1939 through 1949 The company's first major product was an oil cooler for military aircraft. Garrett designed and produced oil coolers for the Douglas
DB-7. The company developed and produced the
cabin pressure system for the
B-29 bomber, the first production bomber pressurized for high altitude flying. By the end of World War II, AiResearch engineers had developed air expansion cooling turbines for America's first jet aircraft, the
Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star. During World War II, Garrett AiResearch sold $112 million in military equipment and had as many as 5,000 employees. Having to scale back its workforce to just 600 employees at the end of the war stimulated Garrett to look for new revenue sources. "He found them in the small turbines which patient Engineer Walter Ramsaur had been perfecting since 1943. A way had to be found to cool cockpits so jet pilots could endure the heat generated by air friction at supersonic speeds. Ramsaur's turbine provided the answer. By putting an engine's heat to work turning the turbine, it cooled the air by expanding it, then injected the air into the cockpit. As rearmament got under way, Garrett began turning out a total of 700 accessory products. With the Navy order for [an on-board engine] self-starter, [by 1951] Garrett Corp. [had] a $120 million backlog, enough to keep 5,500 workers on three shifts busy for at least the next three years". By the end of the 1940s, Garrett Corporation was listed on the
New York Stock Exchange. "In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Garrett was heavily committed to the design of small gas turbine engines from 20 - 90 horse power (15 - 67 kW). The engineers had developed a good background in the
metallurgy of
housings, high speed
seals, radial inflow
turbines, and
centrifugal compressors".
1950s and 1960s By 1949, the Sepulveda Blvd. property was increasingly constrained by the demand for development of commercial space near the fast-growing Los Angeles International Airport (LAX). At that time, 2,000 people worked at the facility "and Garrett was ranked one of the top three aircraft accessory manufacturers in the world". In 1959 ground was broken for construction of an additional facility at 190th Street and
Crenshaw Boulevard in
Torrance, California. Part of that facility was occupied in 1960. "By 1962, 1000 employees were working at the Torrance location and by 1972, 3000 employees were based there". After a gradual series of moves, the Sepulveda facility was closed in 1990. During the 1950s, AiResearch initiated activities in the field of aircraft electronics, "first with an
angle of attack computer 1968-1970, to eliminate gunfire error and then with its first delivery of a complete centralized
air data system". In the 1950s and 1960s, Garrett pioneered the development of
foil bearings, which were first installed as original equipment on the
McDonnell-Douglas DC-10 in 1969 and then became standard equipment on all U.S. military aircraft. In the 1960s, AiResearch Environmental Control Systems provided the
life supporting atmosphere for American astronauts in the projects
Mercury,
Gemini,
Apollo, and
Skylab. On the industrial side, the first T-15
turbocharger was delivered to the
Caterpillar Company in 1955. It was followed by an order for 5,000 production units, to be installed in the
Caterpillar D9 tractor. "On September 27, 1954, Cliff Garrett made the decision to separate the turbocharger group from the gas turbine department due to commercial
diesel turbocharger opportunities. That was the beginning of the new AiResearch Industrial Division for turbocharger design and manufacturing". This new division was established in
Phoenix, Arizona. AiResearch Industrial Division ("AID") would later be renamed Garrett Automotive. Following the first phase of the Caterpillar project, Garrett turbochargers saw wider use on earth-moving equipment, in tractors, stationary powerplants, railroad locomotives and ships. The Garrett T11 automotive turbocharger came into being in 1960 and promptly became popular with diesel truck operators. By 1962, Garrett was powering the world’s first turbocharged production non-sports car, the
Oldsmobile Jetfire Rocket. This was followed by several other firsts, including the first turbocharged car to win the
Indianapolis 500 (1968), the first turbo for a hot hatchback car application (1977-
Saab 99), the first mass production turbo for diesel engines (1978-
Mercedes 300SD), and the first turbo to win the
24 Hours of Le Mans (1978-
Renault Alpine A442)".
1970s tractor sectioned for educational purposes In the 1970s, Garrett's expanding industrial and other non-military applications had changed the basic sources of income. "At the start of the decade sales to the military accounted for 70 percent of the company's business. At the end of the ten years, largely because of turbochargers and
general aviation products, the situation was reversed. Commercial sales made up 70 percent; military had dropped to 30 percent". By the end of the 1970s "sales had reached $1.3
billion; backlog was $1.9 billion". ==Mergers==