Wow, 2 years of personal R&D is a big gamble, good luck. Anything people on here would be interested in?
Yep, but believe it or not - this is my third time taking a gamble like this. Electronics is my third major career endeavor. My final chapter will be combining all of the skills and experiences - but I am still on the learning curve with EE.
The 2 years had to cover my own personal learning curve getting back into EE. I went half-way through an EE program ending in 1993, now I had to intensely self-educate to get anything done. It also had to cover mechanical, electronic, and software design of a product family with a long marketable life span. Since I could not afford a team - I simply had to suck it up and do the whole thing from concept to design to engineering to CNC machining to designing the manufacturing process, marketing, etc. All day, every day. No breaks. Lots of coffee and cheap food. My entire bench is made from eBay test gear that is 10-15 years old. It's a very cobbled system overall, but I have the ability to go from soup to nuts very fast. I resurrected a pick and place machine, a laser engraver, power supplies, designed and manufactured countless tools and fixtures.
The end result is a family of brute strength power management products aimed at camera systems used motion picture and television production. I should send one of the first ones in for a tear down. The biggest drawback of a 1-man-band is that I get no critical feedback from anyone. My previous companies had employees that would point out my design weak spots early in the process. Now, I tend to find the problems late in the game. A tear-down by another engineer would be eye opening - good or bad.
I want to win the 6000 x series pretty bad. A scope like that will allow me to skip a couple of painful years and make some use of the hard work I have put in so far.