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Grimeton Radio Station

Grimeton Radio Station (Swedish pronunciation: [ˈɡrɪ̂mːɛˌtɔn])[1] in southern Sweden, close to Varberg in Halland, is an early longwave transatlantic wireless telegraphy station built in 1922–1924, that has been preserved as a historical site. From the 1920s through the 1940s it was used to transmit telegram traffic by Morse code to North America and other countries, and during World War II was Sweden's only telecommunication link with the rest of the world. It is the only remaining example of an early pre-electronic radio transmitter technology called an Alexanderson alternator. It was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2004, with the statement: "Grimeton Radio Station, Varberg is an exceptionally well preserved example of a type of telecommunication centre, representing the technological achievements by the early 1920s, as well as documenting the further development over some three decades." The radio station is also an anchor site for the European Route of Industrial Heritage.[2] The transmitter is still in operational condition, and each year on a day called Alexanderson Day is started up and transmits brief Morse code test transmissions, which can be received all over Europe.

Grimeton Radio Station
Grimeton Radiostation (Swedish)
The main building with a log-periodic antenna from the 1960s in the background.
Interactive fullscreen map
General information
Architectural styleNordic Classicism
LocationGrimeton, Varberg Municipality, Halland County, Sweden
Coordinates57°6′50.4″N 12°24′15.8″E / 57.114000°N 12.404389°E / 57.114000; 12.404389
Construction startedNovember 1922
Completed24 May 1925
Opened1 December 1924
Inaugurated2 July 1925
OwnerStiftelsen Världsarvet Grimeton
Website
grimeton.org
Official nameGrimeton Radio Station, Varberg
CriteriaCultural: ii, iv
Reference1134
Inscription2004 (28th Session)
Area109.09 ha
Buffer zone3,854 ha
Alexanderson alternator in the Grimeton VLF transmitter. The drive motor is at the extreme right; the speed-increaser gearbox is just to its left. Note the bronze-colored shaft coupling.

History edit

Beginning around 1910 industrial countries built networks of powerful transoceanic longwave radiotelegraphy stations to communicate telegraphically with other countries. During the First World War radio became a strategic technology when it was realized that a nation without long-distance radio capability could be isolated from the rest of the world by an enemy cutting its submarine telegraph cables.[3] Sweden's geographical dependence on other countries' underwater cable networks, and the temporary loss of those vital connections during the war, motivated a decision in 1920 by the Swedish Parliament that the Royal Telegraph Agency build a "big radiotelegraphy station" in Sweden to transmit telegram traffic across the Atlantic.[3]

At the time, there were several different technologies used for high power radio transmission, each owned by a different giant industrial company. Bids were requested from Telefunken in Berlin, The Marconi Company in London, Radio Corporation of America (RCA) in New York and Société Française Radio-Electrique in Paris. The transmitter chosen was the Alexanderson alternator, invented around 1906 by Swedish-American Ernst Alexanderson and manufactured by RCA. This consisted of a huge rotating electromechanical AC generator (alternator) turned by an electric motor at a fast enough speed that it generated radio frequency alternating current, which was applied to the antenna. It was one of the first transmitters to generate sinusoidal continuous waves, which could communicate at longer range than the damped waves which were used by the earlier spark gap transmitters. The alternator was chosen because it was already used in most other transatlantic radio stations, reducing potential compatibility problems.[3] The fact that it was designed by a Swede may have also played a part.[3]

After careful calculations, the station was located in Grimeton, on the southwest coast of Sweden nearest North America, which allowed good radio wave propagation conditions over the North Atlantic to America, and also Norway, Denmark, and Scotland.[3] The site was purchased in autumn 1922, construction began by the end of the year, and the station was finished in 1924.[3] Two 200 kilowatt Alexanderson alternators were installed, to allow maintenance to be performed on one without interrupting radio traffic.[4] To achieve daytime communication over such long distances, transoceanic stations took advantage of an earth-ionosphere waveguide mechanism which required them to transmit at frequencies in the very low frequency (VLF) range below 30 kHz. Radio transmitters required extremely large antennas to radiate these long waves efficiently. The Grimeton station had a huge multiply-tuned flattop antenna 1.9 km (1.2 miles) long consisting of twelve (later reduced to eight) wires supported on six 127 m (380 foot) high steel towers, fed at one end by vertical feeder wires extending up from the transmitter building. The station started operation in 1924, transmitting radiotelegraphy traffic with the callsign SAQ on a wavelength of about 18,000 metres (16.7 kHz),[4] later changed to 17,442 metres (17.2 kHz),[5] to RCA's Radio Central receivers on Long Island, New York. It immediately took over 95% of the telegram traffic to America.[3]

