Edwin Armstrong’s Battle For FM Radio

Chances are you have at least one radio that can receive FM stations. Even though FM is becoming less used now with Internet and satellite options, it still is more popular than the older AM radio bands. FM was the brainchild of an inventor you may have heard of — Edwin Armstrong — but you probably don’t know the whole story. It could make a sort of radio-themed soap opera. It is a story of innovation, but also a story of personal vanity, corporate greed, stubbornness, marital problems, and even suicide. The only thing missing is a long-lost identical twin sibling to turn it into a full telenovela.

Early Days

Armstrong grew up in New York and because of an illness that gave him a tic and caused him to be homeschooled, he was somewhat of a loner. He threw himself into his interest in electric and mechanical devices. By 1909 he was enrolled in Columbia University where professors noted he was very focused on what interested him but indifferent to other studies. He was also known as someone more interested in practical results than theory. He received an electrical engineering degree in 1913.

Unlike a lot of college graduates, Armstrong didn’t go work for a big firm. Instead, he set up a self-financed independent lab at Columbia. This sounded good because it meant that he would own the patents on anything invented there. But it would turn out to be a two-edged sword.

Tubes and Villians

Every good story needs a villain or two, and this one is no exception. The first one is Lee de Forest, the man who invented the triode. History hasn’t painted de Forest kindly, and some of the reasons for that are because of his interactions with Armstrong. However, there’s more than that.

Technically, Thomas Edison invented the vacuum tube as an offshoot of experimenting with light bulbs. He knew electrons were streaming away from the filament and put an electrode in — what we would call a plate — to collect them. He didn’t have any real idea what to do with the device, though.

In 1904 John Fleming realized that the device operated like a check valve allowing current to flow in one direction but not the other and demonstrated using it as a rectifier. This is why people in some parts of the world call tubes Fleming valves.

What de Forest added to the mix was to put a grid between the filament and the plate. He was actually trying to build a radio detector that used ionized gasses and filed a patent on a two-terminal device in 1907. The grid was initially on the outside of the glass tube, which didn’t work well. Once it was moved inside the tube, it allowed a small signal on the grid to be amplified at the plate. De Forest called this tube the audion. There were a few reasons it didn’t work very well, not the least of which is that de Forest erroneously thought that having a little gas left in the tube was essential for its operation. We know now, you want less gas, not more.

This all fits in with the historical accounts that de Forest didn’t fully understand the tube. He was just trying different things to see what would work — not always a bad thing, especially in those days where others worked with a similar methodology. He even reportedly said:

I have arrived, as yet, at no completely satisfactory theory as to the exact means by which the high-frequency oscillations affect so markedly the behavior of an ionized gas.

If he was just a practical inventor, that wouldn’t make him a villain, though. However, when Marconi, who held the Fleming patent, sued that the audion infringed, de Forest took the position that the two devices were completely different. Of course, they were not. A court sided with Marconi although since the grid was a patentable improvement, so the two sides agreed to exchange rights.

We think of protracted court battles over intellectual property as a modern problem. Perhaps it is true that the more things change, the more they stay the same.

Back to Armstrong

Armstrong grew up experimenting with gassy low-quality audions. He was determined to understand how the device worked in a scientific way. While at Columbia he did comprehensive studies and found that using positive feedback could create much higher amplification — enough to drive speakers instead of headphones. This is the basis behind a regenerative receiver. The signal is amplified many times over getting stronger each time. In addition, Armstrong learned that if you increase the feedback, you get sustained oscillations. This would be a huge breakthrough for radio to have a reliable way to generate radio waves electronically.

Armstrong filed for a patent in 1913. Lee de Forest predictably discounted Armstrong’s work for a few years. Then in a surprise move in 1915 he filed patents for the same inventions claiming he had priority because of a lab notebook he had dated in 1912. World War I intervened, however, so things moved slowly.

Regenerative receivers were sold until another Armstrong invention would replace them. Regens are still popular with hackers because they generally have a very low parts count. If you want to learn more about how they work, check out Stan’s video analysis of one based on a FET which isn’t very different from a tube.

