Edwin Ruud

Edwin Ruud

Black and white portrait photograph of Edwin Ruud from a 1922 publication of Gas Age, Volume 50.

Edwin Ruud
Born (1854-06-09)June 9, 1854[1]
Norway
Died December 9, 1932(1932-12-09) (aged 78)[1]
USA
Resting place Plot: Rudd Mausoleum Section 11, lot 39; Homewood Cemetery, Pittsburgh, USA[1]
Nationality Norwegian-American[2]
Occupation
  • Mechanical Engineer
  • Inventor

Engineering career

Discipline Mechanical Engineering
Employer(s)
  • The Fuel Gas and Manufacturing Company
  • Ruud Manufacturing Company
Significant design The Ruud Instantaneous Automatic Water Heater
Awards
Signature

Edwin Ruud (9 June 1854 – 9 December 1932) was a Norwegian mechanical engineer and inventor who immigrated to the United States where he designed, sold, and popularized the tankless-water heater.[3][4]

Biography

The Fuel Gas And Manufacturing Company

In the 1880s, Ruud began working for George Westinghouse at the Fuel Gas and Manufacturing Company in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[3] Eight years after filing his first US patent, Ruud filed the first of five patents he would assign to Westinghouse's Fuel Gas and Manufacturing company.[5][6][7][8][9]

In 1889, Ruud engineered a design for an automatic storage tank-type gas water heater that used a bottom gas heater and temperature controlled gas-valve.[4] He later patented the design in 1890.[6] In October 1890, he expanded on his first water heater design, under the Fuel Gas and Manufacturing Company.[8]

Ruud Manufacturing Company

On January 22, 1897, Ruud filed a patent separate from the Fuel Gas and Manufacturing Company for an Automatic Water Heater. His new design consisted of a cast iron shell, enclosing burners, heating surfaces (a coil of copper tubing through which water flows), and thermostat controlling gas-valves.[10] The object of the design improvement was, "to maintain the supply of water at the desired temperature at all times."[11] With this new design, Ruud left the Fuel Gas and Manufacturing Company to start Ruud Manufacturing, his own engineering and manufacturing shop where he began to manufacture and popularize in home, as well as commercial and industrial water heaters.[3] Ruud was issued his patent for the coiled tube Automatic Water Heater on September 6, 1898.[11]

A 1915 diagram showing the innards of a Ruud instantaneous water heater

Ruud's business expanded as he popularized and improved on his instant water heater design. In 1908, Ruud Manufacturing acquired two local heating and plumbing firms. James Hay of the James Hay Company, heating and plumbing engineers, closed his business in order to operate as president of the Ruud Manufacturing Company in 1908.[12] and J.H. Folsom of Folsom-Webster Co., heating and plumbing contracting firm, dissolved his partnership in Folsom-Webster Company in 1908 to serve as chief of the Cincinnati branch of the Ruud Manufacturing Company. By 1915, the Ruud Manufacturing Company had offices in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Kalamazoo, Michigan; Toronto, Canada; and Hamburg, Germany.[10]

The Ruud Instantaneous Automatic Water Heater

A Ruud Type F Size no. 3 instantaneous and automatic water heater from 1906.

The Thermal Valve Model, Type F, of the Ruud Instantaneous Automatic Water Heater is a design that allows the user to instantaneously heat water for on demand applications while not heating, thus saving fuel, when not in use. The Type F was able to use LP gas, natural gas, and gasoline, requiring only a change of burner spud orifices, and was manufactured in two variations, the "Standard Pressure Heaters," designed to operate in conditions where pressure was at least twenty-five pounds per square inch (1.7 bar), and "Low Pressure Heaters," where operational water pressure could be as low as four pounds per square inch (0.3 bar). Thermal Valve Model, Type F heaters were manufactured in four residential sizes reflective of their output in gallons per minute: 3, 4, 6, 8.[10] In 1915, there were approximately one-hundred-thousand of the Type F installed throughout The United States and Canada.[10]

The water heater arm of Ruud Manufacturing was purchased by Rheem in 1959.[4] However, the Ruud name continued with RUUD Heating and Air Conditioning Equipment.[3]

Awards

Patents

References

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