Honeywell

Career Details
Eligibility:

Engineering Degree with 50%

Selection Process:

Written
GD
Interview

Entry Package:
2.1
Organization Details
Industry:
IT/Software, Hardware
Company Profile :

In 2002, David M. Cote was named Chairman and CEO of Honeywell. Under his leadership the company focuses on five key initiatives: Growth, Productivity, Cash, People and the Enablers, Honeywell Operating System and Functional Transformation, in order to strengthen Honeywell’s position as one of the world's leading enterprises in the new millennium.

Honeywell can trace its roots back to 1885, when an inventor named Albert Butz patented the furnace regulator and alarm. He formed the Butz Thermo-Electric Regulator Co., Minneapolis, on April 23, 1886, and a few weeks later invented a simple, yet ingenious device that he called the "damper flapper."

Here's how it worked. When a room cooled below a predetermined temperature, a thermostat closed the circuit and energized an armature. This pulled the stop from the motor gears, allowing a crank attached to the main motor shaft to turn one-half revolution. A chain connected to the crank opened the furnace's air damper to let in air. This made the fire burn hotter. When the temperature rose to the preset level, the thermostat signaled the motor to turn another half revolution, closing the damper and damping the fire. The temperature correction was automatic. Over the years, many Honeywell products have been based upon similar, but more complicated closed-loop systems.

The Consolidated Temperature Controlling Co. incorporated, acquired Butz's patents and business, and by 1893, had renamed itself Electric Heat Regulator Co. The first company ads ran in 1895 featuring the now famous thermostat. In 1898, the company was purchased by W. R. Sweatt, who, by 1916, had changed the name of the company to Minneapolis Heat Regulator Company, expanded its product line and patented the first electric motor approved by Underwriters Laboratories.

Meanwhile, in Wabash, Indiana ...
Meanwhile, in 1904 a young engineer named Mark Honeywell, was perfecting the heat generator as part of his plumbing and heating business. Two years later, he formed the Honeywell Heating Specialty Co, incorporated, specializing in hot water heat generators.

By 1912, EHR had expanded its product line and changed its name to Minneapolis Heat Regulator Company (MHR). Four years later, MHR patented the first electric motor approved by Underwriters Laboratories.

The 1927 merger
In 1927, Minneapolis Heat Regulator Company and Honeywell Heating Specialty Co. merged to form the Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co., and became the largest producer of high-quality jeweled clocks. W. R. Sweatt became chairman and Mark Honeywell, president. The company made several acquisitions in the controls area. One of those acquisitions was the Brown Instrument Co., a worldwide leader in the field of industrial controls and indicators, and inventor of the pyrometer. Until Edward Brown had invented the carbon-rod pyrometer in the mid-nineteenth century, there was no accurate way to measure the extremely high temperatures in foundries and kilns.

Business around the world
Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co. had long been selling its products around the world through distributors like Yamatake Trading Company in Japan. In 1934, the company acquired Time-O-Stat Controls Corporation and began a long history of global expansion. The first office outside the U.S. was established in Toronto, Canada. Its first European subsidiary was established in the Netherlands the same year, and, within a few years, offices were opened in London and Stockholm. By 1941, it had distributors in Chile, Panama, Trinidad, New Zealand, Argentina and South Africa. By 1972, it operated 25 wholly owned subsidiaries, 142 branch offices, and joint ventures in five countries outside the U.S. In 1993, the company opened affiliates in Abu Dhabi, China, Oman, Romania and the Ukraine. By 1998, Honeywell had operations in 95 countries through 83 wholly owned subsidiaries and 13 joint ventures.

Products, developments and acquisitions
Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co. leveraged its scientific and engineering talent to transform itself and adapt to changing times. Mass production was perfected and an array of aeronautical equipment broadened the company's product portfolio. In 1942, the company invented the electronic autopilot (C-1), which proved to be critically important to the U.S. war effort.

In 1953, the company introduced the T-86 "Round" thermostat, which replaced chunky, rectangular models. One of the world's most recognizable designs, it remains in production today and adorns the walls of more households around the world than any other thermostat.

In 1954, the company acquired Doelcam Corp., a maker of gyroscopes. Over the next two decades, the company constantly improved gyroscopes, making them more sensitive and precise while reducing their size and weight.

