Hi-Rel / Military

Our Production Series

Our hybrid technology on ceramic substrate (Al203) coupled with a robust housing machined from an aluminum block allows us to classify standard transducers as mil transducers, meeting many defense and aerospace requirements.
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High-Quality Converters
Our products in the Hi-Rel range are developed and manufactured exclusively according to specific customer requirements. In this segment in particular, valid tests and precise implementation are required for high operational robustness.

Elektra has more than 40 years of experience in this particular area and offers – especially because of the current market situation – shortened development and delivery times.

Feel free to contact us with your specifications, we guarantee the creation of a development sketch within 14 days.

Examples

Elektra offers a wide range of DC/DC converters in the power range from 5 watts to 360 watts for industrial, telecommunications, automation technology and railway applications according to EN50155. On request, the products are also available RoHS-compliant.

DC/DC converter

EMF150

Development of a tailor-made DC/DC converter for the aircraft sector with input voltages from 16 to 51V; Output 5.1V/2A. No opto feedback; Milled aluminum housing with mounting thread

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DC/DC converter

E05-S-I

DC/DC converter for a radar system with input voltages from 18 to 36V; Outputs +/- 15VDC with 20 watts each. No opto feedback; Aluminum casing; with on/off pin and adjust pin

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DC/DC converter

E05-S-I

Power:

5 Watt

Double exit
Temperature:

-40 °C / +105 °C

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DC/DC converter

E12-S-I

Power:

12 Watt

Double exit
Temperature:

-40 °C / +105 °C

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How Everything Started

Today’s modern electronics date back to two important events: the invention of the Hertzian dipole (used to propagate electromagnetic waves in space) by Heinrich Hertz in Germany in 1886 and the commercial use by Guglielmo Marconi after the invention of the radio in Italy in 1895. The whole world could now listen to the radio: the industrial rise was rapid.

Radio receivers and transmitters were built in large numbers, with so-called vacuum tubes in all versions. The first digital computers (the forerunners of today’s computers) also had vacuum tubes as circuit elements and were as big as a small house.

This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site.