Friday 9 January 09 - 14:18
 

Industry News

  • SSC laser investment tops £2million

    SSC Laser has ordered its sixth Bystronic laser – a £350,000  Byspeed system with 4.4 kW resonator – bringing its overall investment since 2000 to more than £2million.   

  • Full-time quality manager for Bourne

    Walsall-based Bourne Technical Mouldings is strengthening its growing team with the appointment of Russell Wood to the newly established full time role of quality manager. 

  • Business development appointment at Kenard

    The Kenard Engineering Group has appointed Dave Varney as business development manager. He has over 30 years experience in the manufacturing sector, including all aspects of precision machining in the defence and rail sectors.  

  • Machined shafts added to Blue Diamond range

    Blue Diamond can now supply high precision-machined shafts for critical applications in a wide range rotating machinery and equipment such as pumps, conveyors and mixers. Components are available in low or high volumes and a wide variety of materials. The shafts can include features such as oilways, keyways, threads, and splines.  

  • Engineering expands despite gloomy economy

    Businesses in the engineering and technology sector are continuing to expand and recruit new staff despite the gloomy state of the economy, according to research by the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET). The IET’s annual skills survey of 400 companies across the engineering and technology sector reveals that nearly two thirds cited business expansion as a reason for recruitment.  

  • Prima laser keeps Young and Woods flexible

    Harlow-based Young & Woods has purchased a Prima Synchrono laser cutting machine to help it keep down costs and offer a flexible and competitive service to a diverse range of customers. “Versatility is a key requirement for us in providing solutions for customers,” explains director John O’Rourke.  

  • Waterjet profiler piles on the pressure in Cornwall

    An 87k psi waterjet profiler has been installed at LaserMaster in Redruth, Cornwall. Believed to be among the most powerful systems in Europe it will cut almost any material, including steel and granite, up to half a metre thick. 

  • Whitwam invests to inspect

    Aluminium alloy routing specialists, Whitwam Precision Components, has installed an optical, non-contact measuring machine that allows it to inspect flat aerospace components much more quickly that an traditional laser system and reverse engineer parts for which no electronic data exists. 

  • Beck to market low corrosion alloy

    Delphi Corp has announced a strategic licensing agreement with Beck Aluminum to produce and market its patented corrosion-resistant K-Alloy. The agreement will increase the availability of the alloy at attractive prices. 
     

  • Engineering should train staff to solve skills shortages

    Seventeen percent of engineering firms are suffering from skills gaps and can't fill a third of their vacancies. Yet last year only eight percent of the engineering workforce gained nationally-recognised qualifacations. Time to act, says the Learning and Skills Council (LSC).  

  • Go green and stay out of the red

    Environmental measures could be the answer to combating the downturn with new research launched today showing that waste prevention, using less raw material and energy recovery will be crucial to saving UK companies money in the face of economic recession.  

  • Bourne injects more capacity

    Walsall-based Bourne Technical Mouldings, BTM, has boosted capacity by investing in a new energy-efficient injection moulding machine. The Vr-250ES from Victor Europe uses a servo-motor system that can achieve power savings of up to 70%.  

  • 5-axis machining doubles productivity

    Aerospace subcontractor, Atlantic Precision Engineering, is unusual in that it offers both metallic and non-metallic machined components. Over the past year it has invested £750,000 in expanding its floor area by 40 percent, Jobshop production control software and a Matsuura 5-axis machining centre.  

  • Ultra-precision machining facility launches on 10 September

    A new Ultra Precision Microscopy and Machining Centre will be launched at the University of Nottingham on 10 September. The Centre will allow companies to test the commercial potential of new micro products using the latest technologies in micro-moulding, laser processing, micro-machining, metrology and microscopy.  

  • They can’t believe it’s got better

    Some UK businesses are turning their backs on lean management systems because they fear that the improvements such systems can produce are too good to be true, according to a lean management expert.  

  • Yes - steel prices have doubled in the past year

    Independent steel trader Balli Steel reports that in the last 12 months global steel prices have increased by 100% and now range from around $1,000 to $1,500 per tonne. The company highlights that global annualised steel production has reached a record 1.4 billion tonnes, up from 800 million tonnes in 2000. 

  • Will replicators rule the world?

    Machines that can make individually customised components to order with no tooling, lead times or transport costs sound like an idea from Star Trek or Red Dwarf. But as the techniques developed for rapid prototyping become more robust and cost effective the SciFi fantasy is becoming a reality.    

Stevens Rowsell is a specialist precision sheet metal engineering company in East Sussex