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Responsibility passed on: Eberhardt takes over as executive board chairman<br />

Brauner chairs the supervisory board<br />

Düsseldorf. In consensus with the<br />

Röchling family committees, the chairman<br />

of the Röchling family council, Dipl.-Ing.<br />

Wigand Freiherr v. Salmuth, agreed<br />

that family member Klaus Greinert,<br />

elected as Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong>’s supervisory<br />

board chairman in May<br />

1999, would resign from all his Rheinmetall<br />

group supervisory board offices<br />

as of 31 December 1999. Different opinions<br />

on the structure of assets of the<br />

Röchling family, especially regarding<br />

its biggest equity holding Rheinmetall<br />

(with 66% of the common stock) have<br />

prompted this adjustment of group governance<br />

positions true to the principle<br />

of Continuity through Experience.<br />

Since April 1985,<br />

Dr. Hans U. Brauner<br />

(65) has been executive<br />

board chairman<br />

of Rheinmetall<br />

<strong>AG</strong>. His term of<br />

office would have<br />

continued until the<br />

end of 2002, however<br />

out of loyalty<br />

to the Röchling<br />

Dr. Herbert Müller family and after 20<br />

Magneti Marelli’s<br />

pump business<br />

Milan. <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong> <strong>Pierburg</strong> <strong>AG</strong><br />

(Rheinmetall’s Automotive sector) has<br />

taken over the international pump business<br />

of Magneti Marelli S.p.A., Milan,<br />

Italy, as of January 1, 2000. In 1999, this<br />

business showed sales of approx. € 68<br />

million, mainly from oil and vacuum<br />

pumps. <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong> <strong>Pierburg</strong> supplies<br />

the worldwide auto industry with<br />

modules and systems “for every aspect<br />

of the engine”, and is already a major<br />

player in the pump business. Starting<br />

from 2000, these products will account<br />

The latest news from the Rheinmetall group 1/2000<br />

Newsline<br />

Das Profil<br />

Newsline<br />

years on the executive<br />

board, he prematurely<br />

joined the<br />

supervisory board<br />

on 1 January 2000<br />

and – as had been<br />

expected – took<br />

over as chairman of<br />

the supervisory<br />

board of the Rheinmetall<br />

group on 12<br />

January 2000. Brauner<br />

will continue as<br />

chairman of the supervisory<br />

boards of<br />

all Rheinmetall operating<br />

parents, including<strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong><br />

<strong>AG</strong>, <strong>Pierburg</strong> <strong>AG</strong>,<br />

Rheinmetall DeTec<br />

<strong>AG</strong>, and Rheinmetall<br />

Elektronik <strong>AG</strong> as<br />

well as the future<br />

listed Aditron <strong>AG</strong>. He<br />

has also succeeded v. Salmuth as chairman<br />

of Rheinmetall’s advisory board.<br />

Supervisory board chairman v. Salmuth<br />

and executive board chairman<br />

for world sales of around € 300 million.<br />

With this acquisition, <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong> will expand its strong<br />

position in the Western European market<br />

for oil and vacuum pumps and improve<br />

access to Italian carmakers.<br />

Vacuum pumps, oil pumps and thermostats<br />

are mainly developed, manufactured<br />

and marketed at Magneti Marelli’s<br />

Livorno works in Italy. The acquisition<br />

of the Livorno facility means<br />

that around 500 employees will be integrated<br />

into <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong> <strong>Pierburg</strong><br />

<strong>AG</strong>’s Air Supply & Pump division.<br />

Including the <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong> <strong>Pierburg</strong><br />

facility at Lanciano, the Automo-<br />

Responsibility is passed on: after 20 years on the board, the<br />

chairman of Rheinmetall’s executive board Dr. Hans U.<br />

Brauner (l) was elected as chairman of the group’s supervisory<br />

board on 12 January 2000. His successor on the executive<br />

board of Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong> is Dipl.-Math. Klaus Eberhardt.<br />

Brauner have for many years formed a<br />

successful team which, particularly over<br />

the past five years, has contributed to<br />

(Continued on page 2)<br />

tive sector will in future employ over<br />

700 people in Italy generating sales<br />

in excess of € 100 million.<br />

The takeover of the pump business of<br />

Magneti Marelli is another move in <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong>’s strategy of boosting<br />

its sales (today DM 3 billion/€ 1.5<br />

billion with around 12,000 employees)<br />

to DM 5 billion/€ <strong>2.5</strong> billion by 2000+.<br />

Magneti Marelli is in the process of<br />

refocusing its strategy and revamping<br />

its portfolio. This company is a global<br />

developer and manufacturer of automotive<br />

components, systems and<br />

modules. Its 29,500 employees achieved<br />

sales of € 3.8 billion in 1998.


Newsline<br />

Responsibility passed on: Eberhardt takes over as executive board chairman<br />

Brauner chairs the supervisory board<br />

(Continued from page 1)<br />

the growth of the Rheinmetall group.<br />

Back in 1980 a midsize industrial company<br />

with sales of around 700 million<br />

German marks and 6,000 employees<br />

mainly involved in arms production,<br />

Rheinmetall has inside 20 years evolved<br />

into a significant technology group with<br />

34,000 employees and the three core<br />

sectors of Automotive, Electronics and<br />

Defence, with sales of approximately 9<br />

billion German marks in 1999. Brauner<br />

has thus developed Rheinmetall into<br />

Röchling’s most significant asset.<br />

Management<br />

replacement<br />

Bremen. Due to the unexpected<br />

budget shortfalls in the 1999 result,<br />

the shareholders Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong><br />

(51%) and British Aerospace plc<br />

(49%) as well as the supervisory<br />

board of STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH,<br />

Bremen, decided to replace with<br />

immediate effect the management<br />

board of STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH.<br />

Dr.-Ing. Ernst-Otto Krämer (60),<br />

chairman of the management board,<br />

Dr. Thomas Kritzler (50), head of<br />

finance/controlling and in charge of<br />

the naval systems division on behalf<br />

of British Aerospace, plus the former<br />

board member Dipl.-Ing. Klaus Kunze<br />

(61) have retired from the management<br />

board.<br />

Krämer’s successor is Dipl.-Kfm.<br />

Ulrich Grillo (40), deputy member of<br />

the Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong> executive<br />

board, who has now also taken on<br />

the position as chairman of the management<br />

board at STN Atlas Elektronik<br />

GmbH.<br />

Dipl.-Ing. Gert Winkler (55), executive<br />

board member of Rheinmetall<br />

DeTec <strong>AG</strong>, has combined his present<br />

position with that of a member on<br />

the management board of STN Atlas<br />

Elektronik GmbH, where he has<br />

assumed responsibility for Land and<br />

Simulation Systems.<br />

Dipl.-Wirtschaftsingenieur Hans-<br />

Georg Morawitz (44), head of human<br />

resources, communications and services<br />

at STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH,<br />

has joined the management board as<br />

Dipl.-Math. Klaus Eberhardt (52), executive<br />

board chairman of the operating<br />

parent Rheinmetall Elektronik <strong>AG</strong> – the<br />

future listed Aditron <strong>AG</strong> – since the<br />

spring of 1997, has been appointed as<br />

the new executive board chairman of<br />

Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong> as of 1 January 2000, a<br />

position he will combine with his present<br />

responsibility for the Electronics<br />

sector. Brauner will accompany Eberhardt<br />

on Rheinmetall’s Continuity and<br />

Growth Strategy path to annual sales in<br />

the region of 10 billion German marks<br />

as supervisory board chairman.<br />

the member responsible for human<br />

resources and as the company’s director<br />

of industrial relations.<br />

John Young (50), until now a senior<br />

executive at British Aerospace Navy<br />

Systems, has been appointed management<br />

board member responsible<br />

for naval systems. He will be contributing<br />

his longstanding international<br />

experience in developing and building<br />

complex naval systems, specifically<br />

underwater.<br />

Dipl.-Ing. Manfred Meyersieck (50),<br />

head of naval systems, and Dipl.-Ing.<br />

Uwe Duveneck (57), head of land systems,<br />

have both been appointed<br />

senior executive officers.<br />

For the time being Ulrich Grillo will<br />

be in charge of finance/controlling,<br />

until British Aerospace selects a new<br />

candidate for this position.<br />

The new management board has<br />

been requested to immediately submit<br />

a new business plan for improving<br />

profits. An unexpected loss was<br />

anticipated for fiscal 1999. In 1997<br />

and 1998, STN Atlas Elektronik had<br />

generated satisfactory profits of 19.4<br />

million euros and 16.9 million euros,<br />

respectively. Order backlog is considered<br />

good at 1.6 billion euros. Sales<br />

in 1998 amounted to 817 million<br />

euros. In 1999, the 3,200 employees<br />

were expected to produce sales of<br />

around 526 million euros (excluding<br />

sales in the order of 412 million euros<br />

of the spun-off Marine Electronics<br />

now belonging to EMG EuroMarine<br />

Electronics GmbH).<br />

Krämer will continue to serve on<br />

the Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong> executive<br />

board as its chairman.<br />

2<br />

Dipl.-Phys. Dr. rer. nat. Dieter Seipler<br />

(53), divisional director at Robert<br />

Bosch GmbH before joining Rheinmetall<br />

in July 1998 and since then executive<br />

board chairman of <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong> <strong>AG</strong> and <strong>Pierburg</strong> <strong>AG</strong>, has as<br />

head of the Automotive sector been<br />

appointed deputy chairman of the<br />

executive board of Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong>. He<br />

will also be responsible for centrally<br />

coordinating the group’s research and<br />

development activities.<br />

Dr. rer. oec. Herbert Müller (46) who<br />

has been responsible for central finance<br />

since the start of 1996 and has so<br />

far held the position of senior executive<br />

officer reporting to Brauner, has been<br />

appointed executive board member<br />

for finance and controlling as of 1<br />

January 2000.<br />

Now that Rheinmetall has shrunk its<br />

Jagenberg stake to a minority holding,<br />

Dieter Niederste-Werbeck (60), hitherto<br />

executive board chairman of Jagenberg<br />

<strong>AG</strong> (Engineering sector) will in future<br />

concentrate on his functions as<br />

corporate director of industrial relations<br />

besides heading human resources<br />

and other corporate departments<br />

(purchase, real estate and IT).<br />

This reshuffling and strengthening of<br />

management resources will assure<br />

Rheinmetall’s continued growth. The<br />

passing of responsibility from v. Salmuth<br />

to Brauner and from Brauner to Eberhardt<br />

is true to the group’s proven philosophy<br />

of Continuity through Experience.<br />

The supervisory board member Gerhard<br />

Goll who retired from the board at<br />

the end of 1999 has been replaced by<br />

Professor Dr. Enno Vocke as the shareholder<br />

representative appointed by the<br />

district court of Berlin-Charlottenburg.<br />

Newsline<br />

Newsline is a summary of the most<br />

important news articles published<br />

in “Das Profil”, the company newspaper<br />

of the Rheinmetall group<br />

Publisher: Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong><br />

P.O. Box 104261, D-40033 Düsseldorf<br />

Responsible: Dr. Klaus Germann<br />

Editor-in-chief: Rolf D.Schneider<br />

Issue: January 2000


Newsline<br />

Meeting with the press on 16 December 1999<br />

Ambitious goals for Rheinmetall<br />

Düsseldorf. Ambitious goals for corporate<br />

expansion while simultaneously<br />

concentrating on the three core sectors<br />

Automotive, Electronics and Defence:<br />

the Rheinmetall group aims to<br />

boost sales and earnings even further<br />

in the years to come, with a sales target<br />

of around 20 billion German marks<br />

for the year 2010 – at an operating result<br />

of approx. one billion marks<br />

(which will then be possible) and a net<br />

income in the order of 500 million<br />

marks. This forecast was presented by<br />

the former executive board chairman<br />

and new supervisory board chairman<br />

of Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong>, Dr. Hans U. Brauner,<br />

to members of the economic<br />

press and financial analysts during an<br />

informatory meeting held at the group<br />

headquarters in Düsseldorf on 16 December<br />

1999.<br />

While the group anticipates sales of<br />

approximately nine billion German<br />

marks (excluding Jagenberg) and a net<br />

income of about 130 million marks for<br />

the year 2000, Brauner predicts group<br />

sales of some 15 billion marks for the<br />

year 2005 and profits of between 300<br />

and 350 million marks. Regarding the<br />

outlined scenario for 2010 (sales of 20<br />

Düsseldorf. As a further move by<br />

Rheinmetall to strengthen its new<br />

management structure, the following<br />

second-tier group management<br />

appointments took effect on 1 January<br />

2000.<br />

Dipl.-Kfm. Ulrich Grillo (40), Rheinmetall<br />

DeTec <strong>AG</strong> executive board<br />

member for finance/controlling, has<br />

been appointed deputy chairman of<br />

this company.<br />

Dipl.-Kfm. Helmut P. Merch (43),<br />

until now an executive board member<br />

of Rheinmetall Elektronik <strong>AG</strong> (in future,<br />

Aditron <strong>AG</strong>) has been appointed<br />

deputy chairman of the executive<br />

board of Rheinmetall Elektronik <strong>AG</strong>.<br />

In this position he will be assisting<br />

Dipl.-Math. Klaus Eberhardt, Rheinmetall<br />

<strong>AG</strong>’s new executive board<br />

chairman and concurrently, the executive<br />

board chairman of Rheinmetall<br />

Elektronik <strong>AG</strong>.<br />

billion DM and profits of 500 million<br />

DM), the group aims to achieve 60<br />

percent of its growth through mergers<br />

and acquisitions and 40 percent by organic<br />

growth. Theoretically, the workforce<br />

could be up to 55,000 strong at<br />

the end of the decade.<br />

The Automotive sector will generate<br />

the greatest rise in sales, increasing<br />

from a figure of 3.5 billion marks (in<br />

2000) to ten billion marks (in 2010).<br />

The Electronics sector with its new<br />

operating parent Aditron <strong>AG</strong> which will<br />

include the recently established EMG<br />

EuroMarine Electronics GmbH in Hamburg<br />

in future (this is a joint venture<br />

between Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong>/industrial<br />

leadership and SAIT-Radio-<br />

Holland operating in the marine electronics<br />

sector) should increase its sales<br />

from 2.3 billion marks (in 2000) to<br />

five billion in the year 2010. The Defence<br />

sector should also generate sales<br />

revenues of five billion marks in 2010<br />

(with planned sales for 2000 of 3.2 billion<br />

DM). Brauner remarked that this<br />

outlook is seen as relatively realistic.<br />

Brauner, the chairman of the executive<br />

board of Rheinmetall until 31 December<br />

1999, explained that, amongst<br />

Dr.-Ing. Michael Roesnick (45), senior<br />

executive officer at Rheinmetall<br />

Elektronik <strong>AG</strong> (in future, Aditron <strong>AG</strong>)<br />

and management board chairman of<br />

Preh-Werke GmbH & Co. KG, Bad Neustadt,<br />

has been appointed deputy<br />

member of the Rheinmetall Elektronik<br />

<strong>AG</strong> executive board.<br />

Dr. jur. Andreas Beyer (47), executive<br />

officer for corporate legal affairs at<br />

Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong> is now senior executive<br />

officer, reporting to Dipl.-Math.<br />

Klaus Eberhardt, Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong>’s<br />

new executive board chairman.<br />

Ass. jur. Mathias K. Brauner (41),<br />

executive officer for corporate planning<br />

& controlling at Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong>,<br />

now holds the position of senior executive<br />

officer, reporting to Dr. rer. oec.<br />

Herbert Müller, Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong>’s new<br />

chief financial officer.<br />

Dipl.-Kfm. Heinz Dresia (51), executive<br />

officer at Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong>,<br />

3<br />

other things, this growth is to be funded<br />

by a capital increase of the approved<br />

capital in the period 2000/2001.<br />

He also pointed out that the majority<br />

shareholder – Röchling Industrie Verwaltung<br />

GmbH – may reduce its shareholding<br />

from the existing volume of<br />

just under 66 percent (of the common<br />

stock) to 51 percent in the next ten<br />

years. Brauner pointed out that the<br />

group may also seek a further financial<br />

partner who would be willing to take<br />

over between ten and 25 percent of<br />

Rheinmetall’s common stock and<br />

would also be prepared to fund mergers<br />

and acquisitions through financial<br />

participations in operating companies.<br />

In this context, Rheinmetall’s former<br />

chairman remarked that the capital<br />

interest in subsidiaries may also be<br />

reduced. One example given was <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong> <strong>AG</strong> where the interest<br />

might be reduced from 74 percent<br />

(at present) to 51 percent and the<br />

new Aditron <strong>AG</strong> with a decrease from<br />

66 to 51 percent. It is also conceivable<br />

that the 100 percent interest in Rheinmetall<br />

DeTec <strong>AG</strong> may be decreased to<br />

51 percent through the involvement of<br />

a strategic partner.<br />

Rheinmetall strengthens its second-tier management<br />

is now senior executive officer of this<br />

company; as such he will be in charge<br />

of corporate controlling and report<br />

to Ulrich Grillo.<br />

Following the integration of Oerlikon<br />

Contraves <strong>AG</strong>, Zurich, Switzerland,<br />

into Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong>, Dipl.-Ing.<br />

ETH, Lic. Oec. Ernst Odermatt<br />

(51), CEO of Oerlikon Contraves <strong>AG</strong>,<br />

has been appointed senior executive<br />

officer of Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong>.<br />

Dr. Wolfgang G. Glaubitz <strong>MB</strong>A (50),<br />

executive officer for corporate human<br />

resources at Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong>, is now<br />

the senior executive officer, reporting<br />

to Dieter Niederste-Werbeck, Rheinmetall<br />

<strong>AG</strong>’s executive board member<br />

for human resources.<br />

After 20 years of service with the<br />

group, Dipl.-Ing. Burkhart Kaul,<br />

hitherto senior executive officer for<br />

corporate real estate at Rheinmetall<br />

<strong>AG</strong>, will retire on 31 January 2000.


