First Edition. — New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co, 1952. — 610 p.
This book brings to engineers in easy-to-use form the important radio communication, radio broadcasting, television and radar design articles that have appeared in Electronics during the past five years. The book is a sequel to “Electronics for Engineers” and “Electronics Manual for Radio Engineers,” which similarly made available in convenient reference form the same type of material from earlier issues of this magazine. For this third book, the new material was carefully selected, checked, edited and condensed to have maximum reference value. The resulting 252 articles were then logically arranged by subject matter into fifteen chapters, so that each chapter constitutes a comprehensive survey of recent developments. Designers, builders and users of electronic equipment will find here the equations, charts, nomographs, tables and other reference data that are so hard to find in loose copies or bound volumes of the original magazine. Chapters are arranged in alphabetical order so that oftentimes chapter headings alone serve to locate the desired information, as follows: Amplifiers; Antennas; Audio; Cathode-Ray Tubes; Components, Electronic Music; Filters; Measurements; Microwaves; Oscillators; Power Supplies; Propagation; Pulses; Receivers; Transmission Lines; Transmitters.