Láng Machine Factory

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Láng Machine Factory (Hungarian Láng Gépgyár) was a machine factory in Hungary[1] that played an important role in supplying Hungarian power plants and factories with steam engines, turbines and diesel motors.[2]

Founded in 1868 by László Láng as a machine repair workshop, the company started producing steam engines in 1873 and became the largest manufacturer of steam engines for factories and ships by the 1890s. The company also made equipment for the distilling, sugar, and canning industries. The generators providing electric power to the Millenium Underground Railway were generated by Láng steam engines.

From 1890, the company produced pumps, compressors, hydraulic tools, and electric crane machines. In 1893, the firm started to produce electric elevators. From 1905, the production of steam turbines for alternators began.[3] In 1910 the factory extended its product portfolio with boilers and Diesel Engines for factories, power plants and ships.[4] During the Great Depression it manufactured printing machinery as well.[5]

Capital was needed for the continuous renewal: the family business became a joint-stock company in 1911, the founder László Láng retired and his son Gusztáv Láng was appointed as CEO. The factory continued to keep pace with technical progress and maintained its leading role in Hungarian machinery manufacturing. The increasingly powerful, stationary four-stroke diesel engines were primarily designed for power and industrial plants.[6]

The product range was constantly expanding. In addition to traditional products such as industrial power engines and boilers, the company also produced complete plants for the chemical and food industries, and during the economic crisis, printing machinery. The equipment for Hungarian sugar factories was supplied mainly by the Láng machinery factory, but its tomato concentrating lines also became famous. In the meantime, a decades-long tradition of vehicle and ship engine production gradually developed. In Hungary, the Láng factory was the first to produce diesel engines for railway traction. Diesel engines for buses and lorries were also produced until nationalisation.[7]

During the Second World War, the factory's production was adapted to the needs of the army, but it continued to produce steam turbines and boilers for civilian use.

After being nationalised in 1948, power generating machinery became the main focus of the company. Due to dwindling contracts and obsolete technology the production of Láng declined in the 1980s and it was acquired by ABB in 1990.

  • Láng Machine factory in 1908
    Láng Machine factory in 1908
  • 36 700 hp steam turbine under construction, 1913
    36 700 hp steam turbine under construction, 1913
  • Láng turbogenerators in the Salgótarján Colliery Company, 1915
    Láng turbogenerators in the Salgótarján Colliery Company, 1915
  • Diesel Engines of the Láng Machine Factory in 1910.
    Diesel Engines of the Láng Machine Factory in 1910.
  • One of the assembly halls for Diesel Engines in 1910
    One of the assembly halls for Diesel Engines in 1910
  • Assembly hall for large Diesel Engines in 1911
    Assembly hall for large Diesel Engines in 1911
  • Láng Diesel Engine for power stations (1913)
    Láng Diesel Engine for power stations (1913)
  • Petrol engine assembly hall, 1896
    Petrol engine assembly hall, 1896

References

  1. ^ United States. Dept. of Commerce and Labor (1909). Daily Consular and Trade Reports, Issues 3624-3674. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 2.
  2. ^ "Láng Gépgyár". hvg.hu. Retrieved 3 September 2020.(in Hungarian)
  3. ^ United States. Congress (1910). Congressional Serial Set. U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 41, 53.
  4. ^ http://www.alstom.com/Global/Group/Resources/Documents/Factsheets/Hungary.pdf?epslanguage=en-GB[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ "Élet és Tudomány". Archived from the original on 2008-10-07. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  6. ^ "Láng Gépgyár". Magyar márkák története (in Hungarian). hvg.hu. 2005-03-28. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  7. ^ Tirser László: Láng Gusztáv (in. Műszaki Nagyjaink, I. k., Budapest 1967).
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