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Bendix Corporation

Bendix Corporation is an American manufacturing and engineering company which, during various times in its existence, made automotive brake shoes and systems, vacuum tubes, aircraft brakes, aeronautical hydraulics and electric power systems, avionics, aircraft and automobile fuel control systems, radios, televisions and computers. It was also well known for the name Bendix, as used on home clothes washing machines, but never actually made these appliances.

Bendix Corporation
Final logo
IndustryAutomotive
Founded1924; 99 years ago (1924)
FounderVincent Bendix
FateBuyout; 2002
SuccessorKnorr Bremse
HeadquartersAvon, Ohio, US
Parent
Knorr Bremse
(2008-present)
Divisions
  • Bendix Pacific (later Bendix Electrodynamics)
  • Bendix Scintilla
  • Bendix Field Engineering[1]
  • Red Bank
Websitebendix-brakes.com

History

Early history

 
Classic Bendix wordmark, this variant introduced in the 1950s

Founder and inventor Vincent Bendix initially began his corporation in a hotel room in Chicago in 1914 with an agreement with the struggling bicycle brake manufacturing firm, Eclipse Machine Company of Elmira, New York. Bendix granted permission to his invention which was described as "a New York device for the starting of explosive motors." This company made a low cost triple thread screw which could be used in the manufacture of other drive parts. By using this screw with the Eclipse Machine Company, Bendix had a good foundation for his future business plans.

Automotive

General Motors purchased a 24% interest in Bendix in 1924, not to operate Bendix but to maintain a direct and continuing contact with developments in aviation, as the engineering techniques of the auto and aircraft were quite similar then. In the 1920s, Bendix owned and controlled many important patents for devices applicable to the auto industry. For example, brakes, carburetors, and starting drives for engines. It acquired Bragg-Kliesrath brakes in the late 1920s.[2] In 1942 Ernest R. Breech became president of Bendix, moving from General Motors. After performing brilliantly for Bendix by introducing GM management philosophies, he attracted the attention of Henry Ford II who persuaded Breech to move to Ford where he finished his career. By 1940 Bendix had sales running c. $40 million. In 1948, General Motors sold its interest in Bendix as GM wanted to focus on its expanding automotive operations. Bendix was formally founded in 1924 in South Bend, Indiana, United States. At first it manufactured brake systems for cars and trucks, supplying General Motors and other automobile manufacturers. Bendix manufactured both hydraulic brake systems and a vacuum booster TreadleVac for its production lines for decades.[citation needed] In 1924 Vincent Bendix had acquired the rights to Henri Perrot's patents for Drum brake/drum and shoe design.[a][3]

In 1956, Bendix introduced Electrojector, a multi-point electronic fuel injection system, which was optional on several 1958 models of automobiles built by Chrysler.[4][5][6]

 
Logo introduced c. 1968

In the 1960s, Bendix automotive brakes blossomed with the introduction of fixed-caliper disc brakes and the "Duo-Servo" system (which became, virtually, a de facto world standard for drum brakes). During the 1960s, Bendix also dabbled in bicycle hardware, producing a reliable, totally self-contained, 2-speed "Kick-Back" planetary rear axle with coaster braking. Also, just as reliable, was the Bendix "Red Band" and "Red Band II" single speed coaster brake hub. followed by the Bendix "70" and Bendix "80" hub. Considered one of the best hubs on the market, at the time.

When Allied Signal took over Bendix in the 1980s, it quickly divested the brake and steering division to TRW to focus on aerospace applications and railcars. (TRW had already assumed control over Lucas Girling Brake Division years earlier.) The Bendix Electronic Control Unit division was divested to Siemens-VDO; a part of giant Robert Bosch GmbH and formed the foundation of the VW Digifant system and later Bosch Motronic Electronic Control Units introduced in the late 1980s. In the fall of 2018, TRW was assumed by ZF Ind of Germany and the Bendix brake trademark was licensed to Germany's OPTIMAL, where it resides today.[citation needed]

 

Starting in the 1950s or before, Bendix Pacific designed, tested, and manufactured hydraulic components and systems, primarily for the military. In the same facility, avionics and other electronic hardware was designed, manufactured, and documented in technical manuals. Much of this operation was relocated to a new facility in Sylmar, California where they had a large deep indoor pool for testing sonar. Telemetry components for the RIM-8 Talos surface-to-air missile included transmitters and oscillators in various frequency bands as well as the missile itself were designed and built by Bendix. They built and installed the telemetry system in all the ground stations for the first crewed space flights. For this program, they developed the first cardio tachometer and respiration rate monitor system which enabled a ground-based physician to observe an astronaut's vital signs. MK46 torpedo electronics also came from this facility. Other diverse products included radar detectors in aircraft that identified ground missile tracking and ground missiles launched at aircraft. In the 1960s they produced an anti-lock brake system for military aircraft using established technology similar to Dunlop's earlier Maxaret. The technology is similar to the notched wheel and reluctor now used in cars.

