Schelling
1917: Georg Schelling

1917
Georg Schelling founded the Schelling Anlagenbau GmbH with its headquarters in Schwarzach in Vorarlberg. The first services: Repairs for the local whetstone factories, mills and saw mills.

 

1958: Precision Plate Saw

1945
Directly after the end of the war, the green light was given for the series production of woodworking machines. In the following years, Schelling kept setting new milestones in the field of board dividing.

1958
Start of the first special machine with a moving saw blade.

1968: First automatic cut-to-size plant

1968
With the construction of the first automated large cut-to-size board dividing plant for a Dutch company, the family business once again relied on trendsetting technologies in panel dividing.

1971
Schelling marketed the first computer-controlled plants. In the 1970s and 1980s, the Schelling company continued to grow.

1989: Commander Type FW: The first graphic user interface

1982
At the beginning of the 1980s, precision saws were used for metal panels for the first time.

1986
The first Schelling saws with graphical operator guidance and moving images on the screen were manufactured. At the end of the 1980s, subsidiaries were established in the America and Great Britain. Internationalisation continued to increase.

1991: Trend-setting - the FW Unique

1991
New product systems came onto the market. The "FW Unique" with patented turntable and unmistakable design in white and blue is seen as a trendsetter.

1998
New markets were exploited. Two years before the millennium, the Schelling Polska subsidiary was founded in Sroda in Poland.

2002
Even today, the marketing of the EVOLUTION concept counts as a milestone in saw technology.

2004
Schelling gained further ground internationally and founded the Schelling Asia subsidiary.

2006: The PLUS+ concept: New chapter in history

2006
With the introduction of the Schelling PLUS+ product line, Schelling established itself as an innovation leader in cut-to-size saws once again. Its performance and precision placed all existing products in the shade.

2010: With the fs 10, Schelling now also divides steel and titanium

2010
Besides wood, plastic boards and metal panels have been processed for years with Schelling machines. With the fs 10, Schelling circular saw technology has also conquered the market of ultra-hard materials such as titanium panels, e.g. for the aerospace industry, and has considerably accelerated board cutting.

NEWS

05/18/12

Schelling area storage system convinces with rapid amortisation

Interaction of fh cut-to-size saws with vs area storage system increases utilisation while saving...

01/24/12

Entering retirement after 40 years with Schelling: W. Allgeuer

Walter Allgeuer belongs to his company's proverbial "inventory". But after four loyal...

01/10/12

New Marketing Manager

Positive changes at the technology leader in cut-to-size saws: Stefan Krebs Dipl.-Wirt.-Ing....