English: Man tuning an Eagle
vacuum tube radio receiver in 1924. The radio is a 5 tube
Neutrodyne tuned radio frequency (TRF) set, with two stages of tuned radio frequency amplification, a grid-leak
detector, and two stages of audio frequency amplification.. Tuning in a station on early TRF radios was a complicated process. The set has 3
tuned circuits, controlled by the 3 large knobs, which had to be tuned in unison to the new station. If the circuits were tuned to different frequencies, very little signal would get through the receiver and be heard. So finding a station was a process of successive approximation, going back and forth between the knobs, adjusting them, until the station was loudest in the earphones. Once a station was found, the graduation numbers on the knobs were written down as this man is doing, to make it possible to find the station again. This was called
logging the station. Later TRF sets had the capacitors of the tuned circuits "ganged"; linked together mechanically, so they could be tuned in tandem with a single knob, but in early sets like this the resonant frequencies of the tuned circuits didn't "track" well enough to allow this.