JK Lasers

JK Lasers was a global laser manufacturer based in Rugby, Warwickshire, England. Established by Ron Burbeck and Dr Jim Wright MBE in 1972, the company first launched a range of pulsed lasers using ruby, YAG and glass laser rods. This was followed by the MS-Series of Nd:YAG laser systems, designed for industrial welding, cutting and drilling applications.[1]

JK Lasers
Founded1972
FounderRon Burbeck
Jim Wright
Headquarters,
ProductsFiber lasers, pulsed lasers, laser rods
Websitewww.jklasers.com

In 1982, JK Lasers was acquired by Lumonics of Canada to form one of the largest laser companies in the world.[2] Lumonics merged with General Scanning Incorporated (GSI) in 1999 and, following the sale of the Lumonics brand, the laser segment of the business changed its name to the GSI Group Laser Division.[3] Under this name, the company launched its first rack-mountable ytterbium industrial fiber lasers in 2007.[4]

The GSI Group Laser Division completed a rebrand back to JK Lasers in August 2012. General Manager Dr Mark Greenwood said: “The rebrand to JK Lasers is an important step for us. It is a return to our roots; a recognition of our long and successful history.” [5] JK Lasers range of products includes watt to kilowatt fiber lasers, CO2 lasers, Nd:YAG lasers, process tools and software.[6] Its first multi-kiloWatt class of fiber lasers, the JK2000FL, was launched in April 2012.[7]

In April 2015 GSI sold its JK Lasers subsidiary to SPI Lasers, part of the Trumpf group. All products were rebranded with the SPI logo, essentially ending the JK brand.

Awards

In 1978, JK Lasers was awarded The Queen's Award for Export Achievement. This was followed in 1990 with The Queen's Award for Technological Achievement. In 2005, the company was named ‘Outstanding partner in Engineering and Technology’ by McNeil Consumer and Specialty Pharmaceuticals [8] Dr Jim Wright's "outstanding contribution" to the industrial use of lasers in the UK was recognised with the AILU Award in 1998.[9]

gollark: `is-number` is basically a package with several million weekly downloads with about five lines of code which test if a value is a number.
gollark: My main issue with it is:- JS is a wildly unsafe language (in different ways to C, at least) although TS partly fixes this. *Partly*- Hundreds of dependencies needed to do much. I recently interacted with someone on the internet who said this was a *good* thing, and talked about `is-number` being useful. They may be nsane.
gollark: Callbacks have been *mostly* obsoleted by promises, fortunately.
gollark: See, I avoid the hassle of PHP by writing web applications in Node.js, which has fun exciting things like asynchronousness with something like three different ways to write it (events, callbacks, promises, arguably generators), and 1000 dependencies per project.
gollark: PHP Hypertext Preprocessor

References

  1. "Lasers for Industry" (PDF). Jklasers.com. Retrieved 2012-09-27.
  2. "A serious laser player — PROFILE". Electro Optics. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  3. Robert C. Pini. "General Scanning and Lumonics Agree to Merge (Photonics Spectra | Dec 1998 | FastTrack)". Photonics.com. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  4. "WORLD OF PHOTONICS — Laser 2007: of green apples and fiber lasers". Laser Focus World. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  5. SPIE Europe Ltd (2012-08-16). "GSI Group Laser Division Rebrands as JK Lasers". Optics.org. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  6. "Laser Products". JK Lasers. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  7. "2-kW Fiber Laser — JK Lasers (photonics.com | May 2012 | Products)". photonics.com. 2012-05-02. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  8. "Newsletter_Making_Sparks_10.indd" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-06-22. Retrieved 2012-09-27.
  9. "Award". AILU. 1998-10-20. Archived from the original on 2012-12-23. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.