan to finance the $25,000 licensing fee. For several months Ibuka traveled around the United States borrowing ideas from the American transistor manufacturers. Improving upon the ideas, Tokyo Telecommunications made its first functional transistor radio in 1954.<ref>{{cite book | title = Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide | author = David Lane and Robert Lane | publisher = Wallace-Homestead Book Company | year = 1994 | isbn = 0-87069-712-9}} pages 5 and 6</ref> Within five years, Tokyo Telecommunications grew from seven employees to approximately five hundred. Other Japanese companies soon followed and the grand total of electronic products exported from Japan in 1958 increased 2.5 times in comparison to 1957.<ref>{{cite book | title = Made In Japan : Transistor Radios of the 1950s and 1960s | author = Handy, Erbe, Blackham, Antonier | publisher = Chronicle Books | year = 1993 | isbn = 0-8118-0271-X}} pages 23-29</ref>
While on a trip to the United States in 1952, Masura Ibuka, founder of Tokyo Telecommunications, discovered that AT&T was about to make licensing available for the transistor. Ibuka and physicist, Akio Morita, convinced the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) in Japan to finance the $25,000 licensing fee. For several months Ibuka traveled around the United States borrowing ideas from the American transistor manufacturers. Improving upon the ideas, Tokyo Telecommunications made its first functional transistor radio in 1954.<ref>{{cite book | title = Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide | author = David Lane and Robert Lane | publisher = Wallace-Homestead Book Company | year = 1994 | isbn = 0-87069-712-9}} pages 5 and 6</ref> Within five years, Tokyo Telecommunications grew from seven employees to approximately five hundred. Other Japanese companies soon followed their entry into the American market and the grand total of electronic products exported from Japan in 1958 increased 2.5 times in comparison to 1957.<ref>{{cite book | title = Made In Japan : Transistor Radios of the 1950s and 1960s | author = Handy, Erbe, Blackham, Antonier | publisher = Chronicle Books | year = 1993 | isbn = 0-8118-0271-X}} pages 23-29</ref>


===TR-55 and TR-7===
===TR-55 and TR-7===

Revision as of 22:59, 26 April 2010

A transistor radio is a small transistor-based radio receiver.

History

Bell Laboratories demonstrated the first transistor on December 23, 1947.[1] The scientific team at Bell Laboratories responsible for the solid-state amplifier included William Shockley, Walter Houser Brattain, and John Bardeen.[2] After obtaining patent protection, the company held a news conference on June 30, 1948, at which a prototype transistor radio was demonstrated.[3] There are many claimants to the title of the first company to produce practical transistor radios, often incorrectly attributed to Sony (originally Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo). Texas Instruments had demonstrated all-transistor AM (amplitude modulation) radios as early as 1952, but their performance was well below that of equivalent vacuum tube models. A workable all-transistor radio was demonstrated in August 1953 at the Düsseldorf Radio Fair by the German firm Intermetall. It was built with four of Intermetall's hand-made transistors, based upon the 1948 invention of Herbert Mataré and Heinrich Welker. However, as with the early Texas Instruments units (and others) only prototypes were ever built; it was never put into commercial production.

Regency TR-1 — the first transistor radio

Regency TR-1.

Two companies working together, Texas Instruments and Industrial Development Engineering Associates (I.D.E.A.), were behind the unveiling of the Regency TR-1, the world's first commercially-produced transistor radio. Previously, Texas Instruments was producing instrumentation for the oil industry and locating devices for the U.S. Navy, and I.D.E.A. built home television antenna boosters, but the two companies worked together on the TR-1, looking to grow revenues for their respective companies by breaking into this new product area.[4] In May 1954, Texas Instruments had designed and built a prototype and was looking for an established radio manufacturer to develop and market a radio using their transistors. None of the major radio makers including RCA, Philco, and Emerson were interested. The President of I.D.E.A. at the time, Ed Tudor, jumped at the opportunity to manufacture the TR-1, predicting sales of the transistor radios at "20 million radios in three years".[5] The Regency TR-1 was announced on October 18, 1954 by the Regency Division of I.D.E.A. in Indianapolis, Indiana, was put on sale in November 1954, and was the first practical transistor radio made in any significant numbers. The TR-1 was initially offered in black, bone white, mandarin red, and cloud gray. One year after the release of the TR-1 sales approached the 100,000 mark. The look and size of the TR-1 was well received, but the reviews of the TR-1's performance were typically adverse.[6] The Regency TR-1 is patented by Richard C. Koch, US 2892931 , former Project Engineer of I.D.E.A.

