Founded 1931Elmira, New York

Hardinge Inc.

Founded as Hardinge Brothers Inc.

Hardinge Inc., located in the city of Elmira, in Chemung County, New York, which is on the south-central border of upstate New York, was founded more than 100 years ago. The company is an international leader in the machine tool industry, designing, manufacturing, and selling…
Active today · hardinge.com
Founded
1931
Employees
1,510
Sales
$246.6M
Exchange
HDNG
Hardinge Inc. designs, manufactures and sells metal cutting lathes, machining centers, and related tooling and accessories of the highest precision and reliability generally available in the market.Company Perspectives
§ 01

The story

1890–1981

Hardinge Inc., located in the city of Elmira, in Chemung County, New York, which is on the south-central border of upstate New York, was founded more than 100 years ago. The company is an international leader in the machine tool industry, designing, manufacturing, and selling metal cutting lathes, grinding machines, EDM machines, machining centers, turning machines, and related tooling and accessories throughout the world. The majority of Hardinge's sales are made principally in the United States and Western Europe, but Hardinge also numbers customers in Canada, China, Mexico, Japan, Australia, and other countries. A substantial portion of the company's sales are to small- and medium-sized independent job shops, which in turn sell machined parts to their industrial customers. The company also offers option packages with each of its machines to meet specific customer requirements and turnkey services through which it will engineer complete systems for customers. The company has subsidiaries located in Canada, China, Germany, Spain, and the United Kingdom, with distributors located worldwide.

The company markets its machine tools under the "Hardinge" and "Hardinge Super Precision" names directly to manufacturers in the demanding industries of automotive, aerospace, communications, computers, dental equipment, electronics, medical equipment, and photographic equipment, as well as in the construction equipment, defense, energy, farm equipment, recreational equipment, and transportation industries. Major competitors have included Bridgeport Machines Inc., Cincinnati Milacron, Giddings & Lewis, Hurco Companies, Monarch Machine Tool Co., and Newcor Inc.

Early Days, 1890-1930s

Hardinge Brothers was founded in 1890 and organized in Illinois, where it began manufacturing industrial-use, super-precision, and general precision turning machine tools.

There are two principal methods for producing a metal part or finished product: metal cutting and metal forming. All of the machines produced by the company are metal cutting machines.

Turning machines, commonly known as lathes, are one of the most commonly used power-driven machine tools used to remove material from a rough-formed part by moving multiple cutting tools arranged on a turret assembly against the surface of a part rotating at very high speeds in a spindle mechanism. The multi-directional movement of the cutting tools allows the part to be shaped to the desired dimensions. On parts produced on Hardinge machines, those dimensions are often measured in millionths of inches. Hardinge produces: horizontal turning machines, where the spindle is aligned horizontally to the base of the machine; vertical turning machines, where the spindle is aligned perpendicularly to the base; and Swiss-type lathes, where rotating bar stock is fed through a bushing past stationary turning tools. Each of these designs provides unique advantages to the user.

The company was reincorporated in New York in March 1931, as Hardinge Brothers Inc., a successor to the previous company. Several years later, in December 1937, Hardinge Brothers Inc. merged with Morrison Machine Products Inc., itself founded in December 1925, but kept the Hardinge name.

The company established Hardinge Machine Tools Ltd. (HMT) in the United Kingdom in 1939. HMT became a wholly owned subsidiary of the company in 1981 when it redeemed the shares previously held by other investors.

Mid-Stride, 1940s-70s

The following year, revenues dropped to $82.6 million, with net income slipping to $2.7 million.

1958–1998

In 1958, the company established a subsidiary called Canadian Hardinge Machine Tools Ltd., located near Toronto, Ontario.

In the late 1970s, the company began producing computer numerically controlled (CNC) machines and machining centers, which used commands from an on-board computer to control the movement of cutting tools and rotation speeds of the part being produced. The computer control enabled the operator to program operations such as part rotation, tooling selection, and tooling movement for a specific part, and then store that program in memory for future use. The machine would be able to produce parts while left unattended when connected to automatic bar-feeding or robotics equipment designed to supply raw materials. Because of this ability, as well as superior speed of operation, CNC machines are able to produce the same amount of work as several manually controlled machines, as well as reduce the number of operators required. Since the introduction of CNC turning machines, continual advances in computer control technology have allowed for easier programming and additional machine capabilities.

