Jump to content

World Dryer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 96.5.122.1 (talk) at 20:25, 10 May 2022. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

World Dryer
Founded1950; 74 years ago (1950)[1]
FounderGeorge Clemens
Headquarters5700 McDermott Drive
Berkeley, Illinois,
Key people
Tom Vic (President)[2]
ParentCarrier Corporation
SubsidiariesElectric Aire, Nova (Hand Dryers), and American Dryer
Websitewww.worlddryer.com

World Dryer Corporation is a Berkeley, Illinois based manufacturer of hand dryers and related products. Established in 1948 with the Model A, it was a subsidiary of Beatrice Foods, has been a subsidiary of Carrier Corporation, and in 2017 joined the Zurn Industries brand of Rexnord Corp.

Products

History

World Dryer was founded in 1948 by inventor George Clemens, with the intention of inventing and selling a new hand dryer that could compete against paper towels. It was better for the environment, more sanitary (this claim has been disputed by recent studies), and required less frequent maintenance. Three years later, Clemens patented a new hand dryer design, called the Model A. The original version of the Model A featured a wall-mounted assembly, a cast-iron cover, push-button operation, and a swivel nozzle.[3]

The Model A quickly became the industry-standard electric hand dryer, and established World Dryer as the premier manufacturer of electric hand dryers. Beginning in 1955, World Dryer began manufacturing and exporting units internationally via a partnership with UK-based Warner Howard Limited.

In 1968, World Dryer introduced a version of the Model A with a recessed assembly rather than a wall-mounted version. This version, called the Model RA, was modified slightly in 1990 to ensure compliance with the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990, and was further modified in 2005 with a squashed nozzle (Q Nozzle).[4] Other available options on the Model A include a steel cover rather than a cast iron one (DA) and a fixed non-swivel nozzle (A5).

In 1974, World Dryer was acquired by Beatrice Foods Co., and underwent a rebranding later that year, which saw the introduction of the current dark red "globe" logo. Also in 1974, World Dryer introduced a new hair dryer, called the Model B, which features the same motor and assembly as the Model A, but the unit is flipped upside down and is changed from a 30-second timer to a 80-second timer.[citation needed]

A 1980s-era World Dryer Model A

In 1985, Beatrice Foods Co. spun off World Dryer as an independent company. Model As manufactured during Beatrice Foods Co.'s ownership of World Dryer from the mid-1970s to mid-1980s include the byline "A Division of Beatrice Foods Co" on their front labels. World Dryer sold their hand dryer model units to Bradley Corp with a modified version of the their cast iron cover. [citation needed]

In 1986, World Dryer introduced two new low-cost models, the NoTouch and the Airspeed. The NoTouch was the first automatic hand dryer.[5]

In 1987, World Dryer introduced an automatic version of the Model A, known as the XA[citation needed],

In 1992, World Dryer merged with the Electric-Aire Company.

In 2000, World Dryer acquired Quebec-based Nova Hand Dryers.

Beginning in 2005, World Dryer introduced several new models to compete against faster and more modern models that entered the market in the early 2000s, most notably the Dyson Airblade and the Xlerator from Excel Dryer, the latter of which had, by this time, overtaken the World Dryer Model A as the industry standard. The first of these was the AirMax in 2005, which is externally identical to the Model A Series, but is fitted with a larger, more powerful motor, drying a user’s hands in 15 seconds. This was followed by the Airforce in 2008, the speed-adjustable SMARTdri in 2010, the ADA-compliant SLIMdri in 2011, the hands-in VMax in 2013, and the low-electricity VERDEdri in 2015.[citation needed]

Galleries

References

  1. ^ "The History of the World Dryer Brand". www.handdryer.com. Retrieved 15 September 2016.
  2. ^ "World Dryer Corporation: CEO and Executives - Businessweek". www.bloomberg.com. Retrieved 15 September 2016.
  3. ^ Hand Dryers V Paper Towels: the Surprisingly Dirty Fight For the Right To Dry Your Hands
  4. ^ "Restroom Direct shows that a Q Nozzle indicates that it's a squashed nozzle". Restroom Direct: Hand Dryers & Accessories. Retrieved 2021-04-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ US USD302870S, "World Dryer Airspeed/No Touch patent document", published 1989-08-15, issued 1986-04-18