Tyrolit

Tyrolit is an Austrian company that develops, manufactures and markets abrasive products as well as concrete sawing and drilling equipment. With 26 production locations on 5 continents,[1] the TYROLIT group belongs to the world’s largest producers of bonded abrasives.[2][3] The company is based in Schwaz, Tyrol, Austria. TYROLIT, a registered trademark, was named after the mineral Tyrolite, first described in 1845 in Tyrol.

TYROLIT
Private
IndustryAbrasives
Founded13 February 1919 
FounderDaniel Swarovski (Cofounder)
HeadquartersSchwaz, Austria
ProductsConventional and superabrasive grinding wheels, cutoff wheels, diamond tools for the construction and stone industries, concrete sawing and drilling machinery, coated abrasives
Revenue685 million € (2019)
Number of employees
4,500+ worldwide (2019)
Websitetyrolit.group

History

Tyrolit was cofounded on February 13th, 1919 by Daniel Swarovski to manufacture grinding wheels for the production of Swarovski crystals. During World War I, the Swarovski Group was cut off from supplies of grinding wheels, and was thus forced to develop and produce its own grinding wheels. After the war, it was decided to commercialize this activity and to start a separate company: thus, Tyrolit was born.[4] In 1950, the company relocated from the Swarovski Headquarters in Wattens to a new location in Schwaz. One of the largest drivers of growth of the company was the market launch of the glass fiber reinforced cutoff and grinding wheel SECUR in 1952.[5] The glass fiber reinforcement greatly improved the security of the tools against centrifugal breakage.[6] In 1991 Tyrolit acquired both the US company Diamond Products and the Swiss company Hydrostress. These acquisitions added significant presence in the market for concrete drilling and sawing systems.[5] Further major acquisitions took place in 2004 with the purchasing of the Czech company Carborundum Electrite, in 2009 with the purchasing of the US company Radiac and in 2014 with the purchasing of the South African company Grinding Techniques.

TYROLIT headquarters in Schwaz

Organization

The Tyrolit Group is organized in four divisions:[1]

  • Metal / Precision – serves the metal fabrication and precision machining markets
  • Construction – serves the construction industry
  • Stone / Ceramics / Glass – serves the stone, ceramic tile and glass industries
  • Industrial Trade – sells stock articles such as cutoff wheels through industrial distributors

Brands

The Tyrolit Group operates under the following brands:

  • Tyrolit: Global brand for all grinding solutions
  • Tyrolit Hydrostress: drilling and sawing equipment for the construction industry
  • Tyrolit Vincent: Milling, profiling and polishing tools for the stone, ceramic tile and glass industries
  • Radiac: US producer of conventional bonded and superabrasive grinding wheels
  • Diamond Products: US producer of diamond tools and equipment for the construction industry
  • Burka Kosmos: German producer of conventional bonded grinding wheels
  • Carborundum Electrite: Czech producer of conventional bonded grinding wheels
  • Grinding Techniques: South African producer of conventional bonded grinding wheels
gollark: Also, making it symmetrical is not a good enough reason to make it incompatible with 90% of the headphones around and make the available ones for it cost more.
gollark: <@151391317740486657> They're very cheap though, and you might be able to add custom ROMs.
gollark: You didn't have time? Isn't this quite a long challenge thing?
gollark: Also the fact that most stuff, even if it uses DC internally (most things probably do), runs off mains AC and has some sort of built-in/shipped-with-it power supply, and there aren't really common standards for high-powered lower-voltage DC connectors around. Except USB-C, I guess? That goes to 100W.
gollark: I guess it depends on exactly what you do, and the resistance of the wires.

References

  1. TYROLIT Fact Sheet 2017 (PDF)
  2. The abrasives industry in Europe and North America, John Briggs and Ted Giese, 2007, p. 434.
  3. http://www.firstresearch.com/Industry-Research/Abrasives-Manufacturing.html
  4. Ein Denkmal für Daniel Swarovski, Ludwig Sölder, Innsbruck 1961, p.27-29.
  5. Tyrolit History
  6. The abrasives industry in Europe and North America, John Briggs and Ted Giese, 2007, p. 79

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