General Electric Shortly after graduation from Caltech, Ramo was hired by
General Electric. From 1936 until 1946, he served as section head of the general engineering laboratory and also as head of the physics section of the electronics research laboratory. By the end of World War II, he held twenty-five patents in electronics and was cited as one of America's most outstanding young electrical engineers. He became globally recognized as a leader in
microwave research and later headed the development of GE's
electron microscope.
Hughes Aircraft In 1946, unhappy with the direction of General Electric, Ramo returned to California to become director of research for the electronics department of
Hughes Aircraft, and his career became coupled with that of
Dean Wooldridge. Together they formed a successful team for many years, with Wooldridge concentrating on investment and general business aspects while Ramo led research, development and engineering. By 1948, Hughes had created its Aerospace Group to work with the newly created
U.S. Air Force. Dr. Ramo became a Vice-President and the Group's Director of Operations. Ramo employed his skills in Systems Engineering to allow Hughes to deliver integrated RADAR and aircraft fire-control systems. He developed the air-to-air missile, creating the
Falcon missile.
Ramo-Wooldridge Corporation (TRW Inc.) By 1953 Ramo and the Air Force had become increasingly frustrated with management problems at Hughes Aircraft. Ramo and Wooldridge were particularly concerned when
Howard Hughes avoided their attempts to discuss the problem. In September they jointly resigned, and within a week formed the Ramo-Wooldridge Corporation on September 16, 1953. In October 1953 an Assistant
Secretary of Defense,
Trevor Gardner, created a committee to consider the future of guided missiles. This
Strategic Missile Evaluation Committee (SMEC) was headed by
John von Neumann and included both Ramo and Wooldridge. In four months, the committee produced their report and recommended that a crash program was needed to develop
intercontinental ballistic missiles, and that such a program might enable the United States to overtake Russian developments by 1959 or 1960. With Dr. Ramo as the driving scientific and engineering officer, the Ramo-Wooldridge Corp became the lead contractor for the resulting Air Force program. In 1958, an
Atlas rocket delivered a payload 5,000 miles downrange, and the Atlas would go on to serve as the launch vehicle for NASA's
Project Mercury orbital flights, starting with
John Glenn in
Friendship 7. USAF General
Bernard Schriever, head of the ICBM program, described Ramo as "the architect of the
Thor,
Atlas, and
Titan" rockets. During a series of key experiments of ballistic missiles in the 1950s at
Cape Canaveral, Florida, at which Ramo and Air Force General Bernard Schriever were observers, test rockets kept exploding on their launch pads. When one missile rose about 6 inches before toppling over and exploding, Ramo reportedly beamed and said: "Well, Benny, now that we know the thing can fly, all we have to do is improve its range a bit." Ramo-Wooldridge later merged with
Thompson Products to become
TRW, and Simon Ramo became Vice-Chairman of the company. In 1964, TRW and
Martin Marietta formed the jointly owned
Bunker Ramo Corporation with Ramo as President, which then expanded into the computer and communications technology fields.
Retirement and later life Although Ramo officially retired from TRW and the aerospace industry in 1978, he continued to help lead major space and weapons developments and remained an active consultant to aerospace executives and an advisor to the federal government. In January 2008, he joined the faculty of the
University of Southern California's
Viterbi School of Engineering as a presidential chair and professor of electrical engineering. Ramo is also a
founding member of the
National Academy of Engineering. == Awards, appointments and fellowships ==