Getrag
A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject. (January 2013) |
File:GETRAG logo.PNG | |
Company type | Corporation |
---|---|
Industry | Automotive industry |
Predecessor | Getriebe und Zahnradfabrik Hermann Hagenmeyer AG |
Founded | Ludwigsburg, Germany (1935), as Getriebe und Zahnradfabrik Hermann Hagenmeyer GmbH & Cie KG[1] |
Founder | Hermann Hagenmeyer[1] |
Headquarters | , Germany |
Number of locations | 24, in 11 countries across Europe, North America & Asia[2] |
Area served | Worldwide[3] |
Key people | Mihir Kotecha, CEO Tobias Hagenmeyer, President |
Products | Automobile transmissions |
Revenue | € 3 billion (2011)[4] |
Number of employees | 12,500 (2011)[4] |
Parent | Magna International |
Website | Getrag.com |
Getrag (German: [ɡəˈtʁaːk]), stylized as GETRAG,[5] is the world's largest supplier of transmission systems for passenger cars and commercial vehicles. The company was founded on 1 May 1935, in Ludwigsburg, Germany, by Hermann Hagenmeyer;[1] as the Getriebe und Zahnradfabrik Hermann Hagenmeyer GmbH & Cie KG.[1]
Headquartered in Untergruppenbach in Germany, Getrag manufactures and develops passenger car transmission products and solutions for the important automotive markets Europe, Asia and North America with 24 locations and about 12,500 employees worldwide. In 2011, the company had a turnover of three billion euros.[4]
The company has three joint ventures: Getrag Ford Transmissions[1] headquartered in Cologne with Ford Motor Company,[1] Getrag (Jiangxi) Transmission Co. Ltd. with Jiangling Motors Corporation., Ltd. and Dongfeng Getrag Transmission with Dongfeng Motor Corporation. In addition, Getrag supplies transmissions to a variety of automotive manufacturers, including BMW (Mini), Daimler AG, Ferrari, Mitsubishi, Porsche, Qoros, Renault, Volkswagen Group and Volvo. Competitors include Aisin Seiki, BorgWarner, Graziano Trasmissioni and ZF Friedrichshafen.
The portfolio ranges from classical manual transmissions, automated manual transmissions and automatic transmissions based on dual-clutch transmission (DCT) technology to various hybridization solutions, range extender systems and purely electric drivetrains.
Products
Longitudinal orientation
- 217 — 6-speed
- Alfa Romeo Giulia, BMW 1 Series, BMW 3 Series, BMW 5 Series, BMW Z4
- 220 — 5-speed
- BMW 1 Series
- 221 — 5-speed
- Jaguar S-Type, Lincoln LS
- 226 — 6-speed
- BMW M3
- 226 AMT — 6-speed automated manual
- BMW M3
- 232 — 4-speed
- 1968-1972 BMW 2002
- 233 — 6-speed
- Toyota Supra Twin Turbo
- Nissan Skyline GT-R (R34)
- 235 — 5-speed
- 1975 Jensen-Healey, 1976 Jensen GT
- 238 — 6-speed
- Dodge Ram, Dodge Dakota
- 240 — 5-speed
- 1983 BMW E21, Opel Manta, Opel Rekord, various other Opels
- 1984-1991 BMW E30 (318i,318is)
- 242 — 4-speed
- 1972-1975 BMW 2002, 1977-1979 BMW E21
- 245 - 5-speed
- 1980-1982 BMW E21
- 247 AMT — 7-speed sequential manual
- 2005-BMW M5, BMW M6
- 250 — 5-speed
- 1992-1999 BMW E36 for engines up to 2.5L
- 1992-1995 BMW E34 M50
- 260 — 5-speed
- BMW E28
- 1984-1991 BMW E30 M20
- 1988-1991 BMW E34 M20 M30
- 1996-2004 Holden Commodore(VS, VT, VX, VY) for the ECOTEC
- 2002-2005 Cadillac CTS
- 265 — 5-speed
- BMW E23
- BMW E24
- BMW E28
- Jaguar XJS
- Opel Monza
- Opel Senator A
- 1986-1992 BMW M3
- 1987-1990 BMW 320is[6]
- 275 — 5-speed
- Mercedes 240D, 300GD, 280GE, 280
- 275 Z — "dogleg" 5-speed
