In 1883, Schall returned to Stuttgart, and opened his own workshop for forehead, mouth and laryngeal lamps. In 1885, he joined with the mechanic Max Gebbert, whom he had met in Paris, as an equal partner in a new company,
Gebbert and Schall. In September 1885, Schall and Gebbert trained Erwin Moritz Reiniger, who ran a similar workshop for electrical and physical devices in
Erlangen. In 1877, Reiniger, age 23, after attending the
Erlanger University, established a factory to supply the university with
medical equipment. The newly-formed partnership
Reiniger, Gebbert & Schall was based in "Erlangen, Stuttgart, New York," and described as "physical-mechanical workshops, Reiniger, Gebbert & Schall." The workshops in Stuttgart and New York, however, were soon abandoned. Schall led the joint company, and assisted in equipment fabrication and sales. In 1893, the company moved from the central city to a new factory at 45 Luitpoldstrasse, a location that would become an
Erlangen landmark. By 1900, the company was one of the leading manufacturers and producers of
x-ray equipment in the world. The company became involved in the production of x-ray equipment due to Gebbert's foresight, who directly contacted
Wilhelm Röntgen shortly after the discovery of x-rays in 1895. Within a few months, RGS was producing
x-ray tubes and related apparatus at Erlangen. The company went on to establish a collaboration with the Erlangen
Frauenklinic (Women's Clinic) to perform early studies in radiation therapy. ==K. Schall of Wigmore Street==