Fight for Survival, 1980s

The decade of the 1980s was a fight for survival in the turning industry. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, in 1982 there were 865 metal cutting machine tool companies in the United States operating 942 manufacturing facilities. By 1986, foreign machine tool manufacturers accounted for more than 66 percent of the U.S. market for horizontal CNC lathes, forcing the U.S. government to negotiate Voluntary Restraint Agreements (VRAs) with Japan (57 percent) and Taiwan (three percent), which were effective from January 1987 through December 1993, limiting Japanese and Taiwanese manufacturers to their 1981 market share levels of various machine tools. By 1992, the number of American metal cutting machine tool companies had declined to 393 operating 423 manufacturing facilities and, by 1994, imports once again accounted for an estimated 66 percent of U.S. sales of horizontal CNC lathes--in addition to huge sections of CNC machining center (51 percent), vertical CNC lathe (79 percent), manual lathe (69 percent), and grinding machine (55 percent) sales.

In 1987, the company started implementation of "Total Quality" at its facilities. The process for Hardinge involved three principles: 1) Meet the Requirements; 2) Manage by Prevention; and 3) Error Free Work, resulting in continuous improvement in all areas of the company. Also that year, the company created a subsidiary called Hardinge GmbH, located in Germany.

Roaring into the 1990s

The first several years of the 1990s were decent, but not great, for the company, with revenue for 1990 reaching $102.9 million and net income reaching $4.6 million. The following year, revenues dropped to $82.6 million, with net income slipping to $2.7 million. In 1992, revenue reached $84.8 million, with a net loss of $1.2 million. From 1993 to 1998, the company would introduce 21 new machine models across its product line, bouncing back with total revenues in 1993 climbing again to $98.4 million, with a net income of $5.2 million.

In 1994, the company expanded its machine tool line to include CNC vertical turning machines and vertical machining centers, the first sales of which occurred during the first quarter of 1995. Prior to that, all of the company's turning machines were horizontal, which meant that the spindle holding the rotating part and the turret holding the cutting tools were arranged on a horizontal plane. On a vertical turning machine, the spindle and turret are aligned on a vertical plane, with the spindle on the bottom, allowing the customer to produce larger, heavier, and more oddly shaped parts on a machine that uses less floor space when compared to a traditional horizontal turning machine.

A vertical machining center cuts material differently than a turning machine. These machines were designed to remove material from stationary, prismatic (box-like) parts, usually held in a vise on a table, of various shapes with rotating tools capable of milling, drilling, tapping, reaming, and routing. The table is also able to move in various planes. Machining centers have mechanisms that automatically change tools based on commands from a built-in computer control without the assistance of an operator. Machining centers were generally purchased by the same customers as turning machines and were marketed by the company on the basis that a customer would be able to obtain machining centers with the same quality and reliability as the company's turning machines and would be able to obtain its turning machines and machining centers from a single supplier.

1917–1997

In 1994, revenue and net income reached $117.3 million and $6.7 million, respectively, with the machine tool industry in the United States estimated at $5.2 billion, of which $3.6 billion (69 percent) was in the metal cutting category.

The company's name was changed from Hardinge Brothers Inc. to Hardinge Inc. in May 1995. The company further extended its machine offerings into the grinding machine sector of the metal-cutting machine tool industry in November 1995 with the acquisition of St. Gallen, Switzerland-based L. Kellenberger & Co. AG for approximately $19 million.

Founded in 1917, Kellenberger designed, manufactured, and sold high-precision manual and CNC straight, angular, and universal cylindrical grinders with the highest degree of precision and reliability available in the market. The grinding machines of Kellenberger were used to grind the inside and outside diameters of round, cylindrical parts. Such grinding machines were typically used to provide for a more exact finish on a part partially completed on a lathe. The grinding machines of Kellenberger were manufactured in both CNC and manually controlled models, were generally purchased by the same type of customers as other Hardinge equipment, and furthered the ability of the company to be a sole source supplier for its customers.