- Mercedes-Benz 190e 2.3-16, 2.5-16 (incl. evolution models) (717.404), C124 AMG 3.4 CE, R129 300SL (717.450)
- 280 — 5-speed
- 1985-1988 BMW M5 (E28), 1989-1994 BMW M5 (E34)
- 290 — 5-speed
- 1990-1994 Jaguar XJS
- 1995-1997 Jaguar XJR
- 1996-1999 Holden Commodore(VS, VT) for the 5 litre V8
- 420G — 6-speed
- 1995 BMW E34 M5, 1993-1996 BMW E34 540i, BMW E38 740i/iL, BMW 840i/Ci, 1996-2003 BMW E39 M5, BMW E39 540i, BMW M3 (E46), BMW Z8
- 560G — 6-speed
- BMW E31 850i, 850Ci, and 850CSi
- 7DCI600 - 7-speed dual clutch [7]
- 2008- BMW M3
- 2008- BMW 3 Series 335i Coupé / Convertible
- 2008- BMW Z4 sDrive35i
- 2010- BMW E87 1 Series 135i
- 2011- BMW M5
- 2012- BMW M6
- 2014- BMW M4
- 2016- BMW M2
Transverse orientation
- 252 — 5-speed
- MINI One, MINI Cooper
- 281 — 5-speed
- Fiat Stilo, Fiat Croma, Fiat Idea, Lancia Musa
- 282 — 5-speed
- Buick Skyhawk, Chevrolet Cavalier, Chevrolet Beretta, Chevrolet Celebrity, Oldsmobile Achieva, Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme, Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais, Pontiac 6000, Pontiac Fiero, Pontiac Sunbird, Pontiac Grand Am
- 283 — 5-speed
- Land Rover Freelander, Rover 75
- 284 — 5-speed
- Chevrolet Lumina, Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme, Pontiac Grand Prix, Chrysler TC by Maserati (16v only), Chrysler Seled Mexico (Lotus 16v DOHC head)
- 285 — 6-speed
- Ford Focus ST170/SVT, MINI Cooper S
- F20 — 5-speed
- Chevrolet Vectra, Chevrolet Astra, Chevrolet Cobalt, Chevrolet HHR, Saturn Vue, Saturn Ion, Opel Corsa, Opel Meriva, Opel Combo, Opel Astra, Opel Vectra, Vauxhall Corsa, Vauxhall Meriva, Vauxhall Astra, Vauxhall Vectra, plus various other GM cars
- F23 — 5-speed
- Chevrolet Vectra, Chevrolet Astra, Chevrolet Cobalt, Chevrolet HHR, Saturn Vue, Saturn Ion, Opel Corsa, Opel Meriva, Opel Combo, Opel Astra, Opel Vectra, Vauxhall Corsa, Vauxhall Meriva, Vauxhall Astra, Vauxhall Vectra
- F28/6 — 6-speed (with optional four-wheel drive)
- Opel Calibra Turbo, Vauxhall Calibra Turbo, Vauxhall Cavalier Turbo
- 288 — 5-speed
- Chrysler PT Cruiser, Mercedes-Benz Vito W638
- 431 AMT — 6-speed semi-automatic
- Smart Fortwo, Smart roadster
- 452 — 5-speed
- Smart Forfour, Mitsubishi Colt
- 452 AMT — 6-speed semi-automatic
- Smart Forfour, Mitsubishi Colt
- 453 — 5-speed
- Smart Forfour, Mitsubishi Colt
- 453 AMT — 6-speed semi-automatic
- Smart Forfour, Mitsubishi Colt
- ??? - 6-speed
- Noble M12
- 555 — 5-speed
- Dodge Daytona Turbo II, Chrysler GS Turbo II
- 6DCT470 — 6-speed dual clutch
- Mitsubishi Lancer, Mitsubishi Outlander,[8] Peugeot 4007, Citroën C-Crosser
- 6DCT450 — 6-speed dual clutch (also known as Ford PowerShift transmission)
- Dodge Journey, Chrysler Sebring, Dodge Avenger, Volvo C30, Volvo S40/V50, Volvo C70, Volvo V70, Volvo S80, Volvo S60/V60, Ford Focus, Ford C-Max, Ford S-Max, Ford Galaxy, Ford Mondeo, Ford Kuga
- 6DCT250[9][10] — 6-speed dual dry clutch
- Ford Fiesta, Ford Focus, Renault Megane, Renault Scenic, 2015- Smart Fortwo, 2015- Smart Forfour, 2015- Renault Twingo
- 6DCT150 — 6-speed dual clutch for low torque applications
- 6DCT200 — 6-speed dual wet clutch
- 6HDT200 — 6-speed dual clutch for hybrid applications
- 7DCT300 — 7-speed dual wet clutch - Renault EDC and Mini/BMW Steptronic Doppelkupplung since MY2018 in FWD applications
- 7HDT300 — 7-speed dual wet clutch for hybrid applications
- 7DCT500 — 7-speed dual wet clutch - Renault EDC
Transaxles
