Howard A. Chinn


Howard Allen Chinn was an American broadcasting engineer who pioneered techniques of analog audio recording as well as radio and television broadcasting practices. Chinn served as chief audio engineer at Columbia Broadcasting System beginning in the 1940s, and authored many magazine articles and books on the technical aspects of audio engineering and broadcasting.

Early life

Chinn was born in New York, New York January 5, 1906, to David L. Chinn from China and Ethel Whinton of New York.

Education

Chinn attended Polytechnic Institute of New York University, later moving to Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he earned a bachelor's degree in 1927, and a master's degree in 1929. From 1927 to 1932 he served as a research associate at MIT.

CBS

In 1932, Chinn returned to New York to join Columbia Broadcasting System as assistant to the director of engineering. From 1936 forward he was the chief audio engineer. From 1939 to 1941, Chinn appeared as a special lecturer at New York University for graduate studies in electrical engineering.
During World War II, Chinn devoted his energies primarily to war research. For nearly all of 1942 and 1943, he was technical coordinator for the Radio Research Laboratory of Harvard University, funded by the Office of Scientific Research and Development. Chinn published a classified report called Enemy Radar Characteristics. From 1944, Chinn served as technical aide then consultant to OSRD.

Memberships

Chinn joined the Institute of Radio Engineers in the 1930s and wrote technical papers for publication in the organization's journal. Chinn often wrote for Audio Engineering, a magazine that published technical reports on audio subjects.
Chinn was originally against the founding of the Audio Engineering Society in 1948. He wrote a letter to the editor of Audio Engineering to say that the proposed formation of AES was unnecessary, as IRE had already formed an Audio and Video Technical Committee. Others did not agree, and when AES did form, Chinn immediately joined. Chinn served on the AES board of governors in 1951. The office was to be held for two years, but Chinn resigned after one "because of the press of work."

Published works

  • Howard Allen Chinn and Charles W. Horn, , Proceedings of the IRE, Volume 23, Number 5.
  • H.A. Chinn, D.K. Gannett, R.M. Morris. , Proceedings of the IRE, Volume 28.
  • . Harvard University.
  • H.A. Chinn, P. Eisenberg, , Proceedings of the IRE, Volume 33, Issue 9.
  • , Hastings House, New York. Copyright CBS. Editors: Paul Kesten, Paul Hollister, Robert Strunsky, Douglas Coulter, William Lodge, William Gittinger, William Ackerman, John Churchill, Elmo Wilson, Gilbert Seldes, Howard Chinn, Earle McGill, Davidson Taylor, Lyman Bryson
  • H.A. Chinn, Philip Eisenberg, New CBS Program Transmission Standards, Proceedings of the IRE, Volume 35.
  • Audio System Design Fundamentals, Audio Engineering, Volume 32, Number 11, pp. 11–12.
  • AES E-Library: , Reprinted from Audio, 1948 by Sherry, Jr., Frank E.; LeBel, C. J.; Pickering, Norman C.; Salmon, Vincent; Hartley, Jack; Chinn, Howard A.; West, William P.
  • , Audio Engineering, Two-part series, September and October, 1951.
  • The measurement of audio volume. AES paper.
  • , McGraw-Hill.
  • Rudy Bretz and Howard A. Chinn, , McGraw-Hill.
  • Chinn, H.A., O'Brien, R.S., Monroe, R.B., Fish, P.E. , Proceedings of the IRE, Volume 42, Issue 7.

    Awards

  • John H. Potts Award, the highest accolade from the AES, "for outstanding achievement in the field of audio engineering".
  • NAB Engineering Achievement Award, awarded by the National Association of Broadcasters to Howard A. Chinn, director, general engineering; CBS Television Network; New York, New York.