Linley Gumm - TekWiki
- ️Tue Aug 03 1993
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Linley Ford Gumm (b. Jan 30, 1942 in Spokane, WA – ?) (ham callsign K7HFD) was a Tek engineer 1964-1976, senior engineer 1976-1981, principal engineer 1981-1985, chief engineer from 1985.
He recalls his experiences starting at Tek:
I joined Tek on June 15, 1964 joining the Instrument Evaluation group under Jerry Shannon. The first thing that happened to me was I spent something like the first nine weeks working as a test technician in Plant 2 in Building 39 testing 545B and 647 scopes. I was never very good at it. Jerry put me there to make sure I understood the environment that new products went into. On Sept 21, 1964 I would have been back at the Sunset plant working in the evaluation group (Building 81?) working for Herb England for perhaps five weeks. I was so raw that I cringe at the memory.
Regarding the possible Tek 106 design notes document:
In any case, the only thing on that page that is familiar is my characteristic printed signature. I do very vaguely remember reviewing some small aspect of a new generator that involved floating power supplies. I was blown away at the time by the rather cavalier use of same. It all made sense but it was wildly different from anything I had seen at the time. The design of that generator was well along when I first saw it.
The nomenclature of the "new 105" on these drawings makes it almost certain that this is an early set of Type 106 drawings. The Type 105 was a physically large, high voltage (i.e. approximately 100 volts p-p) square wave generator. It was entirely done out of vacuum tubes so it also made extensive use of floating power supplies. The 106 was a box to replace the 105, reducing its size plus adding the capability of generating lower voltage waveforms with a much faster risetime.
At that time at Tek, the Instrument Evaluation organization was responsible for the design and limited production of equipment used in manufacturing test. Over time some of these products were deemed to be of sufficient quality and interest to be sold to the public as products, if for no other reason than that they were specified in oscilloscope manuals as necessary for calibration. They would start out as 067- test fixtures and then later be given a product ID (I don't know if the 106 went this route). This involved things like time mark generators, sine wave sources, load test boxes, etc. Therefore, a box to replace the 105 would be done in the Instrument Evaluation group. I noted Bill Lukens' name on some of the documentation on the Tekwiki web site. I believe he was one of the major players in the 106 development.
(As a completely off-the-subject aside, the 140 color bar generator started out as a 067- test fixture intended to test vector scopes. I have some early front panels of same in my garage. Charlie, of course, fully intended to sell them as a product from the get-go but needed to pretend to be doing a cal fixture to get permission to develop it.)
In any case, I don't believe I drew the diagram on that page. At that time I used a template and my resistors had many fewer points. Further, all of the lettering is much better than I have ever been able to do. The only thing I recognize on that page that might be done my me is the 3.9K notation scribbled above R402.
Links
- TekWeek March 27, 1987: Chief Engineer Linley Gumm
- Linley Gumm @ Prabook
- Key Frequency Parameter Measurements And Instruments (1972)
Document
Page
Class
Title
Author(s)
Year
Refers to
Tekscope 1972 V4 N1 Jan 1972.pdf
2
Article
A Microwave Spectrum Analyzer for the 7000-Series Oscilloscopes
Linley Gumm • Larry Lockwood • Morris Engelson • Al Huegli
1972
7L12
Tekscope 1977 V9 N3.pdf
6
Article
A High Performance Transportable Microwave Spectrum Analyzer
Linley Gumm
1977
7L18
Products by Linley Gumm
Manufacturer
Model
Description
Designers
Introduced
Tektronix
7L12
1.8 GHz Spectrum Analyzer
Morris Engelson • Linley Gumm • Gene Kauffman • Larry Lockwood • Gordon Long • Steve Morton • Paul Parks • Fred Telewski • Neal Broadbent • Jack Doyle • Al Huegli • Steve Skidmore • Leighton Whitsett • Judy Hanson • Robert Holmes • Carolyn Moore • Rena Randle
1971
Tektronix
7L18