Newsline<br />

Defence technology from IWKA – Jagenberg goes to Sachsenring and IWKA<br />

Rheinmetall optimizes its portfolio<br />

Düsseldorf. Three transactions have<br />

helped Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong> to concentrate<br />

its business portfolio on the corporate<br />

sectors Automotive, Electronics and<br />

Defence and simultaneously to<br />

strengthen its defence activities very<br />

considerably. The paper technology division<br />

of Jagenberg <strong>AG</strong> was sold to<br />

Sachsenring Automobiltechnik <strong>AG</strong> in<br />

Zwickau at the turn of the year<br />

1999/2000. IWKA <strong>AG</strong> (Karlsruhe) acquired<br />

the packaging technology division<br />

likewise belonging to Jagenberg;<br />

in turn, Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong>, the operating<br />

parent of the Defence sector, has<br />

taken over the defence business from<br />

IWKA (e.g. armored wheeled and<br />

tracked vehicles). The group’s Defence<br />

sector will therefore reach sales in the<br />

order of four billion German marks. The<br />

sale and purchase of the individual<br />

companies are still conditional on the<br />

approval of the Federal Cartel Office<br />

and the supervisory boards.<br />

Rheinmetall has thus achieved its<br />

objective of refocusing its portfolio on<br />

the corporate sectors of Automotive<br />

(listed <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong> <strong>Pierburg</strong> <strong>AG</strong>), Electronics<br />

(Rheinmetall Elektronik <strong>AG</strong>,<br />

to become listed Aditron <strong>AG</strong>) and Defence<br />

(Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong>). The<br />

fourth sector Engineering (Jagenberg<br />

<strong>AG</strong>) is no longer a core activity.<br />

As part of its ongoing concentration<br />

on the core sectors of Automotive, Electronics<br />

and Defence, at year-end Rheinmetall<br />

transferred 68.4 percent of Jagenberg<br />

<strong>AG</strong>’s voting common stock and<br />

hence management control in Jagen-<br />

From Henschel-Wehrtechnik: the scout vehicle Luchs.<br />

berg to Zwickau-based Sachsenring<br />

Automobiltechnik <strong>AG</strong>. The Jagenberg<br />

group supplies its machines worldwide<br />

to manufacturers of paper and board,<br />

producers and converters of plastic film<br />

and foil as well as to the international<br />

foodstuff industry. Its 3,400 employees<br />

are forecast to generate 1999 sales of<br />

around 1 billion German marks.<br />

In Sachsenring, Rheinmetall has found<br />

a strategic partner whose midsize<br />

organization and dynamic management<br />

will ensure Jagenberg’s future as<br />

a machinery maker of strong engineering<br />

capability. Under the industrial<br />

management of Sachsenring, Jagenberg<br />

will be able to further develop its<br />

innovative power as well as expand<br />

and consolidate its worldwide position<br />

in the specialty machinery market.<br />

The air-droppable armored vehicle Wiesel with an E6-II turret of KUKA Wehrtechnik GmbH.<br />

4<br />

In order to facilitate Jagenberg’s assimilation<br />

within the Sachsenring group<br />

and continuity in the handover of industrial<br />

management, Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong><br />

will retain 18 percent of the voting<br />

common stock of Jagenberg <strong>AG</strong>,<br />

Neuss. Neither the sales nor the income<br />

of the Jagenberg group will be consolidated<br />

in Rheinmetall’s financial<br />

statements in future.<br />

Within the context of the transfer to<br />

Sachsenring, Jagenberg <strong>AG</strong> also sold<br />

its packaging technology division to<br />

IWKA Aktiengesellschaft, Karlsruhe, as<br />

of year-end. The companies sold are<br />

A+F Automation + Fördertechnik GmbH<br />

(Kirchlengern), Benhil Gasti Verpackungsmaschinen<br />

GmbH (Neuss),<br />

the French Erca Formseal S.A., (Les<br />

Ulis) and the American Autoprod Inc.,<br />

Clearwater (Florida). Their aggregate<br />

sales in 1999 amounted to approx. 220<br />

million marks, with a total workforce of<br />

822 persons.<br />

The addition of the Jagenberg companies<br />

will mean that the IWKA group<br />

is strengthening its competence and<br />

international position in the growing<br />

market for packaging machinery used<br />

by the food and dairy industries. In<br />

2000, more than 3,000 employees will<br />

generate sales of around 800 million<br />

marks (in 1998: DM 195 million). This<br />

will make IWKA one of the world’s leading<br />

suppliers of packaging machinery<br />

and plant.<br />

In turn, as of year-end, Ratingen-based<br />

Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong> (Defence)<br />

(Continued on page 5)


Aditron <strong>AG</strong> is<br />

the new name<br />

Düsseldorf/Ettlingen. The decision<br />

to merge KIH Kommunikations Industrie<br />

Holding <strong>AG</strong> (Ettlingen) with<br />

the new Aditron <strong>AG</strong> (formerly operating<br />

under the name of Rheinmetall<br />

Elektronik Beteiligungen <strong>AG</strong>, headquarters<br />

in Düsseldorf) means that<br />

Rheinmetall’s Electronics sector will<br />

be admitted to the stock exchange<br />

this year.<br />

This decision was carried by a large<br />

majority of votes on 17 December<br />

1999. At the extraordinary shareholders’<br />

meeting, Dr. Michael<br />

Newsline<br />

Fritzsche, chairman of the executive<br />

board of KIH, pointed out that KIH<br />

would probably cease to exist in<br />

March 2000 following the official registration<br />

of the merger. The Aditron<br />

share will be traded at the organized<br />

stock exchange in Stuttgart and<br />

Frankfurt.<br />

With the establishment of Aditron<br />

<strong>AG</strong>, the Rheinmetall group now has a<br />

powerful, listed electronics supplier<br />

with an international business share<br />

of 54 percent. Based on a good earnings<br />

position, 1999 sales amounted<br />

to approx. 1.34 billion German marks<br />

(0.68 billion euros). The new company<br />

will have a workforce of about<br />

5,600 worldwide.<br />

5<br />

Significantorder for<br />

combined antennas<br />

Neckartenzlingen. Richard Hirschmann<br />

GmbH & Co. (Neckartenzlingen)<br />

has booked a significant order<br />

for the delivery of 50,000 combined<br />

antennas for navigation and mobile<br />

radio communication. The order<br />

which is worth about two million<br />

German marks was placed by a<br />

renowned German electronics company.<br />

The antennas will be delivered<br />

in the next eighteen months.<br />

The combined antenna GPS 1890 PL<br />

is the smallest of its type currently<br />

available on the market.<br />

Defence technology from IWKA – Jagenberg goes to Sachsenring and IWKA<br />

Rheinmetall optimizes its portfolio<br />

(Continued from page 4)<br />

has taken over the defence technology<br />

sector of IWKA Aktiengesellschaft, Karlsruhe,<br />

comprising KUKA Wehrtechnik<br />

GmbH, Augsburg, and Henschel Wehrtechnik<br />

GmbH, Kassel. In 1998, these<br />

two companies together generated sales<br />

of 244 million German marks with a<br />

workforce of 1,200. By acquiring a German<br />

systems leader in armored wheeled<br />

and tracked vehicles, Rheinmetall<br />

is significantly expanding its defence<br />

technology capability and strengthening<br />

its market position as leading<br />

European supplier of land forces systems<br />

in the long term.<br />

In concentrating on the three corporate<br />

sectors Automotive, Electronics<br />

and Defence, Rheinmetall aims to<br />

achieve a global status in all three<br />

markets:<br />

★ With sales of around 4 billion German<br />

marks and 12,000 employees,<br />

Rheinmetall’s Defence sector will, as a<br />

result of this acquisition, further secure<br />

its strategic position as a competence<br />

source for land forces equipment within<br />

Europe while gaining the necessary<br />

economies of scale as a leading onestop<br />

European supplier of weaponry<br />

and ammunition, armored vehicles<br />

and electronics. Defence’s Oerlikon<br />

Contraves, Switzerland, and Eurometaal<br />

have further contributed to European<br />

integration within this sector.<br />

Through its subsidiary MaK System<br />

Gesellschaft and the expected inclusion<br />

of the defence electronics com-<br />

pany STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH in the<br />

consortium of Krauss-Maffei Wegmann<br />

and the British Alvis group, Rheinmetall<br />

DeTec <strong>AG</strong> has secured for itself a<br />

significant (28-percent) slice of the<br />

large-scale German-British procurement<br />

contract for armored transport vehicles.<br />

Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong>’s objective<br />

will continue to be the necessary<br />

consolidation of Germany’s tank building<br />

industry. Rheinmetall is sticking<br />

to its goal of Defence sales of 25 to 30<br />

percent of aggregate group business,<br />

with an overall expanding volume.<br />

★ Among the Rheinmetall group’s objectives<br />

for the year 2000 and beyond<br />

are the ongoing growth of its Automotive<br />

sector into a module and systems<br />

supplier “for every aspect of the engine.”<br />

The targeted sales of 5 billion<br />

marks (presently DM 3 billion) will be<br />

achieved through organic growth and<br />

acquisitions (preferably outside of<br />

Germany). This means that Rheinmetall<br />

is breaking into a new league, both<br />

as original equipment supplier to the<br />

automotive industry and as military<br />

contractor.<br />

★ Through Rheinmetall, Sachsenring<br />

is entering a dynamic strategic partnership<br />

which, in some instances,<br />

may encompass cooperation in the<br />

field of automotive engineering.<br />

★ In the Electronics sector, Rheinmetall<br />

Elektronik <strong>AG</strong> as the future stock<br />

exchange listed Aditron <strong>AG</strong> (including<br />

the IT companies Hirschmann and Preh<br />

and the security equipment manufacturer<br />

Heimann Systems) will constitute<br />

a powerful electronics supplier within<br />

the Rheinmetall group. Plans for this<br />

sector envisage a<br />

rise in sales from<br />

today’s 1.3 billion<br />

German marks<br />

to over 2 billion<br />

marks, mainly<br />

through organic<br />

growth and acquisitions,primarily<br />

in the United<br />

States.<br />

Rheinmetall’s<br />

international position<br />

in its core sectors of Automotive,<br />

Electronics and Defence is substantiated<br />

by international sales of 60 percent.<br />

With a 1999 sales volume in the<br />

region of nine billion German marks,<br />

the Rheinmetall group employs a<br />

workforce of around 34,000 (13,000<br />

outside of Germany). These figures<br />

still include the Jagenberg group.<br />

Sachsenring’s and IWKA’s partner in the future: Jagenberg in Neuss.


Selected range<br />

of products<br />

Zurich. Oerlikon Contraves <strong>AG</strong><br />

produces cannons, guns, guided<br />

missile systems, ammunition and<br />

fire control units. The company is<br />

also active in the fields of vehiclemounted<br />

weapons, naval air defence<br />

as well as simulation and training<br />

systems. A selection of the<br />

company’s products is given below:<br />

★ Air defence systems produced<br />

include: Skyshield 35, Skyguard/<br />

GDF, Gunstar, Seaguard naval closein<br />

weapons, fire control systems<br />

and Millennium naval gun anti-missile<br />

system.<br />

★ Vehicle-mounted weapons manufactured<br />

by the company feature<br />

various cannons such as the KBA<br />

25 mm automatic cannon, KDE 35<br />

mm automatic cannon and KDA 35<br />

mm automatic belt-fed cannon.<br />

★ Oerlikon Contraves also develops<br />

and produces ammunition for air defence,<br />

vehicle-mounted weapons<br />

and aircraft guns in 20, 23, 25, 27, 30<br />

and 35 mm calibers. Ammunition<br />

types include explosive ammunition<br />

with head or base fuzes, hard-core<br />

ammunition, subcaliber munitions<br />

of the types “fin stabilized” and<br />

“frangible”, and the latest generation<br />

of ammunition with programmable<br />

fuzes. Added to this, the company<br />

offers a wide range of practice<br />

ammunition, often adapted to the<br />

specific needs of the customer.<br />

★ Training systems include Skyguard<br />

air defence mission simulator,<br />

the Feats firing evaluation and training<br />

system and Adams (advanced<br />

driving and maneuvering simulator).<br />

★ Further products: Fieldguard, a fire<br />

control and guidance system for<br />

rocket and gun artillery applications<br />

(Lars), Ranger UAV system, an unmanned<br />

reconnaissance air vehicle,<br />

and Combat Simlas plus, a system<br />

for infantry training allowing also<br />

the identification of soldiers.<br />

The Millennium 35/1000 naval gun<br />

system offers an effective means of<br />

engaging anti-ship missiles with<br />

ranges of up to <strong>2.5</strong> kilometers.<br />

Newsline<br />

FORMER HEAD OF PENT<strong>AG</strong>ON visits Rheinmetall: Caspar Williard Weinberger<br />

(r), Secretary of Defense under President Ronald Reagan between January 1981<br />

and November 1987 recently visited Rheinmetall’s headquarters to hold informatory<br />

talks. Weinberger gave his host Dr. Hans U. Brauner, the former executive board chairman<br />

and new supervisory board chairman of the Rheinmetall group a copy of his book<br />

“The Next War” in which Weinberger and his co-author Peter Schweizer have outlined<br />

a number of conceivable war scenarios which are perfectly realistic in the future.<br />

MJ 333 handed over<br />

to the German Navy<br />

Eckernförde/Bremen. The German<br />

Navy in Eckernförde took delivery of its<br />

new training system MJ 333 punctually<br />

on Monday, 24 November 1999. This<br />

system was developed and built by<br />

STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH, Bremen.<br />

In conjunction with the simulator MJ<br />

332, it now forms part of the advanced<br />

training center of the Naval Weapons<br />

School in Eckernförde to train all crews<br />

of the minehunting fleet.<br />

The two most important milestones<br />

in the MJ 333 conversion program<br />

have therefore been completed by<br />

this high-tech company from North<br />

Germany. Following the acceptance<br />

of the Kulmbach – that was the first<br />

ship to be converted from a mine<br />

countermeasure vessel of the class<br />

343 into a minehunter of the class<br />

333 – and the delivery of the training<br />

system as the second milestone, the<br />

project is now well on the way towards<br />

successful completion.<br />

Peene-Werft GmbH in Wolgast is<br />

the prime-contractor for this ambitious<br />

project, with STN Atlas acting<br />

as the main subcontractor responsible<br />

for essential systems and the integration<br />

of the entire mine hunting<br />

system. The mine hunting sonar sy-<br />

6<br />

stem DSQS-11M, the mine hunting<br />

command & control system Takis,<br />

the one-shot mine disposal vehicle<br />

Seafox and the PC-based data exchange<br />

and information system<br />

Daisy are all delivered by STN Atlas.<br />

The training system MJ 333 in<br />

Eckernförde is tailored to the very<br />

latest criteria and comprises two large<br />

packages.<br />

The first training package encompasses<br />

computer-based training<br />

(CBT) and includes the actual system<br />

training for the ships. CBT will consist<br />

in a step-wise partial simulation of<br />

key elements of the mine hunting system<br />

MJ 333 serving to familiarize the<br />

user gradually with the full scope of<br />

the systems.<br />

The second part of the training will<br />

be carried out with equipment identical<br />

with that on board, i.e. the sonar<br />

DSQS-11M, Takis, Seafox and Daisy,<br />

to train the functional links in the<br />

team allowing for the interaction between<br />

the initial mine detection by<br />

the sonar unit, processing of the tactical<br />

situation on the Takis console<br />

and operation of the Seafox mine<br />

disposal vehicle. Operators will get<br />

to know the process and interaction<br />

between complicated systems and<br />

are thus offered a comprehensive<br />

training for their duties on board the<br />

minehunter at a later stage.


