CANCELLED – Friday, AUGUST 14, 2020 Southern California NADCA CHAPTER 30 Golf Tournament at Los Serranos Country Club (North Course) | 15656 Yorba Avenue, Chino Hills, CA 91709. Golf Tournament Cancelled What a turn of events! We received notification from …
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The Best Aluminum Die Casting Company
The Best Aluminum Die Casting Company. A lot of manufacturers always look for the best aluminum die casting company. Aside from their products needing a lot of aluminum die parts and components, the metalworking industry provides a variety of companies that offer the same type of service. Although competition may be tough and selections may come in great numbers, there is always the possibility of choosing the wrong company to execute your specific needs. A lot of sample companies have their own catalogs online that prospective customers may review and take note of. It is important to have an overall knowledge of the common rates and processes involving die casting prior to selecting your own aluminum die casting company.
Such companies commonly provide intensive analysis of how their process is done. An ideal aluminum die casting company has a specific team for every step involved in the die casting process. These subdivisions allow better outputs of dies by use of well conducted design imports. The specific people who oversee the manufacturing system should also conduct quality control to provide consumers with the best products in accordance to their specific requests. Most dies require precise measurements that must be followed regardless of the number of items being requested. There are also die casting companies that specialize in complex pressure vessels as well as other difficult components. These are companies that have been around in the industry for quite some time and have mastered the entire process of aluminum die casting. Consumers must also be on the lookout for companies that have proven themselves throughout the years and have efficiently served the metalworking industry.
Kinetic Die Casting manufactures products like heatsink die casting, aluminum housings, and lighting fixtures. If you would like more information, please visit our website:Kinetic Die Casting Company
Magna to Cut 10,500 Jobs at Opel
The co-head of Canadian auto parts maker Magna said on Sept. 14 that it planned to cut 10,500 posts at loss-making German car maker Opel once it completes its takeover of the General Motors’ unit.
Co-chief executive Siegfried Wolf said his group, which agreed last week to buy a majority stake in Opel from General Motors, was sticking with plans to cut jobs at Opel and its sister brand Vauxhall in Britain.
He confirmed figures reported over the weekend in the German media but said Magna had not modified its terms since late May, when it first signed a memorandum of understanding with GM on the deal. “Our plans haven’t changed since May 31,” Wolf said at a briefing in Frankfurt ahead of the international auto show.
Previously, the figure reported was 10,000 job cuts. The Opel business, including Vauxhall, employs some 50,000 workers across Europe.
Wolf did not say where the job cuts would be made, a sensitive topic as Germany gears up for national polls on September 27.
German Economy Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg told the newspaper Bild am Sonntag that he believed the cuts were deeper than those estimated earlier by Magna.
Wolf stressed that Opel could be made profitable again by 2015 and dismissed allegations that Magna would invest 600 million euros (US$870 million) of German taxpayers’ money in Russia.
Germany has extended a bridging loan worth 1.5 billion euros to keep Opel going until the takeover is completed, along with loan guarantees worth another three billion euros to get the new company started. Other European Union countries with Opel plants, such as Britain, Poland and Spain, are worried that Germany’s generous aid may mean German jobs take preference and that it could breach European Union rules on state aid. Germany is seeking support from the other countries meanwhile to eventually reduce its own contribution.
Die Casting Processes with the Use of Zinc Alloy
Die Casting Processes with the Use of Zinc Alloy. Die casting is the process by which molten ferrous metal, e.g., zinc, magnesium, copper, lead, tin, aluminum, etc., are molded into cavities and placed under pressure to form. The method of die casting is ideal if the application needed is in large quantity and should be well-detailed and has fine quality. Zinc is a non-ferrous metal that is popularly used for die casting. This is due to the fact that zinc alloys have many characteristics that far exceed other metals. Zinc alloys have high strength and hardness, has high thermal and electrical conductivity, low cost, good finishing characteristics, outstanding fluidity, and excellent corrosion resistance among others.
In the zinc die casting process, two processes are involved, the hot chamber method and the cold chamber method. These two zinc die casting processes make use of various types of metal alloys during the production of parts in the zinc die casting process. The hot chamber method involves the process wherein a steel die is filled with a pool of molten metal, all the time maintaining pressure, until the metal hardens. The second process, the cold chamber method, involves the use of two separate chambers, first to melt, then to hold the melted zinc alloy before it is poured into a shot cylinder and afterwards inject them to the die casting die. Before, the metal alloys used in Zinc die casting processes are tin and lead. The zinc alloy however gained popularity and is now the first choice when it comes to die casting.
