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Tōyō Denki Seizō K.K. is a Japanese company majorly involved in transportation.

The company was founded in June 1918 by Yoshikazu Watanabe, the founder of Ishikawajima Shipbuilding (now IHI Corporation) and the Keihan Electric Railway with the aim of domestically producing electrical equipment for railway vehicles. Production began through a technical partnership with Dick, Kerr & Co.'s Japanese branch based in Tokyo before a ten-year contract was signed with Dick Kerr to transfer the manufacturing and sales rights for traction motors and other electronic equipment to the company. Their first products included the DB-1 control unit and DK-9C traction motors (licensed copies of Dick Kerr products) and the A-Type pantograph (copy of a General Electric design). Dick Kerr would be acquired by English Electric in 1919, while this partnership with Dick Kerr would last until August 1938. Tōyō Denki would also develop a Cardan driveshaft system used for trains, which would go on to be adopted en masse by much of Japan's future rolling stock.

Today, Tōyō Denki is a major manufacturer of underbody equipment for electric locomotives, with their products used across the world.

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