Dick Ropiequet: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Ropiequet_1959.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Dick Ropiequet, 1959]]
[[File:Ropiequet_1959.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Dick Ropiequet, 1959]]
[[File:1958_Dick_Ropiequet.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Dick Ropiequet, 1958]]
{{Person
'''Richard Lincoln Ropiequet''' (8 May 1920 - 25 April 2011) was a Tektronix engineer.  
|Names=Richard Lincoln Ropiequet
|Birth date=8 May 1920
|Birth place=St. Louis, MO, US
|Death date=25 April 2011
|Death place=Grass Valley, CA, US
|Countries=
|Affiliations=University of Illinois;Douglas Aircraft;Firestone Plastics Co.Tektronix;Alta Industries;
|Wikidata id=
}} was a Tektronix engineer.  


With a background as a Navy electronics technician and a BS in chemical engineering from University of Illinois (1946), “Rope” joined the company in 1949. He was a key figure in early Tek, eventually rising to the position of Executive Vice President of Engineering and CRT Research.  He left Tektronix in 1963.
With a background as a Navy electronics technician and a BS in chemical engineering from University of Illinois (1946), “Rope” joined the company in 1949.  
He was a key figure in early Tek, eventually rising to the position of Executive Vice President of Engineering and CRT Research.  He left Tektronix in 1963.
 
[https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-IRE/60s/IRE-Directory-1960-Members.pdf IRE Directory 1960]:
: ROPIEQUET, RICHARD L. (A'51-SM'54), V.P., Engrg., Tektronix, Inc., Box 831, Portland 7, Ore.


==Tek Products==
==Tek Products==
Ropiequet is credited with creating the precision sweep generator for models [[315]] and [[310]]
Ropiequet first projects at Tek were  the [[160]] series of modular instruments, in collaboration with doctors at the University of Oregon Medical School, and the [[122]] preamplifier.
 
He is credited with creating the precision sweep generator for models [[315]] and [[310]]
that for the first time permitted time calibration and led to the term “Time-Base” being adopted.
that for the first time permitted time calibration and led to the term “Time-Base” being adopted.
Ropiequet received Tek's first four patents (filed in 1953).
{{Designer|Dick Ropiequet}}
{{Patents|Dick Ropiequet}}


==Publications==
==Publications==
* http://www.infiniteparticlephysics.com/
* http://www.infiniteparticlephysics.com/
==Patents==
* [http://www.google.com/patents/US3355620 US3355620: Pulse counter tube employing voltage feedback from target to beam deflection electrodes isolated from any d. c. reference voltage] (Filed 2 Dec 1963, granted 28 Nov 1967)


==Links==
==Links==
* http://www.vintagetek.org/2011/10/richard-lincoln-ropiequet/
* http://www.vintagetek.org/2011/10/richard-lincoln-ropiequet/
* [http://www.worldsci.org/php/index.php?tab0=Scientists&tab1=Display&tab2=Display&id=182 World Science database]
* [http://www.worldsci.org/php/index.php?tab0=Scientists&tab1=Display&tab2=Display&id=182 World Science database]
* [https://wiki.naturalphilosophy.org/index.php?title=Richard_L_Ropiequet Richard L. Ropiequet @ naturalphilosophy.org]


 
==Photos==
<gallery>
Dick Ropiequet.jpg
Ropiequet_1959.jpg|1959
1958_Dick_Ropiequet.jpg|1958
Dick Ropiequet in lab.jpg
</gallery>
[[Category:Tektronix people]]
[[Category:Tektronix people]]

Latest revision as of 00:29, 18 November 2024

Dick Ropiequet, 1959

Richard Lincoln Ropiequet (b. 8 May 1920 in St. Louis, MO, US – d. 25 April 2011 in Grass Valley, CA, US) was a Tektronix engineer.

With a background as a Navy electronics technician and a BS in chemical engineering from University of Illinois (1946), “Rope” joined the company in 1949. He was a key figure in early Tek, eventually rising to the position of Executive Vice President of Engineering and CRT Research. He left Tektronix in 1963.

IRE Directory 1960:

ROPIEQUET, RICHARD L. (A'51-SM'54), V.P., Engrg., Tektronix, Inc., Box 831, Portland 7, Ore.

Tek Products

Ropiequet first projects at Tek were the 160 series of modular instruments, in collaboration with doctors at the University of Oregon Medical School, and the 122 preamplifier.

He is credited with creating the precision sweep generator for models 315 and 310 that for the first time permitted time calibration and led to the term “Time-Base” being adopted.

Ropiequet received Tek's first four patents (filed in 1953).

Products by Dick Ropiequet

Manufacturer Model Description Designers Introduced
Tektronix 122 low-level preamplifier Dick Ropiequet 1950
Tektronix 315 "Portable" tube scope Frank Hood Dick Ropiequet John Kobbe Ted Goodfellow Jim Morrow 1952
Tektronix 160 Modular Oscilloscope Dick Ropiequet 1952

Components by Dick Ropiequet

Patents by Dick Ropiequet

Page Office Number Title Inventors Company Filing date Grant date
Patent US 2752527A US 2752527A Method of magnifying waveforms on a cathode-ray tube and circuit therefor Dick Ropiequet Cliff Moulton Tektronix Inc 1953-08-18 1956-06-26
Patent US 2769904A US 2769904A Gated sweep generator Dick Ropiequet Tektronix Inc 1953-08-18 1956-11-06
Patent US 2778935A US 2778935A Cascode multivibrator Dick Ropiequet Tektronix Inc 1953-08-18 1957-01-22
Patent US 2769905A US 2769905A Sweep circuit Dick Ropiequet Tektronix Inc 1953-08-18 1956-11-06
Patent US 2853609A US 2853609A Multivibrator hold off circuit Dick Ropiequet John Kobbe Tektronix Inc 1955-02-21 1958-09-23
Patent US 2826694A US 2826694A Free-running multivibrator Dick Ropiequet Tektronix Inc 1955-03-10 1958-03-11
Patent US 3074020A US 3074020A Bistable multivibrator which changes states in response to a single limited range, variable input signal Dick Ropiequet Tektronix Inc 1959-11-24 1963-01-15
Patent US 3355620A US 3355620A Pulse counter tube employing voltage feedback from target to beam deflection electrodes isolated from any d. c. reference voltage Dick Ropiequet Tektronix Inc 1963-12-02 1967-11-28

Publications

Links

Photos