Step-by-Step—Class 9

Close-up photograph of three transistors on a blue surface, showing different package types with metal leads extending outward. The focus is on the front transistor with a metal mounting tab and three pins, while the others are slightly blurred in the background.

Last updated on 2025-11-07 at 11:38 EST (UTC-05:00)

  1. Step by step – 1st Class
  2. Step-by-Step – 2nd Class
  3. Amateur Radio Codes of Conduct
  4. Step-by-Step – 3rd Class
  5. Step-by-Step – Class 4a
  6. Step-by-Step – Classes 4b & 4c
  7. Step-by-Step—Class 5
  8. Step-by-Step—Class 6
  9. Step-by-Step—Class 7
  10. Step-by-Step—Class 8a
  11. Step-by-Step—Class 8b
  12. Step-by-Step—Class 9
  13. Step-by-Step—Class 10
  14. Step-by-step—Class 11
  15. A Modern Code of Conduct and Ethics for Amateur Radio
  16. Step-by-step—Class 12
  17. Step-by-step—Class 13
  18. Step-by-step—Class 14
  19. Step-by-step—Class 15
  20. Step-by-step—Class 16
  21. Step-by-step—Class 17
  22. Reflection: My Amateur Radio Journey So Far
  23. Authorized to Transmit

From Vacuum Tubes to Transistors: A Personal Reflection on the Building Blocks of Modern Electronics

Every once in a while, I come across a presentation that reminds me just how remarkable our journey in electronics has been. Al Penney’s “Diodes, Transistors and Tubes”, class 9 in the RAC Basic Qualification Course, is one of those — a concise, clear walk-through the history and physics that underpin virtually everything we take for granted in modern technology. [1]

For anyone who’s ever built a circuit, troubleshot a control system, or simply wondered how a radio turns electromagnetic waves into sound, Al’s lecture is a reminder that the devices we use daily rest on a few elegant physical principles.

Atoms, Electrons, and the Dance of Conductivity

Al starts where all good electronics stories should: the atom. Protons, neutrons, and electrons — familiar from high school physics — become the players in a complex dance that determines whether a material is a conductor, an insulator, or something in between.

Semiconductors sit in that fascinating “in-between” zone. By carefully introducing impurities, or doping, engineers can coax silicon or germanium into behaving predictably — letting electrons move when we want them to and stopping them when we don’t. That’s the foundation of everything from radio detectors to modern CPUs.

The Simple Genius of the Diode

The humble semiconductor diode, as Al explains, is just a P–N junction that lets current flow one way but not the other.

Diagram of a PN junction diode showing both its physical structure and circuit symbol. The upper part depicts a semiconductor junction with p-type silicon on the left (anode) and n-type silicon on the right (cathode). The lower part shows the corresponding diode circuit symbol with the triangle representing current flow direction toward the vertical line, labelled with anode and cathode terminals.
A p–n junction diode. The circuit symbol is also shown.
By Raffamaiden – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, Link

It’s the electronic equivalent of a check valve — elegantly simple, profoundly useful. With that one device, we can rectify AC into DC, demodulate radio signals, or stabilize voltage with a Zener diode.

I’ve always appreciated how intuitively physical these analogies are. Whether you think of diodes as electrical check valves or semiconductors as engineered crystals, they connect the abstract world of physics with the very real world of current and voltage.

Transistors: The Revolution in a Grain of Germanium

A close-up photograph of the first transistor, the point-contact transistor invented at Bell Labs in 1947. The device is mounted on a clear acrylic stand, showing delicate wires connected to a small triangular germanium crystal on a metal base. Above the crystal, a bent wire spring applies pressure to the contacts. The setup includes fine leads and soldered connections, demonstrating the experimental nature of the original prototype used in early solid-state electronics research.
The first transistor ever made, built by John Bardeen, William Shockley and Walter H. Brattain of Bell Labs in 1947. Original exhibited in Bell Laboratories. [2]
Unitronic, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Side-by-side image showing a point-contact transistor and its schematic diagram. On the left is a close-up photograph of an early germanium transistor with labeled components: emitter, collector, base, and a spring pressing a gold foil contact onto the germanium crystal mounted on a metal base. On the right is a simplified diagram showing the structure: a plastic wedge holding the emitter and collector contacts pressed onto a germanium substrate, with a thin razor cut between them to separate the two contacts, and labels for emitter, collector, base, spring, gold foil, and germanium.
The first point-contact transistor is on the left. On the right is the schematic representation. 
Image courtesy of AT&T.

Then came the transistor — arguably the most transformative invention of the twentieth century. Al’s slides capture both the historical significance and the practical brilliance of that moment in 1947 when Bardeen and Brattain’s point-contact transistor first amplified a signal.

Before that, we relied on vacuum tubes: glowing, fragile, power-hungry devices that filled radio chassis and computer rooms.

A close-up photograph of an electronic vacuum tube, also known as a thermionic valve. The glass envelope is clear, showing the internal metal electrodes and grid structures. The tube has a metal base with several pins for insertion into a socket, and the top of the glass has a slightly darkened getter flash. The image is taken on a white background, highlighting the tube’s reflective surfaces and cylindrical shape.
Vacuum Tube

The transistor changed everything. It was small, efficient, rugged — and as Al notes, it enabled everything from portable radios to the computers that now run our world.

Vintage 1940s Operadio Tube Amplifier [3]

As someone who’s spent a career around control systems and functional safety, I find the transistor’s evolution from that sliver of germanium to today’s silicon MOSFETs a story of both science and engineering perseverance. Billions of transistors now sit on a chip smaller than your fingernail — each one still following the same basic principles first demonstrated in a Bell Labs lab bench.

Amplifiers and the Art of Control

One of Al’s most practical sections deals with amplification.

Circuit diagram of a 25-watt audio amplifier using an integrated circuit (IC) TDA2040. The schematic shows input, power, and output stages. The audio input passes through capacitor C1 and resistor R1 to the non-inverting input of the IC (pin 1). Feedback is provided via resistors R2 and R3 and capacitor C2. Power supply decoupling capacitors C4 and C5 are connected to ±17V rails. The amplifier output drives a loudspeaker (LS1) through resistor R4 and capacitor C3.
25 Watt Amplifier Circuit Diagram

Whether we’re talking about boosting a microphone signal, driving a loudspeaker, or switching a safety relay, the amplifier’s purpose is the same — to make a small signal powerful enough to do useful work.

Types of Transistors: Classification (BJT, JFET, MOSFET & IGBT) [4]

Transistors and FETs handle this task differently, but the core idea is universal: use a small input to control a larger output. In machinery safety and control, this principle is evident everywhere — from sensor conditioning to PLC inputs and output stages, as well as pneumatics and hydraulics.

Reflections on a Legacy of Innovation

Al’s presentation closes with a nod to vacuum tubes — those glowing ancestors of the solid-state devices we know today. While they’ve been mostly replaced, they still hold a special place in audio and RF engineering for their distinctive performance characteristics.

Vacuum tubes are still commonly used in specialized radio applications, particularly in high-power RF transmitters, including commercial radio and television broadcasting, amateur radio, and military communication systems. Their ability to handle high voltages, high power levels, and their linear amplification characteristics make them preferred in these settings where solid-state devices may be less reliable or unable to perform as well. Vacuum tubes are also valued for their durability in harsh environments, such as those with radiation or electromagnetic pulses (EMP), which is particularly important for military and aerospace applications.

Key Radio Applications of Vacuum Tubes Today

  • High-Power Radio Transmitters: Commercial broadcast stations still use vacuum tubes for final power amplification due to their capacity to handle large RF power loads.
  • Amateur Radio Equipment: Many ham radio operators prefer tube-based transmitters for their superior signal handling, natural overload tolerance, and call sign authenticity in traditional equipment.
  • Military Communications: Vacuum tubes are preferred in certain military radios because of their robustness against EMP and radiation, ensuring reliable operation under extreme conditions.
  • Specialized Scientific and Industrial RF Systems: Vacuum tubes are used in some radar, industrial RF heating, and scientific instruments requiring high voltage and power.
A British radio transmitter from the early 1920s, used for some of the first radio broadcasts by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). The four early power triode valves (vacuum tubes) used in parallel resemble the 4 kW Marconi MT1 valves, developed by Marconi Co. engineer H. L. Round, which operated at 12,000 volts on the plate (anode). Blythe House Science Museum stores tour, London.
By John Cummings – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, Link
This beautiful example of home construction by Dick Stevens, W1QWJ, produces the “full gallon” (full, legally permitted power) on the 50 MHz band. The single tube is a 4CX1600B tetrode. [14]