War Time

During the war, Armstrong also developed the superheterodyne receiver: a common architecture even today where a frequency of interest is converted to a single intermediate frequency for amplification and filtering prior to detection.

By 1919 Armstrong was in court on two fronts on the de Forest patents. To finance his legal fees, he had licensed several companies to make regenerative receivers for amateurs and experimentation. He was also shopping for a big corporation to buy the rights. Westinghouse wound up with both the regenerative and superheterodyne patents. By 1928, the courts would actually decide a Frenchmen named Lévy invented the superheterodyne first.

The Regenerative Patent

The legal front on regeneration was quite different. Both the court and the patent office decided that de Forest’s patents were not valid. However, Armstrong didn’t want to settle for the compensation offered by de Forest. This allowed de Forest to appeal the case, which he eventually won through two further appeals up to the Supreme Court.

This move shocked most people in the radio business at the time. Armstrong attempted to return an award he received from the IRE (the Institute of Radio Engineers) and the institute refused to accept the return, publically stating they rejected the court’s findings.

Although Armstrong didn’t do well in court, he did have a little luck. While dealing with the legal end of things, he stumbled on an improvement to regeneration called super regeneration. That patent netted him $200,000 and 80,000 shares of RCA stock which made him the largest shareholder. Keep in mind, too, that $200,000 in 1922 was a fortune. RCA wound up never actually producing radios using this technology, as the superheterodyne turned out to be far superior.

Which Brings us to FM…

In case you forgot, all this was leading into the invention of FM radio. AM radio is very prone to noise and fading because these show up as changes in amplitude — the A in AM. During the 1920s, Armstrong was trying to think of ways to improve AM radio. FM — modulating frequency instead of amplitude — had been largely dismissed because of an incomplete analysis of FM done by John Carson showing that FM would not improve on the quality of AM.

By 1928, Armstrong started working with FM despite its detractors, and the key was using a wider bandwidth. Armstrong filed for patents in 1933. RCA had the right of first refusal on his patents by this time, but they were unimpressed with a system that was complex and was not compatible with existing equipment.

Armstrong went to smaller radio companies like General Electric and Zenith. He also got the FCC to allocate a band for this new kind of radio with 40 channels in the 42 to 50 MHz range. You might notice that this isn’t where the FM band is today. That will play a part in the story to come. There’s a lot of pictures of old FM radios, for this band online. Oddly enough, this band displaced another attempt to do “better” radio called Apex radio — a topic we will cover in the near future.

The Million Dollar Question

At first, RCA saw FM as a threat to their existing businesses and did everything they could to prevent Armstrong from demonstrating the system to the public. Despite this, Armstrong did get the FCC interested in FM and even built his own FM station W2XMN to help get things moving.

The first broadcast was in 1939. There were only 25 FM receivers in the world at that time, so the audience wasn’t very large.

RCA finally wanted to get into the FM game, but they didn’t want to pay Armstrong royalties. In 1940, they offered him a cool million dollars for a non-exclusive but royalty-free license. Armstrong didn’t feel like it was fair to other companies that were paying 2% on their sales. He refused and this would become a fateful and ultimately pointless decision.

To the right, you can see a magazine cover from 1940. The picture shows a million volt arc that totally ruins AM reception but didn’t interfere at all with the FM radio.

Band Adjustment

Because of World War II, there were comparatively few FM receivers and stations in service on the new frequency band. I say comparatively because ultimately there would be nearly 400,000 receivers in service compared with millions of AM radios.

Signals around 50 MHz are subject to propagation effects that can cause interference. RCA lobbied fiercely to move the FM band and Armstrong vigorously countered it. In his opinion, RCA only wanted to disrupt the existing base of FM stations and receivers, perhaps because he wasn’t willing to take their million dollar offer.

Since you know the current FM band is from 88 to 108 MHz, you can probably guess which side won in 1945. Still, Armstrong was convinced that FM was the future and even hired a public relations firm to spread the word about FM’s superiority.

RCA would eventually develop what they claimed were non-infringing FM patents and even encouraged other companies to stop paying royalties to Armstrong. He sued, but RCA was able to tie the case up for years.

