SKF

Not to be confused with Smith, Kline & French.
Svenska Kullagerfabriken AB
Publicly traded Aktiebolag
Traded as Nasdaq Stockholm: SKF B
BSE: 500472 NSE: SKFINDIA
Industry Manufacturing
Founded 1907 (1907)
Founder
Headquarters Gothenburg, Sweden
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Leif Östling (Chairman), Alrik Danielson (President and CEO)
Products
Revenue Increase SEK 70.975 billion (2014)[1]
Increase SEK 7.801 billion (2014)[1]
Increase SEK 4.750 billion (2014)[1]
Total assets Increase SEK 81.639 billion (2014)[1]
Total equity Increase SEK 24.404 billion (2014)[1]
Number of employees
48,593 (end 2014)[1]
Subsidiaries
  • GLOi
  • Kaydon Corporation
  • Blohm + Voss Industries
  • General Bearing Corp.
  • Alemite
  • Lincoln
  • Reelcraft
  • +150 other
Website www.skf.com

SKF, Svenska Kullagerfabriken AB (Swedish: Swedish ball bearing factory AB), later AB SKF, is a leading bearing and seal manufacturing company founded in Gothenburg, Sweden in 1907. The company manufactures and supplies bearings, seals, lubrication and lubrication systems, maintenance products, mechatronics products, power transmission products, condition monitoring systems[2] and related services globally.

Today, SKF is the largest bearing manufacturer in the world, and employs approximately 48,600 people in 140 production and manufacturing sites, which in addition to 15,000 worldwide distribution locations encompasses 130 countries worldwide.[3] With an annual Turnover of SEK 70.975 Billion, and total assets of SEK 81.639 Billion in FY2014, SKF has been listed as one of the largest companies in Sweden and among largest public companies in the world according to Forbes Global 2000 ranking.[4]

History

Sven Wingqvist, one of the founders of SKF
SKF office in Montreal, Canada in 1940

Sven Wingqvist, at the time a thirty-year-old plant engineer responsible for repairs and maintenance at Gamlestadens Fabriker, was dissatisfied with the performance of the ball bearings then in use. These were rigid ball bearings, imported from Germany, and if the long shafts on the machinery in a textile mill were the least bit misaligned, the ball bearings would become overheated and break down, bringing production to a costly halt. In spring 1907, Wingquist presented a breakthrough – a double row self-aligning ball bearing with a spherical raceway in the outer ring, shared by both rows of balls. This allowed the inner ring to align freely in relation to the outer ring, with no negative impact on the function of the bearing. The new bearing solved the problem associated with misalignment of the shafts and thus did away with the frequent production stops. Self-alignment was particularly useful in the less-than-perfect machinery of the times and in buildings with subsidence problems, which was the case at Gamlestadens Fabriker, since much of the land on which Gothenberg has been built is clay.

On 16 February 1907 on Sven Wingqvist's applied for Swedish patent No. 25406, a multi-row self-aligning radial ball bearing. The Patent was granted on 6 June in Sweden coinciding with patents in 10 other countries. The new ball bearing was successful from the outset. Three years after SKF was founded, the company had 325 employees and a subsidiary in the United Kingdom. Manufacturing operations were later established in multiple countries.

By 1912, SKF was represented in 32 countries and by 1930, a staff of over 21,000 were employed in 12 manufacturing facilities worldwide with the largest in Philadelphia, PA.

SKF began its operations in India in 1923 by establishing a trading outpost in Calcutta. The early operations involved importing of automotive bearings. SKF India Ltd was incorporated in 1961 following a collaboration between AB SKF, Associated Bearing Co. Ltd and Investment Corp. of India Ltd. In 1963, SKF set up its first bearing factory in Pune, Maharashtra.[5]

Assar Gabrielsson, SKF sales manager and Björn Prytz, Managing Director of SKF were the founders of Volvo AB in 1926. In the beginning, the company functioned as a subsidiary automobile company within the SKF group. SKF funded the production run of the first thousand cars, built at Hisingen in Gothenburg, beginning in 1927. SKF used one of the company's trademarked names: AB Volvo, which derives from the Latin "I roll", with its obvious connotations of bearings in motion. The ownership of Volvo lasted until 1935 when the last shares were divested.

In the 1970s SKF embarked on a massive production rationalization program in Europe. A visionary project, "Production Concept for the 80s" was launched with the aim to run the night shifts practically unmanned. To increase productivity and safeguard the product quality, a continuous, automatic flow of bearing rings was needed, so SKF developed the Flexlink brand. FlexLink created the multiflex plastic chain conveyor system to solve the business requirements. SKF divested FlexLink as a separate company in 1997.

Present day business

SKF corporate headquarters in Gothenburg.
SKF in Gothenburg.
SKF building in Schweinfurt, 2012

The SKF Group currently consists of approximately 150 companies including the seal manufacturer Chicago Rawhide. Since its founding, SKF's company headquarters have been located in Gothenburg. One recent acquisition was that of Economos, part of Salzer Holding, an Austria-based seal company, Jaeger Industrial and ABBA, Taiwanese manufacturers of linear actuators. The company's clients include General Electric, Rolls-Royce plc and Pratt & Whitney. It also supplies bearings for Ferrari racing vehicles, used in Formula One races,[6] and is a sponsor of F1. Another focus area is the energy sector, including wind turbines which generate electricity.

By 2013, SKF Industrial Market, Regional Sales and Services, made up about 40% of SKF's total sales.[7]

SKF employs 3000 people across six factories in India and has 27% market share of the industrial & automotive bearings market.[5]

Products

SKF sells products within five technology platforms:

SKF and Business Excellence

SKF runs its own business excellence program for continuous improvement of its business processes in all parts of the company. The program is based on previous initiatives like TQM and integrates with lean management also statistical methods of Six Sigma along with related project management.[8] Many elements of this SKF program remind of the integrated approach of the actual EFQM model for Business Excellence.

The Group has global certification to IS0 14001 (environmental management system), ISO 50001 (energy management) and OHSAS 18001 (health and safety) standards. Its operations are also certified to either ISO 9001 or applicable customer industry standards, e.g. ISO/TS 16949 (automotive), AS9100 (aviation) or IRIS (railway) for quality management systems.

See also

Company history references

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Annual Results 2014" (PDF). SKF. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  2. "Annual Report 2009" (PDF). SKF. Retrieved 2010-04-03.
  3. SKF
  4. 1 2 http://www.livemint.com/Industry/HIXqvf8wM848UX9RBAQ0xK/SKF-and-the-business-of-movement.html
  5. Manufacturing & Logistics IT Magazine
  6. "SAMA Adds New Board Member". PR Newswire (via Yahoo News). 3 October 2013. Archived from the original on 3 October 2013.
  7. "Business Excellence in SKF" (PDF). sandholm.se. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
    (Presented by Tom Johnstone during the Lean & Six Sigma 2011 conference in Stockholm)
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