What's All This Teledeltos Stuff, Anyway?

May 30, 1994
I mentioned, some time ago, that Bob Widlar used to use his "Mexican computer," namely, Teledeltos paper. This is a kind of resistive paper that you could use to make analogs or analogues of various physical items. Well, several people wrote i

I mentioned, some time ago, that Bob Widlar used to use his "Mexican computer," namely, Teledeltos paper. This is a kind of resistive paper that you could use to make analogs or analogues of various physical items. Well, several people wrote in to ask, where can one buy some Teledeltos paper, these days? I checked around and found quickly that the last 3 places we had bought this paper were not in business any more. That's one of the problems you get when you buy a 5-year supply of something—after 4 years, you find that the guy has gone out of business—and, since you haven't bought anything for 4 years, no wonder. Our Librarian Mary Holland was agreeable to trying to help me find, where can you buy it? We still had several yards left, but we did not have enough to give or sell to all the people who wanted some. Mary did a search of businesses who might be selling anything by that trade name. No luck.

Then she started doing searches of the technical literature and journals. She found some Englishmen who had used it as recently as 6 or 8 years ago, in various technical studies.

Unfortunately, I was not able to contact any of those people to talk to. But Mary did not give up easily. She searched for companies in the United Kingdom who might be making or selling this Teledeltos paper, and she found a company—Sensitised Coatings, Bergen Way, North Lynn Industrial Estate, Kings Lynn, Norfolk, England PE30 2JL.

After a little planning and negotiating, we were able to arrange a business deal, to keep it in a simple form, so anybody who wants to buy some Teledeltos paper can do it easily:

Simply buy an International Money Order for 44.00 pounds sterling (about $70). This pays for everything, including the paper, tax, packing, plus shipping, air freight to anywhere in the U.S.A.. (Unfortunately, the fee for the Money Order will be about $30, but that is an acceptable expense, if you are warned.) Send this money order to Mr. David Eatwell at the address above. This will soon get you a roll 29-in. wide by 45-ft. long, about 6 kilohms per square, Grade SC20.

Or if you send a money order for 36.50 pounds sterling, you can get a roll 18 in. x 59 ft., tax and air shipping included. Either way, the price per square foot is about the same, about 85 cents per square foot, fairly reasonable, as most experiments take only 1/2 or 1 or 2 square feet.

Now, while you are waiting for the paper to arrive, you have to get some conductive paint. You can buy 1/2 ounce of silver-loaded paint for about $36 from various hobby stores. The only problem with this stuff is, after you open it once, you come back in a month and it's all dried up. There are various kinds of conductive sprays or paints, and I do not have much luck finding them in stock, or getting them to work. At present, Planned Products, 303 Potrero St. (Suite 53), Santa Cruz, CA 95060 sells a new product, 1/2 ounce of silver-loaded epoxy (mix equal amounts of 2 components and it will cure in 10 minutes). I bought some, and it works well (about $14.95).You can phone them at (408) 459-8088. Also buy several inexpensive brushes and get some soft stranded copper wire.

OKAY—now that you have all this STUFF, what can you do with it? You can make a resistive analogue (or analog), a model of the physical thing you want to analyze. I have used it perhaps a dozen times since I was a sophomore at MIT, and on each of these occasions, it was exactly the right thing to do the job.

One of the early uses of this paper was to model the potentials in a vacuum tube. You paint onto the paper, a conductive pattern that represents the cathode, grids, and plate, and use conductive cement (or paint) to connect wires to those regions. Then you apply some voltages to the elements, and look for the patterns of the fields and the equivalent electron flow.

Now, you don't have to apply 300 V just because you are modeling a tube. This is an analog, remember, and if 5 or 10 V is convenient, then all the signals are proportional. You can probe carefully to see where the equipotential lines are, using a sharp probe, very delicately. You can also conclude from this that the current flow is orthogonal to the lines of equal potential.

Figure 1 shows a typical example of how you can make an oddly-shaped resistor, where the outlines of the Teledeltos paper are cut, and contacts to the resistor are made with conductive paint. I've used it to compute the resistance of a low-ohms thin-film resistor with the smallest legal shape I could make. I painted along the ends of the unknown resistance. I just used a minimum amount of conductive paint to make the outline of the ends of the resistor. Then I made the outline of a simple rectangle so we could establish the sheet resistivity of the paper right adjacent to the experiment. After all, if the sheet resistivity varies 5% in a few inches, you can't be surprised.... Then we did some ratiometric tests and found what the resistance was. If the resistance was too low, we could slice off a little.

Another time, we made some current shunts with precision voltage taps, made out of N+ material. We had one geometry that gave repeatable results, and we wanted to change the shape a little to get a slightly larger voltage. We made up various shapes and compared them. See Figure 2. Of course, in this case, you have to be very careful not to nick the paper when you cut it, or you'll have a bad flaw in your analysis.

Figure 3 shows how Bob Widlar used this Teledeltos paper to define the sizes of several strangely-shaped emitter ballast resistors in his high-performance circuits. If there are any old-timers who have had other uses for Teledeltos paper, we will be interested to hear what they say.

I talked to Mr. Ken Eatwell, who worked with Teledeltos paper in its early days. He explained this paper was first developed in the United States by Western Union about 1936, as a paper sensitive to electric pulses, for the new Facsimile (Fax) machines. After the war, the Creed Co. (a subsidiary of ITT) started to make the "L39" paper, under license in England. Originally, the carbon-loaded paper was coated with dark gray lead thiosulfide, but for a better image, this was changed to a lighter gray copper thiocyanate. In the 1950's, Creed decided that the Fax business would never go anywhere, and got out of the business. Mr. Eatwell thought they were wrong, and started his company, Sensitised Coatings. These days, Fax machines use thermally-sensitive paper, or plain paper with a laser engine or ink jets.

Now is this paper adaptable to a 3-dimensional study? Generally not. I would love to have some 3-dimensional resistive stuff, to help me estimate thermal impedances and thermal cross-talk on an IC die. But I don't think the Teledeltos paper gives me any help there.

Three-dimensional flow is a whole 'nother ballgame. I have thought about making a capacitive analog using a large tub of oil in the shape of a die, with little electrodes in the shape of the heat sources. I am sure I could do this, but I haven't gotten exactly desperate enough to make this one. Besides, one spill and I'd be banned from our lab for life.

Could a powerful modern computer do any or all of this work? Quite possibly, using Finite Element Analysis. But if there is an error in there, you are not likely to find it. If you make an error with Teledeltos paper, you have to think about the shape of the curves, and you may get enough insights that you would catch a mistake. Also, for certain kinds of geometries, the Teledeltos paper may be really easy to apply, when defining the shapes for a computer might be excessively hard.

Is the Teledeltos paper really the hard way, the old-fashioned way? Maybe it seems old-fashioned, but if it gives you some good insights, then it may be a superior technique. And it may be easier than typing a whole bunch of data into a computer.

All for now. / Comments invited! RAP / Robert A. Pease / Engineer

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About the Author

Bob Pease

Bob obtained a BSEE from MIT in 1961 and was a staff scientist at National Semiconductor Corp., Santa Clara, CA, for many years. He was a well known and long time contributing editor to Electronic Design.

We also have a number of PDF eBooks by Bob that members can download from the Electronic Design Members Library.

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