The design of the Regency TR-1 was outsourced by I.D.E.A. to the industrial design firm of Painter, Teague and Petertil. The design program was created within six weeks by way of telephone and design sketches exchanged through mail. The design of the first transistor radio won an award from the Industrial Design Society of New York and was selected by the Museum of Modern Art for the American Art and Design Exhibition in Paris in 1955.[7]

Raytheon 8-TP-1 — the second transistor radio

In February of 1955 the second transistor radio, the 8-TP-1, was introduced by Raytheon. It was a larger portable transistor radio, including an expansive four-inch speaker and four additional transistors (the TR-1 used only four). As a result the sound quality was much better than the TR-1. An additional benefit of the 8-TP-1 was its efficient battery consumption. In July 1955, the first positive review of a transistor radio appeared in the Consumer Reports that said, "The transistors in this set have not been used in an effort to build the smallest radio on the market, and good performance has not been sacrificed." Following the success of the 8-TP-1, Zenith, RCA, DeWald, and Crosley began flooding the market with additional transistor radio models.[8]

Japanese history in the market

While on a trip to the United States in 1952, Masura Ibuka, founder of Tokyo Telecommunications, discovered that AT&T was about to make licensing available for the transistor. Ibuka and physicist, Akio Morita, convinced the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) in Japan to finance the $25,000 licensing fee. For several months Ibuka traveled around the United States borrowing ideas from the American transistor manufacturers. Improving upon the ideas, Tokyo Telecommunications made its first functional transistor radio in 1954.[9] Within five years, Tokyo Telecommunications grew from seven employees to approximately five hundred. Other Japanese companies soon followed their entry into the American market and the grand total of electronic products exported from Japan in 1958 increased 2.5 times in comparison to 1957.[10]

TR-55 and TR-7

In August 1955, still a small company named Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo, Ltd. (Tokyo Telecommunications Engineering Corporation), Ibuka and Morita introduced their own five-transistor radio into the U.S. market, the TR-55, under the new brand name Sony.[11] With its release, Sony became the first company to manufacture a radio from the transistors on up, and to utilize all miniature components. Unfortunately for Sony, it is estimated that only 5,000 to 10,000 units were produced. Coupled by a lack of advertising the result was the demise of this initial attempt. In 1955, in addition to the TR-55, the TR-7 was introduced in the United States by Sony through trade magazines, but was as equally unsuccessful.[12]

TR-63

The TR-63 was introduced by Sony to the United States in December of 1957. The TR-63 was 1/4" narrower and 1/2" shorter than the original Regency TR-1. Like the TR-1 it was offered in four colors: lemon, green, red, and black. In addition to its smaller size, the TR-63 had a small tuning capacitor and required a new nine-volt battery which would become the standard. Approximately 100,000 units of the TR-63 were imported in 1957.[13] This "pocketable" (The term "pocketable" was a matter of some interpretation, as Sony allegedly had special shirts made with oversized pockets for their salesmen) model proved highly successful in the market.[14] With the visible success of the TR-63 Japanese competitors such as Toshiba and Sharp joined the market. By 1959, in the United States market, there were more than six million transistor radio sets produced by Japanese companies that represented $62 million in revenue. By the mid-1960's Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Korea began to take over and by the late sixties Japanese companies stopped manufacturing transistor radios.[15]

Pricing

Prior to the Regency TR-1, transistors were difficult to produce. Only one in five transistors that were produced worked as expected (only a 20% yield) and as a result the price remained extremely high.[16] When it was released in 1954, the Regency TR-1 cost $49.95 (roughly $364 in 2006 USD) and sold about 150,000 units. Raytheon and Zenith Electronics transistor radios soon followed and were priced even higher. In 1955, Raytheon's 8-TR-1 was priced at $80 (approximately $425 in 1994 USD).[17] Sony's TR-63, released in December of 1957 cost $39.95.[18] Following the success of the TR-63 the Japanese companies continued to make their transistor radios smaller. Coupled by the extremely low labor costs in Japan, the Japanese transistor radios began selling for as low as $25. In 1962 American manufacturers dropped prices of transistor radios to as low as $15.[19]

RCA had demonstrated a prototype transistor radio as early as 1952 and it is likely that they and the other radio makers were planning transistor radios of their own, but Texas Instruments and Regency were the first to offer a production model.

Sanyo 8S-P3.

The use of transistors instead of vacuum tubes as the amplifier elements meant that the device was much smaller, required far less power to operate than a tube radio and were more shock-resistant. Transistors are current amplifiers as tubes are voltage amplifiers. Since the transistor base draws current, its impedance is low in contrast to the high impedance of the vacuum tubes.[20] It also allowed "instant-on" operation, since there were no filaments to heat up. The typical portable tube radio of the fifties was about the size and weight of a lunchbox, and contained several heavy (and non-rechargeable) batteries: One or more so-called "A" batteries to heat the tube filaments and a large 45- to 90-volt "B" battery to power the signal circuits. By comparison, the "transistor" could fit in a pocket and weighed half a pound, or less, and was powered by standard flashlight batteries or a single compact 9-volt battery. (The now-familiar 9-volt battery was introduced for powering transistor radios.)

Listeners sometimes held an entire transistor radio directly against the side of the head, with the speaker against the ear, to minimize the "tinny" sound caused by the high resonant frequency of its small speaker enclosure. Most radios included earphone jacks and came with single earphones that provided only mediocre-quality sound reproduction due to the bandwidth limitation of AM (up to 10 kHz). To consumers familiar with the earphone-listening experience of the transistor radio, the first Sony Walkman cassette player, with a pair of high-fidelity stereo earphones, would provide a greatly contrasting display of audio fidelity.

A modern transistor radio (Sony Walkman SRF-S84 transistor radio, released 2001, without included earphones)

The transistor radio remains the single most popular communications device in existence. Some estimates suggest that there are at least seven billion of them in existence, almost all tunable to the common AM band, and an increasingly high percentage of those also tunable to the FM band. Some receive shortwave broadcasts as well. Most operate on battery power. They have become small and cheap due to improved electronics which has the ability to pack millions of transistors on one integrated circuit or chip. To the general public, the prefix "transistor" means a pocket radio; it can be used to refer to any small radio, but the term itself is now obsolete, since virtually all commercial broadcast receivers, pocket-sized or not, are now transistor-based.

Rise of digital audio players

Use of air signal only radios (AM/FM) have declined in popularity with the rise of portable digital audio players, which allow people to carry and listen to the music of their choosing and may also include a digital radio tuner. This is a popular choice with listeners who are dissatisfied with terrestrial music radio because of a limited selection of music or other criticisms. However, transistor radios are still popular for news, weather, live sporting events and emergency alert applications.

File:Trpod.png
A parodied advertisement for an Apple iPod based on the original 1954 Regency TR-1 advertisement

See also

References

  1. ^ The Invention of the Transistor
  2. ^ Handy, Erbe, Blackham, Antonier (1993). Made In Japan : Transistor Radios of the 1950s and 1960s. Chronicle Books. ISBN 0-8118-0271-X.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) page 13
  3. ^ "The Revolution in Your Pocket". Retrieved 2010-04-20.
  4. ^ "The Revolution in Your Pocket". Retrieved 2010-04-20.
  5. ^ David Lane and Robert Lane (1994). Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide. Wallace-Homestead Book Company. ISBN 0-87069-712-9. page 3
  6. ^ David Lane and Robert Lane (1994). Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide. Wallace-Homestead Book Company. ISBN 0-87069-712-9. page 4
  7. ^ Handy, Erbe, Blackham, Antonier (1993). Made In Japan : Transistor Radios of the 1950s and 1960s. Chronicle Books. ISBN 0-8118-0271-X.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) pages 15-17
  8. ^ David Lane and Robert Lane (1994). Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide. Wallace-Homestead Book Company. ISBN 0-87069-712-9. pages 4 and 5
  9. ^ David Lane and Robert Lane (1994). Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide. Wallace-Homestead Book Company. ISBN 0-87069-712-9. pages 5 and 6
  10. ^ Handy, Erbe, Blackham, Antonier (1993). Made In Japan : Transistor Radios of the 1950s and 1960s. Chronicle Books. ISBN 0-8118-0271-X.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) pages 23-29
  11. ^ John Nathan (1999). SONY : the private life. Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 0-395-89327-5. page 35
  12. ^ David Lane and Robert Lane (1994). Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide. Wallace-Homestead Book Company. ISBN 0-87069-712-9. pages 5 and 6
  13. ^ David Lane and Robert Lane (1994). Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide. Wallace-Homestead Book Company. ISBN 0-87069-712-9. pages 6
  14. ^ "Sony Global - Sony History". Retrieved 2008-09-01.
  15. ^ David Lane and Robert Lane (1994). Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide. Wallace-Homestead Book Company. ISBN 0-87069-712-9. pages 6 and 7
  16. ^ David Lane and Robert Lane (1994). Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide. Wallace-Homestead Book Company. ISBN 0-87069-712-9. page 2
  17. ^ David Lane and Robert Lane (1994). Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide. Wallace-Homestead Book Company. ISBN 0-87069-712-9. page 4
  18. ^ David Lane and Robert Lane (1994). Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide. Wallace-Homestead Book Company. ISBN 0-87069-712-9. page 6
  19. ^ David Lane and Robert Lane (1994). Transistor Radios: A Collector's Encyclopedia and Price Guide. Wallace-Homestead Book Company. ISBN 0-87069-712-9. page 7
  20. ^ Donald L. Stoner and L.A. Earnshaw (1963). The Transistor Radio Handbook: Theory, Circuitry, and Equipment. Editors and Engineers, Ltd. page 32

Further reading

  • Michael F. Wolff: "The secret six-month project. Why Texas Instruments decided to put the first transistor radio on the market by Christmas 1954 and how it was accomplished." IEEE Spectrum, December 1985, pages 64-69
  • Transistor Radios: 1954-1968 (Schiffer Book for Collectors) by Norman R. Smith
  • Made in Japan: Transistor Radios of the 1950s and 1960s by Handy, Erbe, Blackham, Antonier (1993) (ISBN 0-8118-0271-X)
  • Unique books on Transistor Radios by Eric Wrobbel
  • The Portable Radio in American Life by University of Arizona Professor Michael Brian Schiffer, Ph.D. (The University of Arizona Press, 1991).
  • Restoring Pocket Radios (DVD) by Ron Mansfield and Eric Wrobbel. (ChildhoodRadios.com, 2002).
  • The Regency TR-1 story, based on an interview with Regency co-founder, John Pies (partner with Joe Weaver) www.regencytr1.com/Regency_Early_Years.html