Timeline of electrical and electronic engineering


The following timeline tables list the discoveries and inventions in the history of electrical and electronic engineering.

Innovations in consumer electronics

1843–1923: From electromechanics to electronics

1924–1959: From cathode ray tube to stereo audio and TV

  • 1924: the first radio receivers are exhibited at the Berlin Radio Show
  • 1925
  • * Brunswick Records in Dubuque, Iowa produced their first record player, the Brunswick Panatrope with a pickup, amplifier and loudspeaker
  • * In the American Bell Laboratories, a method for recording of records obtained by microphone and tube amps for series production. Also in Germany working on it is ongoing since 1922. 1925 appear the first electrically recorded disks in both countries.
  • * At the Leipzig Spring Fair, the first miniature camera "Leica" is presented to the public.
  • * John Logie Baird performs the first screening of a living head with a resolution of 30 vertical lines using a Nipkow disk.
  • * August Karolus demonstrated in Germany television with 48 lines and ten image changes per second.
  • 1926
  • * Edison developed the first "LP". By dense grooves and the reduction of speed to 80 min −1 increases the playing time up to 2 times 20 minutes. He carries himself with the decline of his phonograph business.
  • * The German State Railroad offers a cordless telephone service in moving trains between Berlin and Hamburg – the idea of mobile telephony is born.
  • * John Logie Baird developed the first commercial television set in the world. It was not until 1930, he is called a " telescreen sold "at a price of 20 pounds.
  • 1927
  • * The first fully electronic music boxes used in the USA on the market.
  • * German Grammophon on sale due to a license agreement with the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Company. Its first fully electronic turntables.
  • * The first industrially manufactured car radio, the "Philco Transitone" from the "Storage Battery Co." in Philadelphia, USA, comes on the market.
  • * The first shortwave radio – Rundfunkübertragung overseas broadcast by the station PCJJ the Philips factories in Eindhoven in the Dutch colonies.
  • * Opening of the first regular telegraphy -Dienstes between Berlin and Vienna.
  • * First commercial sound films using the "Needle sound" back in sync with the film screening for LPs over loudspeakers.
  • * First public television broadcasts in the UK by John Logie Baird between London and Glasgow and in the US by Frederic Eugene Ives between Washington and New York.
  • * The American inventor Philo Taylor Farnsworth developed in Los Angeles, the first fully electronic television system in the world.
  • * John Logie Baird developed his Phonovision, the first videodisc player. 30-line television images are stored on shellac records. At 78 RPM mechanically scanned, the images can be played back on his "telescreen". It could not play sound nor keep up with the rapidly increasing resolution of television. More than 40 years later, commercial optical disc players came onto the market.
  • 1928: Fritz Pfleumer got the first tape recorder patent. It replaces steel wire with paper coated in iron powder. According to Valdemar Poulsen to the second crucial pioneer of magnetic sound, image and data storage
  • * Dénes Mihály presented in Berlin a small circle, the first authentic television broadcast in Germany, having worked at least since 1923 in this field.
  • * August Karolus and the company Telefunken put on the "fifth Great German Radio Exhibition Berlin 1928" the prototype of a television receiver, with an image size of 8 cm × 10 cm and a resolution of about 10,000 pixels, a much better picture quality than previous devices.
  • * In New York the first regular television broadcasts of the experiment station WGY, operated by the General Electric Company. Sporadic television news and dramas radiate from these stations by 1928.
  • ** The first commercially produced television receiver of the Daven Corporation in Newark is offered for $75.
  • * John Logie Baird transmits the first television pictures internationally, and the same across the Atlantic from London to New York. He also demonstrated the world's first color television transmission in London.
  • 1929
  • * Edison withdraws from the phono business – the disk has ousted the cylinder.
  • * The company Columbia Records developed the first portable record player that can be connected to any tube radio. It also created the first radio / phonograph combinations, the precursor to the 1960s music chests.
  • * The German physicist Curt Stille records magnetic sound for film, on a perforated steel band. First, this "Magnettonverfahren" has no success. Years later it is rediscovered for amateur films, providing easy dubbing. A "Daylygraph" or Magnettongerät had amplifier and equalizer, and a mature Magnettondiktiergerät called "Textophon".
  • * Based on patents, which he had purchased of silence, brings the Englishman E. Blattner the " Blattnerphone "the first magnetic sound recording on the market. It records on a thin steel band.
  • * The first sound film using optical sound premiers. Since the early 1920s, various people have developed this method. The same optoelectronic method also allows for the first time the post-processing of recorded music to sound recordings of it.
  • * The director Carl Froelich turns "The Night Belongs to Us", the first German sound film.
  • * 20th Century Fox presents in New York on an 8 m × 4 m big screen the first widescreen movie.