The Alexanderson alternator technology was becoming obsolete even as it was installed. Vacuum tube electronic oscillator transmitters, which used the triode vacuum tube invented by Lee De Forest in 1907, replaced most pre-electronic transmitters in the early 1920s. However the large capital investment in an alternator transmitter caused owners to keep these huge behemoths in use long after they were technologically obsolete. By the mid-1930s transatlantic communication had switched to short waves, and vacuum tube shortwave transmitters were installed in the main building, using dipole and rhombic antennas in a neighbouring field. The Alexanderson alternator found a second use as a naval transmitter to communicate with submarines, as VLF frequencies can penetrate a short distance into seawater.

During the Second World War 1939–1945, the station experienced a heyday, when it was one of Scandinavia's gateways to the outside world. Underwater communication cable connections had once again been quickly severed by nations at war and the radiotelegraphy transmissions were a link to the outside world. Several new transmitters were therefore added to the station. As users during the war included the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs and various embassies and legations, the radio station’s transmissions were subject to interception by signals intelligence operations such as the British Y service.

Following the war, additional transmitters were installed and the number of destinations increased, reaching a peak in the 1950s when the station operated twelve shortwave transmitters and one electronic longwave transmitter (as well as the original Alexanderson system), maintaining traffic to some twenty different countries in Europe, Asia and the Americas. By that point, the telegraphic transmissions had shifted from Morse code to radioteletype and the station also provided radiofax and radiotelephony services.

Starting in the 1960s, many of the transmitters were beginning show their age and were subsequently decommissioned. However, rather than repurposing the original station building, a new facility was built to house new radio equipment and several new antennas were erected from the mid-60s and onwards. These investments were relatively short-lived in their original context as they coincided with the move away from using fixed radio stations for international communications in favour of satellites and new types of cables. Instead, focus would eventually move to long-range maritime radio.

Out of the original system, one of the alternator transmitters had been gradually dismantled and scrapped in the 1950s and 60s to free up space in the station building. The remaining alternator continued to be used for naval transmissions until the early 1990s, when a modern solid-state LF transmitter replaced it.

Grimeton Radio Station is now the only station left in the transatlantic network of nine long wave stations that were built during the years 1918–1924, all equipped with Alexanderson alternators. In 2004 it was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List. The Grimeton transmitter is the last surviving example of an Alexanderson alternator, the only radio station left from the pre-vacuum tube era, and is still in working condition. Each year, on a day called Alexanderson Day, either on the last Sunday in June, or on the first Sunday in July, whichever comes closer to 2 July, the site holds an open house during which the transmitter is started up and transmits test messages on 17.2 kHz using its call sign SAQ, which can be received all over Europe.

Technical description edit

 
Principle diagram of information transmission  


The electromechanical transmitter in Grimeton transmitted at a frequency of 17.2 kHz, i.e. in the VLF range, and was thus able to reach America.

In principle, an electric generator (A) is used for this purpose. This is set in rotation by a motor (500 HP, 711.3 rpm) via a gearbox (setup ratio: 2.97) and thus generates a continuous sinusoidal AC voltage (B) of 17.2 kHz or 17,200 Hz. [6]

For comparison, generators of the public electricity networks produce an alternating voltage of 50 or 60 Hz, depending on the country. To produce such high frequencies with a generator, a fast-rotating generator (2115 revolutions per minute) with a special design is necessary.

In Grimeton, mainly Morse signals were transmitted. To send information with the generated alternating voltage, the texts to be sent are translated into a sequence of short and long pulses according to the Morse code by means of a Morse key (D). The switchgear (C) uses these pulses to control the transmission of the AC voltage to the antenna (F). When the key is pressed, the AC voltage is passed on to the antenna and transmitted from there. If the key is not pressed, the AC voltage is suppressed by the switchgear and no signal is transmitted. Thus, for example, as shown in (E), the letter A can be transmitted by a short and a long wave packet and detected at the receiver.

