Amana Radarange Microwave
Is not it true that our life and it seems impossible without a series of electronics? Well, not so long ago are with us, look at this list and remember the first steps of these new companions. 1. RCA TV, model 630TS (1946): With a 10 inch black and white, and huge speakers to the sides, this was the first mass-produced television. 3. Kodak Brownie Camera 127 (1953): The first Brownie camera model was 1900, and in the fifties and was present at every party or family outing worth his salt. 4. Video Camera Bell & Howell Director, Series, Model 414 8-mm Zoomatic (about 1962): The eight-millimeter cameras allowed, since 1932, that videotape is not only a matter of the film industry. But none were as famous as the Bell & Howll. 5. Amana Microwave Radarange (1967): Since the invention of the refrigerator, modern lnuestra nothing has changed so much food and our kitchen as the microwave. This model was seen to stop luxury item. 6. Videocassette recorder JVC HR-3300 (1976): The first VHS recorder to the market, allowing us to not only record a movie for viewing later, but fast forward or rewind. 10. Mobile Phone Motorola Star Tac (1996): Before this model, cell phones are more portable, bricks that people had in the car, not over. Now not only could carry and were fashionable. Uff than memories, I remember Walkman, Video Cassette and many others who were my era, remember the Motorola Brick . . Uff that larger cell hehe . . Most things are named and exixtian when born, so it's hard to imagine the world without them. But it is great to look back and realize that we have experienced the evolution of the great inventions that have made life easier. But more amazing is that despite all this still exists the possibility of wonder. . . His invention is not so new and it dates back to 1946. The first model, the Radarange came out of a U. S. weapons, Raytheon Company, which since 1945 doing research on radar systems. The engineer Percy Spencer Baron was working on a productive machine of ultra-short electromagnetic waves. Absorbed in his business he forgets the sweet chocolate at the bottom of his pocket and found partially melted. Intrigued, he repeated the experience of other foods. Exposed to radiation from the machine, corn kernels, eggs explode. The principle of the microwave oven was born. Invented in 1947 by an American engineer specializing in air defense radars, the amana radarange microwave has become fifty years later in France, with the democratization of frozen, as an object indispensable. . The microwave oven was born in 1947 Research . . air defense radars. The story begins in the 1930s, when British researchers design a device called "magnetron" capable of producing microwaves in order to detect aircraft in flight, including at night. At the start of World War II, two U. S. companies, Western Electric and Raytheon, while embarking in their manufacture. The first domestic amana radarange microwave oven is marketed in 1955 by the American company Raytheon under license from Tappan. But that's another U. S. company, Amana, which under the same license is really off the U. S. market in 1967, with a smaller furnace and cost (500 dollars). Japanese firms, Korean and now Chinese and in turn dominate the global market, managing to sell furnaces from 40 euros. The tilting of the Senate will not cause blockage of the Budget. But between the two committees of Finance, the Court of Auditors and . . read more. In accordance with the Data Protection Act 78-17 of 6 January 1978 relating to data, files and freedom, we are committed to inform those who provide data on our site of their rights, including their right to access and correct personal data. We are committed to take all precautions to protect the security of this information and in particular to prevent it from being distorted, damaged or communicated to third parties. . . .