Issue



Born To be Wild


11/01/2006








1. Get your motor running, head out on the highway - looking for adventure, and whatever comes your way Gail Flower, editor-in-chief gets a ride from Dick Schedtler, VP AR Marketing.
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2. Old friends at Asymtek warmly welcomed the Roadshow crew. Pictured from left to right: Cindy Curran, marketing communications specialist; Gail Flower; Roberta Foster-Smith, marketing communications manager; Françoise von Trapp, managing editor; Alan Lewis, director of application engineering; and David Barach, group publisher.
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3. John T. Byers, president; and Alec Barbiarz, president business development and co-founder, joined us later for discussion.
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4. We don’t mean to have this much fun on the roadshow - it just happens. Flower, von Trapp, Foster-Smith,and Barach suit up for the facility tour.
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5. Production assembly technicians Alberto Davolos, Dalina Hurta, Sherman Yarborough, and Theresa Greenhill inspect assembly subsystems for the Axiom and Millennium.
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6. Karl Thorpe, production supervisor for Asymtek’s Spectrum product, explains the assembly process to Barach.
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7. Jaynie Park, Sr. applications engineer, demonstrates a jetting system by dispensing UV-cure material in rows of dots to check for consistency.
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1. Palomar Technologies was next on the tour. Here we are with Bruce Hueners, president and Advanced Packaging Advisory Board member; Sophie Moya-Christian, receptionist (left); and Michelle Taylor, marketing services manager (right).
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2. Hueners explained that the laser interferometer for testing and calibrating transducers measures micro-inches of movement at high frequency.
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3. Don Beck, applications manager; and Tim Smith, application engineer, demonstrate the versatility of the 3500 die bonder, as Smith uses it to place arrays of 900-1000 LEDs at once.
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4. Beck shows us a solar power panel that will be used in mobile applications, providing lighter, less cumbersome power.
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5. Allan Haas, engineering director, explained the technology behind Palomar’s Bond Data Miner integrated data management software, used to maintain machine calibration, reliability, and maintenance statistics for system performance.
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1. At StratEdge, Tim Going, president; and Casey Krawiec, V.P. North American sales, kept us laughing and taught us lots about hermetically sealed ceramic packages. From left, Don Pehle, quality assurance manager; Going; Krawiec; Josie Santos, director of finance and administration; von Trapp; and Flower.
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2. Isabelle Abalon, operations supervisor, checks molded ceramic packages for fixture marks, and makes sure there is no carbon residue, for proper plating.
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3. Oxide-coated leadframes are ready for assembly.
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4. Elna Javier, technician, demonstrates a steady hand as she uses a single-hair paintbrush to paint liquid gold paste on one area of a ceramic part to complete the connection.
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5. Robbie Villagracia, technician, prepares packages for epoxy application. Die will be placed in the epoxy and then cured in the oven.
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6. Born to be wild...
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