In the late nineteenth century, business expanded in the
Western United States, as did the company's catalog. It grew to include
typewriters,
hand trucks, railway
velocipedes, pumps, tractors, and a variety of warehouse and bulk shipping tools. The company became an industrial supplier distributing complete "turn-key" systems: tools, plumbing, gauges, gaskets, parts, valves, and pipe. Its 1910 catalog contained over 800 pages. The Fairbanks Morse Company began producing oil and
naptha engines in the 1890s with the purchase of the Charter line of engines (the first commercially available gas engine). They had the idea that an engine could be used as backup power for when one of their
Eclipse windmills wasn't getting wind. The Fairbanks Morse gas engine became a success with farmers. Electricity generation and oilfield work also used these engines. Small lighting plants built by the company were also popular. Fairbanks Morse power plants evolved by burning
kerosene in 1893,
coal gas in 1905, then to
semi-diesel engines in 1913 and to full
diesel engines in 1924. The Model N was popular in stationary industrial applications. In 1934, Fairbanks-Morse entered the
radio business by acquiring the Audiola Radio Co. After a 1939 factory fire FM decided to exit the radio business. Fairbanks-Morse radios are well known for their colorfulness. The company also had brief forays into building
automobiles,
tractors,
corn shellers,
hammermills,
cranes,
televisions, and
refrigerators, but output was small in these fields. After the expiration of
Rudolf Diesel's American license in 1912, Fairbanks Morse (FM) entered the large engine business. The company's larger Model Y semi-diesel became a standard workhorse, and sugar, rice, timber, and mine mills used the engine. The model Y was available in sizes from one through six cylinders, or 10 to . The Y-VA engine was the first high-compression, cold-start, full diesel developed by Fairbanks Morse without the acquisition of any foreign patent. This machine was developed in Beloit and introduced in 1924. The company expanded its line to the marine CO engine (Many 100 H.P. CO marine engines were used in the Philippine Islands to power ferry boats) as well as the mill model E, a modernized Y diesel. From this, Fairbanks-Morse became a major engine manufacturer and developed plants for
railway and marine applications. The development of the
diesel locomotive, tug, and ship in the 1930s fostered the expansion of the company. =="Z" Engine Line==