In 1928, two years after the founding of Kato
Engineering, owners Elmer Jensen and Louis Wilkinson
first met the young man who was to become the
dominant influence for years to come. That first
meeting with Cecil Jones led to the development of a
company that has become synonymous with the very best
in power generation and conditioning that industrial
and commercial users have come to expect when they
see the Kato name.
Jones, a graduate of Dunwoody Institute in
Minneapolis and master electrician, had developed a
rotary converter, a device that rural families could
use to operate AC appliances from their DC storage
batteries. Believing that Jones and his invention
would be valuable to Kato, Jensen and Wilkinson hired
him to take charge of production. As a result, the
rotary Kato converter was an overwhelming success.
Though the original owners eventually left the
firm, Kato Engineering Company flourished under
Jones’ direction. By 1936, the company had grown
from five employees to nine and was producing several
small generators.
Kato received its first government contract in
1938. It was to furnish the original 31 U.S. Army
flying fields with AC generators for ground
instrumentation needed for aircraft to land. Then in
1939 the government awarded Kato a second contract,
and the company was on its way to significant growth.
Kato Engineering had 497 employees in 1945 when
employees were housed in six different buildings. In
addition to manufacturing thousands of AC generators
for all branches of the Army and Navy, Kato also
manufactured units for countries around the world.
During the years following World War II, Kato
supplied generators to various industries and built a
reputation on quality, dependability and the ability
to meet specific customer needs with design and
manufacturing innovations. The largest generator the
company made then was 15 kW, but by 1949 it was
turning out 225 kW generators that weighed some 1000
lbs. (450 kg.).
In 1978, Kato became a division of Reliance
Electric. The acquisition by Reliance resulted in
continued growth and investment in Kato - a new
facility was added in North Mankato, Minnesota in
1981 and then expanded in 1993 and again in 1998.
This facility now totals about 300,000 square feet.
Two years after the Kato acquisition in 1978 Exxon
purchased Reliance, then a NYSE stock held company.
In 1986 Reliance purchased the company back from
Exxon in a leveraged buyout and took the company
public with an IPO in 1992. In 1994 Rockwell
International Corporation acquired Reliance Electric
and Kato. In April of 1998, Caterpillar, Inc.
purchased Kato Engineering from Rockwell. In June
1999, Kato was purchased by Emerson
Electric. Together with Emerson's other generator
plants (one in Tennessee, three in Europe, and one in
Asia), Kato makes up one of the largest generator
manufacturing companies in the world.
To continue to meet customers’ demand for
up-to-date designs, of the highest quality, at the
lowest cost and with the shortest manufacturing time,
Kato Engineering has installed state-of-the-art
equipment in the new plant. This equipment includes
precision machining equipment, computer controlled
coil forming and taping machines and a best-in-the
world vacuum-pressure impregnation system for
treating electrical equipment with resin. We are
continuing to invest in our employees and with new
equipment and products to meet the world's power
needs. Our product line now extends to include
machines capable of producing up to 15 MW and higher.
In 1995 Kato Engineering achieved ISO 9001
certification, a quality program that is recognized
world wide.
Demand for electrical power is being created by
deregulation of utilities, co-generation and the
needs of third world countries to develop their
resources, and Kato is a major supplier to this
rapidly expanding world market for dispersed and
standby power. Kato generators supply power to tap
the world's resources - oil, gas, coal, uranium,
copper, iron ore, lumber and others. Tankers,
freighters locomotives, aircraft, mass transit - Kato
furnishes the power to keep all of them moving.
Hospitals, communication industries, remote areas of
the country...any place where dependable controllable
electrical power is needed - that's where you find
Kato generators.