7A11: Difference between revisions

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Their secrets were Al DeVilbiss and a faster IC process.  We had neither.
Their secrets were Al DeVilbiss and a faster IC process.  We had neither.


The star-crossed [[7A12]], designed by [[Roy Hayes]]which was supposed to be the dual trace flagship of the original plugins, was only 105 MHz, not the hoped-for 150 MHz.   
The star-crossed [[7A12]], designed by [[Roy Hayes]] which was supposed to be the dual trace flagship of the original plugins, was only 105 MHz, not the hoped-for 150 MHz.   
That was partially due to the fact that it used the existing Tek IC process (about 1 GHz).  That was a bad decision on day one. The HP IC process was about 3 GHz.   
That was partially due to the fact that it used the existing Tek IC process (about 1 GHz).  That was a bad decision on day one. The HP IC process was about 3 GHz.   
The 7A11 used discrete NPN and PNP transistors with 4 GHz f<sub>t</sub>.
The 7A11 used discrete NPN and PNP transistors with 4 GHz f<sub>t</sub>.
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