Bendix Scintilla manufactured MIL SPEC electrical connectors of many styles. Criteria were met for hostile and non-hostile environments that provided seals against liquids and gasses.

In 1971, Bendix introduced the world's first true computerized ABS (anti-lock) system on Chrysler's 1971 Imperial. Production continued for several years. Under its present ownership by Honeywell, Bendix continues[when?] to manufacture automotive brakes and industrial brakes for a wide variety of industries.[7] In 2014, Honeywell sold the Bendix trademark for automotive brakes in the US, to MAT Holdings.[8]

Many Bendix automotive, truck and industrial brakes sold in the United States used asbestos as late as 1987.[9] Bendix's current parent, Honeywell, continues to deal with numerous lawsuits brought as a result of asbestos-containing Bendix brand brakes.[10]

In February 2020, Bendix announced that it would be moving its headquarters from Elyria, Ohio to Avon, with an expected opening date for its new facility of November 2021.[11]

Mass spectrometer

 
Bendix MA-2 Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometer

A collaboration between Fred McLafferty and Roland Gohlke and William C. Wiley and Daniel B. Harrington of Bendix Aviation in the 1950s led to the combination of gas chromatography and mass spectrometry, and the development of Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry instrumentation. Beginning in the 1960s, Bendix produced scientific instruments such as the Bendix MA-2 Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometer.[12]

Radiological Dosimetry

Bendix also manufactured Radiological Dosimeters for Civil Defense during the cold war, they also made a Family Radiation measurement kit for home use, which included a CDV-746 dosimeter and a CDV-736 Rate meter, which looked like a dosimeter.

Dosimeters manufactured by Bendix for the Office of Civil Defense included: CDV-138; CDV-730; CDV-736-Ratemeter; CDV-740; CDV-742, the version most commonly used by Civil Defense; and CDV-746.

The Dosimeters measured in Roentgens an hour, which is the standard measurement for ionising radiation.

'Dashaveyor' Automated Guideway Transit

In the late 1960s Bendix purchased the rights to the Dashaveyor system – developed for mining and goods movements – in order to use it as the basis for an automated guideway transit (AGT) system, during the heyday of urban transport research in the late 1960s. Often referred to as the Bendix-Dashaveyor in this form, the system used the basic design of the cargo system, but with a larger passenger body running on rubber wheels. Although it was demonstrated at Transpo '72, along with three competitors, only one Dashaveyor system was installed, the 5 km (3.1 mi) long Toronto Zoo Domain Ride which operated from 1976 until its closure in 1994 following an accident due to poor maintenance. Bendix ceased marketing the system by 1975 after it failed to attract interest.

Avionics, military and government

In 1929 Vincent Bendix branched out into aeronautics and restructured the company as "Bendix Aviation" to reflect the new product lines.

Bendix Aviation was founded as a holding company for the assets of Delco Aviation Corporation, Eclipse Machine Company, Stromberg Carburetor Company, and other aircraft accessory manufacturers.[13]

Bendix supplied aircraft manufacturers with all types of hydraulic systems, for braking and flap activation, and introduced new devices such as a pressure carburetor which dominated the market during World War II. It also made a wide variety of electrical and electronic instruments for aircraft.

The Bendix Corporation sponsored the famous Bendix continental air race which started in 1931, and is known for the Bendix Trophy. The competition was a transcontinental U.S. point-to-point race meant to encourage the development of durable, efficient aircraft for commercial aviation. Civilians were barred from the race in 1950. The last race took place in 1962.

During World War II Bendix made nearly every ancillary instrument or equipment for military aircraft.[citation needed] The Bendix radio division was established in 1937 to make radio transmitter/receivers for aircraft and other types of avionics. During the war Bendix manufactured about 75% of all avionics in US aircraft.[citation needed] During and after the war Bendix made radar equipment of various types.

Bendix ranked 17th among United States corporations in the value of wartime production contracts.[14]

One product made by Bendix was a Land Mine Detecting set for the United States Army and United States Air Force in July 1952. The manual numbers for this portable detecting set is US Army manual number TM-5-9540 and US Air Force manual number TO39B-40-5. This set had audio and visual indications and operated on low volt batteries. This backpack style detecting set came with two probes, batteries, detecting plate and other basic electronics in an organized seal fiberglass box. It also manufactured landing gear oleo struts and jet engine fuel controls for early J79 engines and designed guidance systems and assembled the Talos missile for the US Navy.[citation needed] Bendix aviation masks and gauges were modified and tested for use in diving and hyperbaric applications.[15][16]

In the 1950s, Bendix and its successors managed United States Atomic Energy Commission facilities in Kansas City, Missouri and Albuquerque, New Mexico. These facilities procured non-nuclear components for nuclear weapons.

