The Neutrodyne was a particular type of Tuned Radio Frequency (TRF) radio receiver, in which the inter-electrode capacitance of the triode RF tubes are neutralized with interstage variable trim capacitors connected between the grid and plate of each RF amplifier tube.
The circuit was developed in the early 1920's by Alan Hazeltine and made by a group of more than 20 firms that were licensed to produce Hazeltine-Neutrodyne receivers known as the Independent Radio Manufacturers. Hazeltine's invention effectively neutralized the high-pitched squeals that had plagued early radio sets. The design also neutralized the stranglehold that RCA then held on the commercial radio industry.
To properly set up a Neutrodyne receiver, not only had the set to be aligned for best performance, but it also had to be neutralized. This procedure only needed to be done once (albeit by serviceman) and there after the radio could be tuned by anyone without special skill, a unique feature at the time. The neutrodyne was the first commercial receiver suited to use by the general public. By 1927 some ten million of these receivers had been sold to consumers in North America.
To neutralize a Neutrodyne receiver the procedure went something like this:
It is important to neutralize using the actual tube that will be in that socket as grid-plate capacitance varies some from tube to tube. Also once neutralized the tubes should not be exchanged between sockets. Often replacing a defective tube with a new one required neutralizing the receiver again (therefore tube replacement usually required a serviceman).
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"Neutrodyne".
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