Abstract
THE National Radio Exhibition, which was opened at Olympia on Sept. 18, occupies a floor space three times as large as last year and is now the largest radio exhibition in the world. The exhibition is organised by the British Radio Manufacturers' Association, and is arranged in such a well-planned manner that it cannot fail to be of interest to all broadcast listeners, whether technically minded or not. This exhibition definitely supports the idea which was becoming evident last year, that the radio manufacturing industry has passed through its somewhat uncertain experimental stage to that of steady development along trustworthy and well-established lines. The modern commercial radio receiver compared with its prototype of a year or two ago, which resembled an ill-assorted collection of components wired together in a box, is built somewhat on the lines of a car chassis.
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The National Radio Exhibition. Nature 128, 553 (1931). https://doi.org/10.1038/128553a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/128553a0