More than 70 years of manufacturing
The product that started TOYOTOMI's business
At a time when furnace, or charcoal-fired stoves were the mainstream for cooking, Toyotomi began selling cooking stoves that used kerosene, which sold well because of its convenience and soot-free properties.
Nicknamed "King," this was a long hit product that was produced for 13 years from 1959 to 1971. It gained overwhelming popularity for its good combustion performance and excellent durability.
The world's first radiant heater with a glass burning cylinder
Heaters equipped with a glass combustion glass-burning cylinder tube, which is now taken for granted. After the expiration of this patent, companies began to imitate it. The use of glass increased the amount of far-infrared rays, and the warmth of the heater became well known and overwhelmingly popular.
The heater with a glass burning cylinder that made TOYOTOMI a household name
With its glass combustion tube, the heater became a bestseller with the catchphrase "TOYOSTOVE with a red combustion cylinder" in TV commercials, and with its red body and innovative design, nicknamed "Dahlia”. Cumulative production exceeded 1.3 million units, making the TOYOSTOVE a household name.
A convection kerosene heater representative of the 1950s.
This heater was well received for its smart cylindrical shape, sturdy construction, and odorless white flame. Nicknamed "Himawari" (meaning "sunflower" in Japanese), this heater was such a big seller in the 1950s that it can be said to be a representative heater of the era.
An explosive hit product that became the prototype for cartridge tanks and current safety devices
With the adoption of a cartridge tank, glass combustion cylinder, and functions that are the basis for today's safety devices, this best-selling product, nicknamed "SABUROKU," has a cumulative production volume of over 2.5 million units.
The new combustion method "Double Clean" was created based on the unprecedented idea of combining the white light flame of the convection type at that time with the blue flame of the reflection type. This innovative combustion method succeeded in significantly improving "large heat control," "odor reduction," and "increased far-infrared heat by special coating" without any disadvantages at all.
World's first "Double Clean" heater with two-stage combustion
The "Double Clean" heater was sold with a different output from the RCA-86. From that time to the present, various improvements have been made to the size of the combustion tube hole, glass shape, and materials, leading to the current Double-Clean heater. We will continue to improve and evolve in the future.
The world's first convection kerosene heater with glass
The RB-2 is the world's first convection heater to use glass, with a special coating applied to the glass to create a "rainbow-colored" reflection of the flame on the glass. Nicknamed the "Rainbow Stove," it is one of TOYOTOMI's most popular heaters, and is still widely and long-loved by customers who inquire about ordering parts.
World's First Hybrid Fan Heater Controlling Both Electric Ceramic Heater and Kerosene Fan Heater
This is a hybrid fan heater ahead of its time that combines the advantages of kerosene fan heaters and electric ceramic heaters through control to simultaneously realize "high speed," "high power," and "reduced fueling time.
The world's first kerosene heater that does not require batteries
The RS-G30C was featured in many mass media and newspapers as a "kerosene heater that does not require dry batteries," a product born from the experience of the Great East Japan Earthquake of 2011. It also won the Good Design Award for its development concept that does not generate waste dry cell batteries, which is in line with the eco-society.
Pellet stove made in Japan
This pellet stove makes full use of TOYOTOMI's combustion technology, which has long been involved in oil-burning equipment. The fuel is made from wood pellets, such as sawdust and wood scraps that would normally be thrown away, making it a heating product that is kind to people and the earth.
From retro to modern, a pellet stove that renews the image of pellet stoves
This pellet stove is made with TOYOTOMI's combustion technology, which has long been involved in oil combustion equipment. The wood pellet stove is fueled by wood pellets made from wood that would normally be discarded, such as sawdust and scrap wood, making it a heating product that is friendly to both people and the earth.