The AC voltage generated has a voltage of 2000 volts [7] and a power of 200 kW [6] (although these days it is usually limited to about 80 kW). Such strong signals cannot be switched on and off by a simple switch, it would cause considerable sparking. In Grimeton, a different effect was used for this purpose.

As known from historical radios, the antenna and the adjacent coils and capacitors form an resonant circuit, which must be tuned to the desired frequency so that the energy is optimally transmitted. In Grimeton, the tuning of this oscillating circuit is now disturbed in the switchgear (C) when the Morse key is not pressed, thus suppressing transmission. Thus it is possible to influence an AC power of 200kW with a small power (3 kW DC).

 
Resonant circuit consisting of antenna (I), transformer (D) and magnetic amplifier (G)


The antenna resonant circuit essentially consists of the antenna (I), a transformer (D) and a magnetic amplifier (G).[6][8]

As usual in electric generators, an alternating voltage is generated in adjacent coils (B) in the generator (A) by means of rotating magnetic fields. In Grimeton, these coils are mounted on the stator, divided into 2x32 sectors, on both sides to the rotor. The individual windings of a sector are connected to corresponding primary windings (C) of the transformer (D). When the primary voltages are transmitted to the secondary winding (E) of the transformer, these voltages are superimposed to form a strong, sinusoidal output signal which is output to the antenna and transmitted.

The control winding (F) and the magnetic amplifier (G) are responsible for controlling the transmission process by the Morse key (H). The magnetic amplifier is an arrangement of coils and capacitors whose AC resistance is indirectly influenced by the Morse key and a DC source. When the Morse key is open, the solenoid amplifier short-circuits the control winding (F), to put it simply. The short-circuiting of (F) disturbs the transmitting oscillating circuit, so that finally no more than 9 % of the normal antenna current flows [2, page 53]. The situation described above (full transmit or no transmit at all) can therefore only be achieved approximately, but this is sufficient in practice.


 
Principle sketch Section through the generator (not to scale)


In order to achieve the necessary transmission frequency, the generator of the Alexanderson alternator type [8] [9] must not only rotate quickly, but it also needs a special construction with many magnetic poles. For this purpose, the steel, and thus magnetizable rotor disk (A) is provided at the edge with 488 slots (B), which are filled with a non-magnetic material.[7] By means of the coils (D), a continuous magnetic field (E) is generated in the stator by means of direct current, in which the coils (C) are also located. Due to the rotating rotor disk, this magnetic field between the coils (C) is alternately reinforced by the steel disk and the non-magnetic slots are damped. This cyclically changing magnetic field induces a sinusoidal voltage in the coils (C).

The above sketch is not to scale, the air gap between rotor and stator frame is only 1mm wide.[8] The rotor is a steel disc measuring 1.6 m in diameter and approximately 7.5 cm thick at the periphery.

Antenna system edit

To achieve maximum range, like other transoceanic radiotelegraphy stations of this era it transmitted in the VLF band, at a frequency of 17.2 kilohertz and so the wavelength is approximately 17442 meters. Even though the antenna is approximately 2 km long, it is short compared with the wavelength and so it is not very efficient.

The antenna system consists of antenna wires supported by masts, such as those used for high-voltage power lines. The six antenna masts each have a 46m cross-arm at the top and are 127m high. Today they carry 8 antenna conductors although originally there were 12.

The multiple-tuned antenna used at Grimeton is a pre-WW1 invention by E F W Alexanderson, which uses a number of vertical radiator wires interconnected by the flat-top wires, which serve both as top capacitance and as a high-voltage transmission line.

Each vertical wire is terminated in a ground-mounted tuning inductance (or "coil") which serves to tune out the capacitive reactance of the wire, and to establish the proper phase relationship between the currents in the wires.

By dividing the total current flowing into the ground or counterpoise system between several connection points, the equivalent ground loss resistance may be substantially reduced compared to the case when all current is fed into a single vertical radiator.