- 901 — 4 and 5-speed
- Porsche 911 (1964-1968)
- 902 — 4 and 5-speed
- Porsche 912 (1965-1969)
- 923 — 5-speed
- Porsche 912E (1976)
- 016 — 5-speed
- Porsche 924 (1977-1980)
- G31 — 5-speed
- Porsche 924 GTS
- G50 — 5-speed
- Porsche 911 (1987-1989)
- G50 — 5-speed
- Porsche 911 (1987-1989) (G50/00-G50/02)
- Porsche 911 Turbo (1989 type 930) (G50/50)
- Porsche 964 Carrera 2 (1990-1994) (G50/03-04)
- Porsche 964 Carrera 2 RS America (1992-1994) (G50/05)
- Porsche 964 Carrera 2 RS (1993) (G50/10)
- Porsche 964 Turbo (1991-1994 type 965) (G50/52)
- G64 — 5-speed
- Porsche 964 Carrera 4 (1989-1994) (G64/00-02)
- G40/50 — 6-speed
- Porsche 968
- 440 — 5-speed all-wheel drive
- 1990-1993 Mitsubishi GTO twin turbo (3000GT VR-4 in some export markets), Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo - This transaxle carries the Mitsubishi designation W5MG1
- 446 — 6-speed all-wheel drive
- 1993-2000 Mitsubishi GTO twin turbo (3000GT VR-4 in some export markets), Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo - This transaxle carries the Mitsubishi designation W6MG1
- 448 — 6-speed
- Porsche 911 Turbo, GT3, and Porsche (GT3) Carrera Cup vehicles
- 466 — 6-speed
- Audi A4, Audi A6, Porsche Boxster, Porsche Cayman, Škoda Superb
- 466 four-wheel drive — 6-speed
- Audi A4, Audi S4, Audi RS4, Audi A6
- 7DCL750 - 7-speed dual clutch
- Mercedes SLS AMG
- Mercedes-AMG GT
- Ferrari California
- Ferrari 458 Italia
- Ferrari F12 Berlinetta
- Ferrari FF - with all-wheel drive
- Ford GT - 2nd Generation (3.5L TT)
Sites
- Bad Windsheim, Germany
- Bordeaux, France
- Ganzhou, People's Republic of China
- Gothenburg, Sweden
- Halewood, England
- Irapuato, Mexico
- Kechnec, Slovakia
- Cologne, Germany
- Ludwigsburg, Germany
- Modugno, Italy
- Nanchang, People's Republic of China
- Neuenstadt am Kocher, Germany
- Neuenstein, Germany
- Rosenberg, Germany
- Sanand, India
- Schaffhausen, Switzerland
- Shanghai, People's Republic of China
- Sankt Georgen im Schwarzwald, Germany
- Sterling Heights, Michigan, USA
- Untergruppenbach, Germany
- Yudu (in province Jiangxi), People's Republic of China
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f "GETRAG Corporate Group - corporate history". Getrag Corporate Group. Getrag.de. Retrieved 3 November 2009.
- ^ "GETRAG Corporate Group - Sites". Getrag Corporate Group. Getrag.de. Retrieved 9 January 2013.
- ^ "GETRAG Corporate Group - Global Presence". Getrag Corporate Group. Getrag.de. Retrieved 9 January 2013.
- ^ a b c "Facts and figures of the GETRAG Corporate Group" (PDF). Getrag Corporate Group. Getrag.de. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 February 2013. Retrieved 9 January 2013.
- ^ The name seems to be a syllabic abbreviation of Getriebe und Zahnradfabrik Hermann Hagenmeyer AG.
- ^ "FAQ 320is". BMW M Registry. Retrieved 23 September 2011.
- ^ Peter Robinson (1 September 2008). "Lucky Number Seven | News & Analysis content from". WardsAuto. Retrieved 7 March 2017.
- ^ Gernot Goppelt. "Schalt-Plan – Varianten des Doppelkupplungsgetriebes | heise Autos". Heise.de. Retrieved 7 March 2017.
- ^ "Start of Production of the Dry Getrag Powershift Transmission 6DCT250". Chicagopressrelease.com. 16 April 2010. Retrieved 7 March 2017.
- ^ "Getrag Produces 1 Million Dual Clutch Transmissions 6DCT250" (PDF). Getrag Corporate Group. Getrag.de. Retrieved 17 October 2012.
External links
- Getrag.com official website