 
A Bendix G-15 computer

In 1956, the computer division of Bendix Aviation introduced the Bendix G-15, a mini computer which was the size of two tall filing cabinets. The company sold about 400 of these at prices starting at below US$50,000. The Bendix computer division was taken over in 1963 by Control Data Corporation, which continued to support the G-15 for a few years.

The chief designer of the G-15 was Harry Huskey, who had worked with Alan Turing on the ACE in the UK and on the SWAC in the 1950s. Huskey created most of the design while working as a professor at Berkeley and other universities, and also as a consultant.

The company was renamed to Bendix Corporation in 1960.

During the 1960s the company made ground and airborne telecommunications systems for NASA. It also built the ST-124-M3 inertial platform used in the Saturn V Instrument Unit which was built by the Navigation and Control Division in Teterboro, NJ. It also developed the first automobile fuel injection system in the US.

In January 1963, the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) released a report stating that the "most likely abnormality" to have caused the crash of American Airlines Flight 1 on March 1, 1962 was a short circuit caused by wires in the automatic piloting system that had been damaged in the manufacturing process. CAB inspectors had inspected units at a Teterboro, New Jersey, Bendix Corporation plant and discovered workers using tweezers to bind up bundles of wires, thus damaging them. The Bendix Corporation issued denials, stating that the units underwent 61 inspections during manufacture, in addition to inspections during installation and maintenance work, and insisted that had the insulation on the wires been breached at some point, it would have been detected and the unit replaced.

In 1966 NASA selected Bendix Aerospace Systems Division in Ann Arbor, Michigan to design, manufacture, test, and provide operational support for packages of the Apollo Lunar Surface Experiments Package (ALSEP) to fly on the Apollo Program.

Bendix made the fuel system for the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird.[citation needed]

Marine

During World War II, Bendix was contracted to make engine order telegraphs for the United States Navy.[17]

Washing machines

Although popularly connected to washing machines, the Bendix Corporation itself never manufactured them. In 1936, the company licensed its name to Bendix Home Appliances, another South Bend company, for a 25% stake in the company.

In 1937, Bendix Home Appliances, Inc was the first company to market a domestic automatic washing machine.[18] Although sales were initially slow, the benefits of an automatic machine soon began to spread by word-of-mouth. Sales started to climb, so that by the time the USA entered World War II, a total of 330,000 units had been sold. In common with other washing machine manufacturers, production ceased during the war, but resumed in 1946. Total sales reached 2,000,000 by 1950.[19]

The 1937 Bendix Home Laundry [20] would be recognised as a front-loading automatic washer by any modern user of such machines. It had a glass porthole door, a rotating drum and an electrically driven mechanical timer. The machine was able to autofill, wash, rinse and spin-dry. Initially the lack of any vibration damper meant that the machine had to be secured firmly to the floor. The machine also lacked an internal water heater.

Bendix Home Appliances, founded by Judson Sayre, was later sold to Avco Manufacturing Corporation.[21] In 1956, Avco sold Bendix Home Appliances to Philco.[22]

Home electronics

 
Bendix home television

Bendix first manufactured domestic radios and phonographs for the retail market after WWII as an outgrowth of its production of aircraft radios. In 1948 Bendix started to sell car radios directly to Ford and other auto manufacturers. From 1950 to 1959, Bendix made television sets. Production of radios for the retail trade grew quickly in the 1950s, but stopped quickly in the 1960s when Ford, General Motors and Chrysler started producing their own radios.

Mergers

In the decades between 1970 and 1990, Bendix went through a series of mergers, sales and changes with partners or buyers including Raytheon, Allied Signal and others. This diluted its corporate identity, though for some years these companies used the Bendix brand for some of their products, such as aircraft flight control systems.[23]

In 1982 Bendix launched a hostile takeover bid of the conglomerate, Martin Marietta. Bendix bought the majority of Martin Marietta shares and in effect owned the company. However, Martin Marietta's management used the short time between ownership and control to sell non-core businesses and launch its own hostile takeover of Bendix – the Pac-Man Defense. Industrial conglomerate United Technologies joined the fray, supporting Martin Marietta in their counter-takeover bid. In the end, Bendix was rescued by Allied Corporation, acting as a white knight. Bendix was acquired by Allied in 1983 for US$85 per share. Allied Corporation, later named AlliedSignal, later bought Honeywell and adopted the Honeywell name, and Bendix became a Honeywell brand, including the Bendix/King brand of avionics. Honeywell's Transportation Systems division also carries the Bendix line of brake shoes, pads and other vacuum or hydraulic subsystems.

