Dixie-Narco Explained

Dixie-Narco
Type:Subsidiary
Location:Williston, South Carolina, United States
Area Served:Worldwide
Industry:Vending machine manufacturing and distribution
Products:Vending machines, parts
Parent:Crane Merchandising Systems, a subsidiary of Crane Co.
Homepage:dixienarco.com

Dixie-Narco was a former brand of soda vending machines located in Williston, South Carolina owned by Crane Merchandising Systems.

History and description

Founded in Ranson, West Virginia,[1] the company's production facilities were relocated to Williston in 1989. Formerly a subsidiary of Maytag,[2] it is now a subsidiary of Crane Co., who also owns the Crane National, Glasco Polyvend Lektrovend (GPL), and Automatic Products (APi) brands.

The company was an early adopter of employee-suggestion-driven cost savings, soliciting suggestions based on the Rucker "share of production" plan in the early 1960s that helped drive down manufacturing costs.[3]

In 2017, the Dixie-Narco, along with the National, GPL, and Automatic Products brands were retired in favor of the single Crane Merchandising Systems brand. The former Dixie-Narco glass front products are still produced today under the CMS brand.

Legal dispute with Donald Trump

In 1991, Dixie-Narco was involved in a legal dispute with Donald Trump before a Federal Bankruptcy Court related to Trump's Taj Mahal Casino. Dixie-Narco claimed that they were owed payment by Trump for 1,350 bill-changing machines they had supplied the casino with, and that the bond-holder approval necessary for Trump's Chapter 11 filing had been improperly solicited as Trump had told them that Dixie-Narco's claim for $6 million of the machines was "worthless". Trump also asserted that the machines had often broken down. The claim was settled with an offer of $2.4 million to be paid in increasing installments to Dixie-Narco, as well as the Taj Mahal returning 500 of the machines, in return for which Dixie-Narco withdrew their objection to Trump's Chapter 11 debt restructuring.[4] [5]

Current products

Glass front vending machines

Discontinued products

Conventional (stack) vending machines

Dixie Narco named their stack vendors by how many cans it would hold and a suffix denoting the series (no suffix meant an earlier single price machine), for example a 501E is an E-series vendor that had a capacity of 501 cans.

Glass front vending machines

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Dixie-Narco completes Ranson plant expansion . 15 January 2019 . Beverage Industry . 1012–1023 . Magazines for Industry . 1988.
  2. Book: Wheelen . Text with Cases and Software to Strategic Management and Business . 1 July 2000 . Addison-Wesley . 0201532859 . 819 . 15 January 2019.
  3. News: Dixie-Narco . 15 January 2019 . Factory . 121. 1-4 . McGraw-Hill Publishing Company . 1963.
  4. News: COMPANY NEWS; Court Backs Trump's Plan To Shed Half of Taj Mahal . 15 January 2019 . The New York Times . AP . 29 August 1991.
  5. Web site: Stewart . Emily . The Backstory on Donald Trump's Four Bankruptcies . www.thestreet.com . The Street . 15 January 2019 . 15 September 2015.