264:) on a 15-acre (61,000 m) plot in 1959. The 15-acre property is recorded by the Town of North Smithfield Tax Assessor as Lot No. 60 on Plat No. 4, and Lot No. 385 on Plat No. 5. There are five buildings located on the property. The property is bordered to the north by Industrial Drive; to the south by Comstock Road, to the east by a grassy area; and to the west by Providence Pike. The plant was operated by one of Philips' fully owned subsidiaries, Amperex Electronics, to supply
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217:, X-ray tubes, Geiger-Muller tubes, and large transmitting tubes were also manufactured at this location. This location became the headquarters for North American Philips (NAP). The factory was completed in 1953 and closed in 1989. All assets were then sold to Richardson Electronics of rural Lafox, near
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Amperex also operated a site in North
Smithfield, RI . In the 1980s it was used for marketing, sales, QC and Engineering R&D of their discrete semi-conductor business. Before any components were shipped to US based customers QC staff would run some or all pieces through EATON testing equipment.
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In 1973, several years after its acquisition by
Amperex, the manufacturing operations of Advanced Micro Electronics were transferred to Slatersville. The products transferred from Advanced Micro Electronics included small signal silicon planar transistors for military and industrial applications,
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The popularity of the
Plumbicon tubes was so great that Amperex, built a second plant adjacent to the 1959 building on the Slatersville site to meet the demand. The new plant was 85,000 sq ft (7,900 m), and at the time of construction employed the largest and cleanest clean room
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James A Robinson-President (1980 - Merger), Sam Norris, Frank
Randall-General Sales Manager, Irwin Rudich-Product Manager(special purpose tubes and semiconductors), Charles Roddy-Product Manager (transmitting tubes), Michael J. Pawelko-Engineering Manager (1949-1986)
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facilities in the world. The plant was officially opened in 1967 and is still making
Plumbicon camera tubes today. Although the original use of Plumbicon camera tubes was in broadcast television, current demand is primarily in for use in medical imaging equipment.
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tubes used in studio television cameras. The technical advantages of this new tube allowed true color fidelity to be seen in television broadcasts for the first time. In 1967 the
Academy of Television Arts and Sciences presented Philips with an
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logic diodes. Millions of these diodes were manufactured at the
Slatersville plant every year. With the advent of silicon diodes in 1962 there was a decreasing demand for these germanium diodes, so Philips transferred their germanium
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In 1998 Philips
Components purchased, from English Electric Valve (EEV), the only other lead oxide camera tube business still in existence and so became the World's sole lead oxide camera tube manufacturer.
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using both thin and thick film technology. Manufacturing of these three products and the sales office for
Philips Semiconductors were housed in Slatersville until 1992 when this business unit was sold.
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394:"Apparatus for Recognizing Hand Printed Characters", United States Patent 3,909,785, September 30, 1975, assigned to Amperex Electronics Corporation, Hicksville, New York.
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391:"GRAPHICAL DATA DEVICE", United States Patent 3,838,212, September 24, 1974, assigned to Amperex Electronics Corporation, Hicksville, New York.
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Engineers at customer sites would work with
Amperex engineers to determine the best use and components for the customer needs.
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North American Philips Corporation built a 40,000 sq ft (3,700 m) plant at 100 Providence Pike,
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for "Outstanding Achievement in Engineering Development" for the invention of the Plumbicon tube.
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Brooklyn, New York; Hicksville, New York; Slatersville, Rhode Island; Cranston, Rhode Island,
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Amperex had a 25,000-square-foot (2,300 m) manufacturing facility at 99 Bald Hill Road,
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test equipment. Although Amperex stopped making vacuum tubes long ago, hoards of
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A Survey of Early Power Transistors: Amperex 1950s Germanium Power Transistors
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The Hicksville factory had a company-sponsored softball team that played at
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For a brief time Amperex distributed a dot matrix printer, model GP-300.
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Amperex tubes were original equipment parts in many models of
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Defunct manufacturing companies based in New York (state)
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In 1960 Philips invented an imaging tube called the
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165:A voltage regulator vacuum tube made by Amperex
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438:Narragansett Technologies: History
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275:Post Alloy Diffused Transistor
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461:History - Amperex
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419:References
295:Emmy Award
215:magnetrons
175:Nixie tube
69:Key people
282:Plumbicon
270:germanium
183:Tektronix
86:Products
77:Employee
41:Industry
444:Amperex
386:Patents
286:vidicon
140:Marantz
120:Philips
49:Founded
18:Amperex
399:Notes
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