Category:O. C. Electronics, inc.

References edit

  • The History of Spring Reverberation. Seoul, Korea: AccuBell Sound Inc. (Accutronics® & Belton).
    "​ By 1964, the increasingly busy Hammond Organ Company had run out of room to produce the reverb units. So Hammond moved production to another Hammond-owned unit, Gibbs Manufacturing, in Janesville, Wisconsin. In 1971, the reverb business moved again to another Hammond unit, Accutronics®, in Geneva, Illinois. Meanwhile, employees at Gibbs decided to start making their own reverb manufacturing company called O.C. Electronics, giving Accutronics major competition in the reverb market. ... ",
    "​ In 1974, Accutronics, still a division of Hammond Organ, acquired a printed circuit boards maker in Cary, Illinois, which was renamed Accutronics.(Meanwhile in 1977, Hammond Organ became a member of the Marmon Group of companies, a Chicago-based association of manufacturing and service companies.) In 1982, the two operations were combined in the Cary plant. By this time, the reverb units were beginning to be known as “the Accutronics Reverb” and the founder of O.C. Electronics was getting ready to retire. In late 1985, Accutronics acquired O.C., once again uniting the two companies trained in the design and manufacture of the original Hammond reverb units. "

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