  • * The radio station Witzleben begins in Germany with the regular broadcasting of television test broadcasts, initially on long wave with 30 lines at 12.5 image changes per second. It appear first blueprints for television receiver.
  • * John Logie Baird starts in the UK on behalf of the BBC with regular experimental television broadcasts to the public.
  • * Frederic Eugene Ives transmits a color television from New York to Washington.
  • 1930
  • * Manfred von Ardenne invented and developed the flying-spot scanner, Europe's first fully electronic television camera tube.
  • * In Britain, the first television advertising and the first TV interview
  • 1931
  • * The British engineer and inventor Alan Dower Blumlein invents "Binaural Sound", today called "Stereo". He developed the stereo record and the first three-way speaker. He makes experimental films with stereo sound. Then he becomes leader of the development team for the EMI-405-line television system.
  • * The company RCA Victor presents to the public the first real LP record, the 35 cm diameter and 33.33 RPM give sufficient playing time for an entire orchestral work. But the new turntables are initially so expensive that they are only gain broad acceptance after the Second World War – then as vinyl record.
  • * The French physicist René Barthélemy in Paris broadcasts the first television signal from a radio transmitter rather than by wire. The BBC launches first Tonversuche in the UK.
  • * Public World Premiere of electronic television – without electro-mechanical components such as the Nipkow disk – on the "eighth Great German Radio Exhibition Berlin 1931 ". Doberitz / Pomerania is the first German location for a tone-TV stations.
  • * Manfred von Ardenne can be the principle of a color picture tube patent: Narrow strips of phosphors in the three primary colors are closely juxtaposed arranged so that they complement each other with the electron flow to white light. A separate control of the three colors has not yet provided.
  • 1932
  • * The company AEG and BASF start for the magnetic tape method of Fritz Pfleumer to care. They develop new devices and tapes, in which celluloid is used instead of paper as a carrier material.
  • * In Britain, the BBC sends first radio programs time-shifted instead of live.
  • * The company telephone and radio apparatus factory Ideal AG provides a car radio using Bowden cables to control it from the steering column.
  • 1933
  • * After the Nazi seizure of power in Germany is broadcasting finally a political tool. Systematic censorship is to prevent opposition and spread the "Aryan culture". Series production of the " People's recipient VE 301 "starts.
  • * Edwin Howard Armstrong demonstrates that frequency-modulated radio transmissions are less susceptible to interference than amplitude-modulated. However, practical application is long delayed.
  • * In the USA the first opened drive-in theater.
  • 1934: First commercial stereo recordings find little favor – the necessary playback devices are still too expensive. The term "High Fidelity" is embossed around this time.
  • 1935
  • * AEG and BASF place at the Berlin Radio Show, the tape recorder " Magnetophon K1 "and the appropriate magnetic tapes before. In case of fire in the exhibition hall all four exhibited devices are destroyed.
  • * In Germany the world's first regular television program operating for about 250 mostly public reception points starts in Berlin and the surrounding area. The mass production of television receivers is – probably due to the high price of 2,500 Reichsmarks – not yet started.
  • * At the same time, the research institute of the German Post begins with development work for a color television methods, but which are later reinstated due to the Second World War.
  • 1936
  • * Olympic Games in Berlin broadcast live.
  • * "Olympia suitcase", battery-powered portable radio receiver, introduced.
  • * The first mobile television camera is used for live television broadcasts of the Olympic Games.
  • * Also in the UK are first regular television broadcasts – now for the perfect electronic EMI system, which soon replaced the mechanical part Baird system – broadcast.
  • * Video telephony connections between booths in Berlin and Leipzig. Later connections from Berlin to Nuremberg and Munich added.
  • * The Frenchman Raymond Valtat reports on a patent, which describes the principle of working with binary numbers abacus.
  • * Konrad Zuse works on a dual electromechanical computing machine that is ready in 1937.
  • 1937
  • * First sapphire needle for records of the company Siemens
  • * The interlaced video method is introduced on TVr to reduce image flicker. The transmitter Witzleben uses the new standard with 441 lines and 25 image changes, i.e. 50 fields of 220 half-lines. Until the HDTV era the interlace method remains in use.
  • * First movie encoder make it possible not to send the TV live, but to rely on recordings.
  • 1938
  • * The improved AEG tape-recorder "Magnetophon K4" is first used in radio studios. The belt speed is 77 cm / s, which at 1000 m length of tape has a playing time of 22 minutes.
  • * Werner Flechsig invents the shadow mask method for separate control of the three primary colors in a color picture tube.
  • 1939
  • * On the "16th Great German Radio and television broadcasting exhibition Berlin 1939 ", the" German Unity television receiver E1 "and announces the release of free commercial television. Due to the difficult political and economic situation, only about 50 devices are sold instead of the planned 10,000.
