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From: Miloch <Miloch_member@newsguy.com>
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Subject: Hamilton Standard
Date: 18 Sep 2016 16:31:08 -0700
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamilton_Standard
Hamilton Standard (Now UTC Aerospace Systems AKA UTAS), an aircraft propeller
parts supplier, was formed in 1929 when United Aircraft and Transport
Corporation consolidated Hamilton Aero Manufacturing and Standard Steel
Propeller into the Hamilton Standard Propeller Corporation. Other members of the
corporation included Boeing, United Airlines, Sikorsky, and Pratt & Whitney. At
the time, Hamilton was the largest manufacturer of aircraft propellers in the
world.
Standard Steel Propeller had been formed in 1918 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and
Hamilton Aero Manufacturing had been formed in 1920 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin by
Thomas F. Hamilton. Charles Lindbergh's Spirit of St. Louis used a propeller
made by Standard Steel Propeller Company in his historic solo crossing of the
Atlantic Ocean.
In the early 1930s Frank W. Caldwell of Hamilton Standard led a team that
developed a variable-pitch propeller, using hydraulic pressure and centrifugal
force to change the angle of attack of the blades. Caldwell received the 1933
Collier Trophy for this advance in flight propulsion. Later advances included
full-feathering and reversible propellers.
Hamilton Standard was a division of United Aircraft Corporation (1934) along
with Pratt & Whitney (engines).
In the early 1950s Hamilton developed the technology to accurately meter fuel in
jet engines, and its fuel controls were employed on Boeing 707's and Douglas
DC-8's as well as most other Pratt & Whitney jet engines. In 1952 Hamilton
Standard opened its plant in Windsor Locks, Connecticut. In 1958 Hamilton's
first environmental control system entered service on the Convair 880. In 1968
Hamilton began delivering automatic, electronic systems for control of cabin
pressure in aircraft. Hamilton's mechanical fuel controls, in use since the
1950s, evolved into electronically controlled fuel controls and, eventually, to
Full Authority Digital Electronic Controls (FADEC) for jet engines and are in
use today on many commuter, airline and military engine applications. Hamilton's
environmental systems and early association with NASA were highlighted in the
1969 Apollo 11 Moon landing - supported by environmental control, fuel cell and
life support systems manufactured by Hamilton Standard.
In 1999, Hamilton Standard merged with Sundstrand Corporation to become Hamilton
Sundstrand, a division of United Technologies Corporation. Sundstrand brought a
long history and portfolio of quality aerospace products to the newly named
company, and Hamilton Sundstrand products are in use on most commercial aircraft
produced throughout the world today. Hamilton Sundstrand continues to provide
aerospace components and systems to most of the world's aircraft manufacturers,
including Boeing, Airbus, Bombardier and Embraer.
In 2012 Hamilton Sundstrand merged with Goodrich Corporation to become UTC
Aerospace Systems.
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