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Gill Industries Launches Headrest Mechanism that Lowers Cost, 10X Quicker to Retool

   New folding headrest weighs less and is thinner than competing products

    GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., April 3 /PRNewswire/ -- Gill Industries Inc. has
developed a folding headrest mechanism for 2nd and 3rd row seats of SUVs,
minivans, and crossover vehicles that is 10 times quicker to place into
production than competing products and can save up to $650,000 in retooling
and associated costs.
    "It usually takes from six to nine months for us to retool a line to
produce a new headrest system," said Brad Miller, director of advanced product
development for Gill Industries.  "With our new platform folding headrest, we
can cut that time to six to nine days."  The Grand Rapids, Mich.-based
supplier of stamped metal components, welded assemblies and mechanisms sells
products to leading automakers and Tier 1 auto suppliers, such as Johnson
Controls, Continental Teves, Intier, Lear Corporation and Bosch.
    Miller said the system saves customers a considerable amount of money in
two ways: retooling costs and engineering and design costs.  The new headrest
system largely eliminates the need for Tier 1 suppliers and the OEMs to pay
for new tooling of production lines at Gill Industries, which can cost up to
$400,000 for a program.  At the same time, the versatility of the headrest
platform reduces the need for engineering/design changes and testing that can
add up to $250,000 per program.
    The patent-pending headrest mechanism weighs 0.5 kilograms (about 1.2
pounds) less than competing products, which is a significant reduction in
weight when a vehicle carrying as many as five mechanisms is subjected to a 30
mile-per-hour crash test.  Miller said the new mechanism is designed to meet
the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 202a requirements.
    The headrest mechanism is also thinner than competing products so it can
be installed in a wider variety of automotive seats, and a version of the
system can be activated remotely by the driver to flip headrests down for
clearer vision through the rear window.
    Miller said the Gill team of engineers and designers were able to reduce
weight, yet maintain strength, through the use of engineered materials,
component reduction and design for manufacturing.
    "Our team at the Gill Technology Center spent almost an entire year
developing this advancement in automotive technology," Gill Industries
President and Chief Operating Officer Richard Perreault said.  "We are
confident we have a product that is well worth the investment we made in time
and money.  This new headrest mechanism is the type of innovation that the
automotive industry has come to expect of our company."
    Founded in 1964, Gill Industries has sales, design and manufacturing
locations in Grand Rapids, Trenton, Ga. and Naucalpan, Mexico, as well as a
sales office in Hellendoorn, the Netherlands.  Certified as a TS16949 company
and a Women's Business Enterprise, the company sells components, mechanisms
and systems for the automotive, office furniture and utility vehicle
industries.
    For more information or a demonstration of Gill Industries' new platform
articulating headrest system, contact Brad Miller at (616) 559-2782 or e-mail
address bmiller@gill-industries.com or Matthew Gryczan at Lambert-Edwards &
Associates, (616) 233-0500 or e-mail address mgryczan@lambert-edwards.com .


SOURCE Gill Industries Inc.




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CONTACT:
Brad Miller of Gill Industries,
+1-616-559-2782, bmiller@gill-industries.com ; Matthew Gryczan of
Lambert-Edwards & Associates, +1-616-233-0500,
mgryczan@lambert-edwards.com