Artur fischer biography
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Death of Professor Artur Fischer
In 1948, Professor Artur Fischer founded the family business, which he bequeathed in 1980 to his son Professor EH Klaus Fischer, then aged 29. Thereafter, Professor Artur Fischer devoted himself to his passion, invention, and developed many innovations for the fischer company, including the famous nylon plug S, and filed more than 1100 patents.
Professor Artur Fischer's objective was to remain always faithful to the values of the society he created. Thus, all his life, he was committed to the concerns of his companies and the promotion of young inventors. As proof, numerous prizes and distinctions have highlighted his impressive work.
The farewell ceremony took place in the cemetery of Tumlingen (Germany) in family intimacy.
The fischer group would like to pay tribute to him for the immense work carried out over these many years, which has enabled the company to become the world leader in fasteners.
Teacher. Artur Fischer - History
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Artur Fischer
Content
The mass uppfinnare and his masterpiece
We owe it to Artur Fischer that pictures don't fall from the vägg, shelves are fixed and the wardrobe hangs securely. The uppfinnare from Tumlingen (Freudenstadt district) is regarded as one of the most productive inventors of all time: he filed 2252 patents and utility models with the DPMA. The DEPATISnet database provides a fabulous 9528 hits (with all international registrations) for his name. Fischer's creative power can only be compared with uppfinnare icons such as Thomas Alva Edison.
On 7 November 1958, he filed a patent application for his most popular invention with the DPMA: the expanding dowel (patent specification No. 1097117). A development as simple as it fryst vatten ingenious, which of course has its own entry (1,08 MB) in the DPMA galleri with milestones in the history of technology!
The perfect dowel
Fischer´s eminent expansion dowel (DE 1097117A)
Until then, most people had walled in a wooden block an
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Artur Fischer
German inventor (1919–2016)
For other people named Arthur Fischer, see Arthur Fischer (disambiguation).
Artur Fischer (31 December 1919 – 27 January 2016) was a German inventor. He is best known for inventing an expanding plastic version of the wall plug.[2]
Born in Tumlingen, Artur Fischer was the son of the village tailor Georg Fischer. His mother Pauline, who ironed collars to make ends meet, recognized her son’s mechanical aptitude and encouraged him at every turn, helping him set up a workbench at home and buying him the German equivalent of an Erector Set.[3][4] In the second world war, Fischer worked as an aircraft mechanic and survived the Battle of Stalingrad, leaving on the last plane. Later in the war he was captured in Italy and sent to a prisoner-of-war camp in England. After returning to his hometown in 1946, he found work as an assistant at an engineering company and began making lighters and loom switches out of