In 2002 Knorr-Bremse took over the commercial vehicle brake business from Honeywell, USA its share of joint ventures in Europe, Brazil and the USA. Bendix Commercial Vehicle Systems became a subsidiary of Knorr-Bremse. The Knorr-Bremse Group achieved sales of EUR 2.1 billion for the first time.[citation needed]

Advertising

In the 1960s and 1970s, Archie Comics ran comic-strip ads for Bendix brakes for bicycles featuring Archie Andrews and his friends.[24][25][26]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Henri Perrot was a French engineer who patented his designs for drum brakes and shoes. In 1924, after meeting at a European auto show, Vincent Bendix acquired the license to manufacture Perrot's shoe-brake patents.

Notes

  1. ^ "Bendix Field Unit To Move". Baltimore Sun. 20 September 1968.
  2. ^ Schoneberger, L.A. "Pat" Hyland ; edited by W.A. (1993). Call me Pat : the autobiography of the man Howard Hughes chose to lead Hughes Aircraft. Virginia Beach, VA: Donning Co./Publishers. p. 147. ISBN 9780898658736. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  3. ^ Bendix Brakes, History 2012-03-02 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Bendix Electrojector Brochure, dated 12-56, Title: "Electronic Fuel Injection For Passenger Cars"
  5. ^ The News-Palladium, Title: "Fuel Injection For Cars Built By Bendix", September 19, 1956, page7
  6. ^ New Chrysler Fuel System Is Introduced Chicago Daily Tribune September 29, 1957 page A9
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-03-06. Retrieved 2010-01-20.
  8. ^ "MAT to acquire Bendix trademark". Tire Business. 2015-08-13. Retrieved 2015-08-15. MAT Holdings Inc. [...] is acquiring from Honeywell International Inc. the exclusive license for the Bendix trademark for automotive braking products sold in the U.S.
  9. ^ Independent Laboratory testing of Bendix brakes purchased in 1987[dead link]
  10. ^ Lehman Brothers study relating to asbestos liabilities of numerous companies, including Honeywell on page 9
  11. ^ "550 jobs leaving Elyria as Bendix opens new, multi-million dollar brake plant in Avon". WOIO. 26 February 2020. Retrieved August 7, 2020.
  12. ^ Jones, Mark. "Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry". American Chemical Society. Retrieved 19 Nov 2019.
  13. ^ "Bendix Forms Aviation Firm". St Petersburg Times. 21 April 1929. p. 2. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  14. ^ Peck, Merton J. & Scherer, Frederic M. (1962). The Weapons Acquisition Process: An Economic Analysis. Harvard Business School. p. 619.
  15. ^ Leyden, CJ (1957). . NEDU-Evaluation-9-57. United States Navy Experimental Diving Unit Technical report. Archived from the original on 2016-03-06. Retrieved 2013-05-16. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  16. ^ Blockwick, TN (1950). "Determination of the Potentialities of the Bendix, MSA and Cousteau-Gagnon Demand Breathing Appliances for Descents to 400 Feet and the Measurement of the Amounts of Gas Required for the Various Depths". NEDU-RR-5-50. United States Navy Experimental Diving Unit Technical report. Archived from the original on July 5, 2013. Retrieved 2013-05-16. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  17. ^ "Marine Surplus Seller, Issues 13-22". Google Books. United States Maritime Commission. 1946. Retrieved October 3, 2019.
  18. ^ "US2165884A - Cleaning textile and similar materials - Google Patents". Retrieved 2019-06-17.
  19. ^ "LIFE - Google Books". 1950-04-24. Retrieved 2019-06-17.
  20. ^ "LIFE - Google Books". 1937-11-22. Retrieved 2019-06-17.
  21. ^ "Obituaries - Judson S. Sayre". The New York Times. May 12, 1986. Retrieved 2009-07-19.
  22. ^ "Bendix Sale by Avco to Philco Affirmed". New York Times. 1956-11-14. Retrieved 2019-04-16.
  23. ^ "Bendix Logo: Design and History". FamousLogos.us. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  24. ^ "Archie Gets All the Brakes" (Comic Ads #53), ComicVine
  25. ^ Bicycle Museum of America, Flickr Hive Mind
  26. ^ "Comic Books Uncovered," Garage Sale Finds, August 19, 2015

