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What is an Aluminum Die Casting Company?
What is an Aluminum Die Casting Company? Aluminum today is a commonly used metal alloy in a lot of products covering numerous industries. It is used in building automobiles, it is used in consumer electronics, and it is used in housing projects and many more. There are several ways to make use of this metal alloy. Manufacturers all over the world have chosen this metal for their products because it is cheap to obtain, it is a lightweight material yet it is very strong and durable. When it comes to their aluminum needs, manufacturers commonly go to an Aluminum Die Casting Company.
An Aluminum Die Casting Company provides a service to manufacturers of manipulating aluminum metals into the desired shape and size. In other words, these companies are responsible for taking a bar of aluminum alloy and turning them into various parts such as heat sinks, lighting fixtures, brackets and automotive parts. They do this through a process known as die casting wherein the aluminum bars are subjected to intense heating until they liquefy. The liquefied aluminum will next be poured into large metal casings known as castings or molds. The liquid metal would take the form of the casting and when it is cooled, the metal will harden into its former solid state no longer a bar, but the intended shape.
The service of an Aluminum Die Casting Company is very valuable to many manufacturers as they provide high quality material at low costs. This is especially helpful for those does not have access to the needed machinery to accomplish die casting.
Kinetic Die Casting manufactures aluminum die castings creating aluminum die casting boxes, aluminum handle hardware, and aerospace die casting. If you would like to get a quote, please visit our website: Kinetic Die Casting Company
USA Unemployment Hits 14.7 Million
Unemployment Hits 14.7 Million Another 467,000 workers became unemployed in June, sending unemployment to 14.7 million and the unemployment rate to 9.5%. Since the recession began in December 2007, 7.2 million workers have become unemployed. Over half (4.4 million) have been unemployed for over two years.
Year-over-year, there are 5.4 million fewer jobs, worse than the 2001 recession. Although that recession only lasted 8 months, it led to 29 months of job losses. This recession is 18 months old, so many more months of job losses can be expected.
There were an additional 9 million part-time workers who would have preferred full-time work, according to the Employment Report released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).(Source: BLS, Employment Situation Summary)
Manufacturing, a leading indicator, continues to decline. The economy now has 1.6 million fewer manufacturing jobs than the year before, continuing a two-year decline. Manufacturing is a leading indicator because it produces the big-ticket items consumers put off buying in a recession. Once the economy starts to improve, these orders are the first to come back. In the last recession, manufacturing jobs started to improve before the overall job market.
Kinetic Die Casting Company can manufacture aluminum car parts, aluminum hardware, and Aluminum Lighting Partsaluminum lighting parts
Spartan Light Metals lay-off 170, more possible
The Spartan Light Metal Products production facility in Sparta recently conducted a series of lay-offs. Actually, an extensive series of lay-offs that started in November that have gradually picked up speed.
The current action taken by Spartan Light Metal Products has displaced approximately 170 employees at the Sparta facility. The facility is down to two shifts. Some lines have been totally shut down while others are only running during one shift. The company is reported to be hardly running any automotive parts down the lines. Many longtime workers were laid off or demoted with some given a temporary lay-off status while many are being laid off permanently. And it is whispered, this might not be the end.
A press release by Spartan, from the desk of Vice President of Human Resources Philip Zampogna states, “Although Spartan continues to be optimistic this reduction in force will be temporary, unpredictable orders and limited information concerning longer-term customer forecasts make the length of this reduction very difficult to predict in the current market environment.”
Zampogna was not available for comment.
Sparta Mayor Rob Link said, “This will affect the entire surrounding area. There are many people who work outside Sparta that this will affect, too. It is time for the community to pull together. To unite. To make sure people have heat in their house and food on their table.”
