Norman Krim

Norman Krim - Raytheon Engineer and Engineering Manager(1933-1948), Vice President Receiving Tube Division (1948-1950) and First Vice President of Raytheon Receiving Tubes, Cathode Ray Tubes and Semiconductor Division (1950-1961). CEO and consultant for Radio Shack. Retired as Raytheon Historian

Norman (Norm) B. Krim (1913–2011) was an American electronics engineer and engineering executive. His drive to create a transistor product for the electronic experimenter-hobbyist market contributed to paving the path for a generation of American electronic engineers and technicians during the Space Race between the United States and the Soviet Union.

The result was that a whole generation of aspiring engineers — kids, really, working in their garages and basements — got to make all kinds of electronic projects. A lot of them went on to become engineers.—Harry Goldstein, editor for IEEE Spectrum magazine.[1]

Early years

Norm Krim was born June 3, 1913 Manhattan, New York, one of four children of parents Abraham and Ida Krim. He graduated from George Washington High School at age 16 then attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) where he graduated 1934 in electrical engineering.[2] He worked for most of his career for Raytheon, (over 75 years).[1]

He began as an engineer at Raytheon when he was hired in 1933 during his junior year at MIT for 50 cents an hour. His first success was in the development of subminiature tubes, in the Special Tubes group. While working in the special tube division, before the outbreak of WW2, he wanted to use subminiature tubes in consumer products (hearing aids and radios). After Raytheon's success in subminiature tubes for wartime applications such as the proximity fuze, Raytheon became the leader in the design and production of subminiature tubes. Raytheon promoted Krim to be head of the Special Tube Division. The proximity fuze was a small radar-like device attached to on a bomb or artillery shell that would detonate the bomb or shell before impact, causing a greater destruction.[3] Just as importantly, the fuze initiated detonation *without* needing to impact the target directly, or to rely on an altitude setting in the fuze that would detonate the shell at an estimated target height, and close enough that the shrapnel cloud would impact the target. Given the extremes of aircraft target range and speed, and of shell accuracy of the day, the proximity fuze dramatically increased the effectiveness of anti-aircraft fire. After World War Two ended, Norman Krim got the go ahead from Laurence Marshall head of Raytheon, to build the first pocket portable tube radio using and adapting subminiature tubes for commercial products. The radio was called the Belmont Boulevard designed by Niles Gowell (Raytheon had acquired Belmont Radio Corp for this purpose).[4]

Raytheon Subminiature Tube (CK5676 shown)- Made the proximity fuze possible in wartime and the portable hearing aid possible in peacetime

Raytheon Semiconductor Products

Although the Belmont Boulevard did not sell well, he later was given another challenge by Laurence Marshall the head of Raytheon to start making semiconductor products. Under his direction Raytheon became a leader in making hearing aid transistors. A Time Magazine article in 1953 stated, “This little device, a single speck of germanium, is smaller than a paper clip and works perfectly at one-tenth the power needed by the smallest vacuum tube. Today, much of Raytheon’s transistor output goes to America’s hearing aid industry.” The hearing aid was first mass-produced consumer electronics to be miniaturized. By 1948 Raytheon had 98% of the hearing aid tube market. Because of the invention transistor by Bell Labs in 1948, Raytheon, under Krim's direction started making transistors for hearing aids. Their first transistor product was the CK703 point contact transistor. His successes in Raytheon's Semiconductor Products allowed him to become Vice President of Receiving, Cathode Ray Tubes and Semiconductor Division.[2]

1954 Acousticon Hearing Aid with Hybrid Design showing Raytheon CK549DX Hearing Aid Tubes and the Raytheon CK718 Hearing Aid Transistor

He is particularly known for developing the first mass-production alloy junction transistor and used the fallouts or transistors that did not meet specifications as transistors to be sold at a much lower cost, the CK721 and CK722. Raytheon quickly moved into alloy junction transistor because of the lower noise, more rugged and lend it self to mass production, compared to point contact transistor. Establishing a tradition that would become a distinctive feature of early transistors, these (CK722) were production drop-outs from another transistor line, the CK721, that did not pass test criteria for the CK718 hearing aid transistor (the main product). However they could be sold at a much lower cost as a lower specification product. This concept help start a new market for transistors, the experimenter and hobby line. Seeing this window of opportunity Krim linked up with Radio Shack to market the hobby grade transistors. Other manufacturers followed soon after.[1]

