On the strength of the X-10,
Sinclair Radionics won a contract to supply vibration
test equipment to an aircraft equipment company; a high-powered
amplifier which would drive a vibrator with power output
up to 120 watts. Clive Sinclair was busy feeding ideas
to Jim Westwood to try out. Richard Torrens was busy
trying to solve some problem that had been encountered
with the transistors which had been shipped to Hong
Kong. Another engineer had to be found, since the Hong
Kong problem needed someone's dedicated attention, and
the deadline for the 120-watt amplifier contract was
looming ever nearer.
So desperate was Sinclair that he nearly sent Torrens
to Hong Kong - until he found Martin Wilcox, who joined
the company as chief engineer in February 1965. His
first job was to sort out the 120-watt amplifier contract.
After Sinclair had left for Hong Kong, Wilcox decided
that the prototype amplifier couldn't possibly be ready
in time for the client company's engineer who was visiting
in a few days. He therefore set to and designed, built
and tested a conventional 20-watt amplifier to demonstrate
instead. At least there was something to show; he carried
on and four months later the Z-120, as the larger
amplifier was called, had been developed and tested.
Built to a military specification to be acceptable to
the aircraft industry, these eventually sold for £75
each.
|
|