BorgWarner in the Americas
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United States
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.
The BorgWarner Indianapolis 500 Trophy™ made its debut in 1936 when it was presented to Louis Meyer.
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.
In 2005, BorgWarner moved its headquarters from Chicago to Auburn Hills, Michigan, to enhance industry visibility and increase collaboration with the Powertrain Technical Center.
Canada
Morse TEC opened its operation in Simcoe, Ontario, in 1954.
The facility makes silent timing chains and Hy-Vo® front wheel drive transmission chains.
Employees at the plant have earned seven BorgWarner Safety Awards for completing one year without a lost time accident.
Mexico
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.
Beru's operation in Civac-Jiutepec produces ignition components. Begun as a joint venture in 1994, the facility joined the company in 1999.
Brazil
Turbo Systems and BorgWarner's thermal business share a manufacturing facility in Campiñas where turbochargers, fans and viscous fan drives are produced.
In 2005, the facility earned the BorgWarner Chairman's Safety Award for achieving one million hours without a lost time accident.