In 1955, a joint venture called Datamatic Corporation, was established with Raytheon Corp. that marked Honeywell's entry into the computer business. The company's first computer system, the D-1000, weighed 25 tons, took up 6,000 square feet and cost $1.5 million.

In 1957, Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co. purchased a fire detection and alarm firm, the first of many acquisitions that would build its security business into today's global leader. In many North America cities, the red and black "Protected by Honeywell" window stickers and placards became nearly as recognizable as the Round thermostat.

Raytheon's interest in the computer venture was bought out in 1960 and the business name changed to Electronic Data Processing (EDP).

The company's name was officially changed to Honeywell Inc. in 1963, even though it had been casually referred to as such for nearly 40 years. Six years later, Honeywell instruments helped U.S. astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin land on the moon.

In 1970, Honeywell merged its computer business with General Electric's to form Honeywell Information Systems, which performed well in mainframe markets. In 1986, the personal computer emerged and the company formed Honeywell Bull, a global joint venture with Compagnie des Machines Bull of France and NEC Corporation of Japan. Its ownership level was gradually decreased until, in 1991, Honeywell was no longer in the computer business. The digital computer knowledge was then applied to its traditional field of automation control, integrating sensors and activators.

In 1986, Honeywell significantly enhanced its position in the aerospace industry with the purchase of Sperry Aerospace. It instantly became the world's leading integrator of avionics systems. Sperry contributed flight controls, space vehicles and the first FAA-certified wind shear warning system.

The AlliedSignal Connection
During World War I, Germany controlled much of the world's chemical industry, causing shortages of such commodities as dyes and drugs. In response, in 1920 Washington Post publisher Eugene Meyer and scientist William Nichols formed the Allied Chemical & Dye Corporation as an amalgamation of five American chemical companies established in the 1800s.

In 1928, Allied opened a synthetic ammonia plant near Hopewell, Virginia, becoming the world's leading producer of ammonia.

This was the company's earliest venture into new markets. After World War II, Allied began manufacturing other new products, including nylon 6 (for making everything from tires to clothes) and refrigerants. In 1958, it became Allied Chemical Corp. and moved into its current corporate headquarters in Morristown, New Jersey.

In 1962, Allied bought Union Texas Natural Gas, which owned oil and gas properties throughout the Americas. Allied regarded it mainly as a supplier of raw materials for its chemical products, but this changed in the early 1970s when CEO John Connor (secretary of commerce under Lyndon Johnson) sold many of Allied's unprofitable businesses and invested in oil and gas exploration. By 1979, when Edward Hennessy Jr. became CEO, Union Texas produced 80% of Allied's income.

Under its new name, Allied Corp. (1981), the company went on to purchase the Bendix Corp., an aerospace and automotive company, in 1983. By 1984, Bendix generated 50% of Allied's income, while oil and gas generated 38%.

In 1985, Allied merged with the Signal Companies, adding critical mass to its aerospace, automotive and engineered materials businesses. Founded by Sam Mosher in 1922 as the Signal Gasoline Company, Signal was originally a California company that produced gasoline from natural gas. In 1928, the company changed its name to Signal Oil & Gas, entering into oil production the same year. Signal merged with the Garrett Corporation, a Los Angeles-based aerospace company, and in 1968 adopted the Signal Companies as its corporate name.

The addition of Signal's Garrett division to Bendix made aerospace Allied-Signal's largest business sector. In 1985, the company sold 50% of Union Texas, and in 1986 it divested 35 non-strategic businesses through the formation and spin-off of The Henley Group, Inc.

In mid-1991, with a new CEO, Lawrence A. Bossidy, and new leadership in many key businesses, Allied-Signal began a comprehensive program of transformation. Bold actions were taken to improve cash flow and operating margins, to increase productivity, and to position the company as a global competitive force for the years ahead. The Allied-Signal name was changed to AlliedSignal in 1993 to reinforce a one-company image and signify the full integration of all of its businesses.

In 1992, the company sold its remaining interest in Union Texas through a public offering for $940 million in net proceeds.

Throughout the 90’s, Lawrence A. Bossidy led a growth and productivity transformation that quintupled the market value of AlliedSignal shares and significantly outperformed the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500.

