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  2. Barden Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barden_Corporation

    Website. bardenbearings.com. Barden Corporation is a ball bearing manufacturer based in Danbury, Connecticut, USA with factories in Danbury, Winsted, Connecticut and in Plymouth, England. It previously had factories in Bridgeport, Connecticut (Lacey Manufacturing-divested in 2008) [1] and Haverhill, Massachusetts (Pope Spindle-divested in 2003).

  3. Timken Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timken_Company

    Timken Research was created in 1966 to establish technological leadership and to help standardize research and development processes across the company. [12] Timken expanded into new global markets throughout the 1970s and 1980s, establishing a sales operation in Japan in 1974 [13] and opening sales offices in Italy, Korea, Singapore and ...

  4. Ring size - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_size

    An analogic sizing ring stick. Ring sizes can be measured physically by a paper, plastic, or metal ring sizer (as a gauge) or by measuring the inner diameter of a ring that already fits. Ring sticks are tools used to measure the inner size of a ring, and are typically made from plastic, delrin, wood, aluminium, or of multiple materials. Digital ...

  5. Skip a Trip to the Jeweler—Here's Exactly How To ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/skip-trip-jeweler-heres-exactly...

    Try sizing your finger under as normal conditions as possible and look for a couple of signs as to whether or not your ring is too tight or too loose using a ring sizer. Your ring may be too tight ...

  6. Slewing bearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slewing_bearing

    Slew ring bearing. A slewing bearing or slew[ing] ring (also called a turntable bearing) is a rotational rolling-element bearing that typically supports a heavy but slow-turning or slowly-oscillating loads in combination (axial, radial and moment loads), often a horizontal platform such as a conventional crane, a swing yarder, or the wind-facing platform of a horizontal-axis (yaw) windmill.

  7. Fafnir Bearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fafnir_Bearing

    History. The company was founded in New Britain, Connecticut on March 8, 1911, by Howard Stanley Hart. [1] Fafnir was acquired by Textron in 1968. In 1988, Textron's Fafnir Bearing division was acquired by the Torrington Company, which in turn sold it in 1998 to the Timken Company, which still markets ball bearings under the Fafnir brand.