18 (60) GHz Spectrum Analyzer
Linley Gumm • Bob Bales • Russell Brown • George Maney • Carlos Beeck • James Wolf • Dave Shores • Philip Snow • Wesley Hayward • Jack Reynolds • Steve Morton • Don Kirkpatrick • Dennis Smith • Al Huegli
1978
Tektronix
492
21 GHz Spectrum Analyzer
Larry Lockwood • Steve Morton • Linley Gumm • Robert Alm • Bob Bales • Carlos Beeck • Bill Benedict • Craig Bryant • Russell Brown • Wes Hayward • David Leatherwood • Gordon Long • Dave Morton • Bill Peterson • David Shores • Steve Skidmore • Dennis Smith • Phil Snow • Leighton Whitset • Norman Witt
1980
Components by Linley Gumm
Patents by Linley Gumm
Page
Office
Number
Title
Inventors
Company
Filing date
Grant date
Patent US 5233418A
US
5233418A
CATV sweep system using a gated receiver
Linley Gumm • Richard T. King
Tektronix Inc
1993-08-03
Patent US 4410879A
US
4410879A
High resolution digital-to-analog converter
Linley Gumm • Steven R. Morton
Tektronix Inc
1980-10-31
1983-10-18
Patent US 4688253A
US
4688253A
L+R separation system
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
1986-07-28
1987-08-18
Patent US 4728884A
US
4728884A
Infinite dynamic range phase detector
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
1986-10-09
1988-03-01
Patent US 5068614A
US
5068614A
Swept frequency domain reflectometry enhancement
Walter D. Fields • Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
1990-11-05
1991-11-26
Patent US 5073822A
US
5073822A
In-service cable television measurements
Linley Gumm • Bill Benedict
Tektronix Inc
1990-11-19
1991-12-17
Patent US 5493209A
US
5493209A
Tunable trigger acquisition system and method for making in-service time-domain signal measurements
Linley Gumm • Dana E. Whitlow
Tektronix Inc
1993-10-20
1996-02-20
Patent US 5521532A
US
5521532A
Digital synthesizer controlled microwave frequency signal source
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
1994-10-06
1996-05-28
Patent US 6307896B1
US
6307896B1
Instrumentation receiver for digitally modulated radio frequency signals
Linley Gumm • Jeffrey D. Earls
Tektronix Inc
1998-04-03
2001-10-23
Patent US 6246717B1
US
6246717B1
Measurement test set and method for in-service measurements of phase noise
Xiaofen Chen • Linley Gumm • Dana E. Whitlow • Larry Lockwood
Tektronix Inc
1998-11-03
2001-06-12
Patent US 6275523B1
US
6275523B1
In-service measurement of transmitter nonlinearities
Xiaofen Chen • Linley Gumm • Thomas L. Kuntz
Tektronix Inc
1998-11-03
2001-08-14
Patent US 6477198B1
US
6477198B1
Quality cause measurement display
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
2000-05-01
2002-11-05
Patent US 6437578B1
US
6437578B1
Cable loss correction of distance to fault and time domain reflectometer measurements
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
2000-11-14
2002-08-20
Patent US 6384784B1
US
6384784B1
Direction finder system using spread spectrum techniques
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
2001-01-05
2002-05-07
Patent US 6384589B1
US
6384589B1
Reference frequency spur cancellation in synthesized measurement receivers
Linley Gumm • Thomas L. Kuntz • Xiaofen Chen
Tektronix Inc
2001-04-04
2002-05-07
Patent US 6472945B1
US
6472945B1
Operational amplifier oscillator
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
2001-04-27
2002-10-29
Patent US 6608475B2
US
6608475B2
Network analyzer using time sequenced measurements
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
2001-08-23
2003-08-19
Patent US 6701265B2
US
6701265B2
Calibration for vector network analyzer
Thomas C. Hill • Xiaofen Chen • Soraya J. Matos • Leroy J. Willmann • Kyle L. Bernard • Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
2002-03-05
2004-03-02
Patent US 6930563B2
US
6930563B2
Self-adjusting I-Q modulator system
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
2003-04-18
2005-08-16
Patent US 6876261B2
US
6876261B2
Phase lock for synthesizer phase reference oscillator
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
2003-04-21
2005-04-05
Patent US 6768434B1
US
6768434B1
High speed x/sine(x) correction circuit
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
2003-05-15
2004-07-27
Patent US 7519330B2
US
7519330B2
Simultaneous ACLR measurement
Linley Gumm
Tektronix Inc
2004-03-08
2009-04-14