The Bitter End

The two obvious villains in this story were de Forest and David Sarnoff of RCA. However, there’s a third villain: the courts. Being constantly embroiled in legal battles with a giant company takes its toll on your pocketbook and on your mental health.

Facing bankruptcy, Armstrong approached his wife Marion (who had been, by the way, David Sarnoff’s secretary) about returning money he had given her to put aside for their retirement. She refused and in 1954 he took a swing at her with a fire poker. Unsurprisingly, she left him.

Armstrong lived in an apartment on the 13th floor of the New York River House. With his wife gone and three servants done for the day, Armstrong removed an air conditioning unit, put on a nice suit, a hat, overcoat, and gloves. Then after writing a two-page note, he walked out the window, plummeting to his death on a third-floor balcony. The New York Times reported that he was heartbroken over the loss of his wife and regretted hurting her.

It is ironic that Armstrong turned down the million dollars. After his death, Marion settled with RCA for — what else — a million dollars. She also pursued other court cases, defending his patents and receiving infringement awards from other manufacturers. FM would really take off after General Electric added stereo to FM in the late 1950s.

A sad end to a prolific inventor that created a lot of technology we still use today. It is hard to say for sure if the villains in a story like this were really as bad as they appear or just unable to present their side of the story. On the other hand, history is written by the victors and Armstrong certainly wasn’t the victor. That’s got to mean something.

As I was writing this, though, one thing did strike me. Most of the world — including the United States — has gone to a patent system where “first to file” gets priority. I’ve always thought that is bad for us hackers because we are less likely to quickly file patents and, thus, more likely to get knocked out by a big company spewing out dozens of patent disclosures a day. But this is a case where first to file might have totally changed Armstrong’s life for the better. It also reminds me that even though most of us don’t file patents often, maybe we should think about it. Maybe big companies are going to control all the upcoming innovations because — unlike Armstrong — we are letting them.

Photo credits:

Audion Tube by Gregory F. Maxwell GFDL 1.2

AM/FM Animation by Berserkerus CC BY-SA 2.5

 

 

50 thoughts on “Edwin Armstrong’s Battle For FM Radio

    1. I recall watching a Ken Burns movie called “Empire of the Air”. The narrator stated at one point that David Sarnoff wanted the original FM frequency range so that he could use it for the audio portion of television transmissions

    2. I don’t know if most know this .
      But the old Armstrong frequency’s
      We’re used by RCA for their Television
      System.
      Low band VHF television used
      The frequencies.
      Also
      When the World Trade Centers
      We’re destroyed, New York lost
      Most of it television service.
      They quickly put antennas on the
      Old Armstrong tower and returned
      To the Air. CBS had a stand by
      Transmitter in the Crislar building
      They used that sight to go on the
      Air.
      So I would say Armstrong’s tower
      Made it possible for New York
      Television to return to the air.
      The 45 to 50 MHz band is not
      In use , because of Digital TV.
      Be nice to use it again for
      Long coverage FM service again.
      Jmo

  1. Excellent article, thanks. Armstrong was the first to characterize and publish the audion / triode as an engineering device. He invented the regen, the superregen and most importantly the superhet radio, which brought easily tuned affordable radios to millions. Then he went on, against all the other experts of his time, to invent wideband FM and bring it to the market. All of that makes Armstrong the greatest electronics engineer, maybe even the greatest engineer period, of the 20th century. His death was a huge tragedy.

    “Empire of the Air” by Tom Lewis is a really good book about the lives and battles among Armstrong, DeForest and RCA’s Sarnoff. Ken Burns made it into a documentary and most fittingly David Ossman made it into a radio play with an all-star cast. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empire_of_the_Air:_The_Men_Who_Made_Radio

  2. ” It also reminds me that even though most of us don’t file patents often, maybe we should think about it. Maybe big companies are going to control all the upcoming innovations because — unlike Armstrong — we are letting them.”

    Or it just may take more resources to come up with innovations. Like the latest DIY cancer drug. ;-)

      1. There ARE FM radio apps for phones that don’t do this – they don’t spy, AND you can use them even with data and WiFi turned off. You just have to keep looking.

