Plantronics

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Plantronics Corporation
Type Public (NYSEPLT)
Founded 1962
Headquarters Santa Cruz, California
Key people Kenneth Kannappan (CEO)
Industry Consumer electronics
Products Headsets (Circumaural), Audio equipment
Employees over 4500 in 19 countries
Website www.plantronics.com

Plantronics is a hardware company based in Santa Cruz, California, that specializes in lightweight headsets and is the market leader worldwide[1].

Contents

[edit] History

In the early 1960s, airline headesets were so large and clunky, that many pilots had switched back to the use of handheld microphones for communications. The speed and complexity of jet airliners caused a need for the introduction of small, lightweight headsets into the cockpit. In 1961, United Airlines solicited new designs from anyone who was interested. Courtney Graham, a United Airline pilot, was one of the many who thought the heavy headsets should be replaced by something lighter. He collaborated with his pilot friend, Keith Larkin, to create a small, functional design which was robust enough to pass airlines standards. (Larkin had been working for a small company called Plane-Aids, a Japanese import company which offered spectacles and sunglasses that contained transistor radios in their temple pieces.)[1]

The final design, incorporating two small hearing aid-style transducers attached to a headband was submitted to United Airline approval. UAL's approval of the innovative design caused Graham and Larkin to incorporate as Pacific Plantronics (now called Plantronics, Inc.) on May 18, 1961. They introduced the first lightweight communications headset, the MS-50, to the commercial marketplace in 1962.

Photos shows Plantronics, Inc. (SPENCOM) headsets in use by NASA Astronauts Evans and Cernan aboard the Apollo 17 spacecraft.
Photos shows Plantronics, Inc. (SPENCOM) headsets in use by NASA Astronauts Evans and Cernan aboard the Apollo 17 spacecraft.

[edit] SPENCOMM and NASA

In 1961, NASA astronaut, Wally Schirra contacted Courtney Graham, a fellow pilot, to discuss creating a design for a small, lightweight headset to be used in the Mercury spacecraft.

Pacific Plantronics assembled its Space Environmental Communications (SPENCOMM) division to begin working on a reliable solution. SPENCOMM personnel traveled to NASA’s Manned Spacecraft Center (now Johnson Space Center) and Kennedy Space Center to meet with and get design feedback from Schirra and several other astronauts, including Gordon Cooper.

[1]

Together, SPENCOMM and NASA spent only 11 days to create a working microphone design for space communications and Schirra was the first to use the new communication technology during the Sigma 7 (Mercury-Atlas 8) mission.[1] Significant redundancy was built into these headsets, as each microphone circuit had two transducers and each receiver had 5 transducers--in addition, the headsets were used in pairs. The use of these SPENCOMM-NASA headsets in astronaut spacesuits continued through the remainder of the Mercury program, the Apollo program and on to this day.

And in 1969, U.S. astronaut Neil Armstrong stood on the moon and spoke one of the most enduring sentences in history: “That’s one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind...” transmitted through a Plantronics headset.

[2]

[edit] Gallery

[edit] Early Success for MS-50

As the primary result of the Pacific Plantronics partnership with NASA in the Space Program, the MS-50 headset gained nearly instant recognition in the communication marketplace. FAA, Western Electric and many companies with major telephone call centers adapted the MS-50 as a replacement for existing headsets.

[edit] MS-50 Patent

On May 18, 1965, U.S. Pat. No. 3,184,556 was issued to W. K. Larkin for a

miniaturized headset wherein a hearing-aid size microphone transducer and a similarly miniaturized transducer are placed in a capsule mounted near the user's ear; speech is conducted to the microphone via an acoustic tube positioned near the user's mouth, while incoming communications emanating from the receiver are conducted to the user's ear via a second acoustic tube.

[3]

The MS-50 was known commonly as a Larkin-type headset and it could be used with either a light headband or the temple bar of an eyeglass frame as the supporting member for the transducer housing.

In addition, users found that if a longer ear tube on the MS-50, the headband could hang around the user's neck. With this discovery, it became possible to rapidly adjust the headset to any of six different positions, increasing comfort for long-term wear. The six positions are on eyeglasses to the wearer's left or right, on headband to the left or right, and around the neck to the left or right. When the longer tube is on a headset worn on the headband in the traditional location, excess tube may be coiled around the headset support pad on the appropriate side, or left free and slack.

Image from StarSet patent showing proposed use of invention.

[edit] StarSet

In 1970, Ken Hutchings, an engineer who had joined Pacific Plantronics, patented a device which was marketed as the StarSet. United States Patent 3548118 describes

A self-supporting headset having a housing which accommodtates a receiver and microphone. A flexible acoustic tube adapted to communicate between the auditory canal of the ear of the user and the receiver secured to the bottom of the housing, and an adjustable acoustic tube secured to the top of the housing with its distal end adapted to be disposed adjacent to the mouth of the user to transmit sound to the microphone.

[4]

[edit] Cordless Products

[edit] Infrared Devices

In the 1980s, Plantronics ventured into new areas to create a line of cordless products using infrared technology. Though the technology utilized was the same one being used by television remote controls, it had the advantage that the link did not require an FCC telecommunications approval. One of the first products used the infrared beam to create a communications link between a small transmitter and a base unit which was connected to the telephone network. This product was the first "echo-free" speakerphone for use in conference rooms. The small transmitter could be handheld or clipped to clothing to ensure a good pickup of the speaker's voice.

[edit] RF Devices

In 2003, Plantronics introduced the CS50 wireless headset for use on office phones. Since that time, wireless headsets have been widely adopted in businesses around the world.

[edit] Mobile Devices

Plantronics manufactures a wide variety of wireless headsets, including a diverse line of Bluetooth headsets for mobile phones. Wireless headsets are the largest growth area for Plantronics and other headset manufacturers in the last few years.

[edit] Corporate expansion and acquisitions

In the 1980s, Plantronics expanded into other segments of the audio equipment market through carefully targeted acquisitions.

[edit] Clarity

In 1986, Plantronics acquired Walker Equipment, Ringgold, Georgia, a manufacturer of amplified handsets and telephones. The Clarity products were created to enhance telephone usability for those with hearing impairment. Walker later acquired Ameriphone in 2002, and became Walker Ameriphone before changing its name to Clarity; Clarity is now US leading supplier of amplified telephones and is the first company in the world to utilize digital signal processing for audio processing in an amplified telephone [2].

[edit] Altec Lansing

In 2005, Plantronics acquired computer speaker manufacturer Altec Lansing for approximately 166 million dollars.[5] In recent earnings and investor calls Plantronic's management have referred to this acquisition as a "turnaround" given disappointing financial results since purchase.[6]

[edit] Volume Logic

Plantronics later acquired Octiv, Inc. in March 2005 as one of its brands and renamed it as the Volume Logic division. They specialize in giving professionals an audio contouring toolset for crafting 5.1 surround sound soundtracks. Although the Volume Logic series of applications have since been discontinued, the underlying technology has adapted Plantronics telephony products to improve the sound quality of conference and personal phone calls.

[edit] Trivia

  • Plantronics is one of the oldest and largest continuous employers in Santa Cruz County.
  • MS50-series headsets worn in Mission Control and the Apollo spacecraft are still popular today among aviators and professional communicators.
  • Plantronics remains one of the most perfered headsets in aviation, alongside David Clark.
  • The current range of Bluetooth products for mobile phone usage are all named after NASA spacecraft - Discovery, Voyager and Explorer

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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