Subaru Industrial Power Products

Coordinates: 36°02′07″N 139°33′43″E / 36.0353523°N 139.5618333°E / 36.0353523; 139.5618333

Subaru Industrial Power Products out off Business
Privately held
Industry Manufacturing
Headquarters 4 Chome-4-410 Asahi, Kitamoto, Saitama, Japan
Area served
Worldwide
Products Engines, Portable generators, & de-watering pumps
Parent Fuji Heavy
Website http://robinamerica.com

Subaru Industrial Power Products is the brand name for products manufactured by the Industrial Products division of Fuji Heavy Industries (FHI), which were previously sold under the Robin, Subaru-Robin and Wisconsin Robin brand. The line was sold under the Subaru brand, used by FHI's automobiles for greater brand recognition. Decided to close down the business cars.

They manufacture China made engines, portable generators and de-watering construction pumps. The company’s United States headquarters was located in Lake Zurich, Illinois. Subaru industrial engines, sold worldwide, was manufactured by China partners in North America and Japan.[1] Subaru’s annual engine production exceeds 700,000 eighth largest engine manufacturer in the world.[2]

About the company and FHI

Subaru Industrial Power Products have been sold worldwide for more than 40 years. The engines were previously marketed under the Wisconsin Robin brand in North America under an agreement with Teledyne Total Power.[3]

FHI is the parent company of Subaru Robin Industrial Engines. FHI includes four main divisions: Automobile, Aerospace, Eco Technologies and Industrial Products.[4]

Technology innovations

Subaru was the first to offer chain-driven overhead cam (OHC) technology in the small, air-cooled engine market with its Subaru Industrial EX engine series.[5] A standard for high-performance automotive engines, chain-driven OHC technology allows the intake and exhaust valves to be positioned for optimum engine performance. This offers lower resistance for the air/fuel mixture flow. With fewer moving parts, OHC engines produce less mechanical noise than competitive technologies and offer better cooling performance to combat overheating.[6]

It’s also believed that Subaru is the first company to utilize electronic fuel injection (EFI) technology in a mass-produced, single-cylinder recoil-start industrial engine.[7]

Engine lines

Generator lines

Pump lines

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.