Svetlana (company)
Industry | Electronics |
---|---|
Founded | 1889 |
Headquarters | , |
254,760,000 Russian ruble | |
Parent | Ruselectronics |
Website | Official website |
PJSC Svetlana (Russian: ПАО «Светлана») is a company based in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It is primarily involved in the research, design, and manufacturing of electronic and microelectronic instruments.[1] Svetlana is part of Ruselectronics.[2] The name of the company is said to originate from the words for 'light of an incandescent lamp' (СВЕТ ЛАмпы НАкаливания).[3]
History
[edit]The company was established in 1889 as the Ya. M. Aivaz (Russian: Я. М. Айваз) Factory.[4] Svetlana was a major producer of vacuum tubes. In 1937, the Soviet Union purchased a tube assembly line from RCA, including production licenses and initial staff training, and installed it on the St Petersburg plant.[5] US-licensed tubes were produced since then.
Since 2001, New Sensor Corp. has been holding the rights for the Svetlana vacuum tube brand for the US and Canada.[6][7] The New Sensor tubes are actually manufactured at the Expo-pul factory (former Reflektor plant) in Saratov. Tubes manufactured by Svetlana in Saint Petersburg still bear the "winged С" (cyrillic S) logo (see the image below) but no longer the name Svetlana.
In 2017 the company announced a 3-billion-ruble modernization plan.[8]
Products
[edit]The Svetlana Association produces a variety of electronic and microelectronic instruments, including transmitting and modulator tubes for all frequency ranges; X-band broadband passive TR limiter; KU-band broadband TR tube; klystron amplifiers; X-ray tubes; portable X-ray units for medicine and industry; high-frequency fast response thyristors; transistors; integrated microcircuits; microcomputers; microcontrollers; microcalculators; ultrasonic delay lines; receiving tubes; process equipment for the manufacture of electronic engineering items.[1] Vacuum tubes currently in production include the 6550, 6L6, EL34, and KT88.[9]
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Vacuum tube 6B8S, manufactured in 1954, bearing the "winged С" (cyrillic S) logo of Svetlana
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Germanium transistor P14B, manufactured in 1961
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ECL integrated circuit 1500LM101, manufactured in 1988
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16-bit microcontroller K1827VE1 (1989) in an MS2703 microcomputer, also from Svetlana
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Vacuum tube 6550 C
Directors
[edit]- 1961-1969 — Kaminsky I. I.
- 1969-1988 — Filatov O. V.
- 1988-1991 — Khizha G. S.
- 1991-1993 — Shchukin Gennady Anatolyevich
- 1993-1994 — Bashkatov V. E.
- 1994-2014 — Popov V. V.[10]
- since 2014 — Gladkov N. Y.
See also
[edit]- 6P1P vacuum tube
- Russian tube designations
- 7400 series – Second sources in Europe and the Eastern Bloc
- Soviet integrated circuit designation
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Russian Defense Business Directory". Federation of American Scientists. US Department of Commerce Bureau of Export Administration. May 1995. Retrieved 21 July 2017. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- ^ "Список аффилированных лиц" (in Russian). ПАО «Светлана». Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "Soviet Calculators History". Xnumber.com. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
- ^ "История". ПАО «Светлана» (in Russian). Retrieved 15 October 2017.
- ^ Die Geschichte der Russischen Roehren (in German)
- ^ Willis, Barry (23 February 2004). "Svetlana vs. Svetlana". stereophile. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
- ^ "NEW SENSOR CORP. v. CE DISTRIBUTION LLC". LEAGLE. 3 February 2004. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
- ^ "«Светлана» инвестирует 3 млрд рублей в модернизацию и новые разработки". Vedomosti. 18 July 2017. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
- ^ "Продукция АО "С.Е.Д.-СПб"" [Production of AO "S.E.D.-CPB"] (in Russian). Svetlana Electron Devices. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
- ^ "Биография - Попов Владимир Васильевич". ПАО "Светлана" (in Russian). Retrieved 2024-06-05.
External links
[edit]- Russian company stubs
- Electronics companies of Russia
- Manufacturing companies of Russia
- Companies based in Saint Petersburg
- Ruselectronics
- Vacuum tubes
- Manufacturing companies established in 1889
- Electronics companies of the Soviet Union
- Companies nationalised by the Soviet Union
- Ministry of the Electronics Industry (Soviet Union)
- Russian brands