RTX: The Billion-Dollar Business of Defense

April 1
4 mins

Episode Description

Discover how a failed refrigerator startup became a global defense titan, accidentally invented the microwave, and merged into the powerhouse known as RTX.

[INTRO]

ALEX: If you’ve ever popped a bag of popcorn in a microwave, you actually have a massive defense contractor to thank for that snack.

JORDAN: Wait, are you telling me my kitchen appliances are secretly military tech?

ALEX: Exactly. The company we now call RTX—formerly Raytheon—accidentally invented the microwave while building high-powered radar tubes during World War II.

JORDAN: So they went from heating up leftovers to building the world’s most advanced missiles and jet engines? That's quite the pivot.

ALEX: It is the ultimate story of how war, business, and kitchen convenience collided to create a 180-billion-dollar behemoth.

[CHAPTER 1 - Origin]

ALEX: Our story starts in 1922 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, but not with weapons.

JORDAN: Okay, so what was the original plan?

ALEX: Three guys—Vannevar Bush, Charles Smith, and Laurence Marshall—started the American Appliance Company to reinvent the refrigerator.

JORDAN: I’m guessing the fridge business didn’t go well if they’re now building Tomahawk missiles.

ALEX: It was a total flop, but they pivoted to radio components and created a tube that allowed radios to plug into wall outlets instead of using messy batteries.

JORDAN: That’s a huge deal for the 1920s; it basically turned the radio into a standard household appliance.

ALEX: It made them famous, and they renamed the company Raytheon, which basically means "light from the gods."

JORDAN: A bit dramatic for a radio part, but I'll allow it.

ALEX: Just wait—by World War II, the government tapped them to mass-produce magnetrons, which were the “heart” of microwave radar systems used to spot enemy subs.

JORDAN: And that's where the popcorn comes in?

ALEX: Precisely. An engineer named Percy Spencer was standing near a radar tube when he noticed the chocolate bar in his pocket had turned into a puddle.

JORDAN: (Laughs) Most people would worry about radiation; this guy just saw a way to cook lunch.

ALEX: He tested it with popcorn and an egg next, and by 1947, Raytheon released the "Radarange," the world’s first microwave oven.

[CHAPTER 2 - Core Story]

JORDAN: So they’re the kings of the kitchen and the battlefield. How do they become the massive conglomerate we see today?

ALEX: They realized that defense was where the real money stayed, especially as the Cold War heated up.

JORDAN: So they dropped the appliances to focus on things that go boom?

ALEX: Eventually, yes. Through the 60s and 90s, they went on a massive shopping spree, buying up the defense divisions of Texas Instruments and Hughes Aircraft.

JORDAN: They were basically eating their competition to own the entire missile market.

ALEX: Totally. They secured the rights to the Tomahawk cruise missile and the Patriot defense system—the stuff you see on the news every time there’s a conflict.

JORDAN: But the "RTX" name is recent, right? I remember them just being Raytheon.

ALEX: That’s the big 2020 twist. Raytheon pulled off a "merger of equals" with United Technologies.

JORDAN: "Merger of equals" usually means one giant swallowed another, doesn't it?

ALEX: In this case, it was a strategic marriage. United Technologies brought Pratt & Whitney—who make the engines for the F-35 fighter jet—and Collins Aerospace to the table.

JORDAN: So now they don't just make the missiles; they make the engines for the planes carrying them and the electronics in the cockpit.

ALEX: Exactly. To make the deal work, they actually spun off Otis Elevators and Carrier air conditioning into their own companies.

JORDAN: Wow. They literally ditched the elevators and AC units to become a “pure-play” aerospace and defense titan.

ALEX: CEO Greg Hayes moved the whole headquarters to Arlington, Virginia, in 2022 to be as close to the Pentagon as humanly possible.

JORDAN: It sounds like they aren't just a supplier anymore; they are part of the government's nervous system.

[CHAPTER 3 - Why It Matters]

ALEX: That’s why RTX is at the center of every major global headline today.

JORDAN: Because their tech is on the front lines?

ALEX: Right. When you hear about the Iron Dome in Israel or Patriot missiles in Ukraine, you’re looking at RTX products in action.

JORDAN: That has to come with some serious baggage, though.

ALEX: It does. They face massive scrutiny for selling weapons to countries with checkered human rights records, like Saudi Arabia.

JORDAN: I’d imagine their lobbying budget is just as massive as their R&D budget.

ALEX: You’re not wrong—they spent over 13 million dollars on lobbying in 2022 alone to keep those defense contracts flowing.

JORDAN: Is it all smooth sailing for them now, or are there cracks in the armor?

ALEX: They’re actually facing a huge crisis right now with their Pratt & Whitney engines.

JORDAN: What happened?

ALEX: A tiny flaw in the powdered metal used for engine disks is forcing them to inspect and repair hundreds of Airbus passenger jets.

JORDAN: That sounds incredibly expensive.

ALEX: It’s costing them Billions. Literally. It’s a reminder that when you operate at the absolute edge of physics, even a microscopic mistake can ground a global fleet.

JORDAN: So they are indispensable but also incredibly vulnerable.

ALEX: Precisely. They are the engine—literally and figuratively—of both commercial travel and modern warfare.

[OUTRO]

JORDAN: What’s the one thing to remember about RTX?

ALEX: They are the company that turned WWII radar technology into your kitchen microwave and then used that same expertise to become the world’s most powerful defense powerhouse.

JORDAN: That’s Wikipodia — every story, on demand. Search your next topic at wikipodia.ai

See all episodes