Eimac
Eimac is a trade mark of Eimac Products, part of the Microwave Power Products Division of Communications & Power Industries. It produces power vacuum tubes for radio frequency applications such as broadcast and radar transmitters.
History
The Bay area was an early center of ham radio with about 10% of the operators in the United States. William Eitel, Jack McCullough, and Charles Litton, Sr., who together pioneered vacuum tube manufacturing in the Bay area, were hobbyists with training in technology gained locally who participated in development of shortwave radio by the ham radio hobby. High frequency, and especially, Very high frequency, VHF, transmission in the 10 meter band, required higher quality power tubes than were manufactured by the consortium of RCA, Western Electric, General Electric, Westinghouse which controlled vacuum tube manufacture. Litton pioneered the glass lathe which made mass production of reliable high quality power tubes possible.[1]
While employed by the small San Francisco, California manufacturing firm of Heintz & Kaufmann which manufactured custom radio equipment Bill Eitel (amateur radio call sign W6UF) and Jack McCullough (W6CHE) convinced company president Ralph Heintz (W6XBB) to allow them to develop a transmitting tube that could operate at lower voltages than those then available to the amateur radio market, such as the RCA 204A or the 852. Their effort was a success and resulted in production of the HK-354. Shortly after in 1934, Eitel and McCullough left H&K to form Eitel McCullough Corp. in San Bruno California.[2]
The first product produced under the trade mark "Eimac" was the 150T power triode. The new company thrived during World War II by selling tubes to the U.S. military for use in radar equipment.[3]
Mass production
Contracts to provide transmission tubes for radar and other radio equipment during World War II required adaption of mass production, research to improve the reliability of tubes, and development of standardized manufacturing techniques which could be performed by unskilled workers. The workforce expanded from a few hundred to several thousand.[4]
Welfare capitalism
A union organizing drive in 1939-40 by the strong Bay area labor movement was fought off by adoption of a strategy of welfare capitalism which included pensions and other generous benefits, profit sharing, and such extras as a medical clinic and a cafeteria. An atmosphere of cooperation and collaboration was established,[5]
Postwar
As wartime orders ceased and a large supply of military surplus transmission tubes flooded the market the firm laid off 90% of its workers and closed its plant in Salt Lake City. Reallocation of the FM band by the FCC in 1945, however, provided an opportunity for the firm to market a superior power tetrode tube which it had developed.[6]
Beginning in 1947, Eimac operated FM radio station KSBR from their plant in San Bruno, California, one of only two FM stations in the United States to test the new Rangertone tape recorders (adapted from the German Magnetophon recorders).[7] In need of more space, the company moved to San Carlos in 1959. [8] Eimac's San Carlos plant was dedicated on April 16, 1959.[9] In 1965, Eimac merged with Varian Associates and became known as the Eimac Division. In August 1995, Varian Associates sold the Electron Device Business to Leonard Green & Partners, a private equity fund, and members of management. Together, they formed Communications & Power Industries.
In January 2004, affiliates of The Cypress Group, a private equity fund, acquired CPI.
In February 2011, an affiliate of Veritas Capital, a private equity investment firm acquired CPI.
References
- ↑ Christophe Lécuyer (August 24, 2007). Making Silicon Valley: Innovation and the Growth of High Tech, 1930-1970 (trade paperback) 13–40. ISBN 978-0262622110. . The MIT Press. pp.
- ↑ Orr, B (1994). Radio FUNdamentals, Do You Want A Kilowatt?? [sic], CQ p.60
- ↑ Orr, B (1994). Radio FUNdamentals, Do You Want A Kilowatt?? [sic], CQ p.61-62
- ↑ Christophe Lécuyer (August 24, 2007). Making Silicon Valley: Innovation and the Growth of High Tech, 1930-1970 (trade paperback) 38–45. ISBN 978-0262622110. . The MIT Press. pp.
- ↑ Christophe Lécuyer (August 24, 2007). Making Silicon Valley: Innovation and the Growth of High Tech, 1930-1970 (trade paperback) 40,41. ISBN 978-0262622110. . The MIT Press. pp.
- ↑ Christophe Lécuyer (August 24, 2007). Making Silicon Valley: Innovation and the Growth of High Tech, 1930-1970 (trade paperback) 45–48. ISBN 978-0262622110. . The MIT Press. pp.
- ↑ http://books.google.com/books?id=KDdQLuRBVW0C&pg=PA198&lpg=PA198&dq=KSBR,+San+Bruno&source=web&ots=oy0c8-ftrX&sig=EgjqmklSrjuR43Jb4pvJ_YXuNmo&hl=en#PPA198,M1
- ↑ http://www.ieeeghn.org/wiki/images/1/10/Eitel_Mccullough.jpg]
- ↑ Eitel-McCullough, Inc. building in San Carlos, 1959
- ↑ http://www.cpii.com/history.cfm