The company has sent out notifications according to the Federal Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act . The WARN notifications are a federal requirement for employers in the event of mass lay-offs and/or plant closings. The act stipulates that employers must give 60 days notice if they are going to close plants or commit mass lay-offs. That is, unless “the lay-off is caused by business circumstances that were not reasonably foreseeable as of the time that notice would otherwise have been required,” according to the press release by Zampogna. The release goes on to say, “…these sudden and unforeseeable reductions in customer demand have led to this shortened notice period. This action is a reduction in force. There is no intention to close the Sparta, Il location.”
“Spartan Light Metals is a stable company,” said Mayor Link, “They have invested a lot in the Sparta facility. I feel confident the work force will be put back to work.”
The Sparta facility is not the first production facility to be reduced by Spartan. There have been work force reductions in Mexico and Hannibal, Mo as well as three other plants in: Detroit, MI, St. Louis, MO, and Tokyo, Japan. Many reasons point to the decline of the automotive industry in general.
Founded in 1961, by Henry A. Jubel the company was quick to become one of the leading metal die casting companies in the U.S. For the first year, Jubel reportedly slept at his new factory due to a small work force. Spartan remains a private, family-owned company, with Henry’s son, Donald A. Jubel currently handling the reigns. Spartan produces lightweight metal die castings fro the automotive industry. An international company, they supply to such companies as Ford, Toyota and Honda Their products include: cold chamber aluminum and magnesium, hot chamber magnesium, aluminum permanent, precious metal, iron, copper, lead, brass, bronze, ferrous/non-ferrous alloy, and stainless steel die castings. Reports are varied concerning the annual revenue Spartan can generate and ranges from $50-180 million. In 2004, Spartan received an exclusive licensing agreement from NASA for use of the MSF-398.1 aluminum/silicon alloy.
Kinetic Die Casting manufactures aluminum military parts, aluminum hardware, and aluminum die castings. Visit our website for a quote: Kinetic Die Casting Company
Die Casting Molds
Die Casting Molds. Perhaps the most important tool used in die casting is the different Die Casting Molds used. These molds are responsible in shaping the molten metal which is placed in them. They mold the metal into the desired shape of the manufacturer. But, what is die casting any way?
Die casting is a metalworking process that is best used by manufacturers to create a large quantity of small sized to medium sized parts in a short amount of time. This is done first by melting the metal, usually non ferrous metals such as aluminum, lead, magnesium or zinc among others, then forcing them into the Die Casting Molds. The molds are then machined into dies to create the parts and complete the process.
The machines responsible for machining these molds in dies are known as hot chambered die casting machines and cold chambered die casting machines. The hot chambered machines can accomplish the task with fewer cycles involved in the process; in other words it can accomplish the task faster compared to a cold chambered machine. The latter is used by manufacturers in cases where in the hot chambered machine cannot accommodate the alloy being used. They complete the task slower because the metal needs to be melted in a separate furnace and the time it takes to transfer them into the machine makes the difference.
The Die Casting Molds used in these machines can be rather expensive. They are built from hardened metal and could cost as much as several thousand dollars.
Kinetic Die Casting manufactures a lot of aluminum rooftile plates , trim tile molds, and military die casting. If you would like a quote, please visit our website: Kinetic Die Casting Company
U.S. Military Defense Procurement
CHICAGO (Dow Jones)–The surprise selection this week of Oshkosh Corp. (OSK) to build a high-priority truck for the U.S. military highlights a sea-change in defense procurement.
The maker of iconic fire trucks is the latest example of the Pentagon’s increasing preference for contractors with can-do capability over defense industry giants geared for lengthy peacetime procurements.
The extended conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan have created demand for specialist equipment and services that previously attracted little interest from Pentagon planners or traditional defense contractors.
“There’s been such an immediate demand for new equipment, it’s outstripped the ability of the normal contractors to deliver it on time,” said Dean Lockwood, an analyst for Forecast International Inc., a defense consulting firm in Connecticut. The Pentagon has “completely thrown out the normal procurement process.”
Navistar International Corp. (NAV), the commercial truck and engine maker, and diversified manufacturer ITT Corp. (ITT) are among a band of companies that have won large contracts for military hardware to counter specific threats to U.S. troops.