Bibliography

External links

  • GMnext.com: Bendix Aviation Corporation — on General Motors wiki
  • Bendix Aviation Corporation and Your Business! – Michiana Memory Digital Collection
  • Bendix Aviation Equipment Service Guide – AirCorps Library(subscription required)
  • Bendix Appliances homepage (bad link)
  • Popular Mechanics: "Certificate of Brake Test Made Automatically by Small Recorder" (April 1936) – portable brake testing unit developed and sold by Bendix in the 1930s.
  • Bendixline (1957–1958, 1962–1964) – Digitized copies of the Bendix Products Division newsletter
  • Bendix: First Fifty Years in South Bend – Michiana Memory Digital Collection

bendix, corporation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citat. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bendix Corporation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Bendix Corporation is an American manufacturing and engineering company which during various times in its existence made automotive brake shoes and systems vacuum tubes aircraft brakes aeronautical hydraulics and electric power systems avionics aircraft and automobile fuel control systems radios televisions and computers It was also well known for the name Bendix as used on home clothes washing machines but never actually made these appliances Bendix CorporationFinal logoIndustryAutomotiveFounded1924 99 years ago 1924 FounderVincent BendixFateBuyout 2002SuccessorKnorr BremseHeadquartersAvon Ohio USParentAllied Corporation 1983 1985 AlliedSignal 1985 1999 Honeywell 1999 2008 Knorr Bremse 2008 present DivisionsBendix Pacific later Bendix Electrodynamics Bendix ScintillaBendix Field Engineering 1 Red BankWebsitebendix brakes com Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Automotive 1 3 Mass spectrometer 1 3 1 Radiological Dosimetry 1 4 Dashaveyor Automated Guideway Transit 1 5 Avionics military and government 1 6 Washing machines 1 7 Home electronics 2 Mergers 3 Advertising 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 Notes 5 3 Bibliography 6 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit Classic Bendix wordmark this variant introduced in the 1950s Founder and inventor Vincent Bendix initially began his corporation in a hotel room in Chicago in 1914 with an agreement with the struggling bicycle brake manufacturing firm Eclipse Machine Company of Elmira New York Bendix granted permission to his invention which was described as a New York device for the starting of explosive motors This company made a low cost triple thread screw which could be used in the manufacture of other drive parts By using this screw with the Eclipse Machine Company Bendix had a good foundation for his future business plans Automotive Edit General Motors purchased a 24 interest in Bendix in 1924 not to operate Bendix but to maintain a direct and continuing contact with developments in aviation as the engineering techniques of the auto and aircraft were quite similar then In the 1920s Bendix owned and controlled many important patents for devices applicable to the auto industry For example brakes carburetors and starting drives for engines It acquired Bragg Kliesrath brakes in the late 1920s 2 In 1942 Ernest R Breech became president of Bendix moving from General Motors After performing brilliantly for Bendix by introducing GM management philosophies he attracted the attention of Henry Ford II who persuaded Breech to move to Ford where he finished his career By 1940 Bendix had sales running c 40 million In 1948 General Motors sold its interest in Bendix as GM wanted to focus on its expanding automotive operations Bendix was formally founded in 1924 in South Bend Indiana United States At first it manufactured brake systems for cars and trucks supplying General Motors and other automobile manufacturers Bendix manufactured both hydraulic brake systems and a vacuum booster TreadleVac for its production lines for decades citation needed In 1924 Vincent Bendix had acquired the rights to Henri Perrot s patents for Drum brake drum and shoe design a 3 In 1956 Bendix introduced Electrojector a multi point electronic fuel injection system which was optional on several 1958 models of automobiles built by Chrysler 4 5 6 Logo introduced c 1968 In the 1960s Bendix automotive brakes blossomed with the introduction of fixed caliper disc brakes and the Duo Servo system which became virtually a de facto world standard for drum brakes During the 1960s Bendix also dabbled in bicycle hardware producing a reliable totally self contained 2 speed Kick Back planetary rear axle with coaster braking Also just as reliable was the Bendix Red Band and Red Band II single speed coaster brake hub followed by the Bendix 70 and Bendix 80 hub Considered one of the best hubs on the market at the time When Allied Signal took over Bendix in the 1980s it quickly divested the brake and steering division to TRW to focus on aerospace applications and railcars TRW had already assumed control over Lucas Girling Brake Division years earlier The Bendix Electronic Control Unit division was divested to Siemens VDO a part of giant Robert Bosch GmbH and formed the foundation of the VW Digifant system and later Bosch Motronic Electronic Control Units introduced in the late 1980s In the fall of 2018 TRW was assumed by ZF Ind of Germany and the Bendix brake trademark was licensed to Germany s OPTIMAL where it resides today citation needed Bendix RIM 8 Talos Starting in the 1950s or before Bendix Pacific designed tested and manufactured hydraulic components and systems