Additional Contemporary Uses Related to Radio

  • Vacuum tubes find niche roles in audio amplification equipment connected to radio receivers due to their characteristic sound.
  • Vacuum tube audiophile amplifiers are increasingly common, where their soft roll off when over-driven yield a much better sound than the harsh clipping that transistors give under similar conditions.
  • Some hybrid designs combine vacuum tube stages with solid-state components in modern radio equipment.
Oilily A88 Vacuum Tube Integrated Amplifier, 45W+45W Class AB, EL34/KT88 Tube Amplifier with Triode & Ultra-Linear Mode, External Bias Adjustment, High-Fidelity Sound for Audiophiles (Black) [15]

Thus, while transistors have largely replaced vacuum tubes in most consumer electronics, vacuum tubes remain essential in applications where their unique electrical and physical properties provide advantages that solid-state devices cannot fully match [5][6][7][8].

Reading through this material reminded me that understanding where our technology comes from isn’t just nostalgic — it’s essential. Whether we’re designing safety systems, writing standards, or just tinkering in the shop, the principles that Al Penney lays out are as relevant today as they were when the first transistor clicked into life.

In short: the story of diodes, transistors, and tubes isn’t just about components — it’s about curiosity, experimentation, and the human drive to control and harness electricity.

Thanks, Al Penney (VO1NO), for reminding us how far we’ve come — and how much of that journey is still worth exploring.


Bibliography

[1] A. Penney, ‘Chapter 9 – Diodes, Transistors, and Tubes’, Radio Amateurs of Canada, Canada, Nov. 02, 2025. Accessed: Nov. 02, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://www.rac.ca/

[2] J. T. Rubin, ‘The Invention of the Transistor’. Accessed: Oct. 29, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://www.juliantrubin.com/bigten/transistorexperiments.html

[3] ‘Vintage 1940s Operadio Tube Amplifier Guitar Lap Steel Amp 5641 Speaker’, Worthpoint.com. Accessed: Nov. 01, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/vintage-1940s-operadio-tube-amplifier-4596304184

[4] A. Singh, ‘Types of Transistors: Classification (BJT, JFET, MOSFET & IGBT)’, Hackatronic. Accessed: Nov. 01, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://www.hackatronic.com/types-of-transistors-classification-bjt-jfet-mosfet-igbt/

[5] Vacuum Tubes: Complete Guide to Types, Applications & … https://www.blikai.com/blog/vacuumtube/vacuum-tubes-complete-guide-to-types-applications-modern-roles

[6] Are Vacuum Tubes Still Used (& What Are They Used for)? https://pentalabs.com/blogs/tube-talk/are-vacuum-tubes-still-used

[7] When Old is Gold: Harnessing the Power of Vintage … https://www.radiodesigngroup.com/blog/when-old-is-gold-harnessing-the-power-of-vintage-technology-for-modern-applications

[8] Vacuum Tube Market Size & Share 2025-2032 https://www.360iresearch.com/library/intelligence/vacuum-tube

[9] Brief Overview of Vacuum Tubes and Circuits https://www.bristolwatch.com/science/vacuum_tubes.htm

[10] Vacuum tubes and modern uses for them : r/ECE https://www.reddit.com/r/ECE/comments/4hmi03/vacuum_tubes_and_modern_uses_for_them/

[11] List of vacuum tubes https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_vacuum_tubes

[12] Modern Radio Technology Comparison to Tube Radio https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVXwsdsIyiI

[13] Unlocking the Future of Vacuum Tube: Growth and Trends … https://www.marketreportanalytics.com/reports/vacuum-tube-376095

[14] H. W. Silver, ‘Vacuum Tubes’, Nuts and Volts Magazine, no. November, pp. 8–11, 2017. Accessed: Nov. 01, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://www.nutsvolts.com/magazine/article/vacuum-tubes

[15] ‘Oilily A88 Vacuum Tube Integrated Amplifier, 45W+45W Class AB, EL34/KT88 Tube Amplifier with Triode & Ultra-Linear Mode, External Bias Adjustment, High-Fidelity Sound for Audiophiles (Black)’, Tube Amplifier Reviews. Accessed: Nov. 01, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://tubeamplifierreviews.com/oilily-a88-vacuum-tube-integrated-amplifier-45w45w-class-ab-el34-kt88-tube-amplifier-with-triode-ultra-linear-mode-external-bias-adjustment-high-fidelity-sound-for-audiophiles-black/

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