Thermal Care Names New Regional Manager
The process-cooling technology supplier has appointed Avi Bromberg to manage equipment sales and support in the Mid‐Atlantic, New England, Eastern Canada and the Caribbean.
Process-cooling technology supplier Thermal Care Inc., Niles, Illinois, has appointed Avi Bromberg as a regional manager in charge of sales and support for customers in the Mid‐Atlantic, New England, Eastern Canadian and Caribbean territories.
In this role, Bromberg is responsible for supporting Thermal Care’s representative organizations, as well as new and existing customers. Bromberg joined Thermal Care in 2018 as an application engineer, transitioning in 2019 to lead the Inside Sales and Application Engineering teams. During this period, Bromberg was responsible for overseeing the sales team’s internal day‐to‐day activities along with numerous special projects. He earned a bachelor’s degree in industrial engineering from the University of Illinois.
Founded in 1969, Thermal Care develops process-cooling and heat transfer equipment to more than 50 industries. Products include portable/packaged and central chillers, cooling towers, adiabatic fluid coolers, pumping systems and temperature control units.
Avi Bromberg has been promoted to be a regional manager for process cooling and heat transfer equipment supplier Thermal Care. Photo Credit: Thermal Care
Related Content
-
Compact TCU Retains Power, Precision and Configurability of Bigger Systems
NPE2024: Conair’s MicroTemp Thermolator temperature control unit (TCU) is its smallest ever measuring just 14.7 ×y 15.6 ×y 18 inches.
-
Cooling the Feed Throat and Screw: How Much Water Do You Need?
It’s one of the biggest quandaries in extrusion, as there is little or nothing published to give operators some guidance. So let’s try to shed some light on this trial-and-error process.
-
Temperature Control: What You Need to Know to Comply With New Cooling-Fluid Regs
Beginning the first of this year, 12 states are following EPA bans on potentially damaging cooling fluids. Chiller suppliers have adjusted equipment designs to accommodate the new regulations. Here’s what all this means to processors.