Newsline<br />

Eurofighter Simulation Systems GmbH (ESS)<br />

Simulation systems<br />

for Eurofighter project<br />

Bremen/Düsseldorf. STN Atlas Elektronik<br />

GmbH in Bremen has established<br />

the company Eurofighter Simulation<br />

Systems GmbH (ESS) in cooperation<br />

with Indra Sistemas (Spain), Meteor<br />

Construzioni Aeronautiche et<br />

Elettroniche (Italy), Thomson Training<br />

& Simulation (UK) and CAE GmbH<br />

(Stollberg/Germany). This joint venture<br />

company will develop and produce<br />

components required specifically for<br />

simulators to be used to train pilots of<br />

the Eurofighter Typhoon weapon system.<br />

Working in close cooperation<br />

with the air forces of Germany, the United<br />

Kingdom, Italy and Spain, Eurofighter<br />

Simulation Systems GmbH will develop,<br />

manufacture and put into operation<br />

the simulators for the multinational<br />

European Eurofighter program.<br />

Through their joint venture Eurofighter Simulation Systems GmbH, they will jointly<br />

develop and deliver the flight simulators for the new European Eurofighter<br />

aircraft (from l to r): Christian Feldmann, product department manager of land<br />

and flight simulation systems at STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH (Bremen), Karl Kim,<br />

division manager for simulation and training systems at CAE GmbH (Stollberg),<br />

Brian Waller, sales and marketing director at Thomson Training and Simulation<br />

(UK), Renzo Lunardi, chief executive at Meteor (Italy) and Manuel Flecha, managing<br />

director simulation at Indra (Spain).<br />

Armored vehicle:<br />

substantial share<br />

Munich/Telford/Kiel. Through its<br />

subsidiary MaK Systemgesellschaft<br />

mbH (Kiel), Rheinmetall’s share in<br />

the armored transport vehicle project<br />

agreed by the German and British<br />

procurement authorities and Artec<br />

(Armoured Vehicle Technology)<br />

GmbH is substantial. Artec GmbH<br />

with its headquarters in Munich is a<br />

partnership between MaK Systemgesellschaft<br />

mbH, Krauss Maffei Wegmann<br />

GmbH & Co. KG (Munich) and<br />

Alvis Vehicles Ltd. (Telford, UK). It is<br />

anticipated that STN Atlas Elektronik<br />

GmbH, likewise belonging to the<br />

Rheinmetall group, will also<br />

be involved in<br />

development<br />

and productionactivities<br />

for the<br />

armored<br />

transport vehicle.<br />

The project relates<br />

to a joint procurement<br />

order for Germany and Great Britain.<br />

Negotiations on the involvement of<br />

the Netherlands in this program are<br />

well advanced. The order encompas-<br />

7<br />

Multinational: the Eurofighter Typhoon.<br />

The cooperation between these European<br />

partners will also help to ensure<br />

that sufficient consideration is given<br />

to the individual interests of the four<br />

participating nations. The development<br />

and utilization of high-tech products<br />

will strengthen the position of<br />

the European simulator industry and<br />

is an important step towards sustaining<br />

independence in Europe.<br />

ESS GmbH was already included in<br />

the concept and definition phase (that<br />

will continue until October 2000) while<br />

the joint venture was being established<br />

and collaborated closely with the<br />

customers on the general specification.<br />

Between November 2000 and the<br />

end of 2007, 18 full mission simulators,<br />

six interactive pilot stations, four<br />

stationary cockpit trainers and four<br />

mobile cockpit trainers will be delivered<br />

to the air forces of the partner countries<br />

involved in the Eurofighter program.<br />

In the words of Dipl.-Ing. Christian<br />

Feldmann, product department manager<br />

of land and flight simulation systems:<br />

“The Simulation Systems division<br />

of STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH will<br />

be able to extend its activities in the<br />

flight simulation sector through its<br />

participation in this project”.<br />

ses not only the development but also<br />

the option for a first series lot of<br />

new wheeled armored fighting<br />

vehicles due to replace the<br />

Fuchs armored transport<br />

vehicles and<br />

M113 vehicles<br />

of US design<br />

from the year<br />

2005 onwards.<br />

It is planned to<br />

produce a total of<br />

approximately 4000 armored<br />

transport vehicles over a tenyear<br />

period. MaK’s work share in the<br />

first partial order for Germany will be<br />

about 28 percent.


Newsline<br />

Naval school Mürwick uses new simulator generation<br />

Virtual seaways, fog on command<br />

Mürwick/Bremen. Maritime traffic is<br />

governed by a “right-of-way” just like<br />

other traffic. Anyone who fails to obey<br />

this has to expect serious damage to<br />

the crew and ship. Although mistakes<br />

made at the naval school in Mürwick<br />

may cause accidents, these are nevertheless<br />

without impact on man and<br />

machine as dangerous situations are<br />

all part of simulator training. The AANS<br />

shiphandling training system at the<br />

school’s simulation center has one fundamental<br />

objective: to train actions<br />

and reactions sufficiently to avoid<br />

errors and to teach trainees how to<br />

deal with mistakes made by others in<br />

order to avoid major damage. In addition<br />

to this, there are a whole lot of procedures<br />

that are important for naval<br />

forces and require initial training in the<br />

simulator. Nevertheless, simulator training<br />

is still only one (important) element<br />

of training since true seamanship<br />

can only be learned on board ship.<br />

After far more than 20,000 hours of<br />

operation of the old simulation center<br />

taken into service back in 1987, the<br />

decision in favor of a system renewal<br />

was reached in 1997. Two years of<br />

planning, development and integration<br />

by the Bremen-based company<br />

STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH then follo-<br />

wed this decision. The modernized simulation<br />

center was finally taken into<br />

operation on 2 December 1999. The<br />

gap between a simulator and the real<br />

ship is becoming smaller and smaller.<br />

The simulations provided by the new<br />

AANS at the naval school in Mürwick<br />

are so realistic that even experienced<br />

seafarers soon forget that they are<br />

“only” commanding a computer-generated<br />

simulation and not a real<br />

ship.<br />

The system is equipped with the very<br />

latest state of the art. It consists of a<br />

true-to-scale nautical bridge with all<br />

the usual instruments like control<br />

stand, engine console and radar<br />

equipment. An eleven-channel visual<br />

system with CGI (computer generated<br />

images) allows a realistic simulation<br />

of the outside world at day and night.<br />

Even complicated docking maneuvers<br />

can be practiced in the simulator<br />

thanks to the exact physical/mathematical<br />

reproduction of the own ship’s<br />

model, including the use of lines and<br />

pilot vessels.<br />

Two instructor stations as well as a<br />

briefing/debriefing room are available<br />

for control and monitoring purposes.<br />

The instructor communicates with his<br />

pupils via intercom and VHF. Besides<br />

Rheinmetall assigned“BBB/A-2”<br />

London/Düsseldorf. Standard &<br />

Poor’s recently assigned its triple-“B”<br />

long-term corporate credit and senior<br />

unsecured debt ratings, and its “A-2”<br />

short-term corporate credit ratings to<br />

the German group Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong>.<br />

The outlook is stable.<br />

The ratings reflect Rheinmetall’s moderate<br />

financial profile and average<br />

business-risk profile, based on sound<br />

positions in its respective markets.<br />

These strengths are offset partly by<br />

exposure to the German defence sector<br />

(about 15% of sales are to the German<br />

defence ministry) and to market<br />

trends in the global automotive and<br />

electronics industries.<br />

A key rating factor is the company’s<br />

standing as market leader in several<br />

industrial segments that target different<br />

customer groups. In the defence<br />

sector, Rheinmetall further benefits<br />

from a comfortable order backlog. Also,<br />

the ratings take into account<br />

Rheinmetall’s moderate geographical<br />

diversification, to which Germany<br />

contributes about one-half of consolidated<br />

sales.<br />

In the past few years, Rheinmetall<br />

has grown very rapidly thanks to several<br />

substantial acquisitions. The<br />

group more than doubled its sales<br />

between 1997 and 1998. In the year to<br />

Dec. 31, 1998, the group generated revenues<br />

of euro (€) 4.13 billion (US$<br />

4.37 billion) and earnings before interest,<br />

taxes, depreciation, and amortisation<br />

(EBITDA) of € 328 million. The<br />

group’s lease-adjusted EBITDA margin<br />

has increased gradually over the<br />

years, and amounted to about 10% in<br />

1997 and 1998. The group posted a<br />

8<br />

The naval school at Marwick also uses<br />

the latest simulator generation from<br />

STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH.<br />

the bridge with visual system, the training<br />

system includes six cabins with<br />

the complete nautical equipment but<br />

without the visual systems.<br />

The interaction between the main<br />

bridge and cabins also allows exercises<br />

like nautical operations in units<br />

and combined operations with several<br />

ships. The general configuration therefore<br />

also meets the international standards<br />

for training nautical and technical<br />

officers of ships in accordance with<br />

STCW 95 (standards of training, certification<br />

and watchkeeping for seafarers,<br />

issued by the International<br />

Maritime Organisation IMO) which is<br />

obligatory for all UN members.<br />

pre-tax loss of € 17.7 million in the<br />

first half of 1999 (compared with a<br />

pre-tax profit of € 5.2 million in the<br />

first half of 1998), partly because of<br />

the fact that profits in engineering<br />

and defence activities are typically<br />

booked in the second half of the year,<br />

but also because of softer sales.<br />

With a lease-adjusted net debt-tototal<br />

capital ratio of 26% at Dec. 31,<br />

1998, Rheinmetall is considered to<br />

have good financial flexibility and a<br />

moderate financial policy.<br />

Standard & Poor’s expects the financial<br />

burden of future external growth<br />

to be alleviated partly by equity<br />

support from existing shareholders<br />

and/or strategic partners. The balance-sheet<br />

structure is expected to remain<br />

very conservative. The ratings<br />

do not assume any major improvement<br />

in profit margins, or any substantial<br />

organic growth, Standard &<br />

Poor’s said.


Newsline<br />

EXCHANGE OF IDEAS: Discussions during a recent meeting at the new group headquarters in Düsseldorf focused on<br />

socio-political and economic aspects. The former executive board chairman of Rheinmetall <strong>AG</strong>, Dr. Hans U. Brauner, had invited<br />

representatives from political and industrial circles to this event. Guests included the minister president of North-Rhine<br />

Westphalia Wolfgang Clement, the prime minister of the Grandy Duchy of Luxembourg, minister of state Jean-Claude Juncker,<br />

his colleague Francois Biltgen, labor and employment minister as well as minister of education and cultural affairs, minister<br />

for parliamentary relations and delegated communication minister of Luxembourg, Dr. Julien Alex, the ambassador of the<br />

Grand Duchy in the Federal Republic of Germany, district president Jürgen Büssow, the mayor of Düsseldorf Joachim Erwin,<br />

Dr. Heinz Kriwet, supervisory board chairman of Thyssen Krupp <strong>AG</strong>, Dr. Edgar Jannott, executive board chairman of Ergo Versicherungsgruppe<br />

<strong>AG</strong>, Dr. Peter von Blomberg, chairman of the management board of Allianz Versicherungs <strong>AG</strong> and Dr.-Ing.<br />

Hans-Peter Keitel, executive board chairman of Hochtief <strong>AG</strong>. The program for the evening included a visit to the installation<br />

“Aspetti Magici” created by Professor Gabriele Henkel as well as a tour of the new headquarters of the Rheinmetall group.<br />

Our photos show the guests and their host, above all (photo on right) the prime minister of Luxembourg Juncker (c), minister<br />

Biltgen (second from l), ambassador Alex (l), the minister president of North-Rhine Westphalia Clement (second from r) and<br />

Brauner (r), formerly chairman of the executive board and now supervisory board chairman of Rheinmetall.<br />

Close cooperation<br />

in self-protection<br />

Bern/Neuenburg. RU<strong>AG</strong> SUISSE,<br />

Bern/Switzerland, has acquired a<br />

minority stake of Neue Technologien<br />

GmbH in Neuenburg/Germany.<br />

At the same time a close cooperation<br />

in the field of self-defence<br />

systems was agreed between SM<br />

Schweizerische Munitionsunternehmung<br />

<strong>AG</strong>,Thun/Switzerland, Buck<br />

Neue Technologien GmbH and Nico-<br />

Pyrotechnik GmbH & Co. KG Trittau/Germany,<br />

both part of Rheinmetall<br />

DeTec <strong>AG</strong> domiciled in Ratingen/Germany.<br />

So far SM and Buck<br />

Neue Technologien GmbH already<br />

cooperated at the product level. The<br />

jointly developed Maske self-protection<br />

system – today’s leading<br />

product in the field of infrared active<br />

self-protection smokes for combat<br />

vehicles – is currently being produced<br />

for the Swiss Armed Forces.<br />

With the minority stake and the cooperation<br />

agreed upon, the pyrotechnical<br />

core competence of the three<br />

enterprises is gaining strength.<br />

Moreover SM will have access to an<br />

extended market, can make better<br />

use of its capacities, and contributes<br />

to the safeguarding of knowhow<br />

for the Swiss Armed Forces.<br />

Leopard 2 main battle tank with L-55 gun.<br />

Electronics for<br />

Spanish tank<br />

Madrid. A corporate alliance consisting<br />

of STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH of<br />

Bremen (a subsidiary of Rheinmetall<br />

DeTec <strong>AG</strong>), and the Spanish company<br />

Indra EWS of Madrid has received<br />

an order from Spain’s stateowned<br />

Santa Barbara Blindados<br />

(SBB), general contractor for the Spanish<br />

government’s Leopard 2 tank<br />

program. The contract entails the delivery<br />

of 219 combat systems for the<br />

Leopard 2 <strong>MB</strong>T, each consisting of a<br />

fire control unit, panoramic periscope,<br />

tank-testing device and command<br />

system, as well as 16 command<br />

systems for armored recovery<br />

vehicles. The order is part of a pro-<br />

9<br />

curement program for the Spanish<br />

Army. In addition, Empresa Nationale<br />

Santa Barbara (ENSB) of Madrid and<br />

its cooperation partner Rheinmetall<br />

W&M GmbH of Ratingen have received<br />

an order from Santa Barbara Blindados<br />

worth more than DM 155 million.<br />

This contract is for the supply of<br />

219 L44/120 mm tank guns for the<br />

Leopard 2. ENSB will manufacture the<br />

guns under a licence granted by<br />

Rheinmetall W&M GmbH. Rheinmetall<br />

will furnish the necessary knowhow<br />

and support ENSB with technical<br />

assistance and the supply of hardware<br />

worth DM 55 million. In response<br />

to the Germany Army’s decision to<br />

buy the new L55 barrel under its Combat<br />

Performance Upgrade Programme<br />

1 for the Leopard 2 <strong>MB</strong>T, Spain is<br />

also opting for the new gun system.