primarily for the military In the same facility avionics and other electronic hardware was designed manufactured and documented in technical manuals Much of this operation was relocated to a new facility in Sylmar California where they had a large deep indoor pool for testing sonar Telemetry components for the RIM 8 Talos surface to air missile included transmitters and oscillators in various frequency bands as well as the missile itself were designed and built by Bendix They built and installed the telemetry system in all the ground stations for the first crewed space flights For this program they developed the first cardio tachometer and respiration rate monitor system which enabled a ground based physician to observe an astronaut s vital signs MK46 torpedo electronics also came from this facility Other diverse products included radar detectors in aircraft that identified ground missile tracking and ground missiles launched at aircraft In the 1960s they produced an anti lock brake system for military aircraft using established technology similar to Dunlop s earlier Maxaret The technology is similar to the notched wheel and reluctor now used in cars Bendix Scintilla manufactured MIL SPEC electrical connectors of many styles Criteria were met for hostile and non hostile environments that provided seals against liquids and gasses In 1971 Bendix introduced the world s first true computerized ABS anti lock system on Chrysler s 1971 Imperial Production continued for several years Under its present ownership by Honeywell Bendix continues when to manufacture automotive brakes and industrial brakes for a wide variety of industries 7 In 2014 Honeywell sold the Bendix trademark for automotive brakes in the US to MAT Holdings 8 Many Bendix automotive truck and industrial brakes sold in the United States used asbestos as late as 1987 9 Bendix s current parent Honeywell continues to deal with numerous lawsuits brought as a result of asbestos containing Bendix brand brakes 10 In February 2020 Bendix announced that it would be moving its headquarters from Elyria Ohio to Avon with an expected opening date for its new facility of November 2021 11 Mass spectrometer Edit Bendix MA 2 Time of Flight Mass Spectrometer A collaboration between Fred McLafferty and Roland Gohlke and William C Wiley and Daniel B Harrington of Bendix Aviation in the 1950s led to the combination of gas chromatography and mass spectrometry and the development of Gas chromatography mass spectrometry instrumentation Beginning in the 1960s Bendix produced scientific instruments such as the Bendix MA 2 Time of Flight Mass Spectrometer 12 Radiological Dosimetry Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bendix also manufactured Radiological Dosimeters for Civil Defense during the cold war they also made a Family Radiation measurement kit for home use which included a CDV 746 dosimeter and a CDV 736 Rate meter which looked like a dosimeter Dosimeters manufactured by Bendix for the Office of Civil Defense included CDV 138 CDV 730 CDV 736 Ratemeter CDV 740 CDV 742 the version most commonly used by Civil Defense and CDV 746 The Dosimeters measured in Roentgens an hour which is the standard measurement for ionising radiation Dashaveyor Automated Guideway Transit Edit In the late 1960s Bendix purchased the rights to the Dashaveyor system developed for mining and goods movements in order to use it as the basis for an automated guideway transit AGT system during the heyday of urban transport research in the late 1960s Often referred to as the Bendix Dashaveyor in this form the system used the basic design of the cargo system but with a larger passenger body running on rubber wheels Although it was demonstrated at Transpo 72 along with three competitors only one Dashaveyor system was installed the 5 km 3 1 mi long Toronto Zoo Domain Ride which operated from 1976 until its closure in 1994 following an accident due to poor maintenance Bendix ceased marketing the system by 1975 after it failed to attract interest Avionics military and government Edit In 1929 Vincent Bendix branched out into aeronautics and restructured the company as Bendix Aviation to reflect the new product lines Bendix Aviation was founded as a holding company for the assets of Delco Aviation Corporation Eclipse Machine Company Stromberg Carburetor Company and other aircraft accessory manufacturers 13 Bendix supplied aircraft manufacturers with all types of hydraulic systems for braking and flap activation and introduced new devices such as a pressure carburetor which dominated the market during World War II It also made a wide variety of electrical and electronic instruments for aircraft The Bendix Corporation sponsored the famous Bendix continental air race which started in 1931 and is known for the Bendix Trophy The competition was a transcontinental U S point to point race meant to encourage the development of durable efficient aircraft for commercial aviation Civilians were barred from the race in 1950 The last race took place in 1962 During World War II Bendix made nearly every ancillary instrument or equipment for military aircraft citation needed The Bendix radio division was established in 1937 to make radio transmitter receivers for aircraft and other types of avionics During the war Bendix manufactured about 75 of all avionics in US aircraft citation needed During and after the war Bendix made radar equipment of various types Bendix ranked 17th among United States corporations in the value of wartime production contracts 14 One product made by