Albert Barthélemy Franz Marie Joseph Dewandre (20 March 1884, Monceau-sur-Sambre – 25 May 1964, Liège) was a Belgian engineer, inventor and industrialist.
Family background
Albert Dewandre's father Georges (1853–1932) was also an engineer and a member of the AILg (Association des Ingénieurs diplômés de L`Université de Liège),[1] and his mother was Sophie (née Minette) (1855–1924).[2] Albert was the grandson of the Belgian lawyer-politician, Senator Barthel Dewandre (1822–1893).
Inventions
His most notable invention was a brake booster that utilized the vacuum in the intake manifolds of an internal combustion engine. It was commercialized by the German Robert Bosch GmbH, and was first used in some Mercedes-Benz truck models in 1927, and in passenger cars the following year.[3][4]
In 1933, he introduced a front-wheel drivetrolleybus, the "trolleybus Dewandre", with both power steering and brakes. After its introduction in 1935, the drawbacks of Dewandre's solution became apparent, as the feel of the steering system was still poor: it was difficult to keep the trolleybus steady in its direction due to the shortcomings of the steering technology used. After further development, vehicles equipped with power steering and brakes, manufactured under the British company Clayton-Dewandre Ltd., nevertheless brought the inventor a handsome income.
In 1938 Dewandre patented a hydraulically and pneumatically controlled automatic gun turret.[5][6]
Dewandre also designed and built a fountain for the 1939 Expo de l'Eau in Liège.[citation needed] The water jet, which reached a height of one hundred meters,[7] was the tallest of its kind in the world at the time of its construction.