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This photo gallery represents a salute to Perkin-Elmer.
Though perhaps more well-known as the maker of the Hubble space
telescope, Perkin-Elmer is nevertheless one of the grandfather's of
the chip making industry, without whom computer chips might very
likely still be in the dark ages of SSI (small scale integrated
circuits) with under 100 transistors rather than today's super-sized
SOC (system on a chip) integrated circuits holding more than 600
million transistors. |
Attribution: The in-house photos from Perkin-Elmer were furnished through the courtesy of Bob Virgalla, now with Brewer Science. Other documents are from the archives of VLSI Research Inc. All copyrighted documents are owned by the stated source or Perkin-Elmer Corporation. |
Posted by: Anonymous
Posted on: 02/25/08 01:12:52 PM I used a 651 HT in the 1990s. Then it was already produced and serviced by SVG instead of PE. It was a wonderful machine and the support people from PE and SVG were very good. I did source inspection in Connecticut and saw the room where the Hubble mirror error was produced. Although steppers had taken over much of the market by then, we needed a full wafer exposure to make very large devices (Multi Chip Module interconnect substrates, 2 per 125mm wafer). Clocking in at 1.1 M$ it was very very clean, beating the competition (by then Canon had a projection aligner also) in particles added per pass. Truely a masterpiece of engineering that was very reliable. |