This increases the antenna efficiency with about an order of magnitude.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jöran Sahlgren; Gösta Bergman (1979). Svenska ortnamn med uttalsuppgifter (in Swedish). p. 9.
  2. ^ "ERIH Entry: Varberg World Heritage radio station". European Route of Industrial Heritage. 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "History". Grimeton Radio Station World Heritage Site. World Heritage Grimeton. Retrieved 22 April 2023.
  4. ^ a b "A Great Swedish Station". Experimental Wireless & The Wireless Engineer. 2 (16). London: Iliffe & Sons: 224. January 1925. Retrieved 7 February 2023.
  5. ^ Matsumoto, E. (2010). "Alternator type High Frequency Generator remains in the World". 2010 Second Region 8 IEEE Conference on the History of Communications. Madrid, Spain: IEEE. pp. 1–6. doi:10.1109/HISTELCON.2010.5735302.
  6. ^ a b c "The Alexanderson transmitter – The Alexander association". Retrieved 2023-10-31.
  7. ^ a b "CW or MCW? – Föreningen Alexander". Friends of Grimeton Veteran Radio. Retrieved 2023-10-31.
  8. ^ a b c Bucher, Elmer E. (1920). "Technical description of the Alexanderson system for radio telegraph and radio telephone transmission". HathiTrust. Retrieved 2023-10-31.
  9. ^ Mayes, Thorn L. "The Alexanderson 200 KW High Frequency Alternator Transmitters" (PDF). Society of Wireless Pioneers -Historical Papers. Retrieved 2023-10-31.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • World Heritage profile
  • Explore Grimeton Radio Station in the UNESCO collection on Google Arts and Culture
  • Alexander - Grimeton Veteran Radio's Friends
  • SAQ Grimeton at Structurae
  • UHF radio and television tower Grimeton at Structurae
  • Receive SAQ with soundcard only 2015-11-21 at the Wayback Machine
  • Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 1, SkyscraperPage
  • Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 2, SkyscraperPage
  • Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 3, SkyscraperPage
  • Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 4, SkyscraperPage
  • Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 5, SkyscraperPage
  • Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 6, SkyscraperPage
  • Grimeton TV mast, ScyscraperPage
  • Alexanderson Society official webpage (in Swedish)
  • Transmission with christmas greetings

