Brunton, Inc.
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Brunton International LLC (formerly Brunton Inc.) is a manufacturer of navigation tools. Their product line includes recreational compasses, navigational equipment, and geology and survey instruments. They are located in
Riverton, Wyoming Riverton is a city in Fremont County, Wyoming, United States. The city's population was 10,682 at the 2020 census, making it the most populous city in the county. History The city, founded in 1906, is an incorporated entity of the state of Wy ...
.


History

David W. Brunton, a Canadian-born geologist and mining engineer, and William Ainsworth, a skilled watch repairman, founded Brunton in 1895. The firm is most famous for its earliest product, the Brunton Pocket Transit.
Geologist A geologist is a scientist who studies the structure, composition, and History of Earth, history of Earth. Geologists incorporate techniques from physics, chemistry, biology, mathematics, and geography to perform research in the Field research, ...
s, foresters, surveyors, and
archaeologist Archaeology or archeology is the study of human activity through the recovery and analysis of material culture. The archaeological record consists of Artifact (archaeology), artifacts, architecture, biofact (archaeology), biofacts or ecofacts, ...
sWilloughby, Tim,
David W. Brunton and his compass
'', Aspen Times, retrieved 25 March 2012
use this handheld compass and clinometer. Often simply called a "Brunton", the ''Pocket Transit'' was first patented in 1894 by David Brunton, who commissioned William Ainsworth & Sons to manufacture his invention in Denver, Colorado. The company later incorporated as William Ainsworth Inc. and for many years produced the ''Pocket Transit'' along with surveying transits, theodolites, and other instruments. By 1965, William Ainsworth Inc. was owned by a series of corporate conglomerates, and product quality varied as the company changed hands repeatedly. In 1972, a group of businessmen from Riverton, Wyoming bought the company and formed Brunton, Inc. In Riverton, Brunton began producing a new series of recreational outdoor compasses, hunting knives, and binoculars in addition to the ''Brunton Pocket Transit''. In 1996, the company was acquired by Silva of Sweden AB, the original Swedish-based manufacturer of the ''Silva'' brand compass. Initially, Brunton sold Silva of Sweden compasses and GPS devices imported from Sweden under the ''Elite'' ''Pro Elite'', ''Nexus'', and ''MNS'' labels (Johnson Outdoors retained the exclusive rights to the ''Silva'' brand name in North America). Brunton began sourcing some of its compass models from Asia.Scheer, Joshua,
Expansion at Brunton Promises 50 New Jobs
'', The Ranger, 15 March 2012, retrieved 26 March 2012
Over, Ernie,
A 180° turnaround: Brunton's Compass manufacturing relocated to Riverton from China
'', County 10 News Desk, County10.com, 14 March 2012, retrieved 12 April 2012
In 2006, the Silva Group was acquired by the Finnish
Fiskars Corporation Fiskars Corporation (natively Fiskars Oyj Abp; formerly Fiskars Oy Ab until 1998) is a Finnish consumer goods company founded in 1649 in Fiskars, a locality in the town of Raseborg, Finland, about 100 kilometres (62 mi) west of Helsinki. I ...
.Allonen, Heikki, ''Fiskars Acquires Swedish Silva Group'', Stock Exchange Press Release, Fiskars Corporation, 30 June 2006 Along with the rest of the Silva Group, Brunton became part of the Outdoor division of Fiskars. As of 2009, Brunton, Inc. employed about 40 people. In December 2009, Fiskars announced the sale of Brunton Inc. to Fenix Outdoor AB, a Swedish company. As a result of Fiskars divestment of Brunton Inc., Silva of Sweden AB ceased all exports of its Swedish-made compasses and GPS devices to North America, including the ''Nexus'', ''Elite'', and ''Pro Elite'' lines. In turn, Brunton ceased export of its model 8020, 8040, and 9020 compasses to Silva of Sweden AB. As of 2012, the company employed around 68 people at its Riverton, Wyoming manufacturing facility.


