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'''Ingersoll Axles''' is a member of the '''IMT Partnership'''. It was founded as a small [[factory]] in the town of [[Ingersoll, Ontario|Ingersoll]], [[Ontario]], [[Canada]] in 1913 for the production of a [[soap]] called "Fun to Wash." The soap had a very short life, and the factory was soon converted to make [[broom]]s. In 1914, it was purchased by E.A. Wilson, who used the facility to create Ingersoll Machine & Tool in 1915.
'''Ingersoll Axles''' is a member of the '''IMT Partnership'''. It was founded as a small [[factory]] in the town of [[Ingersoll, Ontario|Ingersoll]], [[Ontario]], [[Canada]] in 1913 for the production of a [[soap]] called "Fun to Wash." The soap had a very short life, and the factory was soon converted to make [[broom]]s. In 1914, it was purchased by E.A. Wilson, who used the facility to create Ingersoll Machine & Tool in 1915.

Revision as of 15:18, 31 May 2020

Ingersoll Axles is a member of the IMT Partnership. It was founded as a small factory in the town of Ingersoll, Ontario, Canada in 1913 for the production of a soap called "Fun to Wash." The soap had a very short life, and the factory was soon converted to make brooms. In 1914, it was purchased by E.A. Wilson, who used the facility to create Ingersoll Machine & Tool in 1915.

Ingersoll Machine & Tool specialized in the manufacture of steering gear assemblies for cars and boats – including car starters, steering gears, millimeter shells, truck axle parts, house trailer parts, and machine parts. IMT established a major presence within the automotive industry, and by the early 1930s, IMT made every steering gear assembly for Canadian-built Ford, Mercury, Dodge, Chrysler, DeSoto, Plymouth, Hudson, and Nash cars.[citation needed]

The next several decades saw major growth and expansion of the company's ventures, and IMT became publicly owned in 1947 with a listing on the Toronto Stock Exchange. By the early 1970s, IMT had branched out into the production of washing machines and even hovercrafts.

In 1970, Ivaco acquired a majority interest in IMT, further strengthening its holdings in 1981 with the acquisition of PC Forge. IMT also was awarded a 10-year, $100 million federal contract for large-caliber ammunition shells around this time. The following year, a new, modern facility was built to replace IMT's original building – with the help of a $125,000 grant from the Town of Ingersoll.

IMT developed its own self-steering axle in 1990. The resulting product, now known as the SmartSteer Axle, remains the lightest and strongest leading kingpin self-steering axle in the world.[1]

References

  1. ^ Axles, Ingersoll. "About Us". Ingersoll Axles. Retrieved 27 May 2013.