Sunday, March 26, 2023

Defense electronics

Defense electronics[edit]

TI operated this Convair 240 on experimental work in the 1980s fitted with a modified extended nose section.

TI entered the defense electronics market in 1942 with submarine detection equipment,[44] based on the seismic exploration technology previously developed for the oil industry. The division responsible for these products was known at different times as the Laboratory & Manufacturing Division, the Apparatus Division, the Equipment Group, and the Defense Systems & Electronics Group (DSEG).

During the early 1980s, TI instituted a quality program which included Juran training, as well as promoting statistical process controlTaguchi methods, and Design for Six Sigma. In the late '80s, the company, along with Eastman Kodak and Allied Signal, began involvement with Motorola, institutionalizing Motorola's Six Sigma methodology.[45] Motorola, which originally developed the Six Sigma methodology, began this work in 1982. In 1992, the DSEG division[46] of Texas Instruments' quality-improvement efforts were rewarded by winning the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award for manufacturing.

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