John Dewey Houson of Prineville Oregon
[QUOTE=Vortex;40044]I have many questions, but I just now found
John D. Houston's patent 1,781,062 from 1930
RANDY,
This patent is interesting and the comments about the machine that you can read at Rex Research are even more interesting. I don't know what to make of the patent itself, but then patents weren't written for ease of understanding and I have little patience with purposely bad writing. Leave it to attorneys to make bad writing "correct".
I have been looking into John Dewey Houston of Prineville, Oregon just for the fun of it. The neighbor or acquaintance who wrote in to Fate Magazine (quoted on Rex Research) remembered the dates wrong but Houston did die young, I think he was 27. His father owned a big stock farm (lifestock ranch?) in the arid part of Oregon where people still raise a lot of cattle. They had several servants or live-in ranch hands and so it looks like there would be no reason for him to dream up an exaggerated device, he had money. They travelled to San Francisco to show their machine, perhaps even to Rix Industries, which is still a big compressor design company. I tried to get Rix to look at one of my spreadsheets recently and they said, sure, just send us a check for $50,000 as a deposit on our fee...They're defense contractors no doubt and don't need to hear from us small fry.
Well anyway I think the idea behind Houston's patent is that he got ahead of the heat pump people who insist we need freon and then waste most of the work done in an expansion valve instead of an expansion engine. Houston probably had an air-to-air heat pump and defied the compressor status quo by putting hot air into a compressor, and basically just broke the law of do it like everybody else, and got good results. That is a very rough analysis I know but I hate reading patents, it puts me to sleep in five minutes.
If anyone out there has better info on John Dewey Houston I'd like to hear from them.
Scott
[QUOTE=Vortex;40044]I have many questions, but I just now found
John D. Houston's patent 1,781,062 from 1930
RANDY,
This patent is interesting and the comments about the machine that you can read at Rex Research are even more interesting. I don't know what to make of the patent itself, but then patents weren't written for ease of understanding and I have little patience with purposely bad writing. Leave it to attorneys to make bad writing "correct".
I have been looking into John Dewey Houston of Prineville, Oregon just for the fun of it. The neighbor or acquaintance who wrote in to Fate Magazine (quoted on Rex Research) remembered the dates wrong but Houston did die young, I think he was 27. His father owned a big stock farm (lifestock ranch?) in the arid part of Oregon where people still raise a lot of cattle. They had several servants or live-in ranch hands and so it looks like there would be no reason for him to dream up an exaggerated device, he had money. They travelled to San Francisco to show their machine, perhaps even to Rix Industries, which is still a big compressor design company. I tried to get Rix to look at one of my spreadsheets recently and they said, sure, just send us a check for $50,000 as a deposit on our fee...They're defense contractors no doubt and don't need to hear from us small fry.
Well anyway I think the idea behind Houston's patent is that he got ahead of the heat pump people who insist we need freon and then waste most of the work done in an expansion valve instead of an expansion engine. Houston probably had an air-to-air heat pump and defied the compressor status quo by putting hot air into a compressor, and basically just broke the law of do it like everybody else, and got good results. That is a very rough analysis I know but I hate reading patents, it puts me to sleep in five minutes.
If anyone out there has better info on John Dewey Houston I'd like to hear from them.
Scott
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