      2. The problem is AFAIK, that in many phones, e.g. my Galaxy S5, it is not only “not turned on” but the antenna input of the chip is grounded to make it useless. So this Apps only simulate an FM radio vie internet data.

        1. Martin: This doesn’t make sense. There is no use at all for the chip, if the antenna input is grounded. No, the problem is that many service providers disable the FM radio chip so that you’ll pay data fees for all the music you listen to. Most cell phones have the antenna input connected to the headphone jack, so that the headphone wire acts as an antenna. My Samsung Galaxy S3 had the chip disabled by Verizon, but apparently Verizon ran into a lot of user complaints because of this. My newer J3 (still on Verizon) has the radio chip working.

        2. Is this an exacto cut and soldered magnet wire jumper to headphone jack type fix?
          I still rock an old Nokia N800 and it came stock with both FM RX connected to the headphone cable for ant, and QRP FM broadcast TX for if you dont have an aux in for your car radio.

        3. The FM chip in my S5 does not have a “grounded” antenna. It does require that an earphone be plugged in to use the cord as an antenna. One may still play the radio thru the speakers.

    1. Armstrong was one of the last financially independent inventors. He was able to get royalties and use them to fund his own research and development. He RCA’s largest shareholder at one point, and used that to fund his FM research, including construction of the first FM station and its 450 foot tower, which still stands in Alpine, NJ.

      1. It’s often far too expensive for one individual to build a functional prototype without outside investors, who end up controlling the invention in exchange for their financial risk. A fair exchange perhaps, but it does end up with corporations owning everything.

        Andreas Olofsson developed his own open source parallel computer chip and got it into production with crowd funding. A heroic and nearly unique accomplishment in these times. http://www.adapteva.com/andreas-blog/adapteva-status/

        1. I have advocated for a system connected to or modeled after student financial aid to help small inventors. If I can get the state to assume the risk for my college how much more economic power would a country generate per $ spent on tech dev loan if it incubated actual makers?

    1. That should definitely happen for software patents where the costs of producing a prototype are low and where the requirement to produce a prototype will help prevent overly broad or vague patents.

  3. Actually yes I do have a radio who can receive FM, it is a RS stereo set. I have on WQXR-FM which is the only classical music radio station left in NYC. It’s now a public radio station after being forced off of the air from its original frequency by a silly idea and more commercials on that one. (The commercials on WQXR failed splendidly.)

  4. I was of the understanding that if you had demonstrated (ie: manufactured, produced, etc) a device, any subsequent patent application by somebody else was invalid. Is this actually the case? ie: demonstated ‘prior art’?

    1. Yes sort of. Like anything else legal, you assume a) someone knows about your prior art or b) you are willing to go fight about that prior art and c) the court can be made to understand that it was prior art.

      I worked for a nameless semi company that often patented stuff that had been built years ago but we built it on silicon instead of a PCB or wire wrap. Novel? No. Prior art? Tons. But we had lots of money and you don’t so…

      The sad truth is that today a lot of big companies see patents as risk mitigation. Here’s how it works. I get as many patents as I can. Then I go to my big company cronies and do “cross licenses” so I give — I’ll pick on IBM — IBM the right to use all my patents if they give me right to use all of theirs. Now, we both have so many lawyers that a fight between us would be ugly. But we can both squash any little guys that come crying about stuff. They often don’t care about licensing most of the patents individually or even prosecuting someone else for infringing. They just want to protect themselves against infringement claims. That’s been my experience, at least.

        1. That’s the bottom line: it ain’t so until a court says it’s so, and if you’re up against a big company, you’re never going to be able to afford to get your day in court.

    1. Not exactly. RCA saw the advantages of FM for TV — it eliminated a buzz from the video if AM was used for sound, But, to avoid having use Armstrong’s invention, RCA “invented” Phase Modulation which is very similar to FM but with some mathematical differences.

    1. All of mine have been with “big backing” (who also, of course, own them). However, it isn’t quite that bad if you qualify as a small entity. Most of it will be in legal fees. You should be able to go in for about $15 or 20K. From what I understand if you are one of the “big guys” they routinely reject it the first time through so everyone gets a little more money. I assume if you are filing as a small entity they don’t do that because you are likely to just throw in the towel.