Newsline<br />

Oerlikon Contraves <strong>AG</strong>: products in over 40 countries<br />

A leader in systems technology<br />

Zurich/Düsseldorf. As reported in<br />

Newsline 4/99, Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong><br />

acquired Oerlikon Contraves <strong>AG</strong> in<br />

September 1999. This acquisition,<br />

which has taken effect retroactively as<br />

of 1 January 1999, has expanded<br />

Rheinmetall’s range of products and<br />

strengthened the group’s international<br />

competitiveness and systems<br />

capabilities. Oerlikon Contraves <strong>AG</strong> is<br />

an international supplier of mediumcaliber<br />

gun systems and of combined<br />

gun and guided weapon systems for<br />

air defense. The company is divided<br />

into the three business units Systems,<br />

Ammunition and Adats. The products<br />

of this Swiss company, which has its<br />

headquarters in Zurich, are represented<br />

in more than 40 countries around<br />

the world.<br />

The history of the Swiss company<br />

can be traced back to 1906 when<br />

Schweizerische Werkzeugmaschinenfabrik<br />

Oerlikon (SWO) was established<br />

to manufacture and distribute machine<br />

tools. In 1923, SWO was taken over<br />

by Magdeburger Werkzeugmaschinenfabrik<br />

and operated under the name of<br />

Werkzeugmaschinenfabrik Oerlikon<br />

(WO) from then on. In 1924, the company<br />

purchased a machine factory in<br />

Seebach, Switzerland, a firm which<br />

produced anti-aircraft and anti-tank<br />

weapons systems. This then constituted<br />

the basis for the defense technology<br />

sector. In 1936, WO was taken over<br />

fully by Dr. Emil Georg Bührle who had<br />

already held a majority stake in the<br />

company for some years. The name of<br />

Oerlikon was thereupon closely associated<br />

with a0nti-aircraft systems in<br />

the years that followed.<br />

Also in 1936, Contraves <strong>AG</strong> in Erlenbach<br />

was founded as a study company<br />

for air defense equipment of the artillery.<br />

This firm developed and produced<br />

flight tracking instruments and<br />

training equipment. Between 1944<br />

and 1946, Bührle acquired the shares<br />

of Contraves <strong>AG</strong>.<br />

Whereas the machine tool factory<br />

Oerlikon concentrated largely on products<br />

for the civil sector and on traditional<br />

gun systems, Contraves was<br />

concerned mainly with electronic fire<br />

control systems and guided weapons.<br />

Further activities of the company included<br />

drive systems, connection tech-<br />

International leader: Oerlikon Contraves <strong>AG</strong> has its core capability in the systems<br />

technology sector. Working in interdisciplinary project teams, specialists from<br />

various fields develop advanced, highly complex and powerful products.<br />

Systems which are used in over 40 countries.<br />

nologies and medical equipment. Oerlikon<br />

and Contraves cooperated frequently.<br />

In 1991, the two companies<br />

were merged to form Oerlikon Contraves,<br />

a group of companies operating<br />

throughout the world. Since then, business<br />

has concentrated primarily on<br />

defense and space activities.<br />

Besides the above-mentioned gun<br />

and guided weapon systems, the<br />

Swiss company also manufactures fire<br />

control systems, cannons and ammunition.<br />

Further business areas include<br />

vehicle weaponry, naval air defense,<br />

simulators and training systems as<br />

well as combat identification for the<br />

infantry.<br />

Here are some examples of the products<br />

of Oerlikon Contraves <strong>AG</strong>:<br />

Adats is the only SHORAD system in<br />

the world which can engage both air<br />

10<br />

★ The Skyshield 35 is the most advanced<br />

air defense system from this Swiss<br />

company. All three business units of<br />

Oerlikon Contraves <strong>AG</strong> (Systems, Ammunition<br />

and Adats) were involved in<br />

the development of this system which<br />

consists primarily of two 35 mm revolver<br />

guns and a fire control system<br />

comprising an unmanned sensor module<br />

for control and the command<br />

post accommodating the operators’<br />

work places. The command post can<br />

be positioned up to 500 meters away<br />

from the sensor module. The system<br />

can be upgraded with one or two<br />

Adats launchers. Adats is a fully integrated<br />

SHORAD guided weapon system<br />

with search radar for target detection<br />

and passive electro-optical<br />

multi-sensor package. The latter consists<br />

of an infrared camera, TV and laser.<br />

The Skyshield 35 is also equipped<br />

with the Ahead system, likewise developed<br />

by the company. This 35 mm<br />

ammunition is designed especially to<br />

deal with small, extremely agile targets<br />

against which conventional ammunition<br />

is less effective. The Skyshield<br />

35 is a lightweight, compact system<br />

which is easy to transport. The<br />

system’s modularity assures good<br />

flexibility for positioning. High hit<br />

accuracy, short reaction times and<br />

high firing power are further distinguishing<br />

features of this system.<br />

and surface targets. (Continued on page 11)


Newsline<br />

Perfection by “dry practice”: the Adams system is an advanced driving and maneuvering simulator for the initial and further<br />

training of civil and military truck drivers. The system shown here – which is part of the Swiss Army training center – consists<br />

of five driving simulator cabins and an instructor station.<br />

Oerlikon Contraves <strong>AG</strong>: products in over 40 countries<br />

A leader in systems...<br />

(Continued from page 10)<br />

★ The Skyguard/GDF is also an air defense<br />

system. The fire control unit consists<br />

of two 35 mm GDF-005 twin guns<br />

and the Skyguard fire control system<br />

which controls the guns.<br />

The fire control system includes<br />

radar surveillance,<br />

identification systems for<br />

target recognition and<br />

control consoles for the<br />

operating personnel.<br />

Ahead ammunition is also<br />

used for the Skyguard/GDF<br />

system. Developed in the<br />

early seventies, this Skyguard<br />

is the most widely used<br />

fire control system of Oerlikon<br />

Contraves <strong>AG</strong>. Over the<br />

years, it has been modified repeatedly<br />

to adapt to changing<br />

threat scenarios from the air. In<br />

its upgraded configuration, it is<br />

still one of the most effective fire<br />

control units for air defense.<br />

Combined with the 35 mm twin<br />

guns of Oerlikon Contraves <strong>AG</strong>,<br />

these systems are in service in<br />

about 25 countries.<br />

★ The 35 mm Millennium naval gun<br />

system produced in cooperation with<br />

Royal Ordnance (British Aerospace)<br />

can be used for inner layer defense on<br />

naval vessels. The Millennium system<br />

also uses Ahead ammunition. The<br />

35/1000 revolver cannon is enclosed<br />

by a dome. Millennium is distinguished<br />

by its low weight. It can be operated<br />

in combination with advanced fire<br />

control systems and is readily integrated<br />

into existing defense systems.<br />

★ Oerlikon Contraves <strong>AG</strong> also offers<br />

simulators for military and civil training<br />

purposes: one particularly modern<br />

system in this field is the Combat<br />

Simlas plus, a laser-based training<br />

and identification system for soldiers.<br />

It consists of a laser unit, a master box<br />

as the control unit which e.g. stores<br />

battle data, a 360° helmet sensor and<br />

arm sensors for every soldier. Combat<br />

Simlas plus can be operated in two different<br />

modes. When used in the training<br />

mode, it serves as an infantry<br />

combat simulator and a friend<br />

identification system. Shots fired<br />

at other soldiers are simulated<br />

as a coded infrared laser beam<br />

by the laser unit and hits<br />

are registered by the system.<br />

In combat mode,<br />

the Combat Simlas plus<br />

serves as an identification<br />

and night sight unit.<br />

In this mode, the laser<br />

transmits a beam capable<br />

of identifying soldiers<br />

up to six kilometers<br />

away on the<br />

basis of their sensors,<br />

thus warrantingunmistakable<br />

friend-foe<br />

identification.<br />

The system can<br />

also be used<br />

under adverse<br />

weather conditions.<br />

Targets<br />

can be identified or aimed at even if<br />

largely concealed by bushes and<br />

shrubbery.<br />

11<br />

Combat Simlas plus, the soldier integrated<br />

multifunction laser system: our<br />

picture shows a soldier using the system<br />

in simulation mode to aim and<br />

fire. The compact, smart laser unit CSP<br />

2000 on the M16 rifle, the master box as<br />

the control unit and the helmet and arm<br />

sensors are particularly noteworthy.<br />

★ A further product from the company<br />

is Adams (the Advanced Driving and<br />

Maneuvering Simulator). This is a training<br />

simulator for the initial and further<br />

training of civil and military truck<br />

drivers. The system can simulate every<br />

conceivable traffic situation, be it in city<br />

traffic, on country roads or motorways<br />

or at night. A multi-channel image<br />

generation system, noise and motion<br />

simulation are just some of the features<br />

contributing towards the extremely<br />

realistic presentation. The complete<br />

training system consists of several<br />

driving simulators and an instructor<br />

station from which the instructor<br />

can support and monitor the<br />

trainees. The simulator features an<br />

automatic exercise monitoring and<br />

evaluation function.


Newsline<br />

Simulation and operating systems from STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH<br />

Life rescue operations on land<br />

Bremen. Distress at sea in the German<br />

Bay. Shortly after midnight a private<br />

aircraft with ten people on board<br />

crashes into the North Sea to the west<br />

of Heligoland. The automatic distress<br />

transmitter is activated and – via satellite<br />

– the signal reaches the operational<br />

control center of the German Lifeboat<br />

Institution (DGzRS) in Bremen.<br />

Every minute then counts.<br />

A dramatic scenario, realistic but not<br />

real as the assumed air crash is part of<br />

a routine emergency exercise at the<br />

training center of the German Lifeboat<br />

Institution in Bremen. Experienced<br />

seafarers go through all of the processes<br />

of a search and rescue operation to<br />

make absolutely certain that they are<br />

well prepared for genuine distress situations.<br />

The crews are assisted by advanced<br />

simulation and operating systems<br />

from STN Atlas Elektronik in Bremen.<br />

Handed over by the former Minister<br />

of Transport Matthias Wismann in<br />

early 1996, the training system has become<br />

an essential element of training<br />

activities at the institution today. The<br />

system is, however, quite different<br />

from the “classical” simulator which<br />

offers a realistic reproduction of a cockpit<br />

or nautical bridge, including all the<br />

motion sequences. At a first glance,<br />

the Caesar (Coordinating And Educating<br />

Search And Rescue)<br />

training<br />

center looks<br />

rather like a<br />

language lab<br />

equipped with<br />

modern-day<br />

equipment – yet<br />

it is a lot more<br />

than just that.<br />

Captain Heiner Lübbers,<br />

chief instructor at the German<br />

Lifeboat Institution, explains<br />

that at the training center<br />

“the crews of our ships and cruisers<br />

and the officers manning the control<br />

center practice communication<br />

processes that are absolutely vital for<br />

search and rescue operations.” Always<br />

assuming that the crews have<br />

the necessary seafaring skills, training<br />

operations at Caesar focus largely on<br />

the coordination of operations. The simulator<br />

consists of five separate cabins,<br />

each equipped with telephones,<br />

PC and radio sets. Different crews are<br />

They often risk their lives to save others: the crews of the German Lifeboat Institution’s<br />

fleet that consists of 59 rescue units. The institution with its headquarters in<br />

Bremen, established in 1865, is rated as exemplary in terms of maritime rescue<br />

standards. The simulation and operation systems from STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH<br />

are an essential element of this service.<br />

accommodated in each of the cabins:<br />

e.g. the crew of a rescue cruiser, the officers<br />

on the bridge of a freighter involved<br />

in a rescue operation, the pilot<br />

and copilot of a SAR helicopter of the<br />

German Navy, and the captain of the<br />

ship in distress. The instructor’s station<br />

– representing the Maritime Rescue<br />

Coordination Center MRCC of the<br />

German Lifeboat Institution – is located<br />

at a separate position. The roles<br />

are assigned to the various participants<br />

and it may well be that the<br />

foreman (a German term for<br />

captains of the Lifeboat<br />

Institution) plays the<br />

part of the helicopter pilot<br />

or the watchkeeping<br />

officer on the ship that<br />

has come to the<br />

rescue. After<br />

all, the underlyingobjective<br />

is to<br />

“experience”<br />

a rescue mission<br />

at sea from different<br />

vantage points.<br />

Back to the initial scenario: the cabins<br />

are manned by two to three people.<br />

There are five ships near where<br />

the plane is thought to have crashed:<br />

a passenger ship, a container carrier, a<br />

freighter, a coastal motor vessel and<br />

the rescue cruiser Alfried Krupp. From<br />

12<br />

his instructor’s station, Heiner Lübbers<br />

loads a digital chart into the PCs<br />

of the “crews” and explains the initial<br />

situation – and then things get started.<br />

The foreman of the Alfried Krupp<br />

contacts the other vessels, and after<br />

consultation determines which vessel<br />

should start searching for survivors<br />

where. The search area spans four<br />

nautical miles around the place of the<br />

accident which is fairly certain since<br />

the distress signal automatically produced<br />

a precise position message. Radio<br />

messages are sent, sea charts on<br />

the PC monitor are updated and the latest<br />

messages are evaluated by the<br />

control center.<br />

All of this takes place in real time.<br />

The simulation computer developed<br />

by STN Atlas Elektronik allows for all<br />

the necessary parameters, the speed<br />

of the ships, winds and currents. STN<br />

Atlas has a wealth of experience in this<br />

field since its products include highly<br />

sophisticated shiphandling simulators<br />

that are used by various maritime<br />

institutes, e.g. in Hamburg and Rostock.<br />

These so-called full mission simulators<br />

serve to train bridge crews<br />

and also experienced officers.<br />

The tension remains in the cabins.<br />

The Alfried Krupp calls the container<br />

carrier, “Your position?” The reply is<br />

“54 degrees 56 minutes north, six<br />

(Continued on page 13)


Systems from STN Atlas ElektronikGmbH<br />

Life rescue . . .<br />

(Continued from page 12)<br />

degrees 22 minutes east, 21 knots,<br />

distance 16 nautical miles”. The position<br />

is registered on the electronic chart<br />

of the Alfried Krupp and the foreman<br />

calculates how long it will take for the<br />

freighter to reach the search area.<br />

Every minute counts in such situations:<br />

even with modern rescue vests,<br />

the chances of survival in water are limited.<br />

Besides the obvious danger of<br />

drowning (that is reduced significantly<br />

by the rescue vests) there is the very<br />

serious risk of hypothermia which can<br />

start after only a few minutes at water<br />

temperatures below ten degrees Celsius.<br />

Even if rescue services get there<br />

fast, it may still be too late. This is why<br />

perfect coordination between all those<br />

involved in a rescue operation is essential,<br />

why radio messages should<br />

contain unmistakable instructions to<br />

avoid confusion and why everybody<br />

has to know exactly what to do. In our<br />

example, the exercise was finished after<br />

about an hour and a half – with a<br />

positive outcome. All who were on board<br />

the aircraft have been rescued<br />

thanks to the good coordination of the<br />

rescue mission.<br />

Heiner Lübbers of the German Lifeboat<br />

Institution knows that operations<br />

are not always this successful. Communication<br />

problems are often encountered<br />

in reality, ultimately also<br />

because the situation in shipping has<br />

changed. “Sometimes, we can count<br />

ourselves lucky to find a crew member<br />

Shipwreck – this meant certain<br />

death for sailors on the coast of<br />

the North and Baltic Seas in the<br />

middle of the nineteenth century. Cargo<br />

ships, steamers, sailing boats and barges<br />

which had run aground were really<br />

only interesting for those on shore as<br />

the general rule was “finders keepers”<br />

for any cargo washed ashore. Besides,<br />

cross-border cooperation was literally<br />

unknown in those days. The rulers of<br />

the duchies were only marginally interested<br />

in the welfare of their sailors.<br />

Things changed after the sailing vessel<br />

Alliance hit the dreaded Borkum-<br />

Riff off the North Sea coast and sank in<br />

September 1860. Not one single crew<br />

member survived the accident. This in-<br />

Newsline<br />

on board a freighter<br />

who can speak<br />

at least some English”.<br />

Ships are increasinglyoperated<br />

under a foreign<br />

flag, they are registered<br />

in countries<br />

with relatively<br />

slack rules regarding the training standards<br />

of their crews, shipping companies<br />

exert considerable time pressures<br />

on their captains – all these aspects<br />

have changed shipping drastically in<br />

the last years. Nevertheless any ship<br />

which is sufficiently near the location<br />

of an accident is obliged to come to<br />

the rescue. All captains stick to this<br />

iron rule – after all, they may face the<br />

same situation one day.<br />

Simulator training is mandatory for<br />

the foremen of the German Lifeboat Institution.<br />

Every foreman has to repeat<br />

such a training every other year. The<br />

engineers of rescue cruisers take part<br />

whenever possible. This is important<br />

because the tasks on board ship can<br />

change and ideally every crew member<br />

should be able to take over practically<br />

any job; it is quite conceivable<br />

that the foreman leaves the task of radio<br />

coordination to another crew<br />

member because he is busy maneuvering<br />

the ship.<br />

In addition to the installation of an<br />

advanced training center for rescue<br />

services, the Caesar project has also<br />

involved a complete renewal of the<br />

cident prompted the navigation teacher<br />

Adolph Bermpohl, the lawyer Carl<br />

Kuhlmay, the journalist Arwed Eminghaus<br />

and the senior customs inspector<br />

Georg Breusing to publish an appeal<br />

for the establishment of a maritime rescue<br />

organization for Germany. Associations<br />

for the rescue of shipwrecked<br />

persons were thereupon founded in<br />

Emden, Hamburg, Bremerhaven and<br />

on the East Frisian Islands; in the year<br />

1865 the German Lifeboat Institution<br />

(DGzRS) was then established in Bremen<br />

where the organization still has<br />

its headquarters today.<br />

Rescue stations were established<br />

along the coast, equipped with rowing<br />

boats and launching devices to<br />

13<br />

The rescue cruiser Vormann-Steffens in operation.<br />

maritime rescue control center in Bremen<br />

from where rescue services in the<br />

German territory of the North Sea and<br />

Baltic Sea are coordinated; whenever<br />

a distress signal is transmitted, this is<br />

received directly by the control center<br />

of the German Lifeboat Institution.<br />

Technical processes have changed<br />

considerably in recent years. Distress<br />

messages are rarely received by VHF<br />

radiotelephony nowadays; instead of<br />

this, international regulations demand<br />

that ships of a certain size should have<br />

modern electronic distress systems<br />

on board. The alarm is triggered at the<br />

push of a button, within a matter of seconds<br />

rescue services will know not<br />

only the name of the ship in distress<br />

but also the type of emergency and<br />

the exact position. Even if the crew<br />

does not have the time to send a message,<br />

the automatic distress buoys<br />

that are activated as soon as a ship<br />

starts to sink will do the job. It is then<br />

up to the officers working at the MRCC<br />

in Bremen to assess just how serious<br />

the situation is and who can assist<br />

best in which way – systems from STN<br />

Atlas help them to do this.<br />

shoot the rescue lines on board ships<br />

in distress. Whereas maritime rescue<br />

services were nationalized in the German<br />

Democratic Republic after World<br />

War II, the principle of voluntary service<br />

introduced by the founding mem-<br />

DGzRS: A team<br />

driven by idealism<br />

bers of the German Lifeboat Institution<br />

was upheld in the Federal Republic<br />

of Germany. The institution still<br />

depends exclusively on donations –<br />

and by tradition, the German president<br />

has always been the patron of<br />

the Lifeboat Institution.