During 1997, Kellenberger and Hardinge combined their respective skills to introduce a new jointly developed line of grinders, the Kel-Vision. Revenue for the year hit $180.6 million, with a net income of $14.9 million.

During 1996, the company took yet another step to address a new market segment with the introduction of its Cobra 42 CNC Lathe. A basic, no frills, yet very reliable and accurate lathe, the Cobra provided a relatively inexpensive product offering for potential customers with limited financial resources. Additional models were added to this product line in 1997. Further refining its ability to provide products aimed at particular types of customer applications, Hardinge also introduced two new "long bed" lathes in 1996, specially designed to manufacture parts of greater length than would normally be possible using smaller, more conventional lathes.

By August, the turning industry was growing again due to the adoption of total quality management and successful turning machinery manufacturers were focusing on self-managed work teams, continuous learning, transformational leadership, and customer satisfaction, and looking forward to the utilization of artificial intelligence and investments in technology and flexible manufacturing.

That year, the company established its Hardinge Shanghai Company Ltd. subsidiary near the city of Shanghai in The People's Republic of China. The facility was created to assemble machinery for deliveries to customers located throughout Asia.

Additionally, the company received its third consecutive Supplier of the Year Award from General Motors; was honored as one of the top 50 companies in America by The National Association of Manufacturers; and total revenue for the company reached $220 million, with a net income of $17.3 million.

In April 1997, the company entered the market for electrical discharge machines (EDM) with its acquisition of privately held, Urbana, Illinois-based Hansvedt Industries Inc., the largest manufacturer of EDMs and related equipment in the United States, via a stock purchase. The acquisition of the $8 million company added another high-quality new member to the growing Hardinge family of metal cutting machines.

1997–1998

EDMs are used to produce complex metal parts through a process of erosion with electricity using either a cutting wire or electrode, essentially, removing metal with sparks. Many of the same customers who purchased other Hardinge products also purchased EDMs, adding a new dimension to the company's product lines without moving beyond its core businesses, and broadening the market for Hansvedt products to be sold outside the United States for the first time.

In May 1997, the company released the new Kellenberger KEL-VISION URS Universal and RS Angular OD Cylindrical Grinders for precision grinding of medium to small lot sizes. In June, the company opened new facilities in both Germany and Britain to expand sales support and customer service capabilities in the two countries, and to increase the amount of space available for the display and demonstration of products. That month also featured the introduction of Hardinge's second generation CONQUEST Swiss-Turn CNC lathes, for turning, milling, drilling, and threading for high-speed production of complex parts for industries such as aerospace, computer, medical, precision instruments, and audio/video equipment.

August of that year saw the company open a Tech Center in Charlotte, North Carolina to provide improved customer support. Additionally, the center was created to provide live demonstrations of machines, support customer's specific applications requests, provide direct service support, and conduct on-site programmer's and hands-on training classes. Also that month, the company introduced the CONQUEST GT27 Precision Gang Tool Lathe, a product which provided precise, JIT (just-in-time) machining and an exclusive interchangeable pre-tooled top plate, each holding up to ten tools, which are able to be removed and interchanged within .0002″ in under one minute. Additionally, General Motors Corporation bestowed the company with its third consecutive Supplier of the Year Award, chosen on the basis of quality, service, and price. Net sales for 1997 reached $247 million, with net income inching up to $17.9 million.

In April 1998, the company's common stock split three-for-two. In June, the company opened a Tech Center in Cleveland, Ohio. That month also saw the addition of a new 12-inch, 3-jaw power chuck to the company's lineup of Sure-Grip Power Jaw Chucks.

By the end of 1998, the company was looking ahead to improving uptime, just-in-time, faster cycle time, waste reduction, setup reduction, lot-size reduction, multipurpose machines and tooling, CNC, hard turning, 24-hour production, product life cycle management, and vertical integration, so that it could continue to be a profitable company well into the future.

