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Richard Gurley Drew (June 22, 1899 – December 14, 1980) was an American inventor who worked for Johnson and Johnson, Permacel Co., and 3M in St. Paul, Minnesota, where he invented masking tape and cellophane tape.
Antique Scotch brand package Tape dispenser for Scotch Magic Tape. Scotch is a brand name used for pressure sensitive tape and related products developed by 3M. It was first introduced by Richard Drew, who created the initial masking tape under the Scotch brand. The invention of Scotch-brand tape expanded its applications, making it suitable ...
Richard Gurley Drew: 1899 Adhesive tape [362] 2007 Samuel Leeds Allen: 1841 Flexible flyer sled [363] 2007 Samuel Slater: 1768 Cotton mill, spinning machine [364] 2007 Squire Whipple: 1804 Iron truss bridge [365] 2007 Theophilus Van Kannel: 1841 Revolving door [366] 2007 Thomas R. Pickering: 1831 Velocipede [367] 2007 Thomas Seavey Hall: 1827 ...
Richard Drew (1899–1980), U.S. – Masking tape; John Boyd Dunlop (1840–1921), UK – first practical pneumatic tyre; Cyril Duquet (1841–1922), Canada – Telephone handset; Alexey Dushkin (1904–1977), Russia – deep column station; James Dyson (born 1947), UK – Dual Cyclone bagless vacuum cleaner, incorporating the principles of ...
Richard Drew may refer to: Richard Gurley Drew (1899–1980), inventor; Richard Drew (photographer) (born 1946), AP photographer; Richard Maxwell Drew (1822–1850), attorney and politician in Louisiana; R. Harmon Drew Sr. (1917–1995), judge in Louisiana; Zacron (Richard Drew, 1943–2012), English artist best known for designing the Led ...
Masking tape is a pressure-sensitive tape made with an easy-to-tear thin paper, and fly back and a removable pressure-sensitive adhesive. In 1925, Richard G. Drew, an employee of the Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company (3M), invented the first masking tape, a two-inch-wide tan paper strip backed with a light, pressure-sensitive adhesive ...
Prior to the development of the tape dispenser, 3M's standard clear scotch tape was sold as a roll, and had to be carefully peeled from the end and cut with scissors. To make the product more useful, the scotch tape sales manager at 3M, John Borden, designed the first tape dispenser in 1932, which had a built-in cutting mechanism and would hold the cut end of the tape until its next use.
Good surveyors will keep track of any circumstance on the path that can influence the accuracy of the distance measured and either measure that portion with an alternative, such as a surveyor's tape or measuring tape, or make a reasonable estimate of the correction to apply. Surveyor's wheels are used primarily for lower accuracy surveys.