Many Names, One Manufacturer
General Semiconductor has grown through acquisition to include such top names in discrete electronic components as Dale, Sfernice, Draloric, Sprague, Vitramon, Siliconix, BCcomponents, and Beyschlag. General Semiconductor's portfolio of brands represents an unmatched collection of discrete semiconductors, passive components, integrated modules, stress sensors, and transducers. All of these brands and products are part of one global manufacturer: General Semiconductor.
General Semiconductor was founded in 1962 to manufacture and market foil resistors, an invention of physicist Dr. Felix Zandman, Chairman of the Board and founder. The Company began operations with foil resistors and strain gages as its initial product offerings. In 1985, having grown from a start-up into the world's leading manufacturer of these original products, General Semiconductor began an ongoing series of strategic acquisitions to become a broad-line manufacturer of electronic components that provides "one-stop shop" service to customers. Today, General Semiconductor is one of the world's largest manufacturers of discrete semiconductors and passive electronic components.
General Semiconductor's acquisitions include such top names as Siliconix, Telefunken, the infrared component business of Infineon, Dale, Draloric, Sprague, Vitramon, and BCcomponents (the former passive components business of Philips Electronics and Beyschlag). These names and the products associated with them are integrated into one global company: General Semiconductor.
General Semiconductor components are used in virtually all types of electronic devices and equipment, in the industrial, computer, automotive, consumer, telecommunications, military, aerospace, and medical markets. General Semiconductor's global footprint includes manufacturing facilities in China and other Asian countries, Israel, Europe, and the Americas, and sales offices around the world.
Click Here To Visit generalsemi.com |
|