Newsline<br />

14<br />

DEFENCE TECHNOLOGY AND AESTHETICS – the images presented on these<br />

two pages of our Newsline magazine demonstrate that this combination is certainly not<br />

self-contradictory: sophisticated technical products interpreted by photographers on behalf<br />

of the Rheinmetall group. Conceived and created by a renowned German team of<br />

photographers, these motifs will be used by the Rheinmetall DeTec <strong>AG</strong> group and its subsidiaries<br />

for purposes of public relations and marketing, e.g. in the calender for the year<br />

2000, in product and image brochures, in annual reports and at international exhibitions.<br />

Newsline<br />

15


Newsline<br />

The M/S Nordnorge built in 1997 is the youngest of all “Hurtigruten” ships. The Nacos 45 navigation system from STN Atlas<br />

Marine Electronics GmbH on the Nordnorge contributes significantly towards greater maritime safety.<br />

STN Atlas Marine Electronics on the “Hurtigruten” line for over 40 years<br />

Safely through fjords with Nacos 45<br />

Tromsø. “The world’s most beautiful<br />

sea journey” – although this may sound<br />

exaggerated, anyone who has traveled<br />

along the Norwegian coast from<br />

Bergen to Kirkenes with the famous<br />

“Hurtigruten” line will confirm that the<br />

experience is unforgettable.<br />

For over a century, the “Hurtigruten”<br />

has served as the most reliable and<br />

economical link between the Port of<br />

Bergen in South Norway and the rugged<br />

north of the country. In the dark, snowcovered<br />

winter months it is often the<br />

only link between the north and south.<br />

When the sun disappears for weeks on<br />

end and heavy snowfall blocks the roads<br />

to the north of the Arctic Circle, the<br />

people of Hammerfest, Hønnigsvåg,<br />

Vardø and Kirkenes rely entirely on this<br />

route for their supplies and as the sole<br />

means of transport from the north. Although<br />

even further north than Alaska<br />

and North Canada, the northern region<br />

of Norway has one decisive geographic<br />

advantage: the Gulf Stream flows along<br />

the coastline, transporting warm water<br />

across the Atlantic between the Straits<br />

of Florida and New Foundland and thus<br />

preventing the waterways and ports<br />

from freezing.<br />

Today, eleven ships supply the towns<br />

and villages along the coast every day –<br />

and some have systems from STN Atlas<br />

Marine Electronics GmbH in Bremen on<br />

Safe operation through skerries, sounds and fjords – with Nacos navigation system.<br />

16<br />

board. One of these is the M/S Nordnorge,<br />

one of the latest generation of<br />

the “Hurtigruten” fleet, taken into service<br />

by Ofotens og Vesterallens Dampskipsselskap<br />

ASA in Narvik in 1997. The<br />

Nordnorge and its ten sister ships leave<br />

the Port of Bergen punctually at 22.30<br />

every evening in order to call at 64 ports<br />

at day and night during their eleven-day<br />

journey. The Nacos 45-2 navigation system<br />

from STN Atlas Marine Electronics<br />

helps the M/S Nordnorge to navigate<br />

through the numerous skerries and to<br />

travel through the narrow Raftsund and<br />

even the Trollfjord, much to the delight<br />

of the up to 691 passengers.<br />

The Nacos navigation system<br />

which was first installed on a ship in<br />

1985 and which is now in its third<br />

generation has brought essential<br />

improvements to ships traveling<br />

along the “Hurtigruten”. Only a hundred<br />

years ago, it would have been<br />

quite inconceivable to steer a ship<br />

into the land of darkness in the winter<br />

months. The shallows, rugged coastline,<br />

skerries, sounds and fjords<br />

were dangerous enough in daylight.<br />

And for many, many years, sailors<br />

depended entirely on their own<br />

skills and experience to survive the<br />

journey unscathed.<br />

(Continued on page 17)


(Continued from page 16)<br />

Nacos has made their job a lot easier.<br />

The combined radar and autopilot system<br />

from STN Atlas reliably shows the<br />

way along the coast, thus eliminating<br />

the danger of collisions with the rock<br />

which presents a metal globe to indicate<br />

that the Arctic Circle has been passed.<br />

Yet even today captains sailing<br />

along this beautiful route still have to<br />

use all their skills since varying weather<br />

conditions and encounters in the sounds<br />

always have to be expected.<br />

Not only modern ships are fitted with<br />

marine electronic equipment from STN<br />

Atlas. The so-called traditional vessels<br />

had and still have systems from the<br />

company on board. For example the<br />

M/S Harald Jarl – this vessel is totally<br />

different from the huge hotel ships like<br />

the M/S Nordnorge or the most recent<br />

of the eleven ships, the M/S Nordkapp.<br />

Life on board the small Harald Jarl is<br />

much more leisurely, especially in offpeak<br />

periods when there are only a few<br />

passengers on board.<br />

Given the chance to visit the bridge<br />

and ask the captain, one will learn that<br />

the M/S Harald Jarl that was taken into<br />

service by TFDS in Tromsø in 1960 was<br />

even then equipped with an important<br />

Newsline<br />

STN Atlas Marine Electronics on “Hurtigruten” line<br />

Nacos 45 guides ships<br />

safely through fjords<br />

bridge function by Atlas Werke <strong>AG</strong>, a<br />

predecessor of the present-day company<br />

STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH. Amongst<br />

other things, Atlas (with MaK Maschinenbau<br />

Kiel GmbH belonging to Hugo<br />

Stinnes Industrie und Handel GmbH<br />

at that time) delivered the control system<br />

for the foghorn. According to maritime<br />

regulations, a foghorn has to be<br />

able to produce three different signals.<br />

The Atlas system produces the correct<br />

signal automatically, simply at the push<br />

of a button. The Harald Jarl is also equipped<br />

with an Atlas system for shutting<br />

the bulkheads hydraulically. Fourteen<br />

different sections of the ship can be sealed<br />

water-tight either individually or together<br />

with this system. A display panel<br />

allows the crew to check which<br />

bulkheads are closed at any time.<br />

Anyone wanting to make the journey<br />

on one of the two traditional ships – the<br />

M/S Harald Jarl and the M/S Lofoten<br />

which is nearly the same age – should<br />

do so quickly. The Norwegian government<br />

intends to take these two ships<br />

out of service in the year 2001 at the<br />

latest. After that, the old systems from<br />

Atlas can probably only be admired as<br />

exhibits – in the “Hurtigruten” Museum<br />

in Stokmarknes.<br />

On their eventful, eleven-day journey along the Norwegian coast, the ships of the<br />

“Hurtigruten” also pass through the famous Raftsund. Thanks to the Nacos 45<br />

navigation system, this narrow seaway is no more difficult to navigate than the<br />

Trollfjord – and certainly an unforgettable experience for passengers.<br />

17<br />

Verzuolo/Neuss. Neuss-based Jagenberg<br />

Papiertechnik GmbH, a<br />

member of the Jagenberg group, has<br />

succeeded in booking its first orders<br />

for the newly launched Vari-Top II winder.<br />

The Lang-Papier group, a member<br />

of Finland’s Myllykoski group, is<br />

the world’s first papermaker to use<br />

Jagenberg’s newly developed winder<br />

technology in its production. Two<br />

such machines with working widths<br />

of 8,300 mm recently came on stream<br />

without a hitch at the Ettringen<br />

mill in Germany of Papierfabrik Gebr.<br />

Lang GmbH.<br />

Additionally and against tough<br />

competition Jagenberg was awarded<br />

a further order from the Italian papermaker<br />

Cartiere Burgo for likewise two<br />

of the new winders, with widths of<br />

9,800 mm. Destined for the Burgo<br />

mill at Verzuolo, Italy, these are the<br />

widest ever built by Jagenberg. Both<br />

orders are worth around DM 40 million.<br />

The Cartiere Burgo order is accompanied<br />

by an option for an additional<br />

Vari-Flex winder and several<br />

conversions worth around DM 10 million.<br />

Megaorders for<br />

the new winder<br />

In the development of the new generation<br />

of winders, special emphasis<br />

was placed on ergonomic and<br />

functional aspects as well as service<br />

and maintenance ease. Cost-efficiency<br />

considerations also played a role<br />

since the winders are designed for<br />

one-man operation.<br />

Vari-Top II is all-encapsulated for<br />

even lower running noise compared<br />

with its predecessor. The maximum<br />

operating speed is 2,800 m/min (almost<br />

170 km/h), the design speed as<br />

high as 3,200 m/min. During the very<br />

first days the Ettringen machine was<br />

already producing impeccable winding<br />

results at rates of 2,400 m/min.<br />

“The new Vari-Top II at Ettringen,”<br />

says Willy Heymanns, who as project<br />

manager handled the installation of<br />

the machine at Ettringen, “has meantime<br />

also converted paper from other<br />

production lines at Lang-Papier, with<br />

no problems with any of the grades.”<br />

Vari-Top II specs: Maximum paper roll<br />

weight is 10 t per winding station. The<br />

winder has fully automatic web threading<br />

with integrated winding start. At<br />

the unwinding end, a fully automatic<br />

tambour-butt unit produces readyfor-sale<br />

splices.


Newsline<br />

Series launch at KS Pistões Ltda. in Brazil<br />

Marketing success for<br />

an innovative module<br />

Nova Odessa/Porto Alegre. A good<br />

success for KS Pistões Ltda. in Nova<br />

Odessa, a member of the <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong> group: as the first<br />

company belonging to Rheinmetall’s<br />

Automotive sector, <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong>’s<br />

Brazilian subsidiary has won an order<br />

for an innovative module system. A<br />

major order covering a four year period<br />

was recently agreed with Maxion International<br />

(a joint venture with Navistar),<br />

a renowned diesel engine manufacturer<br />

with its headquarters in Porto<br />

Alegre situated in the south of Brazil.<br />

The module system which went into<br />

series production in early December<br />

1999 consists of pistons, bolts, retaining<br />

ring, ring assembly and – as a novelty<br />

– connecting rod.<br />

Americo Rajczy, commercial director<br />

of KS Pistões Ltda. since October 1997,<br />

rates this order as a further example of<br />

the increasing globalization of business:<br />

“The order was won through the<br />

cooperation with Zoellner and the <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

parent company in Neckarsulm.<br />

The blank for the connecting<br />

rod is procured from Japan while the<br />

other detail parts come from the United<br />

States. The connecting rod is processed<br />

in Germany and at KS Pistões<br />

is then finally assembled to the module<br />

together with the pistons produced<br />

here and the other components.” The<br />

complete system is part of the 7.3 l V8<br />

Smart: the world’s<br />

smallest piston<br />

Neckarsulm. Above all, the Smart reflects<br />

the spirit of a new generation.<br />

And this has been done with a clever<br />

slogan: small to the maximum. The<br />

new pistons of the small turbo engines<br />

with their high power densities –<br />

both in spark ignition and in diesel<br />

engines – come from <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

and give the avant-gardist “city sprinter”<br />

the necessary power. In securing<br />

this series-production order and as<br />

the first and also the only developer of<br />

these pistons, KS <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

GmbH has once again demonstrated<br />

engines built by Maxion-Navistar<br />

which are used for the famous Ford<br />

trucks in the USA.<br />

As to the Ford Motor Company: this<br />

car maker from Detroit is also one of<br />

KS Pistões’ customers for another project.<br />

Working in close cooperation<br />

with the Ford customer team in Neckarsulm,<br />

KS Pistões recently won the<br />

order as the exclusive supplier of pistons<br />

to Ford-Brazil for the 1.0 l and<br />

1.6 l HCS/SOHC engines developed by<br />

Ford, Cologne, specifically for the Brazilian<br />

market. This order was won<br />

against strong competition. Rajczy remarks<br />

that with this order “a technology<br />

developed especially by <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

will now be implemented in<br />

production for the first time in Brazil.<br />

We will be delivering the pistons with<br />

a hard anodic coating of the ring groove.<br />

The end product will be installed<br />

in Ford’s Ka, Fiesta and Escort models.<br />

Over and beyond traditional business<br />

areas, experts from KS Pistões Ltda.<br />

have repeatedly demonstrated<br />

that know-how, good ideas and flexibility<br />

are excellent business attributes<br />

both inside and outside the company.<br />

The most recent example is a special<br />

measurement system originally developed<br />

for commercial reasons – for<br />

which the French sister company Société<br />

Mosellane de Méchanique S.A.<br />

its capabilities as a supplier also for<br />

small diesel engines. Incidentally, the<br />

system used in the Smart is the smallest<br />

diesel piston in the world.<br />

The diesel piston for the Smart is<br />

manufactured at Metal Usti in the<br />

Czech Republic. <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong> delivers<br />

the pistons as the system supplier<br />

with piston rings and bolts. In<br />

the words of Emmerich Ottliczky, diesel<br />

piston design manager for the car<br />

sector: “This re-entry into the diesel<br />

engine sector of DaimlerChrysler has<br />

given us very promising prospects for<br />

the future. Based on the planned follow-on<br />

order, DaimlerChrysler has<br />

confirmed our competence in the<br />

field of diesel engines. Only recently<br />

18<br />

KS Pistões Ltda. (Nova Odessa) recently<br />

started delivering this innovative<br />

module system to the diesel engine<br />

manufacturer Maxion International in<br />

Porto Alegre.<br />

(SMP) in Thionville has expressed a<br />

strong interest. Americo Rajczy reports<br />

that the first of two automatic<br />

control cells developed by the company<br />

was delivered to SMP in France<br />

in the summer of 1999. These systems<br />

are used in an integrated control/assembly<br />

unit for diesel pistons<br />

with robotic control.<br />

The first of these automatic control<br />

cells was taken into operation at KS Pistões<br />

three years ago and has been<br />

the subject of ongoing development<br />

since then. Particular importance has<br />

been attached to using standard parts<br />

(e.g. components, sensors). Up to 24<br />

important technical characteristics of<br />

a piston can be checked with the control<br />

cells. All measurement data are<br />

stored and evaluated statistically.<br />

Quality manager Günther Salaar emphasizes<br />

that these measurement<br />

cells have contributed significantly towards<br />

productivity improvements relating<br />

to the quality control of pistons<br />

and have therefore also improved<br />

quality assurance as a whole.<br />

Delighted about the success of the<br />

world’s smallest diesel piston used in the<br />

Smart: design engineer Karl Dieffenbach<br />

(l) and Emmerich Ottliczky, diesel piston<br />

design manager for the car sector.<br />

we passed the development and process<br />

audit with excellent marks. This<br />

result speaks for itself.”


