DR. CRAIG JON ANDERSON, D.D.S.
Dentist at Market St, Seattle, WA

License number
Washington 4045
Category
Dentist
Type
General Practice
Address
Address
1801 NW Market St #312, Seattle, WA 98107
Phone
(206) 784-6310
(206) 784-6311 (Fax)

Professional information

Craig Anderson Photo 1

Estimator At Boeing Commercial Airplanes

Position:
Estimator at Boeing Commercial Airplanes
Location:
Greater Seattle Area
Industry:
Aviation & Aerospace
Work:
Boeing Commercial Airplanes - Estimator The Boeing Company Oct 1988 - Jul 1996 - Manufacturing Engineering Planning / Flat Sheet Programming Lead Boeing - Greater Seattle Area Jul 1978 - Oct 1988 - Lead Press Plate Maker A
Education:
Green River Community College 1998 - 1999
None, Airframe Mechanics and Aircraft Maintenance Technology/Technician
South Seattle Community College 1985 - 1986
None, Machine Shop Technology/Assistant
Skills:
Blueprint Reading, Cost Estimating, Machinist, Aircraft, Aviation, Procurement, Contract Management, Purchasing, Contract Negotiation, Process Scheduler, Materials Management, Airports, Materials, Engineering, Process Improvement, Lean Manufacturing, MS Project, Proposal Writing, Pricing, Manufacturing, Project Planning, Earned Value Management, Project Estimation, Aerospace, Continuous Improvement, Operations Management, Aircraft Maintenance, Manufacturing Engineering, Maintenance & Repair, Troubleshooting, Program Management


Craig Anderson Photo 2

Owner At Cb Anderson Architects

Position:
owner at CB Anderson Architects
Location:
Greater Seattle Area
Industry:
Architecture & Planning
Work:
CB Anderson Architects since 1996 - owner Cinnabon 1992 - 1996 - Director - Store Planning
Education:
Washington State University 1974 - 1980
Bachelor of Architecture, Architecture
Skills:
Residential, Interior Design, Restaurants, Retail, Interiors, Residential Buildings, Subdivision Design, Retail Design, Commercial Architecture, Submittals, Space-planning, Architectural Design, Renovation, Residential Homes, Contract Management


Craig Anderson Photo 3

It Director At The Max Foundation

Position:
IT Director at The Max Foundation
Location:
Greater Seattle Area
Industry:
Nonprofit Organization Management
Work:
The Max Foundation since Sep 2001 - IT Director Alaska Jan 1992 - Dec 1999 - Commercial Fisherman
Education:
Seattle University 1988 - 1991
Bachelor of Science (BS), Computer Science
Highline Community College 1987 - 1988


Craig Anderson Photo 4

Craig Anderson

Position:
President & CEO at 3 Jeeps Offroad
Location:
Greater Seattle Area
Industry:
Automotive
Work:
3 Jeeps Offroad since Aug 2012 - President & CEO
Skills:
VMware ESX, Linux, TCP/IP, Oracle, Team Leadership, IPTV, Solaris, MySQL, Troubleshooting, OS X, Cisco Technologies, Telecommunications, Windows, SharePoint, Jeeps, Jeep Customization, Vehicle Customization, Customer Service, Windows 7, Windows Server 2008, Cisco, Mac OS X, Marketing Strategy, Sales, Customer Retention, Budgets


Craig Anderson Photo 5

It Director At The Max Foundation

Position:
IT Director at The Max Foundation
Location:
Greater Seattle Area
Industry:
Nonprofit Organization Management
Work:
The Max Foundation - IT Director


Craig J Anderson Photo 6

Dr. Craig J Anderson, Seattle WA - DDS (Doctor of Dental Surgery)

Specialties:
Dentistry
Address:
1801 NW Market St STE 312, Seattle 98107
(206) 784-6310 (Phone), (206) 784-6311 (Fax)
Languages:
English


Craig Anderson Photo 7

Craig Anderson

Location:
Greater Seattle Area
Industry:
Computer Software


Craig Jon Anderson Photo 8

Craig Jon Anderson, Seattle WA

Specialties:
Dentist
Address:
1801 Nw Market St, Seattle, WA 98107


Craig Anderson Photo 9

Sealed, Inductively Powered Lamp Assembly

US Patent:
5264997, Nov 23, 1993
Filed:
Mar 4, 1992
Appl. No.:
7/846200
Inventors:
James T. Hutchisson - Bellevue WA
Craig A. Anderson - Seattle WA
Assignee:
Dominion Automotive Industries Corp. - Kent WA
International Classification:
F21V 2302
US Classification:
362226
Abstract:
A lamp assembly (10) for use with equipment such as construction vehicles and heavy trucks that are subjected to prolonged, intense vibrations. The lamp assembly of this invention includes a socket (14) formed by a shell (42). A sealed enclosure, in the form of a lamp housing (12), is releasably secured in the shell. The light source, such as a gas-discharge tube (16) or a set of LEDs (72) is located inside the lamp housing. A transformer primary winding (20), which is attached to a power source (56), is attached to the outside of the shell. A transformer secondary winding (22) connected across the light source is located inside the lamp housing. The secondary winding is located so that the lamp housing is seated in the socket, adjacent the primary winding. When a voltage is applied across the primary winding, an inductive voltage develops across the secondary winding. The voltage developed across the secondary winding is applied to the light source, which results in its energization and the emission of light thereby.


Craig Anderson Photo 10

Led Based Rotating Beacon

US Patent:
2006020, Sep 21, 2006
Filed:
Mar 18, 2005
Appl. No.:
11/084334
Inventors:
Craig Anderson - Tukwila WA, US
Dennis Anderson - Boise ID, US
William Cresse - Boise ID, US
Assignee:
Preco Electronics, Inc. - Boise ID
International Classification:
F21V 33/00
US Classification:
362253000
Abstract:
A rotating beacon employs an array of LEDs mounted on a rotor assembly in a pattern for unidirectional emission wherein the LEDs are excited through noncontact inductive coupling between a load coupling on the rotor assembly and a source coupling on the stator or mount element. In a particular embodiment, a primary sender flat coil of an air gap transformer is disposed concentrically forming a disc and mounted juxtaposed to a secondary receiver flat coil so that power can be conveyed across the air gap while the rotor is in motion. The transferred power excites substantially all of the LED array in a fixed pattern on the rotating mount. In a second embodiment, the air gap transformer has a primary sender coil is mounted coaxially with a secondary receiver coil (which is typically but not necessarily inside the primary coil), so the secondary, with the array can freely rotate and draw power from the source.