
A Bendix washing machine.
The 'Bendix Corporation' was founded in
1924 in
South Bend,
Indiana by the inventor
Vincent Bendix. At first it manufactured brake systems for cars and trucks. It supplied
General Motors with braking systems for its production lines for several decades. In
1929 Vincent Bendix branched out in aeronautics and renamed the company "Bendix Aviation" to reflect the new product lines. Bendix supplied aircraft manufacturers with all manners of
hydraulic systems, for braking, and flap activation and introduced new devices such as a pressure
carburetor which dominated the market before
World War II. It also made a wide variety of electrical and electronic instruments for aircraft.
Contrary to popular belief, the Bendix Corporation never manufactured
washing machines. In 1936, the company licensed its name to Bendix Home Appliances, a South Bend company, for a 25% stake in that company.
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Bendix sponsored the famous Bendix continental air race which started in
1931, and is known for the
Bendix Trophy. It was a transcontinental US point-to-point race meant to encourage the development of durable, efficient aircraft for commercial aviation, but civilians were barred from the race in
1950. The last race occurred in 1962.
During
World War II Bendix made just about every ancillary instrument or equipment for military aircraft. The Bendix radio division was born in
1937, to make two way radio sets for aircraft and other types of aviation electronics or
avionics. During the war about three quarters of all aviation electronics in US planes had the Bendix name on it.
Bendix started making domestic
radios and
phonographs for the retail market after the war, as an outgrowth of its production of two way radios for aircraft. Bendix also built
television sets from 1950 to 1959.
Production of radios for the retail trade stopped in the mid fifties, but in 1948 Bendix started to sell car radios directly to
Ford and other builders. This market rapidly grew during the 50s, but shrank just as fast in the 60s when Ford, GM and
Chrysler started producing their own radios.
During and after the war Bendix made
radars of all kinds. During the 60s it made ground and airborne telecommunications systems for
NASA, including the
ST-124-M3 inertial platform used in the
Saturn V Instrument Unit. It also developed the first
fuel injection systems in the US.
In 1956 the Bendix computer division,
Los Angeles, of Bendix Aviation introduced the
Bendix G-15, a mini computer which was the size of two high filing cabinets, or a very deep refrigerator. They sold about 400 at a starting price of less than US$50,000. The Bendix computer division was taken over by
Control Data Corporation in
1963, and the G-15 went on being produced by them 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
United Kingdom and on the
SWAC in the 50s. He created most of the design while working as a professor at
Berkeley, and other universities, and moonlighting as a consultant.
In the 70s, 80s and 90s Bendix went through a series of mergers, sales and changes with partners or buyers like
Raytheon,
Allied Signal and others. This diluted its corporate identity, though for some years these companies would use the Bendix brand for some of their products, such as
aircraft flight control systems.
In 1982, Bendix launched a hostile takeover bid of
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 separating ownership and control to sell non-core businesses and launch its own hostile takeover of Bendix (the
Pac-Man Defense). In the end, Martin Marietta won, and Bendix became part of the
Allied Corporation.
The
Allied Corporation would later buy
Honeywell and adopt the Honeywell name, and Bendix became a Honeywell brand.
From the 1950's until the early 1980's, Bendix even managed Department of Energy (DOE) facilities in Kansas City, MO and Albuquerque, NM which procured non-nuclear components for nuclear weapons.
Honeywell now has a brand line of Bendix/king avionics, including completely digital integrated
glass cockpits. Its commercial vehicles division also has a Bendix line of electronics and other vacuum or hydraulic subsystems. Apart from this brand name use Bendix has disappeared completely as a distinct corporation.
Bendix was immortalized in a corporate advertisement created by electronic music pioneer
Raymond Scott entitled "The Tomorrow People." The track can be found on the Raymond Scott compilation album "Manhattan Research, Inc." (2000), and is also sampled by
J Dilla on the ''
Donuts'' album.
See also
★
Mary Cunningham
★
Raymond Scott