

Archive for July, 2009
Inventory Valuation - Value Your Equipment Quickly
Author: admin
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read comments (0)Hughes Communication History
Author: admin
A BRIEF LOOK BACK
How did Hughes Electronics become a world-class provider of high-technology spacecraft, military systems and electronic components? It’s a fascinating story.
HOWARD HUGHES, AVIATION PIONEER
HCI is part of an innovative corporate culture dating back to the early part of this century and the legendary aviator-industrialist-movie producer Howard Hughes.
Hughes began his career in 1924 at the age of 19, when his father’s death left him in charge of the Hughes Tool Company and its valuable oil drilling bit patents.
In addition to running the booming Texas company, young Hughes became a Hollywood movie producer, winning an Academy Award in 1928 for the film “Two Arabian Knights.” He went on to film many classics, including “Scarface” and “Hell’s Angels” with Jean Harlow, “The Outlaw” with Jane Russell, “Stromboli” with Ingrid Bergman, and “The Conqueror” with John Wayne.
In the early 1930s, the restless Hughes took on another challenge — aviation. To keep track of expenses for his latest interest, he formed an aircraft division within the Hughes Tool Company. The newly created Hughes Aircraft Company rented a hangar in Burbank, California, hired a small crew of engineers, designers and mechanics, and concentrated on modifying military aircraft for racing. By 1935, Howard Hughes set a new world speed record of 352 mph in his innovative H-I racer.
Howard HughesHughes continued to create aeronautical innovations and break transcontinental speed records in his H-I Winged Bullet, which is now displayed in the Washington National Air and Space Museum. In 1938, Hughes and four crew members reached another goal — setting an around-the-world flight record of three days, 19 hours, 14 minutes in a modified Lockheed Model 14.
The flight was an important reliability step for commercial aviation development, coming only one year after Amelia Earhart disappeared and two years after Wiley Post and Will Rogers were killed attempting the same feat. For his victory, Hughes received a New York City ticker tape parade and became one of the most famous men in America.
During World War II, Hughes began testing and building aircraft for military uses. In 1947, he took his most famous military plane, the giant wooden troop-carrier flying boat nicknamed The Spruce Goose, on its first and only flight.
The Spruce Goose
Howard Hughes was inducted into the Aviation Hall of Fame in 1973, and his speed and distance records are symbolized on the Hughes Aircraft Company employee service pins.
