History

About / Our Factory


The history of our factory
And a curious link between ball bearings and medical masks.

And a curious link between ball bearings and medical masks.

In August 1942, the Australian government spent £100,000 building a ball-bearing factory in the Victorian town of Echuca.

Some 214km north of Melbourne, it was, back then, a bustling trade hub due to its accessibility via road, rail and river.

By June 1945, the Echuca Ordnance Factory (later named United Bearing Corporation Pty. Ltd) was powering along and employed 147 personnel from surrounding areas.

At the time, it was the only ball bearing factory in Australia and was built to service the defence industry’s needs for their mechanised transport during World War II.


Ball bearings were and still are incredibly important.


Without them, cars, tanks, trucks, ships, aeroplanes and weapon systems couldn't operate.

UBCO produced precision aero-engine and marine diesel bearing sets as part of the war-winning effort.

Notoriously tricky to make, these parts need to be exactly the right size for each machine they were used in. Having a factory dedicated to making ball bearings was a strategic move by the government and great for the local manufacturing industry in country Victoria.


Built for Australians by Australians


In 1972, under the motto ‘Built by Australians for Australians’, Foodmach started trading from a Melbourne workshop, before moving to Echuca as a part of a decentralisation incentive package handed out by the Victorian Government.

The Swedish ball bearing manufacturer, SKF bought out UBCO in 1974 but closed the factory down in 1978 due to a declining market share. It cited 'unrealistically low prices from competitive bearings' and 'a reduction in protection against imports' as the main reasons.

As Foodmach grew to become one of the largest packaging machinery manufacturers in Australia, it took over the eastern half of the old bearings factory next door and employed many of the skilled tradespeople who'd worked there.


Project Med-Con 2020


Over 75 years after its opening, the old Echuca Ordnance factory—built to supply our front line defence force with machinery parts—was tasked with helping our front line medical staff in their fight against Covid-19.

Recreating and updating a 40-year-old machine with no blueprints in less than 60 days in order to secure our nation's mask supplies was a challenge that we're relieved we proved worthy of.

We ran a live blog to share our journey with the world, and we won awards for the project

We are very proud to be operating out of the same factory walls as UBCO once did and to be working with the same goal—to look after the future of our fellow Australians.


Written by Steph Marks

With special thanks to Colin at Lost Echuca Moama.

See more by searching 'Echuca Ordnance Factory' at the National Library of Australia's Trove


FOR HISTORY BUFFS

From the Second World War Official Histories of the Australian War Memorial:

'Among the more important machines for which the Echuca factory began making bearings in June 1944, were:

  • Gray Marine Diesel Engines: 1,715 sets of bearings
  • Cheetah Aircraft Engines: 40,000 steel balls
  • Gravity Conveyor Rollers: 6,000,000 steel balls
  • Mechanical coal-winning equipment: 29 sets of large thrust bearings.'

From Richard Hart, who is a Volunteer Guide at the Australian War Memorial:

'Gray marine diesels were used in a wide variety of small and medium vessels, including most notably Landing Craft Infantry (LCI). It's entirely possible that some of the LCIs from which men of 7th Australian Division stormed the beaches at Balikpapan in 1945 were turning on Echuca bearings.

Cheetah aero engines were installed in more than 800 Avro Anson twin-engined multipurpose aircraft operated by the Royal Australian Air Force. These aircraft were used extensively to train the bomber crews who would later fly Lancasters and Halifaxes against Nazi Germany, and Beauforts and Beaufighters against the Empire of Japan.'

See the relevant chapter of the Official History.