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The Borg-Warner Corporation was formed in 1928, combining Borg & Beck, Marvel-Schebler, Warner Gear and Mechanics Universal Joint. Morse Chain joined the next year.
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The BorgWarner Indianapolis 500 Trophy™ made its debut in 1936 when it was presented to Louis Meyer.
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Today's BorgWarner became a public company in 1993. Plants and technical facilities operate in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Mississippi, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Texas and South Carolina.
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In 2005, BorgWarner moved its headquarters from Chicago to Auburn Hills, Michigan, to enhance industry visibility and increase collaboration with the Powertrain Technical Center.
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| Canada
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Morse TEC opened its operation in Simcoe, Ontario, in 1954.
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The facility makes silent timing chains and Hy-Vo® front wheel drive transmission chains.
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Employees at the plant have earned seven BorgWarner Safety Awards for completing one year without a lost time accident.
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| Mexico
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First established as a joint venture in 1962, Morse TEC's production facility in Guadalajara manufactures silent and roller timing chains, timing chain tensioners and engine timing systems. The unit joined the company in 1998.
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Beru's operation in Civac-Jiutepec produces ignition components. Begun as a joint venture in 1994, the facility joined the company in 1999.
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| Brazil
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Turbo Systems and BorgWarner's thermal business share a manufacturing facility in Campiñas where turbochargers, fans and viscous fan drives are produced.
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In 2005, the facility earned the BorgWarner Chairman's Safety Award for achieving one million hours without a lost time accident.
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