logo image Heater etc. manufacturers A - K


The American Gas Machine Co. made this Radiant Heater No. One.

All 7 of the ceramic radiants are original and only required

cleaning along with the rest of the restoration.

The large gas tank is behind the door in the base of the unit.

Harold Porter bought this heater at a farm sale;

he found it in a three-hole outhouse!


The Coleman Lamp & Stove Co. made this Model No. 653D Fuel Supply Tank

for "Burners, Cook Stoves, Ranges, Heaters & Lighting Plants" in 1925-28.

The tank holds a gallon of fuel and includes a built-on pump.

This restored tank, in John Carriere's collection,

came from an older house in Jackson, Tennessee,

that also had an AGM hollow wire fixture.


Coleman made 7487 Model 3 "Hot Beam" radiant heaters, all in Aug - Dec, 1928.

This one is dated Aug. 1928 and is in Neil McRae's collection.

This is a Quick-Lite appliance and should start

relatively easily after heating the generator with two matches

but it is more difficult to start than that.

Once it is running it runs well.


Coleman Model 480 was also called the Hot Ray radiant heater.

This heater, in the Nichols' collection,

is dated Oct 1929.

It has the original ceramic radiant and still works well.

This heater can be tilted to the horizontal position

and used to heat food on the wire guard which becomes a grill.


Coleman made this radiant heater for their Sunshine Safety Lamp Co. subsidiary

in Kansas City, Missouri, beginning in 1926.

The fount and handle are the same as on their Model 532 lamp

and the fount is stamped with that model number.

This heater, in Jan Dyke's collection,

lacks the ceramic radiant.


Coleman shipped 30,126 thousand No. 4 radiant heaters from June, 1927

through 1929 (Charleen Becker - Hiram Strong's "Shipping Records").

This match lighting appliance, in Glenn Knapke's collection,

requires preheating and has a large fuel tank

with built-in pump behind the front panel.


Coleman probably made the large Model 5B heater in the 1930's

until they were discontinued by the end of this decade

based on information from Herb Ebendorf, Coleman Historian.

Glenn Knapke restored this heater which is in his collection.

This model requires preheating and has 8 vertical ceramic radiants


Coleman made the Model 456 Soldering Furnace

and the 454 Utility Burner in the later 1920's and early 1930's.

This one, in Dwayne Hanson's collection, is dated Nov. '29.

The brown lacquer on the collar may be the remnants

of the original finish on this never-plated brass fount.

The knob was replaced with a "T" handle by a previous owner.


Bo Ryman owns this Model 19 Coleman radiant heater.

It has two wide radiants with an elegant design

rather than several narrow radiants as in other models.


An Amish shop in north-central Indiana made this buggy heater

to hold a Coleman 500 stove (dated A [Jan-Jun] 51).

The sliding door protects the buggy occupants

and the upper, double-walled enclosure prevents burns.

A handle and place to hook the heater to the dashboard are not visible.

This heater is in Jon Schedler's collection.


Coleman of Canada made this Model 518C heater.

It is called a Quick-Lite Model

and produces 3000 BTU's.

This heater, in Harold Porter's collection,

is dated Jan. 1978.


Erich & Graetz AktienGesellschaft, Berlin, Germany,

introduced this Model 85N heating and cooking unit in 1939.

This appliance, in Juan Caiti's collection, has 3 ceramic mantles

arranged in a triangle inside the similarly shaped generator loop.

The fount, which is the same as used on Petromax lanterns,

holds 1 3/4 pints of kerosene and will burn for 7 hours.

A ring to hold pots on the top cooking surface is missing.


The Gloria Light Co. of Australia (Melbourne) made this radiant heater

with the same blue paint finish with gold accent

as on table and wall lamp models that Albert White has seen.

This heater, in Martin French's collection,

includes the wire mesh heating element (right image)

and has a height adjustment screw on the front of the fount.


Model 156 Radiateur Succes was sold from the mid-1920's until the early 1930's

by two French companies, Louis Compain et Cie, Paris, then Guenet & Abbat.

It is designed to be a free standing heater or wall mounted, as seen here.

The metal guard is strong enough so that the reflector can be pointed vertically

when free standing so it can be used as a cooker.

This heater is in Neil McRae's collection.


This Veritas brand bowl fire (radiant heater)

apparently was made by Samuel Heath & Sons, UK,

based on similarities to a Thermidor brand lantern

made by them.

This bowl fire is in Neil McRae's collection.


Aktiebolaget B.A. Hjorth, Sweden made this Model 110 Primus heater.

This heater, in Dane Gernecke's collection,

lacks the wire guard and a draught shield that sits on the alcohol cup.

