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Moving about in the Tube CAD Journal

Tube CAD Journal Publishing

Publisher
   GlassWare, creators of Audio Design Software   

Editorial Staff
   Editor: John E. R. Broskie
   Copy Editor: Anna Russomano Broskie

Mailing Address
   P.O. Box 67271
   Scotts Valley, CA  95067-7271

E-Mail Address
   editor@tubecad.com

Letters to the Editor
   The Tube CAD Journal welcomes letters from its
   readers. Please share your views, opinions, design
   ideas, and critiques with us. Letters should be brief and
   accompanied by your name, e-mail address (please
   indicate if we can publish your e-mail address), city and   
   country. All letters become the property of
Tube
   CAD Journal
and will be edited for length and clarity. 
   Please send letters to the POB or our e-mail address.

Article Submission
  A self addressed, stamped envelope must accompany
  all
mailed editorial submissions. We are not responsible 
   for unsolicited materials.

Advertising
   Please contact us if you are interested in placing an ad
   in the Tube CAD Journal.
 

Printing
  While no portion of Tube CAD Journal can be
   reproduced for profit without the written permission of
   the publisher, we encourage the reader to print a
   copy of  each Web page for easier reading and personal
   archiving. First, click "
File" and then "Page Setup"
   on your browser menu bar and set the left page margin
   to ½ inch. 

Tube CAD Journal is published monthly by GlassWare. ©2000 All Rights Reserved.

Our Purpose
    The Tube CAD Journal is a monthly online magazine devoted to tube audio circuit design. Each month we will present some fresh looks at some old tube circuits and some altogether fresh tube circuits as well (yes, new tube circuits are possible). Circuits and more circuits. While we plan on covering complex tube circuits, like phono preamps or power amplifiers, our focus will be primarily on elemental circuits. Elemental circuits are the primary topologies, or part configurations, arrangements that can stand on their own as recognizable functional circuits although they may be part of a larger circuit. A power amplifier circuit, such as the famous Williamson, comprises several sub-circuits: the Grounded Cathode amplifier, the Split-Load phase splitter, the Differential amplifier and finally a push-pull output stage. Just as we must understand how a resistor or a capacitor functions in a simple circuit, we must understand the function and logic of these elemental circuits before we can understand more complex compound circuits.

Why a Webzine?
   The original intent was to print a conventional magazine. We knew there was a need. A query on our Tube CAD registration cards that a magazine devoted to tube circuit design drew an overwhelmingly loud "YES." Still, we knew the difficulty and impracticality of starting yet another underground tube audio magazine.
    The Web offers the publisher some great advantages over the traditional approach: worldwide distribution, free subscriptions, no paper (for those who must own a paper version, the size of the journal has been left small enough to be printed on A4 or 8.5" by 11" three-hole punched paper for compilation in a three-ring binder), live forums, no Post Office, color, motion, a glossary
    Schematics can now evolve, as the web allows for the easy display of animated GIF's, which display color and motion. Schematics can now show more than just part connections, they can reveal voltage potentials, current flow directions, and possibly, relative  impedances. 
    Math errors and typos will not live indefinitely on a paper page; once spotted, the Web page can be corrected quickly. 
    We look forward to your letters, suggestions and contributions.   

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