Ohio Scientific

Ohio Scientific, Inc.
Formerly
  • Ohio Scientific Instruments, Inc. (1975–1979)
  • M/A-COM Office Systems, Inc. (1981–1983)
Company typePrivate
IndustryComputer
Founded1975; 49 years ago (1975) in Hiram, Ohio
Founders
  • Michael Cheiky
  • Charity Cheiky
  • Dale Dreisbach
DefunctDecember 1983; 40 years ago (1983-12)
FateAcquired by M/A-COM in 1980; later sold to Kendata in early 1983, then Isotron, Inc. (AB Fannyudde [sv]), in late 1983, then Dataindustrier AB in 1986
HeadquartersAurora, Ohio, United States
ProductsSee § Products
Number of employees
300 (1980, peak)
Parent
  • M/A-COM (1981–1983)
  • Kendata (1983)
  • Isotron, Inc. (1983–1986)

Ohio Scientific, Inc. (OSI, originally Ohio Scientific Instruments, Inc.), was a privately owned American computer company based in Ohio that built and marketed computer systems, expansions, and software from 1975 to 1986. Their best-known products were the Challenger series of microcomputers and Superboard single-board computers. The company was the first to market microcomputers with hard disk drives in 1977.

The company was incorporated as Ohio Scientific Instruments in Hiram, Ohio, by husband and wife Mike and Charity Cheiky and business associate Dale A. Dreisbach in 1975. Originally a maker of electronic teaching aids, the company leaned quickly into microcomputer production, after their original educational products failed in the marketplace while their computer-oriented products sparked high interest in the hobbyist community. The company moved to Aurora, Ohio, occupying a 72,000-square-foot factory. The company reached the $1 million revenue mark in 1976; by the end of 1980, the company generated $18 million in revenue. Ohio Scientific's manufacturing presence likewise expanded into greater Ohio as well as California and Puerto Rico.

In 1980, the company was acquired by telecommunications conglomerate M/A-COM of Burlington, Massachusetts, for $5 million. M-A/COM soon consolidated the company's product lines, in order to focus their new subsidiary on manufacturing business systems. During their tenure under M-A/COM, Ohio Scientific was renamed M/A-COM Office Systems. M-A/COM struggled financially themselves and sold the division in 1983 to Kendata Inc. of Trumbull, Connecticut, who immediately renamed it back to Ohio Scientific. Kendata, previously only a corporate reseller of computer systems, failed to maintain Ohio Scientific's manufacturing lines and subsequently sold the division to AB Fannyudde of Sweden. The flagship Aurora factory, by then only employing 16 people, was finally shut down in October 1983.