  • * In the USA the first regular television broadcasts take place.
  • 1940
  • * The development of television technology for military purposes increases the resolution to 1029 lines at 25 frames per second. Commercial HDTV television reached that resolution almost half a century later.
  • * The problem of band noise with tape devices is reduced dramatically by the invention of radio frequency bias of Walter Weber and Hans-Joachim von Braunmühl.
  • 1942: The first all-electronic computer is used by John Vincent Atanasoff, but quickly fades into oblivion. Four years later the ENIAC completed – the beginning of the end of Electromechanics in computers and calculators.
  • 1945–1947: American soldiers capture in Germany some tape recorders. This and the nullified German patents leads to the development of the first tape recorders in the United States. The first home device " Sound Mirror "by the Brush Development Co. is there on the market.
  • 1948
  • * The American physicist and industrialist Edwin Herbert Land launches the first instant camera, Polaroid camera Model 95 on the market.
  • * Three American engineers at Bell Laboratories invent the transistor. Its lesser size and power compared with electron tubes brings portable radio receivers starting its march through all areas of electronics.
  • * The Hungarian-American physicist Peter Carl Goldmark invents the vinyl record, much less noisy than their predecessors shellac. Thanks to micro-groove can play 23 minutes per side. The LP record is born. This one is the redemption of the claim "high fidelity one step closer" to the end of the shellac era.
  • * The Radio Corporation of America leads the music format with 45 RPM records, later to conquer the market for cheap players. The first publication in Germany in this format appears 1953rd
  • * The British physicist Dennis Gabor invents holography. This method of recording and reproducing image with coherent light allows three-dimensional images. It was not until 1971 when the procedure gained practical importance, he received the Nobel Prize for Physics.
  • 1949
  • * In Germany, FM broadcasting starts regular program operation.
  • * Experimentally since 1943, series production since 1949 there are for professional use stereo – Tonbandgeräte and matching ribbons. Also portable devices for reporters, initially propelled by a spring mechanism, has been around since 1949
  • 1950
  • * In the USA the first prerecorded audio tapes are marketed.
  • * Also in the USA the company Zenith markets the first TV with cable remote control for channel selection.
  • 1951
  • * The CBS broadcasts in New York the first color television program in the world, but using the field sequential standard, not reaching to the resolution of the black and white television and was to be incompatible.
  • * With the " tape recorder F15 "from AEG 's first home tape recorder appears on the German market.
  • * RCA Electronic Music is the first synthesizer prior to the creation of artificial electronic sounds.
  • 1952
  • * Reintroduction of regular television broadcasts in Germany after the Second World War.
  • * 20th Century Fox developed with "Cinemascope" the most successful wide-screen process to better compete with television. Only some 50 years later pulls the TV with the 16: 9 size screen after.
  • 1953
  • * The "National Television System Committee" normalized in the USA named after her black-and-white-compatible NTSC -Farbfernseh process. A year later, this method is introduced in the United States.
  • * The car radio top model "Mexico" from Becker for the first time to an FM area and an automatic tuning.
  • 1954
  • * RCA developed for the first apparatus for recording video signals on magnetic tapes. 22 km magnetic tape are needed per hour. By 1956, succeeds the company Ampex through the use of multiple tracks, the tape speed to more practicable 38.1 cm / s lower.
  • * The European Broadcasting Union is founded "Euro Vision".
  • * First regular television broadcasts in Japan.
  • 1955
  • * The second generation "TRADIC", first to use only transistors therefore much smaller and more powerful than its predecessor tube computers.
  • * The Briton Narinder Singh Kapany investigated the propagation of light in fine glass fibers.
  • * The first wireless remote control for a television US-based Zenith consists of a better flashlight, with which one lights up in one of the four devices corners to turn the unit on or off, change the channel or mute the sound.
  • 1956
  • * The company Metz introduces radio device type 409 / 3D. First mass production of printed circuit boards. This follows since the 1930s, several improvements to the manufacturing technology.
  • * The company Ampex introduces the "VR 1000" the first video recorder. That same year, CBS uses it for the first magnetic video tape recording from. Although other programs are produced in color since 1954, the VTR cannot record color.
  • 1957: The Frenchman Henri de France developed the first generation of color TV system SECAM, which avoids some of the problems of the NTSC method. The weaknesses of the SECAM system be fixed in later modifications of the standard for the most part.
  • 1958
  • * By merging the Edison patents and the Berliner, the Blumlein stereo recording method becomes commercially viable. The company Mercury Records launches the first stereo record on the market.
  • * The company Ampex expands the video recorder with the Model "VR 1000 B" to give it color capability.