Jump to content

Burndy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Burndy LLC
Company typesubsidiary
IndustryElectrical Utilities
Commercial, Residential & Industrial Tools
Telecommunication
Renewable Energies Market.
Founded1924
FounderBern Dibner
FateAcquired by Hubbell Incorporated
SuccessorHubbell Incorporated
Headquarters47 E Industrial Park Drive, ,
RevenueIncrease US$ 400 Million
Number of employees
3000+ (2018)

Burndy LLC is a manufacturer of connectors, fittings and tools for electrical utilities, commercial, industrial, and maintenance companies. The company, headquartered in Manchester, New Hampshire, has approximately 3000+ employees and operates three manufacturing facilities in the northeastern United States, as well as one in Brazil, and another in Mexico.

Burndy manufactures connectors for splicing, tapping, terminating, conducting or grounding, and provides certification and testing of tool and connector products to the following standards: ANCE, ANSI, SATM, CSA, IEC, IEEE, MILITARY, NEMA, NUPIC, SLMA, SAE, UL.

History

[edit]
BURNDY founder Bern Dibner

The company was founded in 1924 as Burndy Engineering Company by engineer, science historian, and civic leader Bern Dibner.The corporate name, Burndy, was derived from a contraction of Dr. Dibner’s first name and last initial.

While employed as an engineer unifying the electrical system in Cuba, Dr. Dibner identified the urgent need for improved methods for connecting electrical conductors and joining power system substations. He proceeded to design a universal connector, requiring neither soldering nor welding – which enabled a unified grid. He patented and fabricated his design, then formed his company with an investment of just $5,000.[1] Building on a technical foundation of 24 patents granted to him for connector design, he guided the growth of Burndy until his retirement as chairman in 1972.

In 1956, the Burndy Corporation went public, and later was bought by the French corporation Framatome Connectors International (FCI) in 1988.[2] In 2009, Burndy was acquired and became a subsidiary of Hubbell (NYSE: HUBA, HUBB).[3]

In Europe, the former Burndy Europe, FCI's Electrical Power Interconnect Division is now part of the Sicame Group and known as SBI Connectors Espana.

Burndy today is a global organization that manufactures of electrical connectors for the commercial/industrial, utility, renewable energies, telecommunications, and OEM markets.

In addition to his association with the company he founded, Bern Dibner is frequently identified with two of the world’s leading collections of source material in the history of science: the Burndy Library at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California; and the Dibner Library of the History of Science and Technology at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC.

Dr. Dibner’s son, David Dibner, had a more than 30-year career at the Burndy Corporation, and served as chairman prior to his death in 2005.

Awards and recognition

[edit]

Burndy received the "TED Best of the Best" 2009 Events award for hosting a Dibner Hall reception along with an associated reprint of the 1929 BURNDY Bus catalog. The award recognized the best electrical marketing campaigns fielded in 2008, for which more than 300 entries were submitted. An exhibit at Dibner Hall, located at the Huntington Library in San Marino (California) is called Beautiful Science: Ideas that Changed the World, and highlights four areas of exploration: astronomy, natural history, medicine, and light.[4]

In 2008, BURNDY won awards as supplier of the year from WESCO International, Inc. and Border States Industries, Inc. and received a Graybar Electric Company, Inc. award for innovation.[3]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Bedini, Silvio A. (1 January 1989). "Bern Dibner (1897-1988)". Technology and Culture. 30 (1): 189–193. JSTOR 3105470.
  2. ^ "COMPANY NEWS; Burndy Takes Bid From Framatome". The New York Times. Reuters. 6 December 1988.
  3. ^ a b "Hubbell Reaches Agreement to Acquire Burndy® - Business Wire".
  4. ^ BURNDY Wins TED Award Archived September 4, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
[edit]