[Boatanchors] The Heath Company, Today
Roger Shultz
nj2r at earthlink.net
Fri Feb 1 21:13:43 EST 2008
This should answer the question since they (Heathkit) still exist as
www.heathkit.com and are in the educational business.
This additional link gives the transitional history
http://www.theheathkitshop.com/whathappenedtohe.html
73, Roger, NJ2R
-----Original Message-----
From: boatanchors-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:boatanchors-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Duane Fischer,
W8DBF
Sent: Friday, February 01, 2008 8:39 PM
To: boatanchors at mailman.qth.net
Subject: [Boatanchors] The Heath Company, Today
Hi All,
Recently the question of what the Heath Company in Benton Harbor, Michigan
is doing today has come up on both the HHI Saturday and Sunday Nets. What
follows is from a few years ago. It was provided by K7DDG.
If any of you have "facts" on what Heath is doing today, please post it here
for all of us to benefit from. Thank you.
For proper credit, it should be noted that this material is excerpted from
Shortwave Receivers Past and Present third edition copywrite 1998 by Fred
Osterman.
Heath Company
Benton Harbor MI 1945-1961
The fascinating story of Heath has been told many times on the inside cover
of Heathkit catalogs. Edward Bayard Heath founded the Heath Aeroplane
Company
during the early 1900's. The first Heath "kit" was in fact an airplane
introduced in 1926. In 1931 the founder was killed in a flight test. Heath
remained an aircraft and aircraft parts company through World War II. Howard
E.
Anthony, who had purchased Heath in 1935 gave it a different direction after
the
war. With surplus electronic parts, he marketed the "O-1" oscilloscope kit
for
$39.50. A line of test instruments, amateur radios and hi-fi equipment kits
followed.
Howard Anthony also died in a plane crash in 1954. Daystrom Inc. then
acquired the Heath Company. In 1962 Daystrom was purchased by Schlumberger
Limited,
a leader in the development of electronic techniques for oil exploration.
Zenith purchased Heath from Schlumberger in 1979. They were interested in
Heath's computer production capacity more than amateur radio gear. Budget
cuts,
difficulties with new models and increased offshore competition led to
increased problems in the mid 1980's. In the late 80's and early 90's the
amateur
radio segment consisted primarily of assembled, private labeled equipment
from Standard, Yaesu and Ameritron. Heath now focuses on educational videos
and
workbooks and is not in the radio market.
Roger
K7DDG
Duane Fischer, W8DBF/WPE8CXO
dfischer at usol.com
HHI: Halligan's Hallicrafters International
http://www.w9wze.net
HHRP: Historic Halligan Radio Project
hhrp.w9wze.net
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