| TELEMETRY | Bid to restrict nameless component leading to transmission of data (9) |
| PASSEPARTOUT | Obsolete component leading to misaligned tape |
| VIDEO | Relating to transmission or reception of televised messages (5) |
| MANUAL | A Haynes guide to transmission type? (6) |
| OBTUSE | Hard to understand outside broadcast prior to transmission's initial purpose (6) |
| GEAR | When it comes to transmissions, it's primary (5,4) |
| FIRST | When it comes to transmissions, it's primary (5,4) |
| NEARING | Readying up for something integral to transmissions (7) |
| OTTOLOEWI | Co-recipient of the 1936 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (with Sir Henry Dale) 'for their discoveries relating to chemical transmission of nerve impulses' (4,5) |
| SEMAPHORE | Device for the visible transmission of messages using flags (9) |
| RADIATION | Transmission of aid varies in share (9) |
| CONTAGION | Transmission of disease: go and contain it this way (9) |
| MULTIPLEX | In telecommunications, a system that enables simultaneous transmission of two or more signals (9) |
| TELEGRAPH | Any device or system that allows the transmission of information by coded signal over distance, or the device for transmitting printed information by wire or radio wave. (9) |
| SHORTWAVE | Transmission of Radio 4's success with broadcast worth inclusion (5,4) |
| INSULANTS | Things that reduce the transmission of heat or sound |
| MORSECODE | Spooner's unsophisticated method that allows transmission of messages (5,4) |
| UPLINKING | Transmission of information using a satellite |
| FIBREOPTIC | Brief sort of device attached to bottle of transmission of light (5-5) |
| RADIO | General name for sound communication by radio waves, usually through the transmission of music, news, and other types of programs from single broadcast stations to multitudes of individual listeners e |