Bendix was a Land Mine Detecting set for the United States Army and United States Air Force in July 1952 The manual numbers for this portable detecting set is US Army manual number TM 5 9540 and US Air Force manual number TO39B 40 5 This set had audio and visual indications and operated on low volt batteries This backpack style detecting set came with two probes batteries detecting plate and other basic electronics in an organized seal fiberglass box It also manufactured landing gear oleo struts and jet engine fuel controls for early J79 engines and designed guidance systems and assembled the Talos missile for the US Navy citation needed Bendix aviation masks and gauges were modified and tested for use in diving and hyperbaric applications 15 16 In the 1950s Bendix and its successors managed United States Atomic Energy Commission facilities in Kansas City Missouri and Albuquerque New Mexico These facilities procured non nuclear components for nuclear weapons A Bendix G 15 computer In 1956 the computer division of Bendix Aviation introduced the Bendix G 15 a mini computer which was the size of two tall filing cabinets The company sold about 400 of these at prices starting at below US 50 000 The Bendix computer division was taken over in 1963 by Control Data Corporation which continued to support the G 15 for a few years The chief designer of the G 15 was Harry Huskey who had worked with Alan Turing on the ACE in the UK and on the SWAC in the 1950s Huskey created most of the design while working as a professor at Berkeley and other universities and also as a consultant The company was renamed to Bendix Corporation in 1960 During the 1960s the company made ground and airborne telecommunications systems for NASA It also built the ST 124 M3 inertial platform used in the Saturn V Instrument Unit which was built by the Navigation and Control Division in Teterboro NJ It also developed the first automobile fuel injection system in the US In January 1963 the Civil Aeronautics Board CAB released a report stating that the most likely abnormality to have caused the crash of American Airlines Flight 1 on March 1 1962 was a short circuit caused by wires in the automatic piloting system that had been damaged in the manufacturing process CAB inspectors had inspected units at a Teterboro New Jersey Bendix Corporation plant and discovered workers using tweezers to bind up bundles of wires thus damaging them The Bendix Corporation issued denials stating that the units underwent 61 inspections during manufacture in addition to inspections during installation and maintenance work and insisted that had the insulation on the wires been breached at some point it would have been detected and the unit replaced In 1966 NASA selected Bendix Aerospace Systems Division in Ann Arbor Michigan to design manufacture test and provide operational support for packages of the Apollo Lunar Surface Experiments Package ALSEP to fly on the Apollo Program Bendix made the fuel system for the Lockheed SR 71 Blackbird citation needed MarineDuring World War II Bendix was contracted to make engine order telegraphs for the United States Navy 17 Washing machines Edit Although popularly connected to washing machines the Bendix Corporation itself never manufactured them In 1936 the company licensed its name to Bendix Home Appliances another South Bend company for a 25 stake in the company In 1937 Bendix Home Appliances Inc was the first company to market a domestic automatic washing machine 18 Although sales were initially slow the benefits of an automatic machine soon began to spread by word of mouth Sales started to climb so that by the time the USA entered World War II a total of 330 000 units had been sold In common with other washing machine manufacturers production ceased during the war but resumed in 1946 Total sales reached 2 000 000 by 1950 19 The 1937 Bendix Home Laundry 20 would be recognised as a front loading automatic washer by any modern user of such machines It had a glass porthole door a rotating drum and an electrically driven mechanical timer The machine was able to autofill wash rinse and spin dry Initially the lack of any vibration damper meant that the machine had to be secured firmly to the floor The machine also lacked an internal water heater Bendix Home Appliances founded by Judson Sayre was later sold to Avco Manufacturing Corporation 21 In 1956 Avco sold Bendix Home Appliances to Philco 22 Home electronics Edit Bendix home television Bendix first manufactured domestic radios and phonographs for the retail market after WWII as an outgrowth of its production of aircraft radios In 1948 Bendix started to sell car radios directly to Ford and other auto manufacturers From 1950 to 1959 Bendix made television sets Production of radios for the retail trade grew quickly in the 1950s but stopped quickly in the 1960s when Ford General Motors and Chrysler started producing their own radios Mergers EditIn the decades between 1970 and 1990 Bendix went through a series of mergers sales and changes with partners or buyers including Raytheon Allied Signal and others This diluted its corporate identity though for some years these companies used the Bendix brand for some of their products such as aircraft flight control systems 23 In 1982 Bendix launched a hostile takeover bid of the conglomerate Martin Marietta Bendix bought the majority of Martin Marietta shares and in effect owned the company However Martin Marietta s management used the short time between ownership and control to sell non core businesses and