grimeton, radio, station, swedish, pronunciation, ˈɡrɪ, mːɛˌtɔn, southern, sweden, close, varberg, halland, early, longwave, transatlantic, wireless, telegraphy, station, built, 1922, 1924, that, been, preserved, historical, site, from, 1920s, through, 1940s, . Grimeton Radio Station Swedish pronunciation ˈɡrɪ mːɛˌtɔn 1 in southern Sweden close to Varberg in Halland is an early longwave transatlantic wireless telegraphy station built in 1922 1924 that has been preserved as a historical site From the 1920s through the 1940s it was used to transmit telegram traffic by Morse code to North America and other countries and during World War II was Sweden s only telecommunication link with the rest of the world It is the only remaining example of an early pre electronic radio transmitter technology called an Alexanderson alternator It was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2004 with the statement Grimeton Radio Station Varberg is an exceptionally well preserved example of a type of telecommunication centre representing the technological achievements by the early 1920s as well as documenting the further development over some three decades The radio station is also an anchor site for the European Route of Industrial Heritage 2 The transmitter is still in operational condition and each year on a day called Alexanderson Day is started up and transmits brief Morse code test transmissions which can be received all over Europe Grimeton Radio StationGrimeton Radiostation Swedish The main building with a log periodic antenna from the 1960s in the background Interactive fullscreen mapGeneral informationArchitectural styleNordic ClassicismLocationGrimeton Varberg Municipality Halland County SwedenCoordinates57 6 50 4 N 12 24 15 8 E 57 114000 N 12 404389 E 57 114000 12 404389Construction startedNovember 1922Completed24 May 1925Opened1 December 1924Inaugurated2 July 1925OwnerStiftelsen Varldsarvet GrimetonWebsitegrimeton wbr orgUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameGrimeton Radio Station VarbergCriteriaCultural ii ivReference1134Inscription2004 28th Session Area109 09 haBuffer zone3 854 ha Alexanderson alternator in the Grimeton VLF transmitter The drive motor is at the extreme right the speed increaser gearbox is just to its left Note the bronze colored shaft coupling Contents 1 History 2 Technical description 3 Antenna system 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editBeginning around 1910 industrial countries built networks of powerful transoceanic longwave radiotelegraphy stations to communicate telegraphically with other countries During the First World War radio became a strategic technology when it was realized that a nation without long distance radio capability could be isolated from the rest of the world by an enemy cutting its submarine telegraph cables 3 Sweden s geographical dependence on other countries underwater cable networks and the temporary loss of those vital connections during the war motivated a decision in 1920 by the Swedish Parliament that the Royal Telegraph Agency build a big radiotelegraphy station in Sweden to transmit telegram traffic across the Atlantic 3 At the time there were several different technologies used for high power radio transmission each owned by a different giant industrial company Bids were requested from Telefunken in Berlin The Marconi Company in London Radio Corporation of America RCA in New York and Societe Francaise Radio Electrique in Paris The transmitter chosen was the Alexanderson alternator invented around 1906 by Swedish American Ernst Alexanderson and manufactured by RCA This consisted of a huge rotating electromechanical AC generator alternator turned by an electric motor at a fast enough speed that it generated radio frequency alternating current which was applied to the antenna It was one of the first transmitters to generate sinusoidal continuous waves which could communicate at longer range than the damped waves which were used by the earlier spark gap transmitters The alternator was chosen because it was already used in most other transatlantic radio stations reducing potential compatibility problems 3 The fact that it was designed by a Swede may have also played a part 3 After careful calculations the station was located in Grimeton on the southwest coast of Sweden nearest North America which allowed good radio wave propagation conditions over the North Atlantic to America and also Norway Denmark and Scotland 3 The site was purchased in autumn 1922 construction began by the end of the year and the station was finished in 1924 3 Two 200 kilowatt Alexanderson alternators were installed to allow maintenance to be performed on one without interrupting radio traffic 4 To achieve daytime communication over such long distances transoceanic stations took advantage of an earth ionosphere waveguide mechanism which required them to transmit at frequencies in the very low frequency VLF range below 30 kHz Radio transmitters required extremely large antennas to radiate these long waves efficiently The Grimeton station had a huge multiply tuned flattop antenna 1 9 km 1 2 miles long consisting of twelve later reduced to eight wires supported on six 127 m 380 foot high steel towers fed at one end by vertical feeder wires extending up from the transmitter building The station started operation in 1924 transmitting radiotelegraphy traffic with the callsign SAQ on a wavelength of about 18 000 metres 16 7 kHz 4 later changed to 17 442 metres 17 2 kHz 5 to RCA s Radio Central receivers on Long Island New York It immediately took over 95 of the telegram traffic to America 3 The Alexanderson alternator technology was becoming obsolete even as it was installed Vacuum tube electronic oscillator transmitters which used the triode vacuum tube invented by Lee De Forest in 1907 replaced most pre electronic transmitters in the early 1920s However the large capital investment in an alternator