Herman Affel
Herman Andrew Affel (August 4, 1893 – October 13, 1972) was an American electrical engineer who invented the modern coaxial cable.
Biography[]
He was born on August 4, 1893. He attended MIT. He later married Bertha May Plummer.
From MIT he went to work at Bell Laboratories. Among other projects he worked with Lloyd Espenschied on the characteristics of coaxial cable. Espenschied and Affel jointly applied for a patent on a wideband coaxial cable system of transmission, filed in 1929 and granted in 1934. The invention was disclosed in a prize-winning paper published in AIEE's Electrical Engineering in October 1934.
He died on October 13, 1972.
Legacy[]
In 2006 Affel was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame.
US Patents[]
- U.S. Patent 1,511,013 "Equalization of Carrier Transmissions," 1924, Herman A. Affel
- U.S. Patent 1,835,031 "Concentric Conducting System", 1929, Lloyd Espenschied and Herman A. Affel
External links[]
Categories:
- 1893 births
- 1972 deaths
- American electrical engineers
- Scientists at Bell Labs
- 20th-century American engineers
- 20th-century American inventors
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni