Previous
Story
Next
Story
Back to the InfoAge Homepage
Saturday Evening Post
by Shalett, S.
Aug. 23, 1952
pages. 34-35, 58, 62, 64, and 66
|
 |
 |
Unitizing components
Two other Squier Laboratory officials,
Lt.
Col. John T. Newman, deputy director, and
A. W.
Rogers, chief of the components-and-materials branch, prophesied that transistors
and auto-sembly wiring together will lead to still another revolutionary
technique -- “unitizing.” “Unitizing” means that entire sections
of wiring, tubes, and so forth, can be compressed into a small panel or
a plastic building block. When a radio or radar being used is a tank,
plane or at a front-line combat post goes bad, the repairman, instead of
struggling with the complicated wiring or installing a new set, simply
will locate the area of trouble, pull out the unit and insert a new section,
as quickly and simply as pluging in a new radio tube. The faulty
part, if worth salvaging, can be returned to a rear-area station for repair.
“Or,” said Rogers, “we can simply discard it like a throw-away beer bottle.”
Page updated January 1, 2004
page created August 29, 1999
Previous
Story
Next
Story
Back to the InfoAge Homepage