The 10 billionth Bosch spark plug has just been produced at the company's Bamberg plant in Germany, making Bosch the world's most prolific manufacturer of spark plugs. The vast majority (8 billion) were manufactured at the Bamberg plant, which was established in 1939, while the remaining units were produced at other plants around the world.
Laid end-to-end, the Bosch spark plugs would form a chain stretching for more than 560,000 kilometres, circling the equator approximately 14 times.
A century ago, Bosch produced just a few hundred spark plugs per annum - today, the figure is more than 300 million, produced in factories across the world.
Bamberg is the primary plant for Bosch spark plug production and sets standards for all other Bosch spark plug plants. Bosch factories in India, Brazil, China and Russia also produce spark plugs for the local automotive industries and markets according to the company's worldwide quality standards.
Bosch unveiled its first spark plugs combined with a high-voltage magneto more than 100 years ago, and patented the innovative system on 7 January 1902.
Bosch's reliable ignition system for engines with ever-increasing speeds finally solved what Carl Benz described as the 'problem of all problems' in early automotive engineering.
The spark plug, in combination with industrial manufacturing techniques, opened the way for the surge in vehicle production experienced during the following decades. The result was affordable vehicles for everyone.
Today, constant developments in Bosch spark plugs as integral system components have made a significant contribution toward more economical, cleaner, and more efficient fuel combustion, as well as to more reliable engines and catalytic converters.