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Japanese automotive company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KYB Corporation (KYB株式会社, KYB kabushiki gaisha, formerly Kayaba Kogyo kabushiki gaisha (カヤバ工業株式会社) until 1 October 2015) is a Japanese, Tokyo-based automotive company.[3]
Company type | Public KK |
---|---|
TYO: 7242 | |
Industry | Automotive |
Founded | (November 19, 1919 ) |
Founder | Shiro Kayaba |
Headquarters | World Trade Center Building, 4-1, Hamamatsu-cho 2-chome, Minato-ku, Tokyo 105-6111, Japan |
Key people | Tadahiko Ozawa (Chairman) Masao Usui (President and CEO) |
Products |
|
Revenue | US$ 3.42 billion (FY 2013) (JPY 352.71 billion) (FY 2013) |
US$ 123.89 million (FY 2013) (JPY 12.76 billion) (FY 2013) | |
Number of employees | 14,754 (consolidated, as of March 31, 2018) |
Website | Official website |
Footnotes / references [1][2] |
Among KYB's main products company are shock absorbers, air suspensions, power steering systems, hydraulic pumps, motors, cylinders, and valves.[4] It is one of the world's largest shock absorber manufacturers and it also has the largest market share of concrete mixer trucks in Japan, with 85% of the market.[5]
The company has 34 manufacturing plants and 62 offices in 21 countries.[6] KYB's American aftermarket distribution of automotive shocks and struts is headquartered in Greenwood, Indiana, with additional KYB manufacturing and distribution facilities in metro Chicago, Southern California, and metro Indianapolis.[7] KYB Americas employs more than 100 people in all facilities. Shocks and struts for vehicles are the most popular KYB products distributed in North America.
The company between 1939 and 1941 developed several gliders, autogyros and research aircraft for the Imperial Japanese Army. These are:
After the war, in 1954, the company built a gyrodyne, named Kayaba Heliplane. The development of this aircraft started in 1952 when Shiro Kayaba, the founder of the company, obtained the fuselage of a Cessna 170B and, over the course of two years, turned it into a convertiplane.[8]
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