Product range


Magnetic compasses

As William Ainsworth Inc., production of the ''Pocket Transit'' continued; the same basic design remains in production today, in numerous versions and configurations. In 1970, the company introduced the ''Brunton Cadet'', a simplified evolution of the Pocket Transit incorporating a compass and clinometer, intended for use in training students in the fields of geology, forestry, mining, and surveying.''Boys' Life: Gifts & Gimmicks'', Vol. 60 No. 6 (June 1970), ''
Boys' Life ''Scout Life'' (formerly ''Boys' Life'') is the monthly magazine of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA). Its target readers are children between the ages of 6 and 18. The magazine‘s headquarters are in Irving, Texas. ''Scout Life'' is published ...
'', Boy Scouts of America, ISSN 0006-8608, p. 52
The company soon began marketing the ''Cadet'' to instruct
Boy Scouts Boy Scouts or Boy Scout may refer to: * Members, sections or organisations in the Scouting Movement ** Scout (Scouting), a boy or a girl participating in the worldwide Scouting movement ** Scouting America, formerly known as Boy Scouts of America ...
in the principles of surveying. In 1972, the newly formed Brunton, Inc. began compass and transit production in Riverton, Wyoming. Compasses included the ''Pocket Transit'', ''Cadet'', and an emergency compass called the ''Life Card'', designed to float in a bowl of water. This was followed in 1981 by the Model 8040 ''Sportsman's Compass'', a map (baseplate) compass with folding cover and mirror sight. In the same year, Brunton introduced the Model 9020. This small baseplate compass was designed for hikers, outdoorsmen, and hunters. Over the next ten years, Brunton would introduce a full range of map or baseplate compasses based on a liquid-filled vial with ''no-tools adjustment'' for
magnetic declination Magnetic declination (also called magnetic variation) is the angle between magnetic north and true north at a particular location on the Earth's surface. The angle can change over time due to polar wandering. Magnetic north is the direction th ...
. This new line included Models ''8010'', ''8020'', ''8040'', ''9020'', and the compact 9030 ''Trailbuster''. Brunton baseplate compasses with a G suffix (i.e. ''9020G)'' featured bright 'optic green' acrylic baseplates combined with a 'deep well' capsule and top-hat mount needle pivot in order to function in most magnetic zones. Brunton often included UTM and map scales with these compasses for U.S. standard 1:24,000 and 1:62,500 USGS topographic maps. The ''Model 9030 Trailbuster'' was intended to replicate the popular Boy Scout ''Trailblazer'' pocket compass discontinued by Taylor Instrument Co. The 9030 omitted the usual acrylic baseplate in order to minimize bulk (it weighed only 1 ounce), yet could still be adjusted to hold a set course or take bearings from a map. In 1991, the U.S. military purchased a number of Brunton Model ''8010'' ''Smoke Chaser'' compasses originally produced for
U.S. Forest Service The United States Forest Service (USFS) is an agency within the U.S. Department of Agriculture. It administers the nation's 154 national forests and 20 national grasslands covering of land. The major divisions of the agency are the Chief's ...
fire-fighting crews. Assigned an NSN stock number, the compasses were stocked in survival kits for U.S. Navy and Marine flight crews. These Model 8010 compasses used clear baseplates and were equipped with lanyards. The compasses were shipped in plain cardboard boxes with military stock number NSN 6605-00-553-8795. Brunton discontinued all 8000- and 9000- series compasses in 2011. After being acquired by Silva, Brunton began selling Silva of Sweden compasses and GPS devices. The Brunton 'Nexus' line included the Silva Model 15T and Model 25 ''Ranger'' compasses, rebranded as the Nexus 15TDC/TDCLE and 25TDC/TDCLE (Nexus 225) Pro Elite. The 25TDCL and 25TDCLE Pro Elite aka ''Nexus Type 225'' compasses remain, technologically speaking, the high-water mark of the Silva of Sweden 'Ranger' design. Another advanced Silva design sold by Brunton was the Model 54LU (Silva Expedition 54), a sophisticated prismatic baseplate compass marketed to foresters, surveyors, geologists, and SAR teams. Silva of Sweden in turn imported some Brunton designs to be marketed in Europe under the ''Voyager'' name. Brunton at this time began importing some of their compass line from Taiwan, including the Models ''9030 Trailbuster'', and the ''9075'' and ''9077'' lensatic compasses. In 1997, Brunton introduced an electronic fluxgate compass called the ''Brunton Outback''. Imported from Taiwan, the ''Outback'' featured gimbal-mounted magnetic sensors.Hodgson, Michael, ''Compass and Map Navigator'', Guilford, CT: The Globe Pequot Press, (1997), p. 44 Brunton claimed that the Outback could be tilted in use up to 15 degrees while producing accurate readings. Storing up to 10 bearings in its memory, the Outback also featured a night navigation mode with illuminated arrows to warn the user if he walked off-course. The ''Outback'' was criticized for poor rain resistance and short overall battery life, and was eventually replaced by the Brunton ''Nomad'' electronic compass, which was produced in two versions. Poor sales caused Brunton to discontinue the ''Nomad'' in 2011. In 1998, Brunton introduced its ''Eclipse'' range of imported liquid-filled baseplate compasses featuring low-profile vials, a magnified readout in 1-degree increments, and an unconventional, patented ''circle-over-circle'' magnetized disk in place of a traditional pointed needle, set into an extremely shallow liquid-filled capsule. The ''Eclipse'' compasses included the ''Model 8096 GPS'', the ''Model 8097'', and the ''Model 8099 Pro''. Like older Brunton outdoor compasses, the ''Eclipse'' series used ''no-tools'' adjustable declination. Designed by Brunton, but imported from China, some owners of ''Eclipse'' compasses reported issues with air bubbles forming in the compass vials as well as parallax issues when using the sighting mechanism. The shallow capsule depth also limited the compass' ability to point accurately to north in varying magnetic zones. In 2009, Brunton stopped selling most Silva of Sweden products. The ''Nexus'' and ''Elite'' lines were discontinued, as well as the ''Brunton 54LU''. Some Silva models, including the ''Brunton 15TDCL'' and ''Brunton 16DLU'', were later sourced from a production facility in China. In 2011, Brunton discontinued the Models 8010G, 8020, 8040G, 9020G, and 9030 compasses. In 2012, Brunton introduced a new series of outdoor compasses called ''O.S.S.'' (''Orbital Sighting System)''. Like the ''Eclipse'' series, the O.S.S. compasses featured double-thickness acrylic baseplates, a large liquid-filled capsule and a ''circle-over-circle'' north indicator. To answer criticisms of the previous Eclipse design, Brunton incorporated several design changes including a deep-well 'global' vial, a serrated outer bezel, and map meridian lines imprinted in the base of the housing (to aid in map orientation). Unlike older ''Eclipse'' compasses, ''O.S.S.'' compasses were assembled in Riverton, Wyoming from components made in the United States. As of 2012, Brunton was the only major compass manufacturer with U.S.-based production facilities. In 2014, Brunton dropped the circle-over-circle magnetized disk/needle design used in the ''Eclipse'' and ''O.S.S.'' series, and returned to a traditional needle design for the magnetic north indicator.Brunton, Inc. 2014 Sales Sheet,
TrailExplorers.com
', retrieved 14 April 2024
The current TruArc baseplate compass line uses rare-earth magnets to stabilize the north indicator needle. Equipped with 'deep-well' liquid-filled capsules, all TruArc compasses were designed from the outset to work in all magnetic zones. In 2016 Brunton introduced the Axis Pocket Transit (F-5011 and F-5012) intended specifically for geologists. The Axis Pocket Transit offered for the first time simultaneous measurements of strike, dip, trend, and plunge in a variety of configurations. The Axis Pocket Transit features an unconventional lid design that swings a full 360 degrees in both directions and two axes that allow precise measurement of vertical and horizontal angles on all configurations of bedding surfaces. It also breaks from traditional transit functionality in orienting north in-line with the major axis and in sighting through this hinge without the standard mirror and sight arm. Brunton launched a new series of illuminated field survey instruments and general outdoors (baseplate-style) compasses at the OutDoor show in Friedrichshafen, Germany, June 18, 2017. The Omnisight LED is a lensatic (direct-sighting) surveying compass reminiscent of the previous Brunton Clinomaster, but with LED illumination.Dennig, Melanie,
Brunton Introduces LED-Enhanced Navigation Instruments at OutDoor and Outdoor Retailer Shows
', SNEWS, retrieved 30 May 2019
The compass is also available with a built-in clinometer as the Omnislope LED. Brunton introduced new
photoluminescent Photoluminescence (abbreviated as PL) is light emission from any form of matter after the absorption of photons (electromagnetic radiation). It is one of many forms of luminescence (light emission) and is initiated by photoexcitation (i.e. ph ...
dials to its TruArc line of compasses, and reintroduced the older Brunton 8010 (''Smoke Chaser'') compass with clear baseplate, now incorporating a new photoluminescent dial marked in degrees. A version using an MRAD (mils) scale has since been discontinued.


