Armstrongs Radio Legacy Saves N.Y. TV
Frank Beacham
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The Alpine Tower in New Jersey - Photo:
John Payne/Nucomm
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Radio pioneer Edwin Howard Armstrongs
legacy to New York City came full circle on Sept. 11, the day
the World Trade Center collapsed. Shortly after, a new generation
of broadcasters realized that a tower built by the visionary in
1937 would save over-the-air television transmission in the shaken
city.
When the massive antenna mast atop the north
tower of the trade center crumbled into rubble, the on-air signals
of most major New York City broadcasters went with it. Unable
to quickly relocate to the crowded spar at the peak of the Empire
State Building, the broadcasters turned to what has become a broadcast
landmark: Edwin Armstrongs tower on the Palisades Interstate
Parkway in Alpine, N.J.
Among the stations installing antennas on the Alpine tower in
the wake of the disaster were WNBC, Channel 4; WABC, Ch.7, WPIX,
Ch. 11 and WNET, Ch. 13. However, in the scurry to get back on
the air, few realized the irony of choosing Armstrongs historic
mast, once the site of Americas first FM radio station.
"The idea of NBC ending up there
its kind of ironic, isnt it? Maybe Armstrong is turning
over in his grave," mused Jerry Minter, a veteran radio engineer
who knew the inventor of FM radio.
The incongruity stems from a series of events
beginning in the 1930s that helped define American broadcasting.
The 102-story Empire State Building, opened in 1931, was at the
time the tallest building in the world and a natural place to
install broadcast antennas. Its 1,250-foot peak, conceived as
a mooring for dirigibles, was soon converted to an antenna mast.
Early on, the Empire State Buildings 85th
floor became a hotbed of broadcast activity. It was home to RCAs
experimental television station, which began broadcasting shortly
after the skyscraper opened.
Eventually, "Empire" became home to
nearly all of New York Citys television stations, remaining
so until completion of the 110-story World Trade Center in the
early 1970s.
Empires 85th floor was also home to Edwin
Armstrongs FM radio laboratory. By 1935, it was clear that
Armstrongs "staticless" FM system worked well.
Perhaps too well. RCA chief David Sarnoff, claiming he needed
the space for television, ordered Armstrong who wanted
to begin an FM broadcasting service in New York to remove
his equipment and vacate the Empire State Building.
"Sarnoff was very much worried that since
one FM station could pick up another that they would be relaying
(programming) instead of using the telephone lines in the NBC
network," recalled Renville McMann, who began his engineering
career with Armstrong at age 14.
"More than being threatening to AM radio, FM was threatening
to the networks, which at the time were largely under the control
of RCA and NBC."
Armstrongs eviction from Empire left the
inventor undeterred in his quest to bring high-fidelity FM radio
to New Yorkers.
After purchasing 11 acres in Alpine that overlooked
the New York metropolitan landscape, Armstrong built a 425-foot,
three-armed steel tower in 1937 and soon launched the nations
first FM radio station.
It was a spectacular project, both in its visionary foresight
and scenic beauty.
"The view from that magnificent tower is
unbelievable. You can see out to the tip of Long Island. Its
a great piece of technological real estate," said Tom Lewis,
author of "Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio,"
a 1991 history of radio broadcasting.
Armstrongs independent FM radio venture,
however, would lead to a legendary feud with rival David Sarnoff.
After World War II, with the launch of commercial television on
the horizon, a lengthy patent battle ensued between Armstrong
and Sarnoffs RCA and NBC network. It would eventually consume
Armstrong.
"Sarnoff started stealing the patents.
In early television equipment, RCA paid a royalty for the picture
component, but they decided not to pay a royalty on the audio
component, which was the invention of Armstrong," said Lewis.
"What Sarnoff did to Armstrong was just awful. Just inhuman."
Along with Lee de Forest, Armstrong is recognized
as one of radios great pioneers. Among his contributions
are the invention of the regenerative circuit (1912); the superheterodyne
circuit (1918); the superregenerative circuit (1920); and the
wideband frequency modulation system that became known as FM radio.
