Cape Engineering Co: Difference between revisions
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1970 [[E. and H. P. Smith]] sold [[Cape Engineering Co]] and another business as these were substantially different businesses from the rest of the group<ref>The Times, Sep 10, 1970</ref>. | 1970 [[E. and H. P. Smith]] sold [[Cape Engineering Co]] and another business as these were substantially different businesses from the rest of the group<ref>The Times, Sep 10, 1970</ref>. | ||
1977 Exhibited ventilators at Dubai medical equipment exhibition<ref>The Times, Nov 24, 1977</ref> | |||
2006 Won 10-year contract industrial cleaning and asbestos management for Scottish Power<ref>The Times, August 16, 2006</ref> | |||
== See Also == | == See Also == |
Revision as of 13:07, 30 January 2013


of Warwick
1952 After he retired from Alvis, George Thomas Smith-Clarke was co-opted onto a Birmingham hospital region subcommittee "to investigate the efficacy of mechanical ventilators". Upset at the distress caused to a patient taken out of an iron lung for nursing care, he redesigned all aspects of the existing Nuffield/Both iron lung or cabinet breathing machine, widely used to treat patients with respiratory paralysis caused by poliomyelitis.
Kits of parts to modify 500 Both machines were manufactured by a new company, Cape Engineering Co, set up with Smith-Clarke's support by several ex-Alvis employees.
The Smith-Clarke Junior Cabinet Respirator was designed by George Thomas Smith-Clarke and made by Cape Engineering.
1962 E. and H. P. Smith acquired Cape Engineering Co Ltd[1]
1970 E. and H. P. Smith sold Cape Engineering Co and another business as these were substantially different businesses from the rest of the group[2].
1977 Exhibited ventilators at Dubai medical equipment exhibition[3]
2006 Won 10-year contract industrial cleaning and asbestos management for Scottish Power[4]