Capturing the force of nature  
  Pax Scientific  
     
                          A b o u t  J a y  H a r m a n
  bio
 
   
  Jay Harman jay harman, President and CEO

A serial entrepreneur and inventor, Jayden Harman has taken a hands-on approach to his lifelong fascination with natural fluid systems. In the process, he has grown companies that design innovative products, ranging from prize-winning watercraft called the WildThing and the Goggleboat, to a medical research company that developed a non-invasive technology for measuring blood glucose, to his latest company, PAX Scientific. PAX designs more efficient industrial equipment such as fans, mixers, and pumps based on Harman’s revolutionary concepts.

Born and raised in Australia, Harman’s love of nature began as a boy swimming in the ocean near his home. He began his career as a naturalist with the Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, but he quickly demonstrated talents as an inventor. While still with the Australian government, he designed, built, and licensed a set of crustacean measuring gauges as well as a range of hovercraft. At the same time, Harman became a leading spokesperson for the fishing industry in southwest Australia, and was appointed director of a government environmental commission overseeing waterways conservation.

In 1982, Harman founded his first company, ERG, Ltd, which went public two years later and grew into one of Australia’s largest technology companies, with a capital value as high as $3 billion. ERG developed large “active screen” billboards, plastic molding systems, interlocking building bricks, and afterburners for aircraft engines. While with ERG, Harman negotiated licenses in Hong Kong, Australia, Europe, and the US.

Two other successful business ventures based on Harman’s inventions followed. The first, Exclusive Acrylic Pty, Ltd, pioneered the use of mass production thermoformed plastics in global boat production—a concept that mirrored Harman’s love of sailing. The company later became a world leader in acrylic thermoforming. Harman then designed and created the Goggleboat, the world’s first all-plastic, seamless marine craft, which won the Australian Design Award. In 1990, he designed and created another innovative boat, the WildThing, which won the same design award as well as Best of Show in several international boat shows. Based entirely on natural design, these boats were radically lighter and stronger than comparable boats. As a result, these craft were extraordinarily navigable, yielded 30 percent greater fuel efficiency, and could be nested in containers for economical bulk shipping.

An avid sailor, diver, and explorer, Harman also designed and built a 54-foot wooden sloop, which he sailed 27,000 miles throughout Asia. He has built or restored a variety of other boats, including a 120-foot superyacht and two 150-foot wooden minesweepers, the Pax (sister ship to Jacques Cousteau’s Calypso) and the Chaleur.

Simultaneous with Harman’s marine craft development, he established CSL UK, based in the United Kingdom, to conduct medical research on non-invasive technology for measuring blood glucose and other electrolytes. The company later licensed its technology to Boehringer Mannheim. In another business venture, Harman licensed an award-winning solution for the safe encapsulation of friable asbestos—an extremely hazardous substance found in buildings throughout Australia and the United States.

Harman also founded a Rudolph Steiner-based wilderness boarding school in Australia’s Karri Valley. The school housed 66 students, aged 8 to 14, from Europe, Australia, and the US. Harman offered a sailing course for these children in which participants learned about biology, geography, math, astronomy, and world cultures while on extended excursions that ranged from Australia to Sri Lanka and throughout Southeast Asia.

The culmination of Harman’s work in natural flow has been the development of the PAX Streamlining Principle, a guideline for translating nature’s extraordinary efficiencies into industrial applications. Harman focused on the science and technology of fluid flow equipment during the 1990s, and began filing patents for PAX Scientific’s unique rotors. Harman’s goal is to show manufacturing industries that more efficient equipment is profitable for both shareholders and the planet.

Harman founded PAX Scientific, a Marin county engineering research and design firm that uses streamlining geometries to design energy efficient, quiet, and ecologically friendly technology.  Harman also sits on the boards of PAX Water Technologies and PAX Mixer.

 
 
     
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