By 1983 the company had progressed to offering standard computer based industrial products to end users and to original equipment manufacturers as components in their products and ten years later began offering encoder test equipment.
In 1999 the company began offering a suite of hardware and Windows-based software to designed to test additional types of encoders as well as resolvers and other servo feedback devices.
In 2001 the company introduced a line of equipment designed to provide repair shops and plant maintenance personnel the ability to test run many types of servo motors with one common drive device.
A patent was later issued to the company for "an apparatus that allows a non-standard brushless motor to be driven with a standard drive amplifier.
Notable manufacturing applications include use by Ford, General Mills, and Sturm Ruger.