About Cornell Dubilier Cornell Dubilier is a privately held, American owned maker of capacitors for electronic and electrical equipment with three ISO-9001 registered facilities. If you didn't know that it was founded in 1909 by William Dubilier with his invention of the mica capacitor, you wouldn't suspect that Cornell Dubilier is the oldest capacitor maker in the Western Hemisphere because it is growing rapidly with a flurry of new products. Cornell Dubilier's major capacitor types are aluminum electrolytic, polyester film, polypropylene film, mica, pulse, snubber, motor-run, motor-start and high voltage capacitors. Emphasis is on serving the power electronics markets and providing not just reliable capacitors but capacitor solutions with great service. A chronology of this, Cornell Dubilier's first hundred years is tabulated here:
Cornell Dubilier has become a preeminent, worldwide supplier of capacitors for power electronics. Principal markets are power supplies, motor drives, HVAC, motors, welding, aerospace, telecom, and UPS systems. The unifying theme is power electronics and differentiation from other capacitor makers by a high level of customer service and technical support from a staff of 20 engineers and 20 customer service account managers. And, of course, better capacitors. As an illustration the latest UPS bus capacitor permits two, rather than three, in series for a 940V bus voltage because it is rated 675V. While the company's growth and active customer base of more than 35,000 has come from daily management of stocking programs, making next-day delivery routine and ISO-9001 quality, Cornell Dubilier's culture sees its roots in technological innovation. It still boasts about the inventive genius of its founder, William Dubilier, his more than 355 patents - a third of Thomas Edison's total - and his accomplishment of inventing the mica capacitor that revolutionized early radio transmission. Dubilier became chief electrician of the Continental Wireless Co. at the age of 19. In 1915, he founded Dubilier Condenser Corp. of New York, where he pioneered the development of self-healing, metallized dielectrics for capacitors, high-voltage transmitting capacitors, and antenna-shortening capacitors. In 1933, Dubilier's company merged with the Cornell Radio Company to form the Cornell-Dubilier Electric Corp. William Dubilier is responsible for the many improvements in capacitors since the era of the Leyden jar. He held innumerable radio patents pertaining to telegraphy, telephony, high-frequency apparatus, and a system for detecting submarines which he devised during World War I. He was knighted by the Queen of England for his contributions to electrical science. What motivated the award was that Dubilier's new mica capacitor withstood the shock waves from arterial guns firing and didn't break like the Leyden jars thus allowing reliable radio communication with the British infantry. But there's an even better story: Three years before he invented the mica capacitor the then 22 year old William built a precursor to the cell phone. His precursor had the drawbacks of just fitting in a suitcase and requiring connection to a household AC power circuit, but its 100 kHz transmitter enabled clear telephone conversations between phones up to fifty miles apart with no connecting wires and performed reliably between Tacoma and Seattle Washington. In 1933 his company won a precedent-setting patent legal case. In United States v. Dubilier Condenser Corp. the Supreme Court concluded that an employer owns an invention only if the employee is specifically hired to invent. If, as in the factual scenario of Dubilier, the employee merely uses the employer's resources to invent, the most the employer retains is a "shop right" - the non-exclusive right to practice the invention. Of course attorneys soon moved the control back to the employer. Federal statute now determines the rights of federal employees, and most civilian employees must sign Patent Disclosure and Assignment Agreements. What's prophetic about this 1933 case is that it is about inventions of Dubilier employees Francis W. Dunmore and Percival D. Lowel while they worked at the U.S. Bureau of Standards. The inventions allowed replacing the batteries needed to electrify loudspeakers and radios with direct connection to ac lighting circuit power. These were the first power supplies, and power electronics remains Cornell Dubilier's largest capacitors market today. Cornell Dubilier is the power electronics capacitor company with a focus on technological and service solutions that delight customers. About West Coast Engineering WCE has the techology and resources to handle any size transaction, no matter how big or small. Quick Facts
West Coast Engineering is committed to providing the highest quality service to customers with its large diverse inventory stocked in its ISO9001:2000 and ESD compliant 70,000 sq. ft. warehouse. Year after year, West Coast Engineering has been considered a top independent distributor because of its principled reputation built on longstanding relationships with a dedicated customer base. WCE's strategies differ from any other independent distributors. Listed below are some of the added measures that WCE takes to make sure that OEMs, CEMs and distributors have peace of mind when placing orders for electornic components, selling excess inventory, forming strategic alliances, and purchasing RoHS or
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