On Fri, 27 Jul 2018 19:33:51 -0700 Jim Cathey via Mercedes
<mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:

> >
> > Have never heard of FAG, or most others.
> 
> 
> It's short for Fischer's Automatische Gussstahlkugelfabrik,
> obviously.  :-) Trademarked since 1905.
> 
> Fischer was first to invent a machine for making high-quality steel
> spheres in volume, in 1883.


http://www.reliablebearing.com/history.htm

History and Development
        
        
An early type of linear bearing was an arrangement of tree trunks laid
down under sleds. This technology may date as far back as the
construction of the Pyramids of Giza, though there is no definitive
evidence. Modern linear bearings use a similar principle, sometimes with
balls in place of rollers.

The first plain and rolling-element bearings were wood, but ceramic,
sapphire or glass can be used, and steel, bronze, other metals, and
plastic (e.g., nylon, polyoxymethylene, teflon, and UHMWPE) are all
common today. Indeed, stone was even used in various forms. Think of the
"jewelled pocket watch", which incorporated stones to reduce frictional
loads, and allow a smoother running watch. Of course, with older,
mechanical timepieces, the smoother the operating properties, then the
higher the accuracy and value. Wood can still be seen today in old water
mills, and the water itself had a part to play in the cooling/lubrication
implications, of such natural and commonly found, bearing resources.

John Harrison. Click to read more. Rotary bearings are required for many
applications, from heavy-duty use in vehicle axles and machine shafts, to
precision clock parts. The simplest rotary bearing is the sleeve bearing,
which is just a cylinder inserted between the wheel and its axle. This
was followed by the roller bearing, in which the sleeve was replaced by a
number of cylindrical rollers. Each roller behaves as an individual
wheel.The first practical caged-roller bearing was invented by horologist
John Harrison in his H3 chronometer of 1760.

An early example of a wooden ball bearing, supporting a rotating table,
was retrieved from the remains of a Roman ship in Lake Nemi, Italy. The
wreck was dated to 40 BC. Leonardo da Vinci is said to have described a
type of ball bearing around the year 1500. One of the issues with ball
bearings is that they can rub against each other, causing additional
friction, but this can be prevented by enclosing the balls in a cage. The
captured, or caged, ball bearing was originally described by Galileo in
the 1600s. The mounting of bearings into a set was not accomplished for
many years after that. The first patent for a ball race was by Philip
Vaughan of Carmarthen in 1794.

Friedrich Fischer`s idea from the year 1883 for milling and grinding
balls of equal size and exact roundness by means of a suitable production
machine formed the foundation for creation of an independent bearing
industry.

The initials of the names "Fischers Automatische Gußstahlkugelfabrik" or
"Fischer Aktien-Gesellschaft" became a logo which was registered on 29
July, 1905. In 1962 it got the look it still has today, and it finally
became an integral part of the company in 1979.

The modern, self-aligning design of ball bearing is attributed to Sven
Wingquist of the SKF ball-bearing manufacturer in 1907.

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