By inserting standard legs in lieu of the reflector and heating cone supports,

the appliance becomes a tripod stove with a silent burner.

The date code AN (1949) is stamped on the bottom.


This bowl fire was made by Imber Research, a British company.

It is the same as a heater made under the Bialaddin name

(compare to the bowl fire on the right below).

This heater is seen here running on kerosene;

the alcohol preheater with the wick and cup is just below the mantle.

This heater is in Will Nelle's collection.


Willis & Bates made these 3 versions of the Bialaddin F2700 bowl fire.

Type 1 on the left has an air block and flat handle base (bottom)

and a preheater fill spout (top).

Type 2 (center) is as Type 1 but lacks the air block and spout.

Type 3 (right) is as type 2 but has a dipped handle base.

These bowl fires are in Neil McRae's collection.


Johannesburg Metal Pressings is believed to have manufactured this Apex brand heater.

This heater is in Alan Ford's collection.

The curved surface above the burner

turns a strawberry red color when running, according to Alan.

This piece is easily dislodged and needs to be cleaned of soot

if the heater has not been running at full power.


This Kayen radiator, model HR 11, is in Jim Dick's collection.

It was made in Sydney and Melbourne,

by W. Kopson & Co. and T.S. Nettleford & Sons respectively, between 1945 and circa 1955.

Founts were usually polished brass not copper as seen on this model,

which is sprayed with gold lacquer.

The reflector is polished copper.

 

American Gas Machine lanterns - early models updated July 24, '09
Main updated Nov. 19, '09
AGM lanterns - models beginning with the mid-1930's updated Dec. 11, '08
American Gas Machine lamps updated Nov. 24, '08
AGM, King Seeley, & Thermos lanterns - later models updated Nov. 19, '09
Coleman lamps before mid-1920's updated Feb. 28, '09
Coleman lanterns pre-1931 updated Oct. 21, '09
Coleman lamps after mid 1920's updated Nov. 19, '09
Coleman lanterns 1931 - 1945 updated Oct. 23, '09
Coleman hollow wire lighting updated Nov. 12, '08
Coleman lanterns 1946 - 1960 updated Sep. 1, '09
Coleman stoves pre-1945 updated Dec. 11, '08
 Coleman lanterns 1961 - 1980 updated Oct. 31, '09
Coleman stoves post-1945 updated Nov. 19, '09
 Coleman lanterns 1981 - present updated Oct. 21, '09
Custom lighting updated Nov. 5, '09
Heater etc. manufacturers A - K updated Mar. 4, '09
Hollow wire lighting updated Sept. 22, '09
Heater etc. manufacturers L - Z updated Nov. 29, '07
International lamp manufacturers A - F updated Nov. 11, '09
International lantern manufacturers A - E updated Nov. 5, '09
International lamp manufacturers G - Z updated May 19, '08
 International lantern manufacturers F - M updated Oct. 27, '09
Irons updated Dec. 16, '08
 International lantern manufacturers N - S updated Oct. 25, '09
Links updated Oct. 22, '09
 International lantern manufacturers T - Z updated Oct. 2, '09
Pumps updated Nov. 18, '08
Propane lantern & stove manufacturers A - B updated Feb. 22, '08
 Stove manufacturers A - D updated Nov. 4, '09
Propane lantern & stove manufacturers C updated Sept. 15, '09
Stove manufacturers E - O updated Sept. 7, '09
Propane lantern & stove manufacturers D - M updated Sept. 15, '09
Stove manufacturers P - Z updated Sept. 12, '09
Propane lantern & stove manufacturers N - Z updated Sept. 15, '09
Swedish lamps updated Nov. 5, '09
Tilley lanterns updated July 14, '08
Tilley household lamps pre-1945 updated May 12, '09
US lantern manufacturers A - G updated Sept. 28, '09
Tilley household lamps post-1945 updated June 6, '08
US lantern manufacturers H - M updated Sept. 28, '09
Tilley industrial lamps & lanterns updated Apr. 25, '09
US lantern manufacturers N - P updated Sept. 19, '09
US lamp manufacturers A - B updated Aug. 14, '09
US lantern manufacturers Q - Z updated June 2, '09
US lamp manufacturers C - M updated Feb. 25, '09
Wrench & other lamp tool manufacturers A - M updated Dec. 16, '08
US lamp manufacturers N - R updated Nov. 19, '09
Wrench & other lamp tool manufacturers N - Z updated Dec. 16, '08
US lamp manufacturers S - Z updated Apr. 7, '09

 

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© 2000-2009 Terry Marsh
 tgmarsh@noctrl.edu