Armstrongs wideband FM system offered
improved noise properties and delivered significantly better performance
under adverse weather conditions, said McMann. RCA promoted an
alternative design, but the engineering community was in wide
agreement that it violated Armstrongs patents.
"Sarnoff was trying to block FM and trying
to block Armstrong. Making him go broke was as good a way as any
other," said McMann. "RCA effectively chose to violate
his patents and not pay him."
History revisited
In 1954, Armstrong, financially devastated and
under family pressure to end his long legal fight with Sarnoff,
dressed in a suit and overcoat with scarf and gloves and jumped
to his death from his New York City apartment.
"I would give my life to turn back to the
time when we were so happy and free," Armstrong wrote in
a suicide note to his wife.
Armstrongs widow, once Sarnoffs
personal secretary, continued her husbands legal proceedings
over the patents. Eventually, the courts validated Armstrongs
position, establishing him, not RCA and NBC, as the legitimate
inventor of key FM radio technology and the sound system used
by analog television.
Jerry Minter remembered Armstrongs funeral.
"Sarnoff sat behind me. Id never
met him, but he shook hands with me and everybody there. When
it was over, he just stood there looking stunned as we all walked
off. He was very upset. I think he felt responsible."
When Armstrong designed his Alpine tower, he
anticipated using it one day for television, recalled Minter.
"But because of the feud between Armstrong and Sarnoff, it
didnt come off. Now, we are reliving that history."
As Armstrongs associates contemplated
the historical implications brought on by the World Trade Center
disaster, their memories raced back to happier times at Alpine
especially those of Armstrongs daring penchant for
climbing the great steel structure.
"He was utterly fearless on the tower,"
remembered McMann. "He used to climb the tower for exercise.
But when it came time to come down, he would step into a bucket
attached to a cable controlled by an electric winch and have himself
lowered to the ground. He recognized that wench was very dangerous,
but did it anyway. Ten thousand dollars wouldnt have gotten
me in that bucket. I was leaving my fingerprints in the steel."
Today, the tower is owned by Charles Sackerman
and operated by the Alpine Tower Company of Montvale, N.J. Before
the recent disaster, it was home to a variety of communications
services for government and industry and to WFDU, a radio station
operated by Fairleigh Dickinson University in Teaneck, N.J.
Now, for the first time in its history, Alpine is hosting
television transmitters.
"The site has ideal topography for VHS
and UHF transmission. Its high, doesnt have close
structures and there are no reflections. It has everything youd
like to have for a transmitter shack," said John Turner,
president of Turner Engineering Associates of Mountain Lakes,
N.J.
"The top of the tower is roughly the height
of the Empire State Building. It favors the northern counties.
People in New Jersey and Long Island wont see much difference.
They may even get better pictures."
Another of the great historical quirks of the
Alpine antenna relocation, noted Turner, is that for some stations,
the era of analog television broadcasting may very well end on
the same tower where FM broadcasting began.
"WNBCs move to the Alpine tower completes
a full circle in broadcast history," said Lewis. "Its
a great irony that this magnificent tower that Armstrong built
in 1937 is now saving the bacon of NBC and other New York broadcasters
in 2001."
McMann agreed. "Armstrong was technically
brilliant. Many of his ideas were truly great. He came up with
solutions that others of us would not have considered. He was
head and shoulders above any other engineer Ive ever known.
I dont think Sarnoff knew how to turn on and off the lights.
Hed been a telegraph operator, but he was no engineer."
For supporters of Edwin Armstrong, a man who
died thinking he was a failure, the events of September 2001 are
still another validation of his genius.
"Not only the building of that tower, but
every time you touch a television or radio you touch an invention
of Edwin Howard Armstrong," said Lewis.
"I bet you can find few people at NBC today
who even know who Armstrong was. But the ultimate irony is they
wouldnt be getting a paycheck today had it not been for
him."