Rebuilds to include<br />

paper machines<br />

Enfield. Alongside the Jagenberg<br />

Papiertechnik product range, the<br />

range of systems of the other Jagenberg<br />

subsidiaries is also marketed<br />

from the Enfield location for the<br />

North American market. This applies<br />

equally to Jagenberg Diana GmbH<br />

and WPM Woschnik + Partner Maschinenbau<br />

GmbH, which service<br />

North America with a 15-strong team.<br />

The Jagenberg foil and film division<br />

includes the product groups of<br />

Kampf, Lemo and Bachofen + Meier<br />

<strong>AG</strong> (B<strong>MB</strong>) and is represented by the<br />

Kampf Machinery Division (headed<br />

by Peter Hoelzel), the Lemo Machinery<br />

Division (since 1 October 1999 –<br />

Newsline<br />

Reorientation of Jagenberg Inc.: focus on the converting segment<br />

More muscle for the US market<br />

Enfield/Neuss. Market focus on both<br />

traditional and new terrain: Jagenberg<br />

Inc., the US subsidiary of Jagenberg <strong>AG</strong><br />

founded in March 1979 and based in<br />

Enfield, Connecticut, is restructuring<br />

and strengthening its presence and activities<br />

in the North American paper and<br />

board industry. This reorientation of the<br />

company, which currently employs<br />

some 170 people, involves a much<br />

greater focus on the converting market,<br />

intensification of activities in the rebuild<br />

sector – which got under way<br />

some time ago – and a fundamental<br />

reorientation of sales, which in future<br />

will nurture contacts with North American<br />

customers in the form of a complete<br />

service “from a single source”.<br />

With a reputation built up over decades<br />

in the paper finishing and converting<br />

sector – evidence of which can<br />

be seen in well over 3000 winders sold<br />

around the world – Jagenberg Inc. will in<br />

future focus very specifically on the<br />

North American converting market. This<br />

sector – as in other regions of the global<br />

market – is made up of predominantly<br />

small and medium-sized firms, which<br />

convert rolls of paper or board bought in<br />

from the (large) paper mills by coating,<br />

slitting to diameter or width, or sheeting.<br />

Volker Rose, since the beginning of<br />

this year Chief Executive Officer and President<br />

of Jagenberg Inc.: “To this branch<br />

of industry, which is renowned for its<br />

great flexibility, for example because it<br />

also produces smaller batch sizes, we<br />

are now offering in the form of modifications<br />

of the proven Vari-Flex S winder<br />

and Star and Sprint sheeters, products<br />

that are tailored to its own specific<br />

needs.”<br />

While these tailormade products<br />

meet the special demands of the converter<br />

by offering, for example, an optimal<br />

price-performance ratio and comparatively<br />

simple operation and handling,<br />

they also satisfy every requirement<br />

for sophisticated Jagenberg technology.<br />

Rose: “This aspect incidentally gives us<br />

major competitive edge: we have transferred<br />

the experience and technical expertise<br />

gained over many decades – for<br />

example in the winding technology sector<br />

– to smaller machines. And it is from<br />

this that the customers in the converting<br />

market can profit directly.” This US<br />

market segment will be serviced by<br />

sales manager Erin Ernie and her colleague<br />

Werner Reitter; both will also be responsible<br />

in future for the sale of smaller<br />

winders and sheeters (with a working<br />

width of up to three metres) in North<br />

America.<br />

The US subsidiary of the Neuss-based<br />

machine builder will also significantly<br />

step up its activities in the rebuild sector.<br />

Here, the highly motivated and<br />

competent team of the newly established<br />

Rebuild Division headed by Bob<br />

Mosebach is now on hand with suitable<br />

Frank Balsensiefer)<br />

and B<strong>MB</strong><br />

sales manager<br />

David Netz.<br />

As for Basagoitia<br />

S.A. (Tolosa),<br />

which became<br />

part of the<br />

Jagenberg group<br />

at the beginning<br />

of this year, En- Volker Rose<br />

field boss Volker Rose reports that<br />

the Spanish company will be incorporated<br />

fully in US sales activities in<br />

future: “This will also put us in a position<br />

in the future to offer rebuilds for<br />

paper machines with smaller working<br />

widths.” A strategic step into a<br />

new market segment with the promise<br />

of additional business for Jagenberg<br />

Inc.<br />

19<br />

Currently preparing for their new task<br />

as sales managers with Jagenberg Inc.<br />

at the Neuss-based machine builder’s<br />

headquarters are Chris Himmelsbach<br />

(2nd from right), Max Golter (right), Fabian<br />

Pesenti (2nd from left) and Jeff<br />

Brown (centre), pictured here with<br />

Michael Balzer, responsible in future<br />

for sales coordination at Jagenberg Inc.<br />

in Enfield. The five were photographed<br />

on a Synchro sheeter.<br />

system components and a wealth of<br />

process expertise to assist US customers<br />

improve the productivity of (older)<br />

machines or enhance the quality of<br />

their end products. Rose: “With the<br />

right rebuild measures, which we are offering<br />

both for Jagenberg and other<br />

makes of machine, customers can, for<br />

example, increase the operating speed<br />

of their winder, reduce slitter or roll<br />

change times, or wind larger rolls without<br />

a flaw.”<br />

The 48-year-old President of Jagenberg<br />

Inc. also expects additional<br />

strength to be gained from the restructuring<br />

of sales for the “traditional”<br />

customers. In future, the North American<br />

paper industry will be divided into<br />

six – as opposed to the previous four –<br />

areas, each of which will be serviced by<br />

a separate sales manager. Rose: “Each<br />

of the six sales specialists is responsible<br />

for an average of 80 to 90 paper<br />

mills. He is the first contact person for<br />

his region and responsible for all aspects<br />

of business: alongside the actual products<br />

– winders, coaters and sheeters –<br />

he will also play an active role in rebuild<br />

projects, service and spares business.”<br />

In other words, the full customer service<br />

truly “from a single source”.


Distinguished with the Good Design<br />

Award of the renowned Chicago Athenaeum:<br />

the “modul 5000”.<br />

Good Design Award<br />

for “modul 5000”<br />

Chicago/Waldeck. Mauser Office<br />

GmbH in Waldeck is justifiably delighted:<br />

the office furniture maker has received<br />

another very special distinction for<br />

its design. After all, the company has<br />

won the Good Design Award of the Chicago<br />

Athenaeum, Museum of Architecture<br />

and Design. The institution which is<br />

one of the oldest and most highly acknowledged<br />

organs in the history of modern<br />

product design first presented the<br />

coveted Good Design Award back in<br />

1950. The initiator at that time was Edgar<br />

J. Kaufmann in cooperation with further<br />

famous pioneers of American product<br />

design like Eero Saarinen, Charles and<br />

Ray Earnes, Alexander Girard, George<br />

Nelson, Florence Knoll, Harry Bretola,<br />

Finn Juhl and Russel Wright.<br />

Over two thousand products from 48<br />

different countries – ranging from an<br />

aircraft to a paper clip – took part in the<br />

competition. Only the very best in the<br />

world made the top hundred, one of<br />

these being the “modul 5000”, the<br />

most recent desk system design from<br />

Mauser Office. This is hardly surprising<br />

since this latest success story is the result<br />

of the proven cooperation with the<br />

renowned designer Peter Maly. The<br />

good feeling for new trends in the office<br />

sector reflected by the design and also<br />

the material and ergonomics of the<br />

“modul 5000” were just right and therefore<br />

also convinced the jury in Chicago.<br />

The “modul 5000” desk system<br />

follows a tradition of numerous other<br />

design awards recently won by Mauser<br />

Office – including the so-called Red<br />

Point prize of the Design Center of North<br />

Rhine-Westphalia (1997) and the IF<br />

Design Award of the Industrial Forum<br />

Hanover at the CeBit exhibition (1998)<br />

for the cupboard and wall system “sistemare”<br />

created by the designer Michele<br />

de Lucchi from Milan.<br />

Newsline<br />

Test systems also used for civil applications<br />

When vandalism is<br />

the object of testing<br />

Unterlüß. The environmental test<br />

systems of Rheinmetall W & M GmbH<br />

that were primarily used for military<br />

projects in the past are increasingly<br />

being used for civil products, especially<br />

those coming from the automotive<br />

supplier industry. One such company<br />

is Continental <strong>AG</strong>, the well-known<br />

manufacturer of tires, which has<br />

tested its shock absorber assemblies<br />

at different temperatures. The companies<br />

Johnson Controls Inc. (Burscheid)<br />

and Becker Group Europe<br />

(Grefrath) have performed long-term<br />

temperature tests on instrument holders<br />

and electronic components.<br />

Preh-Werke of the Rheinmetall group<br />

examined the effects of dew on electronic<br />

assemblies for BMW. Volkswagen<br />

<strong>AG</strong> has likewise used the facilities<br />

at Unterlüß to test the de-icing<br />

and heating of windscreens for its<br />

Sharan and Caravelle vehicles.<br />

Yet the test facilities are also of interest<br />

to a far wider group of customers.<br />

The company IMPAC (Hamburg) has<br />

had its flexible tube systems for oil<br />

drilling rigs tested. Environmental experts<br />

from Unterlüß have tested telephone<br />

components for Elmeg GmbH<br />

& Co. KG from Lehrte. The suitability of<br />

electronic assemblies from Baker<br />

Hughes (Celle) for mining applications<br />

has been tested<br />

and steel cables<br />

as well as cable<br />

loops from Spanset<br />

GmbH & Co.<br />

KG (Übach-Palenberg)<br />

have also<br />

been examined.<br />

The test series<br />

conducted by<br />

Höft & Wessel<br />

from Hanover for<br />

Deutsche Bahn<br />

<strong>AG</strong> was also very<br />

interesting: here,<br />

the tests concerned<br />

the new<br />

ticket vending<br />

machines which<br />

are now located<br />

at practically every<br />

railway station.<br />

20<br />

Wolfgang Höfer who is responsible<br />

for planning and coordinating test facilities<br />

at Rheinmetall W & M GmbH<br />

commented on the test results: “Under<br />

high humidity and temperature<br />

conditions, the ink tended to smear<br />

on the tickets. The tickets even stuck<br />

together. The PC integrated in the<br />

ticket machines did not withstand<br />

the shock test serving to simulate<br />

vandalism at railway stations.” The<br />

tests helped to reveal inherent deficiencies<br />

which were then remedied.<br />

Further clients who have benefited<br />

from the environmental testing facilities<br />

at Unterlüß are the Rheinmetall<br />

companies Nico Pyrotechnik, Silberhütte<br />

and STN Atlas Elektronik. Even<br />

customers from Great Britain have<br />

used the test systems: the Salisburybased<br />

company Dera and Primetake<br />

from Fiscaton have had special products<br />

tested.<br />

It goes without saying that early<br />

tests on prototypes in the test systems<br />

offer distinct advantages for<br />

manufacturers. Defects which would<br />

have serious repercussions in seriesproduction<br />

are detected at an early<br />

stage. This saves money and reduces<br />

the development risk. In addition,<br />

the test conditions can be reproduced<br />

at any time.<br />

A lot depends on their judgement: Frank Ullrich (r), a former<br />

world champion and the present coach of the German<br />

men’s biathlon team, Marian Riedel (l) as well as Sandro<br />

Brislinger (marksmanship) evaluate the hit accuracy of rifles<br />

fired under extremely cold conditions. These three biathlon<br />

experts are members of the sports promotion<br />

group of the German Army in Oberhof (Thuringia).


Newsline<br />

German biathlon team tests sports rifles in Unterlüß<br />

Sporting order for<br />

environmental experts<br />

Oberhof/Unterlüß. It is minus 22 degrees<br />

Celsius and late September<br />

1999 in Unterlüß. A shot is heard. The<br />

bullet goes straight through the paper<br />

disk, leaving a visible hole. This process<br />

is repeated five times. Having<br />

checked the results, Frank Ullrich, the<br />

coach of the German<br />

men’s biathlon<br />

team is satisfied<br />

since all five<br />

shots hit the same<br />

hole.<br />

September and<br />

freezing temperatures?<br />

Paper disks<br />

and biathlon? How<br />

does this add up?<br />

We are at the tem-<br />

Wolfgang Höfer<br />

perature test facility (TVA) of Rheinmetall<br />

W & M GmbH. The TVA is used to<br />

test products in two test chambers at<br />

temperatures between minus 46 degrees<br />

Celsius and plus 85 degrees Celsius<br />

at a humidity of between 10 and<br />

95 percent. The team headed by TVA<br />

manager Gerhard<br />

Klocke, his deputy<br />

Adrian Müller and<br />

switching controller<br />

Harald<br />

Lembrecht has been<br />

given a sporting<br />

order on a cold winters<br />

day. The coach<br />

of the German biathletesistesting<br />

rifles to be used in<br />

competitions.<br />

Frank Ullrich, the<br />

German men’s<br />

coach and Gerhard<br />

Müssiggang, the<br />

coach of the women’s<br />

team, have<br />

brought some<br />

twenty different rifles<br />

with them. With<br />

Stephan Hoss and<br />

Sandro Brisling, responsible for skiing<br />

and marksmanship, they are testing<br />

their sports rifles at temperatures between<br />

minus 22 and 20 degrees Celsius<br />

before the winter sports season<br />

starts. Each rifle fires five shots at the<br />

target from a distance of 50 meters.<br />

The results are registered and recorded<br />

on video. Wolfgang Höfer, team<br />

leader and responsible for planning<br />

and coordination of the environmental<br />

testing facilities at W & M explains the<br />

background: “The biathletes carried<br />

out these tests to find the best possible<br />

rifle in combination with the most<br />

suitable ammunition at extremely cold<br />

temperatures”:<br />

Low temperatures change the properties<br />

of a rifle. Loads occurring in the<br />

rifle can deform the barrel of the weapon.<br />

In addition, sub-zero temperatures<br />

can have an effect on the ammunition<br />

and on the way in which this is loaded<br />

into the barrel. Ullrich explains:<br />

“To achieve ideal results in a competition,<br />

the rifles must be tailored to low<br />

temperatures. And then there are different<br />

types of ammunition, each of<br />

which has different properties affecting<br />

the accuracy of firing. The best<br />

possible result is obtained if five shots<br />

in succession hit the same hole.<br />

Sandro Brislinger (l), expert marksman, and Marian Riedel, skiing specialist, testing the<br />

rifles of the German men’s biathlon team at minus 22 degrees Celsius in a climatic test<br />

chamber at Unterlüß. The ammunition is also tested under these sub-zero conditions.<br />

The road towards success has not<br />

been easy. Before the coaches started<br />

testing their rifles at Rheinmetall W &<br />

M in Unterlüß, the weapons were tested<br />

in refrigeration chambers in Suhl.<br />

When this system was closed down,<br />

21<br />

Temperature check: Adrian Müller (l),<br />

deputy manager of the temperature test<br />

system, and switching controller Harald<br />

Lembrecht at the electronic control system<br />

for the two climatic test chambers.<br />

they had to find an alternative quickly<br />

as the world championship was not far<br />

away. Ullrich who works with the<br />

sports team of the German Army in<br />

Oberhof heard of Rheinmetall’s temperature<br />

testing facility. “We were incredibly<br />

lucky to have been given this<br />

opportunity since these low-temperature<br />

tests are extremely important to<br />

us. Besides, we were relieved that the<br />

experts in Unterlüß were willing to<br />

help us so quickly.”<br />

The team found ideal rooms and test<br />

conditions in Unterlüß. The sportsmen<br />

paid three two-day visits to the Rheinmetall<br />

site in Lower Saxony during the<br />

last three months<br />

to conduct a series<br />

of tests. Ullrich notes<br />

that “these<br />

tests were very useful<br />

and helped to<br />

improve the hit accuracyconsiderably.<br />

During the last<br />

biathlon world<br />

championship held<br />

in Kontiolathi (Finland)<br />

in 1998, Frank<br />

Luck won a gold<br />

medal for the sprint<br />

and Ricco Groß was<br />

equally successful.<br />

The low-temperature<br />

tests conducted<br />

at the TVA contributed<br />

towards this<br />

success.”<br />

Looking ahead,<br />

Ullrich points out that the next world<br />

championship in Oslo will take place<br />

in February 2000. Who knows,<br />

perhaps the low-temperature tests<br />

performed in Unterlüß will tip the scales<br />

in favor of the biathletes.


