History
Early years
Surface combustion is an engineering term which refers to process whereby a gaseous fuel is premixed with enough oxygen so that both the fuel and the oxygen are nearly completely used up. Some time prior to 1913, natural gas salesman Henry O. Loebell incorporated the Improved Appliance Company, which manufactured industrial furnaces. Taking advantage of recent advances in combustion research, Loebell changed the name of his corporation to Surface Combustion Corporation in 1915 and expanded into natural gas burning generators and industrial combustion systems. The firm was initially headquartered in The Bronx,Midland-Ross years
In November 1959, steel manufacturer Midland-Ross Corporation bought Surface Combustion for $23 million. Midland-Ross purchased the Fandaire division of Yuba Consolidated Industries in February 1962 and merged it with Surface Combustion. In April 1969, Midland-Ross sold Surface Combustion's Janitrol and Webster divisions to Laird, Inc. The sale did not include the Janitrol Aero division, which was retained by Surface Combustion. In the 1970s, Surface Combustion began developing furnaces for the destruction of chemical weapons under a contract awarded byForstmann, Little years
On July 1, 1986, the private investment firm Forstmann Little & Company acquired Midland-Ross for $450 million. By this time, Surface Combustion owned more than 500 patents and had installed about 250,000 heat-treating and industrial furnace appliances worldwide. Forstmann, Little did not retain control of Surface Combustion for long. In 1987, the investment firm sold Surface Combustion to a consortium consisting of Surface Combustion management. The sale did not include Surface Combustion's Janitrol Aero division, which Forstmann, Little retained as part of its FL Aerospace Corporation.Independence again
Surface Combustion moved into a headquarters in Maumee, Ohio, in 1988. At the time the company was spun off from Forstmann, Little, it had about 150 employees—about 20 of which worked on research and development. It opened a new factory for the manufacture of heat-treating equipment and furnaces in Waterville, Ohio, in 1991. As an independent firm, Surface Combustion grew swiftly. It moved into another new headquarters, in size, in 1990. In 2004 and again in 2010, the company won contracts to produce furnaces and decontamination devices for chemical weapons.;About the firm
As of 2015, Surface Combustion, Inc. primarily manufactured industrial furnaces and equipment to heat-treat metal products. Its equipment was used in the automotive, energy production, farming, and mining industries. Some of the equipment is purpose-designed, and requires on-site assembly. The company had about 100 employees and annual sales of $40 million to $50 million. It sold equipment in 40 to 50 countries, and owned more than 675 patents. Tim Levy, president of Industrial Steel Treating, has called Surface Combustion "the IBM" of automobile manufacturing for the critical role their heat-treating equipment plays in the industry.Products
Surface Combustion manufactures equipment utilized for batch production or continuous production for various heat treating processes, including hardening, annealing, normalizing, gas carburizing, carbon restoration, carbonitriding and ferritic nitrocarburizing. It also manufactures custom furnaces for the destruction and elimination of chemical weapons and munitions. The company holds more than 675 patents and over 75 trademarks.References
Bibliography
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