After the war Radiotechnique grew fast. Philips acquired total control of Radiotechnique in 1947. The Suresnes factory in 1951 produced half of France's reception tubes and 30–40% of the wireless telephony receivers. By virtue of its association with Philips it had the financial, technical and commercial resources to enter the television market when it developed in France, and later to enter industrial electronics. This phase was marked by financial restructuring, recruitment and training of managers and technicians, and by geographical expansion of manufacturing facilities. New factories were opened to the west of the Suresnes parent factory. The factory at Suresnes with 2,500 employees was followed by: The Évreux industrial center was located on Rue
Pierre Brossolette from 1955, operated by a subsidiary Coprim () which mass-produced basic electronic components for mass market devices. By 1959 Radiotechnique had acquired 20% of
COGECO, whose factories in
Tours and
Joué-lès-Tours manufactured capacitors.
Dreux gives an example of the problems encountered. Officials there heard that the company was looking for a site for a new plant and offered cheap land, help in improving infrastructure and plentiful local labour. In 1956 Radiotechnique opened a television assembly plant and a factory for electronic components and cathode-ray tubes in Dreux. More than 1,000 workers were to be employed in the new facilities. The workers promised by Dreux, displaced from closed facilities of Grosdemouge, Potez, the foundry and Firmin-Didot, were too highly skilled for routine production-line assembly jobs. They were unionized and demanded higher wages than the company could afford. The new plants were short of several hundred workers when they opened. Radiotechnique brought in workers from Italy, Hungary and Spain to open the factory, but there was high turnover. In the following years recruiters continued to hire semiskilled workers in Italy, Spain and Morocco. By 1970 about 39% of the workers were foreign-born. Often they lived in primitive conditions in all-male dormitories built by the company. In the early 1950s RT was one of three major vertically integrated tube producers in France, the others being
Thomson-CSF and the
Compagnie Générale d'Electricité (CGE). In the late 1950s Radiotechnique, Philips and Mullard sold Dario commercial
photomultipliers for detection of nuclear radiation, developed by the research arm (LEP). RTC was a major manufacturer of photovoltaics and pioneered terrestrial applications as early as 1961. In 1968 Radiotechnique had 30% of the French market for television sets and 50% of the market for picture tubes. As of 1979 RTC was the French components division of Philips Elcoma, and the manufacturer of their solar panels. In 1979 RTC manufactured the Philips BPx47 range solar panel while LEP undertook research into applied
photovoltaics. As of 1979 La Radiotechnique was a major manufacturer of electronics equipment, radio receivers and television sets under the "Radiola" and "Philips" brands. The Radiotechnique group had about 15,000 employees in France. with
Motional Feedback. Radiotechnique began commercial production of semiconductors around 1954. In 1965 all
electronic component research, development and production, previously distributed between Coprim and the Radiotechnique "Tubes and Semiconductors" division was grouped into the new subsidiary Radiotechnique-Coprim (RTC). Radiotechnique became the parent company for RTC and LEP. In June 1967 Philips, Radiotechnique and the
Compagnie Générale d'Electricité formed a joint venture named RTC: Radiotechnique-Compelec. This took over all the industrial establishments in Caen, Chartres, Dreux, Évreux, Suresnes, Tours and Joué-lès-Tours. It made ferrite cores, printed circuits, ceramic dielectric capacitors, memory matrices and wirewound resistors. In the late 1960s Radiotechnique produced
Sylvania's SUHL-TTL integrated circuits, which were sold to the French computer maker
Bull and to the computer division of Philips. In 1968 Radiotechnique Compelec had 22% of the French semiconductor market, ahead of Sescosem and
Texas Instruments, who both had 20%. Radiotechnique was later adversely affected when Sylvania lost market share to Texas Instruments. As of 1 January 1986 RTC la Radiotechnique-Compelec, Hyperelec and Cima became RTC-Compelec. Philips had a majority position in the new RTC. In 1988 it was renamed RTC-Philips Composants, and in 1990 Philips Composants. In 1992 this was split into Philips Composants and Philips Circuits Imprimes. In June 1998 Philips Composants, which specialized in manufacture of ceramics products, was sold to the Carbone Lorraine group and took the name Ferroxdure. In November 1998 the Aspocomp group of Finland purchased Philips circuits imprimés, which employed 550 people at the Évreux plant. The Évreux operation became Aspocomp, a 99% subsidiary of the Aspocomp group. Due to financial troubles the company first announced a severe layoff plan, then went bankrupt. On 20 June 2002 the judicial liquidation of the company Actions Simplifiées Aspocomp was announced by the Évreux District Court and all staff were dismissed. ==Brands==