Fritz Karl Preikschat
Fritz Karl Preikschat was a German, later American, electrical and telecommunications engineer and inventor. He had more than three German patents and more than 23 U.S. patents, including a dot matrix teletypewriter, a blind-landing system for airports, a phased array system for satellite communications, a hybrid car system, and a scanning laser diode microscope for particle analysis. He was the only engineer to work on both sides of the Space Race: a lab manager for NII-88 in Soviet Union and a lead engineer for the Space division of Boeing.
Early career in Germany
In 1934, he graduated from Hindenburg Polytechnic in Oldenburg, Germany with a degree in "Elektrotechnik". He then served in a minesweeper unit of Kriegsmarine.From 1940 to 1945, he worked as an engineer and lab manager in the radar group of GEMA. At the end of WW2, his family fled to Dresden and survived the Bombing of Dresden in World War II. His family then resettled as refugees in the Bavarian town of Amberg.
Contributor to the Soviet Union's rocket and satellite programs (1946–1952)
In 1946, he was one of the more than two thousand German specialists forcibly brought to the Soviet Union under Operation Osoaviakhim. He was then one of the more than 170 German specialists – headed by Helmut Gröttrup – brought to Branch 1 of NII-88 on Gorodomlya Island in Lake Seliger. From 1946 to 1952, he was an engineer and head of the high frequency lab, working on a guidance system, among other things, for the early Soviet rocket program. He also worked on a design for a 6-dish deep-space tracking station for the early Soviet space program. In 1960, the Soviet Union implemented the full 8-dish deep-space tracking station called Pluton in the Crimea.Debriefing by U.S. Army (1952–1954)
In June 1952, he was released from the Soviet Union and returned to East Germany. The Berlin Wall had not yet been constructed, so he was able to cross the border via the Berlin U-Bahn from East Berlin, East Germany, to West Berlin. He quickly met an American MP, who put him in a safe house where he spent two months getting debriefed by the U.S. Army on the Soviet Union's rocket program. He was also interviewed over several months by Reinhard Gehlen. Later, he published a 114-page report for the Army on the Soviet Union's "Microwave-based Control System for Long-Distance Rockets". In September 1952, he was flown from West Berlin to Frankfurt, West Germany, where he was reunited with his family, finally ending a difficult, six-year separation.Dot matrix teletypewriter (Germany, 1957)
In 1952–1954, he filed five patent applications for a dot matrix teletypewriter, later granted in 1957. In April 1953, he was hired by Telefonbau und Normalzeit GmbH. In 1956, TuN introduced the device to the Deutsche Bundespost, which did not show interest. In his final contract with TuN, he sold the five patent applications to TuN for 12,000 Deutsche Marks and 50% of the device's net future profits. Photos and working papers of the dot matrix teletypewriter prototype were submitted to his first U.S. employer, General Mills, in 1957. A set of working papers for the dot matrix teletypewriter were published in 1961. At Boeing in 1966–1967, the dot matrix teletypewriter design was the basis for a portable facsimile machine, which was prototyped and evaluated for military use by teams at Boeing, including sales.Emigration to the United States (1957)
On June 28, 1957, he emigrated to the United States via Operation Paperclip, sponsored by an Army contract with General Mills. The contract was cancelled shortly afterwards, so he hired on as principal scientist at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, where he worked on satellite transponder communications. He became a U.S. citizen in 1962.From 1959 to 1970, he mostly worked as lead engineer in the Space Division of Boeing. He also had a stint in the Military Products Group at Honeywell.