Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q5532137> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 33 of
33
with 100 triples per page.
- Q5532137 subject Q7471324.
- Q5532137 abstract "General Radio Company (later, GenRad) was a broad-line manufacturer of electronic test equipment. Started in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1915 by Melville Eastham, the company moved to West Concord in the 1950s. There, it became a major player in the automatic test equipment (ATE) business, manufacturing a line of testers for assembled printed circuit boards. It also produced extensive lines of electrical component measuring equipment, sound and vibration measurement and RLC standards.Primarily because of its line of ATE equipment, the company was eventually acquired by Teradyne in 2001 and has now been relocated to Teradyne's corporate campus in North Reading, Massachusetts. In 1991, QuadTech, Inc. was founded as spinoff of GenRad's Instrumentation Division. IET Labs, Inc. purchased the GenRad product lines from QuadTech. The classic GenRad instrument line including RLC standards and decades, Digibridges, LCR meters, megohmmeters, stroboscopes, and sound level meters continues to be manufactured and supported by IET Labs, Inc. in West Roxbury, MA. Among General Radio's accomplishments over the years have been: The introduction of one of the world's first portable oscilloscopes The production of many high-precision standards for resistance and capacitance The commercial production of the stroboscope as the Strobotac The commercial production of the sound level meter Commercial invention of the binding post. Invention of the GR connector The Variac variable autotransformerAdditional General Radio Firsts Can be found Here http://www.ietlabs.com/company_info/dev_history/".
- Q5532137 thumbnail 1540_Strobolume_by_General_Radio_Corporation_-_separate_control_box_and_strobe_on_tripod.jpg?width=300.
- Q5532137 wikiPageExternalLink dev_history.
- Q5532137 wikiPageExternalLink experimenters.
- Q5532137 wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Q5532137 wikiPageExternalLink historic_catalogs.
- Q5532137 wikiPageExternalLink historic_manuals.
- Q5532137 wikiPageExternalLink www.quadtech.com.
- Q5532137 wikiPageExternalLink www.teradyne.com.
- Q5532137 wikiPageExternalLink grhs.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q1140661.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q164399.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q173350.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q174320.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q178873.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q2102086.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q2404292.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q2427371.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q25358.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q260222.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q2622641.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q323477.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q363815.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q49111.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q523240.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q5514511.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q565668.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q7471324.
- Q5532137 wikiPageWikiLink Q9010708.
- Q5532137 comment "General Radio Company (later, GenRad) was a broad-line manufacturer of electronic test equipment. Started in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1915 by Melville Eastham, the company moved to West Concord in the 1950s. There, it became a major player in the automatic test equipment (ATE) business, manufacturing a line of testers for assembled printed circuit boards.".
- Q5532137 label "General Radio".
- Q5532137 depiction 1540_Strobolume_by_General_Radio_Corporation_-_separate_control_box_and_strobe_on_tripod.jpg.