      A little old, but good reading: http://www.ipwatchdog.com/2015/04/04/the-cost-of-obtaining-a-patent-in-the-us/id=56485/

  5. Armstrong turned down RCA’s offer of $1M in 1940 ($18M in 2018) for a non-exclusive, royalty-free license because he “didn’t feel like it was fair to other companies that were paying 2% on their sales”. I’d have taken the offer and told the other companies their royalty rate would go to zero once the total hit $1M, seems perfectly fair.

  6. RCA and Armstrong probably did similar calculations: A large, one-time payment will ultimately be less costly than modest 2% royalty payments that last for the foreseeable future.

    Also, why would Armstrong want to limit his royalties from existing and future licensees, just so RCA (which he likely viewed as a treacherous rival) could save money?

    If he had taken RCA’s money, future licensees would want a similar option: The standard 2% of sales royalty, or the one-time-payment, which would tend to be much cheaper for the larger businesses.

    1. Raises another point: 2% of sales royalty… is this 2% of the gross taking, 2% of the nominal profit, or 2% of the actual profit. I think we all know how big businesses can fiddle their books (and pay accountants huge sums of cash to do so) so it looks as though they haven’t made a dime, when in fact they’ve made millions.

    2. Once you have money you have the power to get most everything for cheaper, it is expensive to be poor.
      Like how the faster a SR-71 flies the less fuel burned up per nautical mile.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RBHZFYpQ6nc
      We get the legal system of our choice in a democratic republic, though when our information is filtered by those with more $$free speech$$ I suppose informed voting becomes nigh impossible for the average person It becomes hard to fire politicians who are willing to listen to and accept the $$free speech$$ the kind which makes running for office possible but which opposes the interests of 90% of the electorate.

      1. TLDR unless we do something similar to unionizing as small lab makers/inventors we have no power against the likes of Boeing and Intel when determining the legal framework of the future of the information economy, it can be democratic or a plutocracy. But most of us wont spend any of our $$free speach$$ on the gamble that we can get equal rights to megacorps when Taobao sells such wonderful stuff and melted solder gratification is only weeks away, less if we stockpile our favorite components and tools.
        Even if we could unionize wh could resist big money and big influence and determine an agenda that we need.

  7. the Armstrong story is a complex one, a lot of what is said here is correct but others have missed the point.I have spent a lot of time researching this story and have links to some audio recording of early tests (search You Tube FM Tests like https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJKtBNZXvBI) I have several patents as a small entity and have successfully pursued many, retiring at 57 from one of them.. Cost? last Patent was $125K cheap Patent prosecution is essentially worthless. It is difficult but not impossible, The US Patent Laws make it increasingly more difficult for the little guy to win. Ted Hartson WA8ULG.

  8. Excellent story to show that patents are pretty much useless to the lone inventor.
    You may get the patent but the big guys waltz right over you with their legal budgets if push comes to shove in court.

    “It also reminds me that even though most of us don’t file patents often, maybe we should think about it. Maybe big companies are going to control all the upcoming innovations because — unlike Armstrong — we are letting them.”

    And if we don’t “let them”, they will just ruin our life as they did with Armstrong. I find this a good cautionary tale to not bother with patents. Patents are the big boy’s playground, played by their rules. Us little guys are better off leveraging openness and agility.

  9. I filed my patent as a “Small Entity”, just to protect my invention from being “completely” used by my large “deep pockets” competitors. Fortunately, I was able to afford the expenses ( back in 1996 ). The system can work for “small” entities.

    I just wish that the Major had been more patient, but as Ren McMann, my old friend, and one of the Major’s associates once told me, “The Word ‘Compromise’ Was Not in the Major’s Vocabulary”. When he knew he was right, he just couldn’t “bend”. The Major was a true genius, who created concepts totally new, without any existing examples to learn from. THAT is TRUE genius!

      1. “Funny” story about patent fights. A patent attorney friend related a story about someone who tried to sue IBM for patent infringement. IBM told the that person to be on the lookout for truck loaded with thousands of patents they would claim he had infringed on. He settled.

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