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Maribeth Seagers

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Aug 2, 2024, 9:56:53 PM8/2/24
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Following its successful IPO in 1999, Agilent became a fully independent company in June 2000 focusing on key markets in communications, electronics and life sciences. Recognized as an industry leader, Agilent was number one worldwide in the test and measurement market but also faced challenges in some of its businesses.

Agilent overcame those challenges and has evolved to focus on high growth areas in the life sciences, diagnostics and genomics, and lab support services, serving six key markets. The company is a global leader in analytical and clinical laboratory technologies, delivering insights and innovation that help our customers bring great science to life. Agilent’s full range of solutions includes instruments, software, services, and expertise that provide trusted answers to our customers' most challenging questions.

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The Keysight (Agilent/HP) 6674A is a member of the 667xA series of 2000 watt DC power supplies with exceptional, proven reliability that test system engineers look for. It also has the unusual combination of high efficiency and low noise operation.

Programming of the dc output and the extensive protection features can be done either from the front panel or using industry standard SCPI commands, via the GPIB.

Using the serial link, up to 16 power supplies can be connected through one GPIB address. Test system integration can be further simplified be using the VXIPlugPlay drivers.

The output voltage and current can also be controlled with analog signals. This is helpful for certain types of noisy environments, and also immediate reactions to process changes.

Lab-bench use is enhanced by the fan-speed control, which minimizes acoustic noise. The extremely low ripple and noise helps the built-in measurement system make extremely accurate current and voltage measurements.

The Keysight (Agilent/HP) 6674A is fully tested and refurbished in our in-house ISO9001 calibration laboratory. We supply manuals, accessories, full warranty and a free-of-charge Certificate of Conformity. We can also provide the Keysight (Agilent/HP) 6674A with a fresh calibration for a small additional charge.

Description
The HCTL-2000, 2016, 2020 are CMOS ICs that perform the quadrature decoder, counter, and bus interface function. The HCTL-20XX family is designed to improve system performance in digital closed loop motion control systems and digital data input systems.

The Keysight 2000W, GPIB, single output 6672A is a highly efficient low-noise supply that maximize test throughput and is designed to offer excellent reliability, low ripple and noise, and extremely accurate built-in measurements of voltage and current.

Keysight high performance DC power supplies offer speed and accuracy for test optimization. The single output, 2000 W GPIB 6671A-6675A provide fast, low-noise outputs; analog control of output voltage and current; and fan-speed control to minimize acoustic noise.

The U2000H USB power sensor makes setup and measurement fast without the need of a power meter, just plug the USB sensor cable to the PC, you can control the USB power sensor with the Power Panel (N1918A) software. Internal triggering enables triggering based on the burst signal envelope, eliminating the need for an external triggering signal. Trace display provides a graphical view of the signal envelope to assist in gate placement and trigger level setup.

Bell Electronics NW, Inc. sells refurbished and new electronic test and measurement instruments. All items are sold with a warranty, so you may be assured that the equipment you receive will function as it was intended.

Agilent Technologies, Inc. is a global company headquartered in Santa Clara, California, that provides instruments, software, services, and consumables for laboratories. Agilent was established in 1999 as a spin-off from Hewlett-Packard. The resulting IPO of Agilent stock was the largest in the history of Silicon Valley at the time.[2][3] From 1999 to 2014, the company produced optics (LED, laser), semiconductors, EDA software and test and measurement equipment for electronics; that division was spun off to form Keysight.[4] Since then, the company has continued to expand into pharmaceutical, diagnostics & clinical, and academia & government (research) markets.[5]

Agilent serves analytical laboratories and the clinical and routine diagnostics markets with a full suite of technology platforms. These include: automation, bioreagents, FISH probes, gas and liquid chromatography, immunohistochemistry, informatics, mass spectrometry, microarrays, spectroscopy, target enrichment, and vacuum technologies.[6]

Agilent also provides lab management services, including enterprise asset management, laboratory business intelligence, equipment management and service, software maintenance, regulatory compliance, sample preparation, genomics and cloning, GC and HPLC columns, spectrometry and spectroscopy supplies, and consumables.[6] The company is known for investing in R&D within its own research labs and those of leading universities to advance the state of knowledge in the life sciences, diagnostics, and chemical analysis space.[7]

Agilent Technologies was created in 1999 as a spin-off of several business units of Hewlett-Packard[12] including test & measurement, optics, instrumentation and chemical analysis, electronic components, and medical equipment product lines.[13][note 1] The split was predicated on the difficulty of growing HP's revenue stream and on the competitive vigor of smaller, more agile competitors.[14] The company's launch slogan was "Innovating the HP Way", which capitalized on the strong HP corporate culture.[14] The starburst logo was selected to reflect "a burst of insight" (or "spark of insight")[15] and the name "Agilent" aimed to invoke the notion of agility as a trait of the new firm.[14] The Agilent spin-off was accompanied by an initial public offering which raised $2.1 billion, setting a record at the time.[2]

In the early 2000s, "economic uncertainty" depressed demand for Agilent's products,[16] including slow sales of health care products to hospitals in the United States, which accounted for 60% of the company's revenue at the time.[12] The downturn also struck sales in the communications and semiconductor markets, where orders amounting to $500 million were canceled by buyers.[17] These poor economic conditions prompted large reductions in force; from a headcount in 1999 of 35,000, which had risen to 48,000 by May 2001,[17] it had by early 2003 cut 18,500 positions.[16] In 2001, in midst of this downsizing, Agilent sold its health care and medical products organization to Philips Medical Systems,[18] and was noted as having a valuation of about $11 billion.[19] HP Medical Products had been the second oldest part of Hewlett-Packard, acquired in the 1950s.[citation needed]

In August 2005, Agilent announced the sale of its business which produced semiconductor integrated circuits (known as "chips") for consumer and industrial uses to Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Silver Lake Partners for $2.66 billion.[2] This move was part of a broad effort to concentrate "on the test-and-measurement business at its historic core," and would entail termination of about 1,300 of the company's 28,000 employees.[2] The group operated as a private company, Avago Technologies, until August 2009, when it was brought public in an IPO. After purchasing Broadcom Corporation in 2016, Avago changed its name to Broadcom Limited.

Also in August 2005, Agilent sold its 47% stake in the light-emitting diode manufacturer Lumileds to Philips for $1 billion.[2] Lumileds originally started as Hewlett-Packard's optoelectronics division.

Also in August 2005, Agilent announced a plan to divest its semiconductor test business, composed of both the system-on-chip and memory test market areas.[2] Agilent listed the new company as Verigy on the Nasdaq in mid-2006.

In 2009, Agilent announced the closure of a subsection of its Test & Measurement division. The product lines affected included the automated optical inspection, solder paste inspection, and automated X-ray products [5DX] in 2004. In 2011, the company, along with the University of California, Davis, announced that it would be establishing the "Davis Millimeter Wave Research Center".[20] Agilent announced it would increase its life sciences engagement through the acquisition of Halo Genomics, based in Uppsala, Sweden, which was involved in next-generation sequencing technology development.[21]

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