Every Account Run by Someone Who Knows Your System.
Lone Wolf Technologies has been doing one thing since 1996: industrial water and wastewater treatment, run independently, with a dedicated rep on every account. Not a national chemistry chain. Not an equipment OEM with a chemistry line bolted on. A real water treatment company built around the work itself.
1996. Fort Worth. The Idea Was Simple.
The industrial water treatment industry in the mid-90s was already moving toward the corporate-chemistry-chain model that defines most of it today. Big national accounts, generic product catalogs, monthly delivery checked off the route — and customers who couldn't reach their rep when chemistry actually moved. Lone Wolf Technologies was built on the opposite premise: a team that runs every account itself, knows every system on a first-name basis, and shows up when the readings say to show up.
Three decades later, the model still works. Every cooling tower, every boiler, every wastewater program run by someone who understands what makes that specific system tick. The chemistry is the technical part. The relationship is the part that keeps a tower running clean for ten years instead of swapping vendors every two.
"We were never trying to be the biggest. We were trying to be the company you call when the big one stops showing up. That's still the bet — and it's still working."
— Jim, Owner, Lone Wolf TechnologiesWhat 30 Years of Doing It This Way Looks Like.
Cooling tower programs at hospitals running clean ASHRAE 188 compliance for the last decade. Boiler programs at industrial facilities that haven't lost a tube to oxygen attack on our watch. Wastewater discharge at industrial customers that passes TCEQ audits without scrambling for documentation. Permian Basin operations that wouldn't trust their chemistry to a vendor that doesn't know the basin. These aren't testimonials we're paying for — they're the actual work that brings customers in and keeps them.
AWT — Because Continuing Education Matters.
Lone Wolf is a member of the Association of Water Technologies (AWT). Industry membership isn't a marketing badge — it's the way you stay current on regulatory changes, new chemistry, ASHRAE 188 program updates, and the technical depth the work requires. Three decades in industrial water treatment doesn't happen without active engagement in the technical community.
A Technical Service Representative On Call 24 Hours a Day.
The eight items below are the operational commitments behind every Lone Wolf program. Not aspirational. Documented and tracked.
The Easiest Way to Know If We're The Right Team Is to Have Us Walk Your Site.
Initial site visits are no-charge. We walk your cooling tower or boiler, sample your makeup water, review your records, and write up an honest read on where your program is. No proposal-on-the-spot. No pressure. Just a clear picture.

Frequently Asked Questions
How long has Lone Wolf Technologies been in business?
Since 1996. Independent industrial water and wastewater treatment across five states, family-founded and family-operated, with a growing team of certified technical reps. The 30-year track record is why we don't chase corporate account tiers — reputation and referrals drive the pipeline.
What certifications do Lone Wolf reps hold?
Reps hold combinations of AWT Certified Water Technologist (CWT), AWT Reverse Osmosis Specialist certifications through Level IV, HazMat handling and DOT certifications, and OSHA-required industrial safety credentials. Certifications are ongoing — every rep completes continuing education as AWT standards evolve.
Is Lone Wolf independent or part of a larger chemical company?
Fully independent. Not owned by, contracted to, or a distribution arm of any national chemical company. Chemistry decisions are made on what your system needs, not on what a corporate purchasing agreement requires us to sell. This is the core reason our recommendations are vendor-neutral.
Where is Lone Wolf headquartered?
Fort Worth, Texas, at 7509 Pebble Dr. Service coverage extends across Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Louisiana, and Arkansas — including major metros (Dallas–Fort Worth, Houston, Austin, San Antonio, Oklahoma City, Tulsa, St. Louis, Kansas City, Springfield, New Orleans, Little Rock) and industrial corridors in each state.
