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Russell
Games Slayter
In
the 1930s, Games Slayter, the driving force behind Owens Corning
technology and innovation, envisioned a glass fiber material that
was lighter and more refined than the then-current technology
produced. With help from Dale Kleist and Jack Thomas, Slayter
developed the method for the mass-production of affordable fiberglass
and early applications of the new technology.
In
1931, Slayter, a chemical engineer, persuaded executives with
the Owens-Illinois Glass Company to support his research into
finding new uses for glass. Slayter, with Thomas and Kleist, worked
on ways to produce glass fiber insulation. Once Kleist and Thomas
invented the steam-blown process for making glass fibers, Slayter
streamlined the process for mass-production and made significant
improvements. He developed numerous applications for the glass
fibers, including blowing wool insulation for homes. By the 1940s,
Owens-Corning was also producing glass fiber reinforcements for
plastic laminates, which found their way into aircraft, boats,
and many other uses.
Slayter was born in Argos, Indiana, earning his B.S. from Purdue
University in 1921. A prolific inventor, Slayter held more than
90 patents.

Herman
A. Affel
Karl Bosch
Lloyd
Espenschied
Willard S.
Boyle
George E.
Smith
Vinton G. Cerf
Robert E. Kahn
Robert W. Gore
Fritz Haber
Richard M. Hoe
Benjamin Holt
Ali Javan
Dale Kleist
Robert S.
Langer, Jr.
Julio C.
Palmaz
Gregory G.
Pincus
Russell
Games Slayter
George E.
Smith
John H. Thomas
Elihu
Thomson
William Erastus
Upjohn
Granville
T. Woods
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