First low-cost transistor available to the general public, introduced in 1953
The CK722 was the first low-cost junction transistor available to the general public. It was a PNPgermanium small-signal unit. Developed by Norman Krim, it was introduced by Raytheon in early 1953 for $7.60 each; the price was reduced to $3.50 in late 1954 and to $0.99 in 1956. Norm Krim selected Radio Shack to sell the CK721 and CK722 through their catalog. Krim had a long-standing personal and business relationship with Radio Shack.[1] The CK722s were selected "fall out" from the Raytheon's premium-priced CK721 (which are fallouts from CK718 hearing-aid transistors).[2] Raytheon actively encouraged hobbyists with design contests and advertisements.[3][4]
In the 1950s and 1960s, hundreds of hobbyist electronics projects based around the CK722 transistor were published in popular books and magazines.[5][6] Raytheon also participated in expanding the role of the CK721/CK722 as a hobbyist electronics device by publishing "Transistor Applications" and "Transistor Applications – Volume 2" during the mid-1950s.
^"8 Transistor circuits you build with Raytheon CK722 transistors". Popular Electronics. Vol. 2, no. 4. New York: Ziff-Davis. April 1955. p. 8. CK722 advertisement.