3M
For more than 100 years, people around the world have looked to 3M for products and ideas that solve problems and make their lives easier and better. With more than 55,000 products, 30-plus core technologies and leadership in major markets served worldwide, 3M continues to develop ingenious solutions to meet your varying needs. More...
AMP
Innovative Technologies That help You Build What's Next.
There is no industry that evolves as rapidly as electronics.
Over the past five years, Tyco Electronics has kept pace; rapidly growing to become the world's largest passive component manufacturer. Based on the interconnect technology leadership of AMP products, Tyco Electronics has added a full complement of leading component brands -- including Raychem, Elcon, P&B, M/A-COM, CII and many more - to offer customers an unparalleled portfolio of connectors, relays and circuit breakers, active and passive fiberoptic components, wireless products, power components, resistors and inductors, motors and myriad others across 25 product segments. Tyco Electronics' ability to serve your present and future requirements is realized through the synergies of a strong R&D program, expertise in materials science, product design and process engineering, and our network of knowledgeable application engineers, sales representatives and customer service personnel. We want to help you make your next generation of products successful. More...
Duracell
The story of Duracell begins in the early 1920's with an inventive scientist named Samuel Ruben and an eager manufacturer of tungsten filament wire named Philip Rogers Mallory. Ruben came to the P.R. Mallory Company seeking a piece of equipment he needed for an experiment. But Ruben and Mallory saw an opportunity: uniting the one's inventive genius with the other's manufacturing muscle. Their partnership, which would last until 1975 with Mallory's death, was the bedrock of Duracell International.
Samuel Ruben's inventions revolutionized battery technology. Amidst World War II, for instance, Ruben devised the mercury cell, which packed more capacity in less space and was durable enough for the harsh climates of wartime theaters like North Africa and the South Pacific — places where ordinary zinc carbon batteries used in flashlights, mine detectors, and walkie-talkies couldn't hold up. P.R. Mallory manufactured millions of mercury cells for the war effort. The Mallory Battery Company was formed shortly thereafter. More...
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