Die Cast Tooling and Its Forms
Die Cast Tooling and Its Forms. Die cast tooling are the dies and the molds used for die casting. These die cast tools many forms namely Trim Dies used for die cast parts, Die Cast Family Mold Tooling, Complete Class “A” Die Cast Mold Tooling or Die Tooling, Unit Die Tooling, Prototype Die Cast Tooling Inserts and Die Cast Tooling Inserts.
I would be focusing this article on the latter form, the die cast tooling inserts since among all the die cast tooling, these are the least expensive. These actually are just enough steel to create cavities plus extra steel to put up with the fluctuations of the temperature of molten metal injecting under force. To extend the tooling life, the inserts should be heat treated to reach their proper hardness, not too hard and not too soft. Making it too soft will cause it to easily get damaged or easily wear from erosion and making it too hard, on the other hand could result to the steel cracking due to high temperature. Toolmakers who do not use enough steel in the inserts may reduce its potential life.
The die casting tooling inserts need to be supported by a type of holder so that metal could be injected into it and also to provide a sort of a path for the metal to pass and go in while the gases escape. These gases should be removed because it can produce porosity. This holder of inserts are called unit die, family die or mold base.
Die casting is no simple task. You would need to ask expert toolmakers to do this job for you. You just simply need to look online for you to find the expert that could help you. Varying websites of different die casting companies can be found in the internet. All you need is to choose which is the one nearest you.
Manufacturing Index Rises, Job Losses Slow: Can Manufacturers Be Optimistic Again?
It seems to me that getting the economy to recover is a little like trying to fly with fairy dust. Fairy dust doesn’t work unless you belive in it; close your eyes, jump on the bed, imagine yourself flying out the window and poof! You’re in the air. Of course, there’s always the risk that you will end up on the floor instead.
Rather like when former President Bush attempted to rally Americans to go shopping during 2008’s holiday season. If Americans would spend their last nickels and dimes – if they just BELIEVE in the economy – it would right itself. Unpleasantly reminiscent of Reagan’s “trickle down” economics, Bush’s call went largely unanswered; underemployed consumers stayed home, businesses slashed jobs, clients cut orders and executives stopped marketing campaigns. Whether it was the fault of consumers not spending or of corporations spending irresponsibly, unemployment skyrocketed, Wall Street bellied up and the auto industry toppled. During spring’s harshest season of job losses, having faith in our economic system seemed absurd.
As the recession has worn on, businesspeople have become increasingly skeptical of “good” news. Most have not been willing to trust in occasional spikes in the manufacturing index or consumer market at the cost of precious dollars and scarce optimism – and understandably. “[I]s it insane to hold off on optimism when you’re not sure whether another customer could bite the dust?” asks bag manufacturer Kevin Kelly in a May Newsweek Web Exclusive.
The economy can do a lot in two months, however, and the early signs and tentative predictions of improvement that were made earlier this spring have held steady. Economic reports from July confirm that although the job market probably won’t bottom out until mid 2010, the recession is indeed coming to a close.
The ISM manufacturing index for July indicates manufacturing may be out of the red by the end of the month: July’s index was 48.9, a full 5 points up from June and 1.1 points away from indicating positive economic growth. Confirming this market trend is a recent Reuters survey finding “large US industrial manufacturers are far more optimistic about domestic and global economics than they were three months ago”. 43% of respondents indicated they were optimistic about this upcoming year’s economy, a huge rise since last quarter’s poll. More respondents also indicated plans for new hires, new investments and business expansions than in previous recession polls. A large number of manufacturing industries saw positive growth last month, among which were mineral products, paper and printing products, transportation equipment and appliances.
Area Development Online and Bloomberg.com report an unexpected decline in July’s unemployment rates. Job losses slowed from an unemployment rate of 9.5% in June to 9.4% in July, marking the smallest number of monthly jobs lost since August 2008, far below what had been predicted. With 6.7 million total jobs lost since the recession’s beginning in late 2007, this bit of progress is dearly bought, and between continuing layoffs from Boeing, Verizon and others, we probably haven’t seen the end of job cuts yet. Just like the slow in manufacturing decline we saw in April, this slow in unemployment is not final – but it’s a healthy indicator.
“The basic message,” The New York Times quoted IHS Global Insight chief economist, “is that the rate of job cuts is diminishing, and that’s good news.” President Obama’s stimulus packages are predicted to begin making a significant impact in unemployment in 2010, with many thousands of jobs having been already saved by green energy manufacturing initiatives.
Undoubtedly, realistic thinking and hard-headed business have kept many business and jobs afloat during the past 18 months. But could it be time to let skepticism go? Our recovering economy needs all the support it can get, and some confidence from manufacturers – pillars of the U.S. economy – may go a long way in speeding that recovery.
Source: IQS