transmitter caused owners to keep these huge behemoths in use long after they were technologically obsolete By the mid 1930s transatlantic communication had switched to short waves and vacuum tube shortwave transmitters were installed in the main building using dipole and rhombic antennas in a neighbouring field The Alexanderson alternator found a second use as a naval transmitter to communicate with submarines as VLF frequencies can penetrate a short distance into seawater During the Second World War 1939 1945 the station experienced a heyday when it was one of Scandinavia s gateways to the outside world Underwater communication cable connections had once again been quickly severed by nations at war and the radiotelegraphy transmissions were a link to the outside world Several new transmitters were therefore added to the station As users during the war included the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs and various embassies and legations the radio station s transmissions were subject to interception by signals intelligence operations such as the British Y service Following the war additional transmitters were installed and the number of destinations increased reaching a peak in the 1950s when the station operated twelve shortwave transmitters and one electronic longwave transmitter as well as the original Alexanderson system maintaining traffic to some twenty different countries in Europe Asia and the Americas By that point the telegraphic transmissions had shifted from Morse code to radioteletype and the station also provided radiofax and radiotelephony services Starting in the 1960s many of the transmitters were beginning show their age and were subsequently decommissioned However rather than repurposing the original station building a new facility was built to house new radio equipment and several new antennas were erected from the mid 60s and onwards These investments were relatively short lived in their original context as they coincided with the move away from using fixed radio stations for international communications in favour of satellites and new types of cables Instead focus would eventually move to long range maritime radio Out of the original system one of the alternator transmitters had been gradually dismantled and scrapped in the 1950s and 60s to free up space in the station building The remaining alternator continued to be used for naval transmissions until the early 1990s when a modern solid state LF transmitter replaced it Grimeton Radio Station is now the only station left in the transatlantic network of nine long wave stations that were built during the years 1918 1924 all equipped with Alexanderson alternators In 2004 it was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List The Grimeton transmitter is the last surviving example of an Alexanderson alternator the only radio station left from the pre vacuum tube era and is still in working condition Each year on a day called Alexanderson Day either on the last Sunday in June or on the first Sunday in July whichever comes closer to 2 July the site holds an open house during which the transmitter is started up and transmits test messages on 17 2 kHz using its call sign SAQ which can be received all over Europe Technical description edit nbsp Principle diagram of information transmission The electromechanical transmitter in Grimeton transmitted at a frequency of 17 2 kHz i e in the VLF range and was thus able to reach America In principle an electric generator A is used for this purpose This is set in rotation by a motor 500 HP 711 3 rpm via a gearbox setup ratio 2 97 and thus generates a continuous sinusoidal AC voltage B of 17 2 kHz or 17 200 Hz 6 For comparison generators of the public electricity networks produce an alternating voltage of 50 or 60 Hz depending on the country To produce such high frequencies with a generator a fast rotating generator 2115 revolutions per minute with a special design is necessary In Grimeton mainly Morse signals were transmitted To send information with the generated alternating voltage the texts to be sent are translated into a sequence of short and long pulses according to the Morse code by means of a Morse key D The switchgear C uses these pulses to control the transmission of the AC voltage to the antenna F When the key is pressed the AC voltage is passed on to the antenna and transmitted from there If the key is not pressed the AC voltage is suppressed by the switchgear and no signal is transmitted Thus for example as shown in E the letter A can be transmitted by a short and a long wave packet and detected at the receiver The AC voltage generated has a voltage of 2000 volts 7 and a power of 200 kW 6 although these days it is usually limited to about 80 kW Such strong signals cannot be switched on and off by a simple switch it would cause considerable sparking In Grimeton a different effect was used for this purpose As known from historical radios the antenna and the adjacent coils and capacitors form an resonant circuit which must be tuned to the desired frequency so that the energy is optimally transmitted In Grimeton the tuning of this oscillating circuit is now disturbed in the switchgear C when the Morse key is not pressed thus suppressing transmission Thus it is possible to influence an AC power of 200kW with a small power 3 kW DC nbsp Resonant circuit consisting of antenna I transformer D and magnetic amplifier G The antenna resonant circuit essentially consists of the antenna I a transformer D and a magnetic amplifier G 6 8 As usual in electric generators an alternating voltage is generated in adjacent coils B in the generator A by means of rotating magnetic fields In Grimeton these coils are mounted on the stator divided into 2x32 sectors on both sides to the rotor The individual windings of a sector are connected to corresponding primary windings C of the transformer D When the primary voltages are transmitted to the