GPS receivers

In 2000, Silva of Sweden AB introduced its Silva ''Multi-Navigator'' GPS device. Brunton marketed the product in North America as the Brunton ''MNS''. The ''MNS'' featured an electronic compass, barometer, and barometric altimeter in addition to GPS functionality.
Review Of Silva Multi Navigator/Brunton MNS GPS Device
', Alan Law's Mountain Web-Site, 9 November 2003, retrieved 18 October 2022
With a relatively high energy consumption of 210 mA (or 270 mA with illumination on), the ''MNS'' had a battery life of around 10 hours. At $399, the ''Brunton MNS'' faced intense competition competitors such as ''Garmin'' and ''Magellan.'' Products with better battery life and improved scrolling menu displays kep the ''MNS'' from gaining significant market share. Furthermore, the ''MNS'' was not
WAAS The Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) is an air navigation aid developed by the Federal Aviation Administration to augment the Global Positioning System (GPS), with the goal of improving its accuracy, integrity, and availability. Essenti ...
capable and did not offer internal storage of waypoints, routes or tracks. In 2004, Brunton introduced a lower-priced GPS receiver, the ''ATLAS'', a rebadged version of the
Lowrance Navico is a marine electronics company providing navigation, marine instruments and fish finding equipment to both the recreational and commercial marine sectors. The Navico Recreational Marine Division is one of the world's largest provider of ...
iFinder. This product also failed to gain a significant share of the handheld GPS market, and Brunton discontinued all handheld GPS receivers in 2009.
Brunton Multi Navigator System
', Trailspace.com, retrieved 18 October 2022


Optics

In 1992, Brunton introduced a line of binoculars and other optical equipment aimed at the hunting and outdoor recreation market. The optics line was discontinued in 2014.


See also

*
Brunton compass A Brunton compass, properly known as the Brunton Pocket Transit, is a precision compass made by Brunton, Inc. of Riverton, Wyoming. The instrument was patented in 1894 by Canadian-born geologist David W. Brunton. Unlike most modern compasses, ...


References


External links


Brunton website

Information on the Brunton Revolt power bank range
{{Fiskars Surveying organizations Optics manufacturing companies of the United States Fiskars Riverton, Wyoming