<strong>Pierburg</strong> <strong>AG</strong>, a member of the<br />

<strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong> <strong>Pierburg</strong> group,<br />

has been producing intake manifolds<br />

since the early nineties. With<br />

its innovative and advanced technical<br />

products, the Neuss-based automotive<br />

supplier has joined the ranks<br />

of the world’s most renowned suppliers.<br />

This is also underlined by some<br />

two dozen projects performed<br />

with car makers operating throughout<br />

the world.<br />

Here are some details on the technologies<br />

involved: the torque yield<br />

and performance of an engine also<br />

depend on the design of the intake<br />

manifold. Engines with short intake<br />

manifolds and large cross-sections<br />

only produce maximum power at<br />

high speeds. Long intake manifolds<br />

are, however, most efficient at low<br />

speed ranges. The particular advan-<br />

Newsline<br />

Magnesium intake manifold for Audi’s flagship<br />

Concepts as formula for success<br />

Neuss. “The intake manifold is the<br />

connection between the throttle body<br />

and cylinder. The throttle body opens<br />

at the engine as soon as the accelerator<br />

is stepped on. Air enters and then<br />

reaches the cylinder via the intake<br />

manifold. The greater the pressure on<br />

the accelerator, the greater the supply<br />

of air to the cylinder so that the car<br />

gains speed.” This is the somewhat<br />

brief but very apt description of the<br />

function of one of the company’s most<br />

important products – the intake manifold<br />

– by Karl Schmidt, manager of the<br />

air supply systems development department<br />

at <strong>Pierburg</strong> <strong>AG</strong> in Neuss.<br />

The success story of this young product<br />

– for which preparatory work started<br />

only ten years ago – is extensive. To<br />

give just some highlights: series production<br />

of the first aluminum variable<br />

intake manifold for the V6 engine of<br />

the Audi 100 was launched in 1991. This<br />

series was extremely beneficial as it allowed<br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong>’s specialists to gain experience<br />

in areas such as the production<br />

sector, which would then secure<br />

the future of the company in the longterm.<br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong> presented its first variable<br />

intake manifold made from magnesium<br />

in 1995; this went into series-production<br />

only one year later. More than<br />

twenty different intake manifold systems<br />

have been developed for com-<br />

A successful team presents its work (from l to r): project manager Hans-Jürgen Ritter,<br />

department head Hans-Ulrich Kühnel, design engineer Uwe Kontschack and<br />

production engineer/prototyping manager Lars Baumeister with the die-cast magnesium<br />

variable intake manifold with three-length design for the Audi V8 engine.<br />

panies like VW, Audi, Opel and<br />

DaimlerChrysler since production of<br />

the intake manifold first got under way.<br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong> recently won Audi’s quality<br />

prize for a magnesium die-cast variable<br />

intake manifold with three-length<br />

design. This is integrated in the V8 engine<br />

used in Audi A6 and Audi A8 cars.<br />

The die-casting process allows extremely<br />

thin wall thicknesses of only 1.5<br />

tage of variable intake manifolds is<br />

that switching elements make it possible<br />

to switch over automatically<br />

between short and long manifold<br />

lengths, depending on the speed<br />

and load range. The torque behavior<br />

can therefore be influenced. At lower<br />

A supplier known<br />

worldwide<br />

speeds, a very high torque exists and<br />

a good performance is also achieved<br />

at high speeds. Compared to twolength<br />

designs, the three-length variant<br />

offers a greater speed range with<br />

optimum torque behavior. Intake<br />

manifolds with infinitely variable intake<br />

channel lengths will be the<br />

trend for the future.<br />

22<br />

mm for the V8 intake manifold so that,<br />

in conjunction with the magnesium<br />

used, the intake manifold weighs a<br />

mere 7.12 kg. Aluminum intake manifolds<br />

can be twice as heavy. Karl<br />

Schmidt explains that “magnesium is<br />

an extremely light metal weighing only<br />

1.8 kg per liter. By contrast, aluminum<br />

still weighs 2.7 kg.”<br />

The three-length design of the intake<br />

manifold for the Audi V8 engine is an<br />

absolute novelty. Lars Baumeister,<br />

production engineer and prototyping<br />

manager as well as support engineer<br />

for assembly and metering systems,<br />

was involved in the development of<br />

the production concept for the intake<br />

manifold. He highlights the advantages<br />

of the new intake manifold for Audi:<br />

“The three-length design reaches a<br />

high torque at low speeds. This reduces<br />

fuel consumption even further. In<br />

addition, pollutant emission values<br />

are cut back.”<br />

Another important reason for winning<br />

the Audi quality prize – besides<br />

the excellent technology of the intake<br />

manifold – was the very short period<br />

needed to develop the product. The<br />

concept definition was made in January<br />

1997 and series production already<br />

got started in mid 1998. This was<br />

a development period of only one and<br />

(Continued on page 23)


Newsline<br />

Elegant: the Audi A8, equipped with a magnesium variable intake manifold from<br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong>, is the largest limousine produced by the car maker from Neckarsulm.<br />

Magnesium intake manifold for Audi’s flagship<br />

Concepts as formula ...<br />

(Continued from page 22)<br />

a half years. Normally such a process<br />

takes at least a year longer. This success<br />

was also helped<br />

by the very<br />

positive cooperation<br />

between development<br />

experts at<br />

Neuss and productionspecialists<br />

from the Nettetal<br />

plant.<br />

Karl Schmidt had<br />

an excellent team<br />

athisdisposalin<br />

Karl Schmidt<br />

Neuss, with Hans-Ulrich Kühnel as the<br />

manager of the intake manifold department,<br />

Hans-Jürgen Ritter, project<br />

manager for the intake manifold of the<br />

V8 engine, the design engineer Uwe<br />

Kontschack and Manfred Steiner who<br />

carried out engine tests and performance<br />

measurements at <strong>Pierburg</strong>’s<br />

engine test department.<br />

This team was<br />

backed by qualified<br />

productionspecialists<br />

from Nettetal:production<br />

foreman<br />

Hans-<br />

Gerd Delißen<br />

who had acted<br />

as prototyping manager<br />

during the development phase of<br />

the Audi intake manifold (and has now<br />

retired), Lars Baumeister and Robert<br />

Freudenberg in Nettetal responsible<br />

for quality assurance in production<br />

complemented the team. Special emphasis<br />

was laid on a strategy of simultaneous<br />

engineering, with the design<br />

office, tool manufacture by the company<br />

Schaufler and own production<br />

activities in Nettetal taking place practically<br />

simultaneously. For instance,<br />

the production department often gave<br />

the intake manifold department in<br />

Neuss recommendations on specific<br />

production aspects to make certain<br />

that the product could actually be produced<br />

economically at a later stage.<br />

Development and production of the<br />

Audi intake manifold benefited significantly<br />

from experience gained in earlier<br />

projects. In the words of Baumeister:<br />

“<strong>Pierburg</strong> is currently the systems leader<br />

in the field of magnesium intake<br />

manifolds. We have managed to produce<br />

an intake manifold of high density<br />

while keeping the wall thickness small.<br />

It is unlikely that any of our competitors<br />

will be able to achieve this since<br />

they lack the production<br />

experience<br />

with magnesium.”<br />

Nearly<br />

20,000 V8<br />

intake manifolds<br />

have<br />

been delivered<br />

to date.<br />

Audi certainly appears to<br />

be more than satisfied with<br />

the quality of <strong>Pierburg</strong>’s products<br />

since the successor of the V8 intake<br />

manifold, the Audi-S intake manifold, is<br />

already being manufactured.<br />

23<br />

AT<strong>AG</strong> investment<br />

Basis for<br />

growth<br />

Neckarsulm. KS Aluminium-Technologie<br />

<strong>AG</strong> (AT<strong>AG</strong>) has taken another important<br />

step towards becoming one of<br />

the world’s most advanced aluminum<br />

foundries. The topping-out ceremony<br />

for the new foundry building was celebrated<br />

in one of the production halls<br />

on 22 November 1999. Persons attending<br />

this ceremony included Volker<br />

Blust, the mayor of Neckarsulm, Jochen<br />

Hahn and Dr. Peter Neu, both<br />

members of the executive board of KS<br />

Aluminium-Technologie <strong>AG</strong> and Georg<br />

Liebler, member of the executive board<br />

of <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong> <strong>Pierburg</strong> <strong>AG</strong>.<br />

The company has spent approx. 100<br />

million German marks on this project,<br />

this being the biggest investment ever<br />

made by KS Aluminium-Technologie <strong>AG</strong>.<br />

The expansion of production capacities<br />

will create about 150 new jobs at AT<strong>AG</strong><br />

which currently has 610 employees.<br />

Planning activities for the new lowpressure<br />

foundry with adjacent processing<br />

building got under way in January<br />

1998. Expansion of the production<br />

area then commenced in December<br />

1998. Old buildings were torn<br />

down and replaced by new, light halls.<br />

Construction work should be completed<br />

by March 2000.<br />

A building area of some 9,000 square<br />

meters will be available for the new,<br />

advanced smelting plant as well as the<br />

low-pressure foundry with up to 18 casting<br />

cells. Engine blocks for BMW, VW<br />

and Porsche will largely be produced<br />

in the modern, two-storey halls.<br />

With its new low-pressure foundry, KS<br />

Aluminium-Technologie <strong>AG</strong> has once<br />

again set new standards for business in<br />

the region – a fact which was emphasized<br />

by the mayor of Neckarsulm, Volker<br />

Blust (front l) during the topping-out<br />

ceremony on 22 November 1999.


Newsline<br />

ETC-I series successfully launched in Berlin<br />

Flexibility is trumps<br />

with new generation<br />

Berlin. Successful launch of ETC-I series<br />

production: manufacture of the innovative<br />

electronic throttle control ETC<br />

(drive-by-wire) recently got under way<br />

at the Berlin plant of the <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong> group. Production<br />

work is being carried out for three orders<br />

from internationally renowned<br />

carmakers and automotive suppliers.<br />

All in all, some 15 million German<br />

marks have so far been invested in the<br />

plant for this trend-setting project involving<br />

advanced production technologies.<br />

ETC-I systems which will be a<br />

significant source of turnover for <strong>Pierburg</strong>’s<br />

Berlin plant in the coming years<br />

are used in conjunction with air supply<br />

systems and help to reduce fuel consumption<br />

and pollutant emission values<br />

very substantially.<br />

The commencement of series production<br />

of the ETC-I drive-by-wire system incorporating<br />

electro-motive control over<br />

the entire adjustment range has been<br />

accompanied by the successful introduction<br />

of a new generation of motorized<br />

throttle bodies on the market.<br />

These systems will<br />

constitute essential<br />

elements of the<br />

business activities<br />

of the <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong><br />

group in this product<br />

segment in<br />

the years to come.<br />

Here are some<br />

details on the system<br />

technology:<br />

the throttle is no<br />

longer controlled<br />

by a (conventional)<br />

control cable<br />

but solely by electromotive<br />

power. The respective position<br />

of the throttle is regulated electronically<br />

via the motor control unit; a<br />

sensor at the accelerator picks up the<br />

selected power and transmits this to<br />

the control unit (so-called drive-by-wire).<br />

This then determines the optimum<br />

angle of the throttle over the entire adjustment<br />

range – from idle to full power.<br />

The innovative ETC-I system therefore<br />

combines all the possibilities of<br />

influencing air mass flow in one component,<br />

thereby assuring lower fuel<br />

consumption and pollutant emission<br />

levels. In addition, the ETC-I allows certain<br />

comfort (e.g. speed control) and<br />

safety functions (e.g. anti-slip control)<br />

when required.<br />

The launch of this new system is an<br />

important move into the future for <strong>Pierburg</strong>’s<br />

Berlin plant with 750 employees<br />

and an operational performance of<br />

about 156 million marks in 1998.<br />

Michael Klose – plant manager since<br />

November last year – rates this new<br />

product group as an important basis<br />

for business success in the future:<br />

“Quantities will rise distinctly above<br />

one million units already next year. As<br />

things stand, ETC-I systems will be the<br />

most important product group at the site<br />

in the next years.” An outlook with a<br />

sound background: besides the series<br />

orders already secured from General<br />

Motors, Delphi and Siemens which are<br />

now in production, further companies<br />

have already placed firm orders and/or<br />

shown a strong interest in the products.<br />

ETC-I project manager Dipl.-Ing. Reinhard Mende (l) and<br />

plant manager Michael Klose with the new electronic driveby-wire<br />

system recently launched at <strong>Pierburg</strong>’s Berlin plant.<br />

In line with the innovative character<br />

of the new product, production facilities<br />

and systems used to manufacture<br />

the new drive-by-wire system are likewise<br />

up to the very latest state-of-theart.<br />

So far, the company has invested<br />

approximately 15 million marks into<br />

this project which will naturally also<br />

help to secure the site in the long<br />

term. Klose points out that “amongst<br />

other things, a new production con-<br />

24<br />

Marko Bleinagel with the most recent<br />

series-product from <strong>Pierburg</strong>’s Berlin<br />

plant: the electronic drive-by-wire system.<br />

The 26 year-old who has a master’s<br />

diploma in electrical engineering<br />

and recently qualified as industrial<br />

management expert is responsible<br />

for the operation of the advanced ETC-I<br />

assembly line.<br />

cept has been developed, warranting<br />

maximum production flexibility in all<br />

areas from casting to mechanical production<br />

and ultimately through to final<br />

assembly.” This has led to a sharp reduction<br />

in buffer phases, extremely<br />

short routes and minimum flow times.<br />

ETC-I project manager Reinhard Mende,<br />

who already accompanied the successful<br />

launch of other ETC series variants<br />

as the responsible planning engineer<br />

in the last years, explains the<br />

details: “To give an example: we use a<br />

highly flexible modular production system<br />

consisting of six production cells<br />

and a central robotic transport system<br />

for mechanical processing. This Flexline<br />

system delivered by Chiron-Werke<br />

GmbH & Co. KG allows three housing<br />

variants to be processed simultaneously<br />

in a ‘chaotic’ sequence; the entire<br />

mechanical processing stage is carried<br />

out from five sides in one fixture.”<br />

The new assembly line for the ETC-I<br />

systems is equally flexible. In the words<br />

of Mende: “In the modular assembly line<br />

where eleven of the fourteen assembly<br />

stations operate automatically,<br />

three different ETC-I types can likewise<br />

be manufactured simultaneously in any<br />

chaotic sequence without requiring additional<br />

set-up times.” This system allows<br />

the plant to react very flexibly to the<br />

requirements of the customer. Another<br />

technical highlight in production is the<br />

assembly station where the tooth-segment<br />

is welded by laser technology.


Propulsion comes<br />

from Nitrochemie<br />

Wimmis. PMP (Pretoria Metal Pressings,<br />

a division of Denel Ltd.) in Pretoria,<br />

South Africa has chosen Nitrochemie<br />

Wimmis <strong>AG</strong> (Wimmis) as its<br />

development partner for the propulsion<br />

system in connection with the new<br />

armored personnel carrier 2000 to be<br />

procured by the Swiss Army. Besides<br />

other national and international suppliers,<br />

PMP has tendered a full-caliber<br />

target practice tracer for the new 30<br />

Newsline<br />

The new generation of mobile Satcom terminals<br />

Simply independent with NetLink<br />

Bremen. With its NetLink, STN Atlas<br />

Elektronik, Bremen, is presenting a<br />

new generation of Satcom terminals.<br />

Used in connection with the new Inmarsat<br />

service Global Area Network,<br />

NetLink offers an extremely mobile<br />

solution for fast and reliable satellite<br />

communication with all of the benefits<br />

of an ISDN connection.<br />

The compact Satcom terminal can<br />

be utilized under a whole range of<br />

different environmental and geographical<br />

conditions. The small and<br />

light-weight yet also very stable and<br />

robust NetLink with a detachable integrated<br />

antenna offers maximum<br />

mobility for unusual and extreme applications:<br />

for instance, the businessman<br />

traveling through South America<br />

is given direct access to data and<br />

information on the company’s network,<br />

the latest reports can be transmitted<br />

directly from a drilling rig in<br />

Kazakhstan to the headquarters in<br />

London or, via a video conference,<br />

contact can be established between<br />

someone working on a pipeline in<br />

the jungle and experts in New York –<br />

the possible uses of NetLink are<br />

practically unlimited. High-speed data<br />

exchange with 64 kbps as well as<br />

high-quality voice transmission in<br />

conjunction with absolute mobility<br />

and worldwide coverage. NetLink can<br />

be integrated in existing IT networks<br />

simply by means of a configurable<br />

standard ISDN interface.<br />

To give some pertinent examples:<br />

transmission of charts and drawings,<br />

videos and images, access to the In-<br />

ternet, electronic commerce, access to<br />

company networks (LAN link). NetLink<br />

will become even more efficient for the<br />

user when the packet-oriented Inmarsat<br />

Packet Data Service (IPDS) for data<br />

transmission is introduced in March<br />

2000. The advantage for the user will<br />

be that only the actual<br />

quantity of data<br />

transmitted will<br />

be invoiced and not<br />

the time of the<br />

connection.<br />

Weighing only<br />

about 5 kilograms,<br />

including the antenna,<br />

DC/DC power<br />

supply unit<br />

and battery, and<br />

having an extremely<br />

compact design,<br />

the unit fits into<br />

any normal briefca-<br />

se or pilot case.<br />

NetLink also offers<br />

a whole lot of other<br />

superior features:<br />

integrated battery<br />

packs allow for up to four hours of pure<br />

talking time and up to 70 hours of<br />

standby operation and the integrated<br />

DC/DC power supply unit (10 to 32 V<br />

DC) or the AC power supply unit (90<br />

to 265 V AC) included with the unit<br />

serve to ensure that the NetLink can<br />

be supplied from practically any power<br />

source.<br />

The sturdy and reliable design with<br />

a light-metal frame assures stability<br />

and protects the unit against external<br />

influences. The specially developed<br />

mm Bushmaster II weapon (high rate)<br />

to the Swiss Gruppe Rüstung that is<br />

responsible for the placement of defense<br />

orders. Fundamental trials are<br />

under way in South Africa. Other<br />

countries apart from Switzerland have<br />

likewise shown an interest in such a<br />

practice tracer.<br />

PMP opted for Nitrochemie as its<br />

partner on grounds of the stringent requirements<br />

imposed and the company’s<br />

proven experience with this<br />

caliber. The development contract<br />

was signed by both parties with an<br />

option for the series. The develop-<br />

25<br />

antenna sliding mechanism is without<br />

conventional hinges and guarantees<br />

quick operability and a long-life.<br />

Particular importance has been<br />

attached to the simple operability of<br />

the NetLink. For instance, antenna<br />

alignment with the satellite is simple<br />

The new portable ISDN satellite terminal NetLink of STN<br />

Atlas Elektronik supports a wide range of applications like<br />

internet access, interconnection of Local Area Networks,<br />

Video Conferencing and file transfer.<br />

with the aid of acoustic and optical<br />

signals. The Windows-based graphical<br />

user interface (GUI) allows easy<br />

and exact adaptation of the unit to<br />

specific requirements. The large, integrated<br />

backlit graphic LC display gives<br />

uncomplicated access to all important<br />

functions and information –<br />

even under adverse environmental<br />

conditions. Standard cipher equipment<br />

(STU IIB/STU III) can be connected<br />

for applications subject to security<br />

considerations.<br />

ment order is worth approx. 200,000<br />

euros.<br />

The qualification will be completed<br />

with series-production maturity at<br />

the end of 2000. Given that the fullcaliber<br />

variant is procured, series deliveries<br />

will start in 2001/2002. Due<br />

to the use of a temperature-independent<br />

propellant, dual use in the Mauser<br />

F and the American Bushmaster II<br />

weapon will be possible. The projectile<br />

reaches a muzzle velocity of between<br />

1080 and 1120 m/s (depending<br />

on the type of weapon) at a weight of<br />

363 grams.