The prospect for further military sales has bolstered Navistar and ITT’s stock prices in recent months. Navistar has surged 169% off its 52-week low in November, but early Thursday was trading down 4.53% at $40.59 a share after failing to win Tuesday’s contract. ITT, meanwhile, is up 35% off its March low. The stock was recently trading down 4.01% at $43.28.
Oshkosh won out over rivals bids from consortia including BAE Systems PLC and General Dynamics Inc. (GD) for the $1.06 billion contract to build 2,244 armored all-terrain trucks for U.S. troops Afghanistan.
Oshkosh already makes large and medium-size cargo trucks for the military, but had little previous experience with a high-priority program like the patrol trucks, which are expected to help U.S. soldiers pursue Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan’s rugged, mountainous landscape.
“We took a measured risk,” said Oshkosh CEO Robert Bohn in an interview. “This will help us get through the worst recession we’ve seen in our lifetime.”
He credited the win to an all-out effort by the company’s engineering staff and Oshkosh’s ability to leverage its existing truck components and its production capacity.
Oshkosh, whose brands include Pierce fire trucks and JLG self-propelled work platforms, has struggled in recent quarters because of falling demand for construction-related equipment. Oshkosh’s sales for the fiscal first half ended March 31 fell 18% to $2.68 billion. The company reported a $1.21 billion loss amid large charge-offs, compared with income of $109.9 million, or 1.47 a share, in the same period a year earlier. About 17% of the company’s work force has been laid off since last year.
In 2008, defense sales were Oshkosh second largest business unit, accounting for 27% of its $7.13 billion in net sales.
The company’s stock has more than doubled since the beginning of the year, including a 27% increase on Wednesday. Oshkosh was recently up 2.17% at $18.83 amid a marketwide selloff.
Navistar stunned the defense industry two years ago by raking in billions of dollars worth of contracts for mine-resistant, ambush-protected trucks, or MRAP. The company impressed military planners with its use of a readily available commercial truck chassis and engines for a heavily armored truck that could survive roadside bomb blasts in Iraq. Like Oshkosh, Navistar was able to deploy its own assembly lines to expedite production of the vehicles. Warrenville, Ill.-based Navistar built more than one-third of the 16,000 MRAPs purchased by the military.
Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services put Navistar and its customer financing arm on watch for a ratings downgrade Thursday as the outlook for North American commercial truck demand remains bleak for this year and next. S&P said Navistar’s inability to win Tuesday’s contract for the new military truck eliminated a potential revenue offset for lower sales of commercial trucks.
The MRAP and the smaller, more mobile variant of the MRAP being built by Oshkosh were developed and tested in six months. Observers note that many traditional defense contractors are at a disadvantage in such accelerated procurements because they typically rely on outside contractors for components and production work outside of their core specialties, such as building aircraft or ships.
Meanwhile, ITT’s defense electronics business has been growing at a 28%-a-year pace since the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. In 2008, ITT’s $6.3 billion in military sales accounted 54% of the company’s total annual revenue, up from $1.7 billion or 32% of revenue in 2003.
ITT’s other businesses, which include pumps for water treatment plants and automotive components, have struggled in recent years amid lower end-market demand and a downturn in the economy.
The White Plains, N.Y., company, which makes a variety of radio equipment and night-vision goggles, is the U.S. military’s leading supplier of electronic jammers to disrupt the radio signals used to detonate improvised explosive devices (IED) that target trucks carrying U.S. troops.
ITT has built some 40,000 truck-mounted jammers. Prior to the wars, such jammers were primarily used on aircraft, rather than trucks.
“The Department of Defense did not view IEDs as a weapon that could or would be used effectively by our enemies,” said Bob Pergler, director of business development for ITT’s electronic systems.
Kinetic Die Casting manufactures aluminum and zinc die casting parts. Samples of KDC’s work include die cast speaker parts, aluminum tile plates, and other die cast metal parts. If you would like to have a quote please visit our website: Kinetic Die Casting Company