Honeywell was founded and shaped by inventive technical people and superior leadership. These same values power the new Honeywell. The new Honeywell captures the best of its AlliedSignal and Honeywell Inc. heritage, and is one of the world’s leading companies.

Honey well came to our college for recruitment....
I belong to the ECE branch...
There were three sections namely..
1. AT (Quans and reasoning)
2. C Test
3. Technical... (Digital electronics,DSP,Control Systems,LIC,Micro processors and controllers).

Section 1:

* I couldnt exactly remember the Reasoning ques...
There was one ques thar had ms.braun,Mr.Allen.. totally six in number..3 of them would smoke.. one prefers silence... It was quite easy..

Another Ques was abt democracts and republicans hav to be selected from two groups of A,B,C,D,E and F,G,H,I.Atleast one has to be an army person and
another an economist...

* The quans was ok... problems based on cisterns,volume.profit and loss, work.... and a couple of ques on Venn Diagram.

Section 2:

Most of them were easy... but there were tougher ones based on files and unions.

Section 3:
There were 3 to 4 ques based on Control System which included one block diagram and a signal flow graph.
The diagram for Type 2 order 5 system.
The ques from LIC were very fundamental like.... the slew rate depends on _______.
The other ques that I remember are
What is FFSK?
A ques on the properties of Darlington Pair.
FFT is due to ______
there were ques on boolean algebra like... the min terms are (2.3.4.5) then the boolean expressions is
_____
expression for Algebraic XNOR is _______

Micro processor and controller ques was quite easy...
the two modes of 8086.
8051 is optimized for ____ bits.
why program counter?...
stack is used for_______

0
No votes yet

text have No negative

text have No negative marking and 3 sections -technical 35 questions in 30 mins-DCT, data structures,interrupts in 8085 etc..aptitude -30 questions in 30 mins ,C-20 questions in 15 mins-was quite easy some questions(not sectionwise)

key constraints are .....for...
(a) secondary key
(b) primary key
(c) foreign key
(d)...

If a sinusoidal signal of 1100Hz is flat top sampled at a rate of 1800Hz,& this signal is passed through an ideal LPF with cutoff 1KHZ,the o/p contains the following frequency components: (This question was repeated again in the same paper !!!)
(a)only 800Hz
(b)...
(c)...
(d)...

TRAP is _____interrupt
(a)synchronus
(b)asynchronus
(c)hardware
(d)...

When the instruction RST is executed, the control jumps to location:
(a)0020
(b)0024
(c)0028
(d)none of the above

A memory cell in static Random Access Memory is made up of:
(a)6 mos transistors---ans
(b)1 mos transistor and 1 capacitor
(c)4 mos transistors and 2 capacitors
(d)...

Worst case algorithm is meant for the case
(a)when sometimes favourable
(b)when worst unfavourable
(c)...
(d)...

A semaphore with negative count n(s=n) has how many processes in the Q?
(a)0
(b)n
(c)n+1
(d)n-1

If in a PCM system the no of bits used is increased from n to n+1,the signal-to-noise ratio improves by
(a)3dB
(b)6dB
(c)20ndB
(d)24ndB

2 trains of length 110m & 90 m travelling at 45kmph & 50 kmph respectively..when will they pass each other?
(a)144mins
(b)102mins
(c)..
(d)...

From a circular sheet of radius 10cm , 40% is cut off & from the remaining portion a cone is constructed, what is the ratio of the radius of the cone to its height?

If a vessel contains 56 litres of a mixture of milk & water in the ratio 3:2..what amount of water should be added to make the ratio 4:5?

2 pipes fill a cistern in 12 mins,pipe A is 3 times faster than pipe b...if only pipe B has to fill the cistern ,how long will it take?
(a)1hour
(b)2hours
(c)..
(d)..