Hardinge Machine Tools Ltd. (U.K.); Hardinge Shanghai Company Ltd. (China); L. Kellenberger & Co. AG (Switzerland); Kellenberger Incorporated.

§ 02

The story in context

Timeline drawn from the story; dates are approximate.

What the company didThe economyTechnologyNational history
CompanyEarly Days, 1890-1930s Hardinge Brothers was founded in 1890 and organized in Illinois, where it began manufacturing industrial-use,…
1890
1893
EconomyThe Panic of 1893 pulls down banks and overbuilt railroads.
1901
EconomyU.S. Steel forms as the first billion-dollar corporation.
1903
TechnologyThe Wright brothers achieve powered flight.
1906
HistoryThe Pure Food and Drug Act creates federal oversight of food and medicine.
1907
EconomyThe Panic of 1907 nearly breaks the US banking system.
1908
TechnologyFord's Model T puts the automobile within reach of the middle class.
1911
HistoryStandard Oil is broken up into 34 separate companies.
1913
EconomyThe Federal Reserve is created.
TechnologyFord's moving assembly line transforms factory production.
1914
EconomyWorld War I begins; global trade reorders.
1916
EconomyPiggly Wiggly opens the first self-service grocery store.
CompanyFounded in 1917, Kellenberger designed, manufactured, and sold high-precision manual and CNC straight, angular, and universal cylindrical grinders…
1917
1920
TechnologyCommercial radio broadcasting begins with KDKA in Pittsburgh.
HistoryProhibition takes effect, upending the brewing and spirits trades.
Companymerged with Morrison Machine Products Inc., itself founded in December 1925, but kept the Hardinge name.
1925
EconomyThe Grand Ole Opry begins broadcasting from Nashville.
1927
TechnologyThe Jazz Singer ushers in the era of sound films.
TechnologyLindbergh flies the Atlantic solo, and aviation captures the public.
1928
TechnologyPenicillin is discovered, opening the age of antibiotics.
1929
EconomyThe stock market crashes; the Great Depression spreads worldwide.
CompanyThe company was reincorporated in New York in March 1931, as Hardinge Brothers Inc., a successor to the previous company.
1931
EconomyThe Empire State Building rises in just over a year.
1933
EconomyNew Deal reforms reshape US banking and industry.
HistoryProhibition is repealed and the alcohol trade reopens.
EconomyGlass-Steagall separates commercial from investment banking.
EconomyThe first drive-in movie theater opens in New Jersey.
1935
EconomyThe Social Security Act reshapes American labor and insurance.
1936
TechnologyThe Douglas DC-3 makes passenger airlines profitable.
CompanySeveral years later, in December 1937, Hardinge Brothers Inc.
1937
EconomyThe Golden Gate Bridge opens as the world's longest suspension span.
1938
HistoryThe Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act creates the modern FDA.
Company(HMT) in the United Kingdom in 1939.
1939
EconomyWorld War II begins; wartime production surges.
1945
EconomyThe war ends; a long global expansion begins.
1946
TechnologyENIAC, the first general-purpose electronic computer, is unveiled.
1947
TechnologyThe transistor is invented.
1955
EconomyMcDonald's franchising begins, remaking fast food.
EconomyDisneyland opens and invents the modern theme park.
1956
EconomyThe Interstate Highway program remakes US commerce.
TechnologyThe first transatlantic telephone cable opens.
CompanyMid-Stride, 1940s-70s In 1958, the company established a subsidiary called Canadian Hardinge Machine Tools Ltd., located near Toronto, Ontario.
1958
TechnologyThe integrated circuit is demonstrated.
TechnologyThe Boeing 707 launches the commercial jet age.
1960
TechnologyThe FDA approves the first oral contraceptive.
1962
EnvironmentSilent Spring launches the modern environmental movement.
EconomyThe first Walmart opens, built on everyday low prices.
1965
EconomyMedicare and Medicaid create federal health coverage.
1969
TechnologyARPANET, the internet's precursor, goes live.
1970
EnvironmentThe EPA is founded; US environmental regulation expands.
1971
EconomyThe dollar leaves the gold standard; currencies float.
