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I believe Zenith was acquired by Goldstar,
http://www.zenith.com "Len Over 21" wrote in message ... In article , "Phil Kane" writes: On Sun, 12 Oct 2003 17:41:41 -0500, Gray Shockley wrote: If memory serves, Heath didn't throw in the towel, per se. Zenith bought them out for their computer(s) and terminals and then Zenith tossed out nearly all of Heath except those items. Didn't Shlumberger get into the picture before Zenith, or was it after Zenith? Memory says that Schlumberger acquired them first, then Zenith. The Heath-Zenith home appliance/gadget corporate headquarters moved to someplace else (southeast?) according to what I remember from the doorbell packages. Zenith quit the TV receiver manufacture some time ago; they were a close second to Admiral Corporation, also in the Chicago area. My first kit was a Heath Q-1. Mine also, 1951. The CRT in the kit was WW2 surplus, 5BP1, container still marked with Army lettering. :-) My first Heathkit was their VTVM (Vacuum-Tube Voltmeter for those who never played with one). One of the best test instruments of its time (1950s). It's still good. My Heath VTVM was purchased in late 1953, shipped to my battalion mailbox in Tokyo, Japan, while assigned to ADA. Used it for checking "Hi-Fi" music electronic kits purchased at the legendary Akihabara district of Tokyo, even then a mecca for electronics-radios-components covering many square blocks. Mine traveled with me back to Illinois then California. Slight drift in the resistor values makes it a tad out of spec now and the rotary switches will probably never survive another cleaning (oxide build-up on the rotary contacts has always been a problem with old electronics). The Heath SB-310 receiver kit, purchased and built two decades later, has almost useless rotary switch contacts now. LHA |
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