#define ADD(X,Y) X+Y
main()
{
#undef ADD(X,Y);
fun();
}
fun()
{
int y=ADD(3,2);
printf("%d",y);
}
o/p?
Runtime error(linker error): _add undefined in module

Which of the following is illegal
(a)void v;
(b)void *v;
(c)void **v;
(d)all are legal

#define int INTEGER/*line1*/
#define INTEGER int/*line 2*/
main()
{
INTEGER p=10;/*line 5*/
printf("%d",p);
}
o/p?
(a) compiler error at line 1
(b) compiler error at line 2
(c) compiler error at line 5
(d) No error,prints 10
ans:c

main()
{
int counter=1;
for(;;)
{
counter++;
if(counter>9)
break;
}

}
in the above program
(a)error b'coz for should have parameters
(b)error bcoz 2 semicolons in a for loop are invalid
(c)no error,loop is executed once
(d) no error ,loop is executed 10 times

main()
{
char str={'H','E','L','L','O','\0'}
printf("%s/n",str+1);
}
o/p?
(a)prints ELLO
(b)prints HELLO
(c)prints ILLO (i.e.'H' is incremented by 1)
(d)...

The average temperature for monday,wednesday,thursday was 46 o C.the average temperature fortuesday,wednesday,thursday,friday was 48(some no)..if temp on monday was 42 o C,what is the temperature on tuesday?
(a)32
(b)36
(c)37
(d)3....

The average marks of 12 students was found to be......(some no)...it was later found that while entering the data , it had been entered as 74 instead of 50...and 20 instead of 24(nos are not the same)...what is the correct average?

If a lady bought a house & sold it at 25% more than what she had paid after 3 years, she has to pay 50%tax on the gain...If C is the cost price,(gain=s.P-c.p),what tax did she have to pay?
(a)..
(b)C/8
(c)...
(d)...

Some no of men(given)..complete a work in (given) no of days...after (some no) of days ..some more(given no) men join them,they will finish the work in how many days?

If a car travels from A to B at a speed of 'x' kmph & travels back from B to A at 4/5th the speed,then the total distance travelled in terms of percentage of x is?
(a)2400km
(b)3600km
(c)..
(d)...

A question on malloc
int *p;
p=malloc(sizeof(int)*5);
if malloc returned the address 1000;the value of p+1 is
(a)1002
(b)1004
(c)...
(d).....

cascade amplifier is:
(a)a common emitter stage followed by a common base stage
(b)a common base followed by emitter follower
(c)...
(d)a common base stage followed by a common emitter stage

A network has 7 nodes & 5 independent loops,the no of branches=?
(a)11
(b)14
(c)..
(d)...

Many nodes transmit at the same time .....collision occurs...retransmit.....what is this called?
(a)
(b)
(c)collision.....enforcement
(d)

If the characteristic impedance of a transmission line is 50ohms,at 1 end the impedance is +j50 ohms,the VSWR =?
(a)0
(b)infinity
(c)+j
(d)+1

Minimum no of NAND gates required to realize the boolean eqn: Z=ABC?
(a) 4
(b) 6
(c)..
(d)....

It has been found that mercury poisoning due to industrial pollution causes Hobson's disease. An island R is completely away from modern industry.People here follow subsistence agriculture method. A high % of people in Island R are affected by Hobsons disease.From the above paragraph, we can deduce
(i) there must be another reason for Hobson's disease other than mercury posoning
(ii) mercury poisoning can be due to other reasons than industrial pollution
(iii)....
(a) i only
(b)ii only
(c) i ,ii, iii
(d) i and ii

fun()
{
int counter=1;
counter++;
if(counter>10)
fun();
}...(some program similar to this one). the program will be executed infinetely--ans

Which of these are legal?
i.a pointer to a function
ii.a pointer to a structure
ii.pointer to union
(a)i only
(b)i and ii
(c)i,ii &iii
(d)ii &iii

Union..
{
int ivalue;
char lvalue;
struct boo
{
int ivalue;
char lvalue;
}databook;
};
(a)error as struct within union is not allowed
(b)error as struct members have same name as union members
(c)...
(d).....

How many stacks are there in DOS?
(a)1 stack
(b)2 stacks
(c)3 stacks
(d)...

What is the o/p?
main()
{
char arr[5]={'a','a','b','c','d','e'};
printf("%s",arr);
}

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
 
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><a> <em> <strong> <small> <sup> <sub> <cite> <blockquote> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2> <h3> <h4> <img> <br> <br /> <p> <div> <span> <b> <i>.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options