launch its own hostile takeover of Bendix the Pac Man Defense Industrial conglomerate United Technologies joined the fray supporting Martin Marietta in their counter takeover bid In the end Bendix was rescued by Allied Corporation acting as a white knight Bendix was acquired by Allied in 1983 for US 85 per share Allied Corporation later named AlliedSignal later bought Honeywell and adopted the Honeywell name and Bendix became a Honeywell brand including the Bendix King brand of avionics Honeywell s Transportation Systems division also carries the Bendix line of brake shoes pads and other vacuum or hydraulic subsystems In 2002 Knorr Bremse took over the commercial vehicle brake business from Honeywell USA its share of joint ventures in Europe Brazil and the USA Bendix Commercial Vehicle Systems became a subsidiary of Knorr Bremse The Knorr Bremse Group achieved sales of EUR 2 1 billion for the first time citation needed Advertising EditIn the 1960s and 1970s Archie Comics ran comic strip ads for Bendix brakes for bicycles featuring Archie Andrews and his friends 24 25 26 See also EditBendix drive Ernest L Webster formed Startomatic Company which was leased to Bendix Mary Cunningham William AgeeReferences EditFootnotes Edit Henri Perrot was a French engineer who patented his designs for drum brakes and shoes In 1924 after meeting at a European auto show Vincent Bendix acquired the license to manufacture Perrot s shoe brake patents Notes Edit Bendix Field Unit To Move Baltimore Sun 20 September 1968 Schoneberger L A Pat Hyland edited by W A 1993 Call me Pat the autobiography of the man Howard Hughes chose to lead Hughes Aircraft Virginia Beach VA Donning Co Publishers p 147 ISBN 9780898658736 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first has generic name help Bendix Brakes History Archived 2012 03 02 at the Wayback Machine Bendix Electrojector Brochure dated 12 56 Title Electronic Fuel Injection For Passenger Cars The News Palladium Title Fuel Injection For Cars Built By Bendix September 19 1956 page7 New Chrysler Fuel System Is Introduced Chicago Daily Tribune September 29 1957 page A9 Bendix Brakes official website Archived from the original on 2010 03 06 Retrieved 2010 01 20 MAT to acquire Bendix trademark Tire Business 2015 08 13 Retrieved 2015 08 15 MAT Holdings Inc is acquiring from Honeywell International Inc the exclusive license for the Bendix trademark for automotive braking products sold in the U S Independent Laboratory testing of Bendix brakes purchased in 1987 dead link Lehman Brothers study relating to asbestos liabilities of numerous companies including Honeywell on page 9 550 jobs leaving Elyria as Bendix opens new multi million dollar brake plant in Avon WOIO 26 February 2020 Retrieved August 7 2020 Jones Mark Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry American Chemical Society Retrieved 19 Nov 2019 Bendix Forms Aviation Firm St Petersburg Times 21 April 1929 p 2 Retrieved 27 November 2020 Peck Merton J amp Scherer Frederic M 1962 The Weapons Acquisition Process An Economic Analysis Harvard Business School p 619 Leyden CJ 1957 Bendix Friez Wrist Depth Gauge NEDU Evaluation 9 57 United States Navy Experimental Diving Unit Technical report Archived from the original on 2016 03 06 Retrieved 2013 05 16 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint unfit URL link Blockwick TN 1950 Determination of the Potentialities of the Bendix MSA and Cousteau Gagnon Demand Breathing Appliances for Descents to 400 Feet and the Measurement of the Amounts of Gas Required for the Various Depths NEDU RR 5 50 United States Navy Experimental Diving Unit Technical report Archived from the original on July 5 2013 Retrieved 2013 05 16 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint unfit URL link Marine Surplus Seller Issues 13 22 Google Books United States Maritime Commission 1946 Retrieved October 3 2019 US2165884A Cleaning textile and similar materials Google Patents Retrieved 2019 06 17 LIFE Google Books 1950 04 24 Retrieved 2019 06 17 LIFE Google Books 1937 11 22 Retrieved 2019 06 17 Obituaries Judson S Sayre The New York Times May 12 1986 Retrieved 2009 07 19 Bendix Sale by Avco to Philco Affirmed New York Times 1956 11 14 Retrieved 2019 04 16 Bendix Logo Design and History FamousLogos us Retrieved 2011 08 18 Archie Gets All the Brakes Comic Ads 53 ComicVine Bicycle Museum of America Flickr Hive Mind Comic Books Uncovered Garage Sale Finds August 19 2015 Bibliography Edit Grant James H 2010 The Gradall A Story of American Ingenuity New Philadelphia Ohio JHG Partners ISBN 978 0 692 00667 2 OCLC 671808156 Sloan Alfred P 1963 My Years With General Motors Garden City NY Doubleday ISBN 9780385042352 OCLC 802024 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bendix Corporation GMnext com Bendix Aviation Corporation on General Motors wiki Bendix Aviation Corporation and Your Business Michiana Memory Digital Collection Bendix Aviation Equipment Service Guide AirCorps Library subscription required Bendix Appliances homepage bad link Popular Mechanics Certificate of Brake Test Made Automatically by Small Recorder April 1936 portable brake testing unit developed and sold by Bendix in the 1930s Bendixline 1957 1958 1962 1964 Digitized copies of the Bendix Products Division newsletter Bendix First Fifty Years in South Bend Michiana Memory Digital Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bendix Corporation amp oldid 1137475369, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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