DocumentCode
1204115
Title
Radio Standards Go to War
Author
Westman, Harold P.
Author_Institution
Secretary, War Committee on Radio, American Standards Association, New York, N.Y.
Volume
31
Issue
7
fYear
1943
fDate
7/1/1943 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
381
Lastpage
384
Abstract
World War I clearly demonstrated the economies which engineering standards provide. To obtain such benefits in the radio field at this time, the War Committee on Radio is developing, under the war procedure of the American Standards Association, standards for radio components. The wartime and peacetime procedures of preparing standards are described. To be most useful, single designs of components must be chosen which are suitable for all military and naval conditions which may be met all over the world, and each part must carry unchanged its own identification number throughout all of the branches of the Armed Services. These standards must not only give complete instructions to the manufacturer who produces the component but must also provide the equipment design engineer with all the data he needs. To permit the inspection of components by personnel with sharply limited engineering knowledge, the standards are written in simple language and mathematics and other complexities are avoided.
Keywords
Data engineering; Design engineering; Inspection; Knowledge engineering; Manufacturing; Personnel; Production; Standardization; Standards development; Standards publication;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IRE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0096-8390
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JRPROC.1943.231714
Filename
1694779
Link To Document