Memo from Raymond I. Schiff to William Newton
Model G Product Meeting Recommended Design Changes for Cost Reduction
- 1956-Oct-10

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Small JPG1200 x 1539px — 336 KBFull-sized JPG2708 x 3473px — 1.6 MBOriginal fileTIFF — 2708 x 3473px — 27.0 MBThe memo discusses cost reductions to the Model G pH meter and is extensively annotated.
Arnold Beckman invented his first pH meter in 1934 at the request of a chemist from the California citrus industry, who needed an accurate way to measure the acidity of his product. The resulting “acidimeter” with its glass electrode was renamed the Model G pH meter in 1937 and produced on a larger scale by Beckman’s company, National Technical Laboratories. This instrument kicked off the rapid development not only of NTL and Beckman Instruments, but also of the electronic scientific instrument industry.
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Schiff, Raymond I. “Memo from Raymond I. Schiff to William Newton,” October 10, 1956. Beckman Historical Collection, Box 18, Folder 26. Science History Institute. Philadelphia. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/7d278t62k.
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