secondary winding E of the transformer these voltages are superimposed to form a strong sinusoidal output signal which is output to the antenna and transmitted The control winding F and the magnetic amplifier G are responsible for controlling the transmission process by the Morse key H The magnetic amplifier is an arrangement of coils and capacitors whose AC resistance is indirectly influenced by the Morse key and a DC source When the Morse key is open the solenoid amplifier short circuits the control winding F to put it simply The short circuiting of F disturbs the transmitting oscillating circuit so that finally no more than 9 of the normal antenna current flows 2 page 53 The situation described above full transmit or no transmit at all can therefore only be achieved approximately but this is sufficient in practice nbsp Principle sketch Section through the generator not to scale In order to achieve the necessary transmission frequency the generator of the Alexanderson alternator type 8 9 must not only rotate quickly but it also needs a special construction with many magnetic poles For this purpose the steel and thus magnetizable rotor disk A is provided at the edge with 488 slots B which are filled with a non magnetic material 7 By means of the coils D a continuous magnetic field E is generated in the stator by means of direct current in which the coils C are also located Due to the rotating rotor disk this magnetic field between the coils C is alternately reinforced by the steel disk and the non magnetic slots are damped This cyclically changing magnetic field induces a sinusoidal voltage in the coils C The above sketch is not to scale the air gap between rotor and stator frame is only 1mm wide 8 The rotor is a steel disc measuring 1 6 m in diameter and approximately 7 5 cm thick at the periphery Antenna system editTo achieve maximum range like other transoceanic radiotelegraphy stations of this era it transmitted in the VLF band at a frequency of 17 2 kilohertz and so the wavelength is approximately 17442 meters Even though the antenna is approximately 2 km long it is short compared with the wavelength and so it is not very efficient The antenna system consists of antenna wires supported by masts such as those used for high voltage power lines The six antenna masts each have a 46m cross arm at the top and are 127m high Today they carry 8 antenna conductors although originally there were 12 The multiple tuned antenna used at Grimeton is a pre WW1 invention by E F W Alexanderson which uses a number of vertical radiator wires interconnected by the flat top wires which serve both as top capacitance and as a high voltage transmission line Each vertical wire is terminated in a ground mounted tuning inductance or coil which serves to tune out the capacitive reactance of the wire and to establish the proper phase relationship between the currents in the wires By dividing the total current flowing into the ground or counterpoise system between several connection points the equivalent ground loss resistance may be substantially reduced compared to the case when all current is fed into a single vertical radiator This increases the antenna efficiency with about an order of magnitude Gallery edit nbsp 1900 meter 1 2 mile flattop antenna nbsp Interior of Grimeton radio station nbsp Log periodic shortwave antenna beside the transmitter building nbsp Interior of transmitter hall showing control panel for alternator nbsp Interior of transmitter hall showing Alexanderson alternator nbsp Grimeton World Heritage entrance hall nbsp A warning sign at the entrance nbsp Grimeton VLF masts See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Varberg Radio Station List of masts List of towersReferences edit Joran Sahlgren Gosta Bergman 1979 Svenska ortnamn med uttalsuppgifter in Swedish p 9 ERIH Entry Varberg World Heritage radio station European Route of Industrial Heritage 2014 Retrieved 15 January 2015 a b c d e f g History Grimeton Radio Station World Heritage Site World Heritage Grimeton Retrieved 22 April 2023 a b A Great Swedish Station Experimental Wireless amp The Wireless Engineer 2 16 London Iliffe amp Sons 224 January 1925 Retrieved 7 February 2023 Matsumoto E 2010 Alternator type High Frequency Generator remains in the World 2010 Second Region 8 IEEE Conference on the History of Communications Madrid Spain IEEE pp 1 6 doi 10 1109 HISTELCON 2010 5735302 a b c The Alexanderson transmitter The Alexander association Retrieved 2023 10 31 a b CW or MCW Foreningen Alexander Friends of Grimeton Veteran Radio Retrieved 2023 10 31 a b c Bucher Elmer E 1920 Technical description of the Alexanderson system for radio telegraph and radio telephone transmission HathiTrust Retrieved 2023 10 31 Mayes Thorn L The Alexanderson 200 KW High Frequency Alternator Transmitters PDF Society of Wireless Pioneers Historical Papers Retrieved 2023 10 31 External links editOfficial website World Heritage profile Explore Grimeton Radio Station in the UNESCO collection on Google Arts and Culture Alexander Grimeton Veteran Radio s Friends SAQ Grimeton at Structurae UHF radio and television tower Grimeton at Structurae Receive SAQ with soundcard only Archived 2015 11 21 at the Wayback Machine Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 1 SkyscraperPage Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 2 SkyscraperPage Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 3 SkyscraperPage Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 4 SkyscraperPage Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 5 SkyscraperPage Grimeton VLF transmitter tower 6 SkyscraperPage Grimeton TV mast ScyscraperPage Alexanderson Society official webpage in Swedish Transmission with christmas greetings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grimeton Radio Station amp oldid 1219545383, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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