Newsline<br />

Successful qualification of pilot lot – international interest<br />

Series launch for SMArt ammunition<br />

Unterlüß. Following the recent, highly<br />

successful qualification of the pilot<br />

lot at the firing range of the German Army’s<br />

technical center in Meppen, the<br />

new sensor-fuzed ammunition for 155<br />

mm artillery – generally known as<br />

SMArt 155 – will now enter into seriesproduction.<br />

The first units of this<br />

smart, highly effective projectile are<br />

due to be delivered to the German Army<br />

in the near future. The project<br />

which is being carried out by Rheinmetall<br />

DeTec (Ratingen/Unterlüß)<br />

and<br />

Diehl (Nuremberg)<br />

through their joint<br />

company Gesellschaft<br />

für intelligenteWirksysteme<br />

(GIWS) has also<br />

attracted considerable<br />

interest internationally.<br />

Commenting on Helmut Ortmann<br />

the very successful outcome of the<br />

presentation at the WTD range, Helmut<br />

Ortmann, one of the managers of<br />

Rheinmetall W&M GmbH, pointed out<br />

that “the successful qualification of<br />

the pilot lot in Meppen which was accompanied<br />

by an equally successful<br />

presentation to international defence<br />

experts has delivered the proof for series-qualification.<br />

We have presented<br />

Our sketch illustrates the mode of operation of the submunition<br />

of the SMArt 155 after ejection from the projectile.<br />

an excellent result and have secured a<br />

good position on the market. We will<br />

therefore make the very best of the<br />

technical and time advantage which<br />

SMArt has over competing products.”<br />

This strategic policy is also reflected<br />

by the recent placement of the first series<br />

order currently being executed by<br />

the two partners Rheinmetall and<br />

Diehl. The first series lot consisting of<br />

250 systems will soon be delivered to<br />

the German Army.<br />

Ortmann rates the chances of SMArt<br />

on the international market as good:<br />

“Experts who have closely followed<br />

the qualification of the pilot lot – including<br />

defence specialists from Finland,<br />

the Netherlands, the USA, Bahrein<br />

and the United Arab Emirates – were<br />

all very impressed by the high standards<br />

of the project and the product.”<br />

Representatives of the Swiss Army<br />

who had been given the opportunity to<br />

witness a demonstration of the new<br />

sensor-fuzed ammunition at Meppen<br />

in July this year reacted similarly. In the<br />

words of Ortmann: “Our guests were<br />

impressed. The decision on the use of<br />

SMArt is expected shortly since Switzerland<br />

intends to define the manufacturer<br />

and the related type of ammunition<br />

this year.”<br />

The SMArt 155 is a joint project of the<br />

companies Diehl (Nuremberg) and<br />

Rheinmetall DeTec<br />

<strong>AG</strong>, being performed<br />

in equal shares<br />

through the<br />

joint venture GIWS<br />

(Nuremberg). The<br />

SMArt projectile as<br />

such is a highly effective<br />

artillery<br />

projectile capable<br />

of effectively engaging<br />

hard and semi-hard<br />

targets<br />

with extreme precision.<br />

It consists<br />

of a thin-walled<br />

projectile body<br />

with an ejection<br />

device that is triggered<br />

by an electronic<br />

time-fuze<br />

and two nearly<br />

identical submunitions.<br />

These, in<br />

turn, consist of the<br />

26<br />

With SMArt, the German Army will have<br />

an intelligent type of ammunition.<br />

orientation and stabilization unit, the<br />

sensor fuze and the warhead with the<br />

main explosive charge including the<br />

safe and arming unit.<br />

A word on the function of the submunition:<br />

after ejection from the projectile<br />

and transition into the stable descent<br />

phase, each submunition spirally<br />

searches the terrain below for targets<br />

with its multi-mode sensors. Subsequent<br />

to successful target identification<br />

by the electronic signal processing<br />

system of the sensor fuze, the<br />

warhead with the actual explosive<br />

charge is detonated. The projectile forged<br />

by the explosion is capable of penetrating<br />

all modern vehicle armouring<br />

including reactive armour systems<br />

(e.g. additional armouring) and<br />

of neutralizing the detected target. If<br />

no target is found in the search area,<br />

self-destruction of the submunition is<br />

triggered at a certain altitude.


Newsline<br />

1999 investments of approx. 30 million marks in <strong>Pierburg</strong>’s Hartha plant<br />

Operational performance upgraded<br />

Hartha. Anyone driving along route<br />

No. 175 – from Döbeln to Rochlitz – to<br />

Hartha in Saxony in the late hours of the<br />

evening will see immediately that three<br />

of the four floors of <strong>Pierburg</strong>’s plant about<br />

a kilometer and a half away from<br />

the road are still fully illuminated. At<br />

first sight, this light has a simple explanation<br />

and pleasing commercial background:<br />

owing to an excellent order situation,<br />

production is being carried out<br />

in three shifts and partly even six days a<br />

week (e.g. intake manifold, shaft manufacture,<br />

electrical motors for the secondary<br />

air pumps) to cope with all the<br />

work required in connection with the<br />

automatic assembly of electrical water<br />

circulation pumps, intake manifold assembly,<br />

shaft production, rotor manufacture<br />

for the electrical fuel pumps and<br />

electrical valve control systems and the<br />

manufacture of electrical motors for the<br />

secondary air pumps – making up for<br />

eighty percent of the production.<br />

Yet the bright lights also symbolize<br />

something else: in the opinion of<br />

district administrator Dr. Manfred<br />

Graetz, this plant belonging to the <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong><br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong> group is one of<br />

the few major plants in the district to<br />

have successfully managed its commercial<br />

re-orientation after the German<br />

reunification. Very modern production<br />

lines for a number of different<br />

products (which have to be produced<br />

in large quantities to meet market demands)<br />

have been implemented since<br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong> took over in spring 1992 with<br />

investments of some 47 million marks<br />

and the creation of (currently) about<br />

210 new jobs.<br />

Hartha’s plant manager Dr.-Ing. Thomas<br />

Mielke with the most recent<br />

series-produced product from the site:<br />

the value-optimized secondary air<br />

pump. The screen shows resource<br />

management for pump assembly.<br />

In the words of Graetz: “From the<br />

outset, <strong>Pierburg</strong> GmbH has been a<br />

source of hope for economic reconstruction<br />

in the town of Hartha and the<br />

neighboring region. The plant now has<br />

more than 200 employees and many<br />

millions of marks have been spent on<br />

modern machines and systems.” According<br />

to the 52 year-old administrator,<br />

the <strong>Kolbenschmidt</strong> <strong>Pierburg</strong> group<br />

is the largest single employer in Hartha;<br />

furthermore, it is one of the five<br />

most important plants in the district.<br />

Production of the water circulation pump: electromechanic<br />

Veronika Hedrich assembling a pump housing including the<br />

stator package with the related printed circuit board and simultaneously<br />

checking (on the monitor) the soldering robot<br />

which is also part of the production line.<br />

Thanks to its growing reputation in<br />

the automotive industry and thus also<br />

the greater demand on the market,<br />

operational performance at this plant in<br />

Hartha has naturally also improved: after<br />

approx. 66 million marks in 1997,<br />

the operational performance rose to<br />

143 million marks in 1998, while profit<br />

is also satisfactory. And this improved<br />

even further in 1999. Dr.-Ing. Michael<br />

Mielke, manager of the <strong>Pierburg</strong> plant<br />

in Saxony since November 1998 remarks<br />

that “operational performance<br />

will be increased to approximately 190<br />

million marks – with a good contribution<br />

margin – which bears comparison<br />

with the three other <strong>Pierburg</strong> sites in<br />

Germany.”<br />

In view of this pleasing situation, further<br />

investments were launched in<br />

1999 to secure the medium to long<br />

term position of this <strong>Pierburg</strong> plant situated<br />

in the hilly countryside of central<br />

Saxony. To quote plant manager<br />

Mielke: “As to the development of this<br />

plant since the Neuss-based automotive<br />

supplier joined us in the spring of<br />

27<br />

1992, the main accents have naturally<br />

shifted slightly. Whereas the initial<br />

aim was primarily to establish and<br />

consolidate the site we are now focussing<br />

on the further development of the<br />

plant from a pure motor production<br />

site (mono-structure) to a supplier<br />

with a broad range of products.”<br />

This goal is in the process of being<br />

reached: today, Hartha already manufactures<br />

large quantities of plastic intake<br />

manifolds, vacuum and water circulation<br />

pumps as well as electrical motors<br />

for various applications.<br />

The most recent<br />

series-product<br />

is the value-optimized<br />

secondary air<br />

pump that is to<br />

be manufactured<br />

completely in Hartha<br />

in future; in the<br />

past, only the related<br />

electrical motors<br />

were produced<br />

for the predecessor<br />

system. Customers<br />

include renowned<br />

companies like<br />

VW/Audi, Webasto,<br />

Eberspächer,<br />

Peugeot, Saab,<br />

Nedcar/Volvo and General Motors.<br />

The mentioned expansion of its range<br />

of products which can benefit from the<br />

know-how and enthusiasm of a highly<br />

qualified and motivated workforce<br />

forms the strategic background for a<br />

number of investments, with 30 million<br />

German marks spent in 1999 alone. In<br />

the words of Mielke: “Our main focus in<br />

the coming years will be the utilization<br />

of the new assembly lines, including<br />

the advanced facilities for the production<br />

of water circulation pumps and the<br />

value-optimized secondary air pumps,<br />

as well as the expansion of our position<br />

as a supplier on the market. We naturally<br />

attach importance to a well-balanced<br />

mixture in regard to our product spectrum<br />

and customer structure in order to<br />

be able to react sufficiently flexibly on<br />

the market.” Related measures include<br />

the cost improvement program launched<br />

at Hartha in 1999, widespread use<br />

of flexible production facilities with<br />

shorter set-up times and selective process<br />

optimization in the fields of technology<br />

and information.


Newsline<br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong> develops AMA 4000 – BMW orders new system generation<br />

Central intelligence, modular design<br />

Neuss/Munich. <strong>Pierburg</strong>’s measurement<br />

technology product group has<br />

ranked among the leading international<br />

suppliers of modern measurement<br />

systems and equipment for many<br />

years. Increasingly stringent requirements<br />

for emission standards in Europe<br />

and the USA have led to a drastic<br />

reduction of pollutant concentrations<br />

in exhaust gas. Measurement experts<br />

at the Neuss-based company have accepted<br />

the challenge and have managed<br />

to secure their hold on the market<br />

for measurement systems. The team<br />

headed by the product group’s manager<br />

Georg Maul has developed a new<br />

generation of exhaust gas measurement<br />

systems (AMA in short) to be<br />

launched under the name of AMA<br />

4000 in March this year. The first order<br />

for the new exhaust gas measurement<br />

system has already been booked from<br />

BMW (Bayerische Motorenwerke <strong>AG</strong>).<br />

In line with legislation in different<br />

countries, the AMA systems can be<br />

used to perform exhaust<br />

gas emission<br />

tests for certificati-<br />

on and to monitor<br />

series production<br />

of vehicles on engine<br />

and chassis dynamometers.<br />

Apart<br />

from systems delivered<br />

to the automobile<br />

industry,<br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong>’s measurement<br />

technology<br />

product group also<br />

supplies custommade<br />

systems to<br />

automotive suppliers,<br />

advanced<br />

technical colleges<br />

and institutes concerned<br />

with measurement<br />

technology.<br />

Dilution unit with<br />

multiple venturi jets<br />

The advanced,<br />

trend-setting technology<br />

used in the<br />

AMA 2000 analysis unit will also be employed<br />

for the latest generation of exhaust<br />

gas measurement systems. However,<br />

one essential difference is that the<br />

AMA 4000 has a central intelligence<br />

which controls the components via a<br />

bus system. The decentralized structure<br />

(where the individual elements all<br />

Air<br />

blower<br />

intergral modal<br />

Heated Elements<br />

approx. 40°C<br />

Lines 40°C<br />

had their own computer systems) has<br />

been abandoned in favor of the consistent<br />

use of modular constructions. Jochen<br />

Böning from the sales department<br />

points out that “these modifications<br />

have produced a compact, cost-effective<br />

design. Systems which had to be<br />

accommodated in two AMA cabinets in<br />

the past can now easily be housed in<br />

one”. Sales manager Günter Maassen<br />

adds that “internal communication and<br />

also control of the AMA have changed<br />

decisively as a result of the innovations.”<br />

To achieve a user-friendly and<br />

aesthetic design, the product group<br />

commissioned the Design and Ergonomics<br />

faculty of the University of Essen<br />

to design the cabinet and central control<br />

panel. In the words of Rainer Ballik,<br />

manager of preliminary development<br />

activities: “In designing the AMA<br />

4000, particular consideration was given<br />

to the specific wishes of the customers.<br />

About two years ago, we started<br />

Air Heater<br />

Filter<br />

Mixer<br />

PIERBURG PIERBURG PIERBURG PIERBURG<br />

CVS control<br />

unit<br />

bags<br />

air exhaust<br />

diluted<br />

AMA<br />

diluted<br />

AMA<br />

undiluted<br />

The exhaust gas values of vehicles are tested on a chassis dynamometer. Our<br />

diagram shows the system structure: the vehicle under test is positioned on the<br />

dynamometer. A test driver drives the specified curve, with the system simulating<br />

the resistance exerted on the vehicle when driving along a road. A certain quantity<br />

of exhaust gas is filled into bags during the test and is then analyzed by the AMA.<br />

asking customers what they wanted.<br />

The results of this campaign were then<br />

used to specify the requirements for<br />

the hardware and software of our latest<br />

generation of exhaust gas measurement<br />

systems.”<br />

The achievements of the highly motivated<br />

development team are worth<br />

28<br />

Ambient Air<br />

Air dryer<br />

after<br />

cat<br />

pre<br />

cat<br />

Optional<br />

Driver’s Aid<br />

seeing. The order placed by BMW even<br />

before the AMA 4000 is actually launched<br />

on the market is clear proof of<br />

the quality of the work carried out by<br />

<strong>Pierburg</strong>’s measurement experts. Although<br />

the system will not be available<br />

on the market before March 2000,<br />

BMW has already ordered the AMA<br />

4000 to modernize its exhaust gas<br />

testing centers. <strong>Pierburg</strong> is to install<br />

twelve test facilities in Germany, Austria<br />

and the USA. This is the biggest<br />

single order ever booked by the product<br />

group. And the prospects for the<br />

successful team are good – as an official<br />

World-Wide Selected Supplier of<br />

BMW, the measurement experts will<br />

continue to work as a reliable partner<br />

for the Munich-based car maker in<br />

future, too.<br />

Yet the excellent kick-off for the AMA<br />

4000 with the order from BMW is by no<br />

means the only success story for <strong>Pierburg</strong>’s<br />

measurement technology team.<br />

Other measurement systems have e.g.<br />

been sold to BMW,<br />

Audi, Degussa, Siemens<br />

and Aral.<br />

Measurement facilities<br />

are also being<br />

delivered to Ellring<br />

Klinger, a manufacturer<br />

of engine seals<br />

and sealing systems<br />

in Idstein/<br />

Taunus, to the engine<br />

manufacturer<br />

MAN and to Hatz, a<br />

fan diesel engine developer<br />

in Rurstorf a.<br />

d. Rott near Passau.<br />

Interesting projects<br />

have likewise<br />

been secured<br />

on the international<br />

market:<br />

contracts have, for<br />

instance, been<br />

concluded with<br />

the car maker KIA and the Katech Institute<br />

(Korean Automotive Technology<br />

Institute) in Korea. In addition,<br />

complete measurement systems have<br />

been ordered by India – where a<br />

major order was placed by the company<br />

Mico – and China despite harsh<br />

competition there.

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