TechnologyNasdaq opens as the first electronic stock market.
1973
EconomyThe OPEC oil embargo triggers a global shock.
1974
EconomyERISA overhauls how private pensions are run.
1975
TechnologyThe personal-computer era begins.
1978
EconomyThe Airline Deregulation Act remakes commercial aviation.
1979
EconomyA second oil crisis drives inflation higher worldwide.
1980
EnvironmentSuperfund makes US polluters pay for cleanup.
EconomyThe Bayh-Dole Act lets universities patent federally funded research, igniting biotech.
EconomyThe Motor Carrier Act deregulates interstate trucking.
TechnologyCNN launches around-the-clock cable news.
CompanyHMT became a wholly owned subsidiary of the company in 1981 when it redeemed the shares previously held by other investors.
1981
TechnologyThe IBM PC launches and sets a standard.
TechnologyThe first US in-vitro fertilization baby is born.
CompanyCensus Bureau, in 1982 there were 865 metal cutting machine tool companies in the United States operating 942 manufacturing facilities.
1982
1984
TechnologyApple ships the Macintosh; the GUI era begins.
HistoryThe Bell System breakup ends the telephone monopoly.
Companyforeign machine tool manufacturers accounted for more than 66 percent of the U.S.
1986
Companygovernment to negotiate Voluntary Restraint Agreements (VRAs) with Japan (57 percent) and Taiwan (three percent), which were effective from…
1987
EconomyBlack Monday: markets fall sharply around the world.
1989
HistoryThe Berlin Wall falls; global markets open up.
CompanyRoaring into the 1990s The first several years of the 1990s were decent, but not great, for the company, with revenue for 1990 reaching $102.9…
1990
1991
TechnologyThe World Wide Web is released to the public.
TechnologyLinux and open source challenge proprietary software.
Companythe number of American metal cutting machine tool companies had declined to 393 operating 423 manufacturing facilities and, by 1994, imports once…
1992
CompanyFrom 1993 to 1998, the company would introduce 21 new machine models across its product line, bouncing back with total revenues in 1993 climbing…
1993
TechnologyThe Mosaic browser brings the web to everyone.
Companythe company expanded its machine tool line to include CNC vertical turning machines and vertical machining centers, the first sales of which…
1994
TechnologyE-commerce begins to disrupt retail.
EconomyNAFTA opens trade across North America.
EconomyThe Mexican peso crisis rattles emerging markets.
Companyin May 1995.
1995
TechnologyWindows 95 launches; the internet goes mainstream.
Companythe company took yet another step to address a new market segment with the introduction of its Cobra 42 CNC Lathe.
1996
EconomyThe Telecommunications Act rewires US media and telecom.
CompanyKellenberger and Hardinge combined their respective skills to introduce a new jointly developed line of grinders, the Kel-Vision.
1997
EconomyThe Asian financial crisis rattles global markets.
EnvironmentThe Kyoto Protocol sets the first climate targets.
CompanyIn April 1998, the company's common stock split three-for-two.
1998
TechnologyUS v. Microsoft antitrust trial reshapes software.
Still active in 2026
§ 03

Related companies

Lineage: Hardinge Brothers Inc Hardinge Inc.
Owned
+2 regional units
Subsidiaries of Hardinge Inc.
Hansvedt Industries Inc.
§ 04

Further reading

  • Agan, Robert E., "Making a Living in the Turning World," Tooling & Production, August 1996, p. 107.
  • "Hardinge Inc.," New York Times, April 24, 1998, p. C5(N)/D5(L).
  • "Hardinge Inc.," Wall Street Journal, February 3, 1998, p. B10(E).
  • "Hardinge Inc.," Wall Street Journal, April 28, 1998, p. B17(W)/ B19(E).
  • "Hardinge Reports Increased Sales, Increased Earnings in First Quarter of 1998," PR Newswire, April 23, 1998 p. 0423CGTH005.
  • "Lathe Design Meets High Volume Demands," Tooling & Production, December 1997, p. 79.
Adapted from the International Directory of Company Histories, Vol. 25 (1999).
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