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![]() "mikehack" wrote in message ... Date posted: 2003-11-06 http://www.rwonline.com/dailynews/one.php?id=4115 Continental Electronics Has a New Owner Broadcast transmitter manufacturer Continental Electronics has a new owner. The company has had a varied ownership history. Continental was founded in 1946 by James O. Weldon and later became part of LTV Corp. In 1972, Weldon bought it back. Doesn't Continental trace their history back to Collins Radio of Cedar Rapids. Iowa? |
#2
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In article , "Bill Robinson"
wrote: "mikehack" wrote in message ... Date posted: 2003-11-06 http://www.rwonline.com/dailynews/one.php?id=4115 Continental Electronics Has a New Owner Broadcast transmitter manufacturer Continental Electronics has a new owner. The company has had a varied ownership history. Continental was founded in 1946 by James O. Weldon and later became part of LTV Corp. In 1972, Weldon bought it back. Doesn't Continental trace their history back to Collins Radio of Cedar Rapids. Iowa? I believe that the Collins broadcast transmitter line was a relatively recent acquisition, early on the acquired Western Electric's AM transmitter business, which I think set the tone for their future transmitter business. The Western Electric divestiture is interesting, I don't know that anyone picked up the FM line, probably because FM was going down the tubes at the time? A company whose name I don't remember seems to have picked up the Western Electric Television transmitter line, which may never have been sold under the Western Electric name. Anyone have more info on this? Regards, John Byrns Surf my web pages at, http://users.rcn.com/jbyrns/ |
#3
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![]() The Western Electric divestiture is interesting, I don't know that anyone picked up the FM line, probably because FM was going down the tubes at the time? A company whose name I don't remember seems to have picked up the Western Electric Television transmitter line, which may never have been sold under the Western Electric name. Anyone have more info on this? SEL got WECo's VHF TV transmitter line. The merger of the Collins line into CE was done many decades after the creation of CE from the spin-off of WECo's AM line. CE also made UHF TV transmitters in the 1950s. Whether any of these were WECo inspired, I can't say. They sure resembled WECo boxes, however. WECo's non-telco assets were spread all over the place. Litton Industries, my former employer, bought the Westrex Corporation assets from WECo, and these assets included all film production equipment, and all disk recording equipment ... IOW any equipment which handled "principal recording elements". Litton also got the Westrex trademark, and began to market this equipment under the Li/Westrex name, with Westrex Corp itself being a subsidiary of a supsidiary of Litton Industries, Inc. |
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