Early- Before 1956

Later as transistor yield improved and size got smaller- After 1956

In the later runs Raytheon kept the bigger transistor case size for the CK721 and CK722. A possible reason was marketing. The size was like an identifying physical trademark. Many people who used these transistor still remembered what they looked like.[5]

Transistor radios

Although Regency is credited of building and marketing the first Transistor Radio (Model TR-1 in 1954), Raytheon was only a few months behind with the 8TP1 through 4 "lunchbox" style radio. Norman Krim was involved in the early trasistor radio designs. According to Krim, at the Chapel St labs, they made a six transistor superheterodyne radio in 1952-53. Transistor radio designs for mass production went to Belmont Radio Corporation headed by Henry F. Argento a division of Raytheon. More info on Belmont go to this link Belmont-Raytheon.

Unlike Regency (IDEA Inc), Raytheon used their own transistors. Regency contracted with Texas Instruments, a young upcoming semiconductor manufacturer. According to Consumer Reports Magazine articles dated April and July 1955, the Raytheon was a better radio (used 7 transistors vs 4 in the Regency), but quite a bit larger.[6] Raytheon marketed only four models (8TP series, T-100 series, T-150 series and T-2500) and got out of the transistor radio market after 1956. More information can be found at this link "Oral History: Norman Krim 1984".[7]

Raytheon Transistor Radios. LEFT 8TP4 World's 2nd Transistor Radio (1955) and RIGHT T-2500 Raytheon's Last Transistor Radio (1956)

Later career and retirement

Norman Krim was married to the former Beatrice Barron (deceased in 1994) for 52 years. They had three children Robert, Arthur and Donald.[2]

For a brief time he left his VP position at Raytheon and served as CEO of Radio Shack from 1961-1963. He sold his interests to the Tandy Corporation in 1962.[1] He returned to Raytheon until his retirement in 1997. During those years he was also part of a consulting firm. In later years he would act as Raytheon's in-house historian.[8] Norman Krim was a senior member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers or IEEE. He died in December 2011, in Newton, MA at the age of 98.

Engineering contribution to society

According to Jack Ward's "Semiconductor Museum", Norman Krim is credited to inspire the transistor hobbyist and experimenter market with the creation of the CK721 and CK722. As Jack Ward, curator of the Semiconductor Museum website states, "Many of the talented and dedicated professionals and amateurs who have been responsible for the tremendous rise of the electronics industry over the past four decades can still remember the time when, as a young hobbyist, they were able to scrape together enough money (maybe through saving allowance or cutting the neighbor’s grass) to buy that first CK722...." From the CK722, came articles in electronic magazines, books and pamphlets on do it yourself building projects and competition from Raytheon's competitors notably General Electric who following Krim's lead of recycling out of specification transistors came up with the 2N107 transistor.[5]

The Belmont Boulevard (1945), A Vacuum Tube Pocket Radio Using Raytheon Subminiature Tubes

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Goldstein, Harry (23 December 2011). "In Memoriam: Norman Krim". IEEE Spectrum Tech Talk/Blog.
  2. 1 2 3 Hevesi, Dennis. "Norman Krim, Who Championed the Transistor Dies at 98". 2011/12/20. New York Times. Retrieved 2013-02-02.
  3. Krim, Norman. "Raytheon Hearing Aid Transistors- Audio Clip 3". Jack Ward. Retrieved 2013-04-02.
  4. Schiffer, Michael Brian (1991). The Portable Radio In American Life. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press. p. 162. ISBN 0-8165-1284-1.
  5. 1 2 Ward, Jack. "Norman Krim The Father of the CK722". Jack Ward.
  6. American Classics, M31 Gallery of. "1955 Raytheon 8TP Series". 2007. Robert Davidson. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  7. Wolf, Michael. "Oral History: Norman B. Krim 1984". December 11, 1984. IEEE History Center, New Brunswick, NJ. Retrieved 2013-02-03.
  8. Harry Goldstein (March 2003). "The Irresistible Transistor". IEEE Spectrum.

External links

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