Glenn Bateman: Difference between revisions
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}} was a Tektronix engineer. | }} was a Tektronix engineer. | ||
He worked on the [[7A11]] and [[485]]. | He worked on the [[7A11]] and [[485]]. | ||
{{Designer|Glenn Bateman}} | |||
[[Category:Tektronix people]] | [[Category:Tektronix people]] |
Revision as of 12:29, 15 August 2021
Glenn Bateman (b. 1932 – d. 2020) was a Tektronix engineer. He worked on the 7A11 and 485.
Products by Glenn Bateman
Manufacturer | Model | Description | Designers | Introduced |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tektronix | P6046 | 100 MHz differential probe | Glenn Bateman | 1968 |
Tektronix | 7A11 | 250 MHz FET-probe amplifier | John Addis • Ron Peltola • Glenn Bateman | 1969 |
Tektronix | 485 | 350 MHz portable scope | John Addis • Wink Gross • Gene Andrews • Glenn Bateman • Ron Peltola • Bob Firth • Murlan Kaufman • Bob White • Keith Taylor • Dick Troberg | 1972 |
Tektronix | TR501 | 1.8 GHz tracking generator | Fred Telewski • Glenn Bateman • Michael McMahon • David Morton • Phillip Snow | 1976 |
Tektronix | TR502 | 1.8 GHz tracking generator | Fred Telewski • Glenn Bateman • Michael McMahon • David Morton • Phillip Snow • Carlos Beeck • Jack McCabe • Leighton Whitsett | 1976 |
Tektronix | TR503 | tracking generator | Fred Telewski • Glenn Bateman • Michael McMahon • David Morton • Phillip Snow • Carlos Beeck • Jack McCabe • Leighton Whitsett | 1981 |
Components by Glenn Bateman