Posts Tagged ‘welding’

Small Business Co-Op Uses Federal Grant to Purchase Welding Equipment

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Here is an interesting tidbit jewelry makingthat might spark some ideas for additional sales of gases and welding equipment in your area.

Local jewelry manufacturers in New Mexico have been given an opportunity to be more competitive, thanks to the Socorro County Chamber of Commerce and a grant from the USDA Rural Business Enterprise fund.

The Chamber purchased $54,000 of state-of-the-art manufacturing equipment to be used cooperatively by local jewelers who meet certain small business criteria.

The equipment includes a laser welder, milling machine and vacuum casting machine.

The community qualified for the grant because it meets federal guidelines of being located in a rural area with high unemployment, low wages and few manufacturing or production jobs. The primary goal of the grant program is to encourage economic development in rural communities by retaining and creating additional jobs.

All the equipment purchased is the property of the federal government. Quarterly reports detailing its use must be submitted for three years as a condition of the grant.

Super Jen Plus 10

Monday, December 21st, 2009

It’s a major annual event for the Gases and Welding Distributors Association—the announcement of theboard new GAWDA board of directors, who will help lead the association through the coming year.

For 2009-10, we thought we’d handle the introduction a bit differently than in years past, when we would publish photos along with brief Q&As to help association members get to know the board a little better.

This time around, we centered the introduction on the theme of the board of directors as “superheroes” of the association, giving of their time and sharing their industry expertise to help make the association and the industry stronger.

In keeping with that theme, this year we developed a five-page comic-book style treatment to introduce the board, which you can see online at http://www.weldingandgasestoday.org/content/1q10/meetboard2009.pdf.

I hope you like it.

Women Welders Create Message of Hope for Kansas Community

Friday, November 20th, 2009

woman welderIt’s been at least eight years since Butler Community College in El Dorado, Kansas, has had a female student enrolled in its welding program. This year it has three.

When El Dorado’s chief of police heard about the students, he contacted the program instructor to see if the women welders would consider working on a project to highlight domestic violence awareness in El Dorado. They jumped at the chance, saying that it was important to let other women know they have options—such as pursuing careers in the welding and gases industry, as they are now doing.

The project the police chief envisioned and the women created is a stylized depiction of a stop sign encircled with a purple ribbon that bears the message: “Stop Domestic Violence!” The sign is now on permanent display in the El Dorado Police Department’s memorial garden.

“I feel good that I’m trying to help people,” one of the welders, Jessica Davis, told KSN-TV News. “I don’t even know the people I’m trying to help—just them passing by and seeing it, if that helps them, great.”

Prison Inmates Learn Welding Skills for Good-Paying Jobs After Release

Friday, November 13th, 2009

 

inmate

 

Are correctional facilities among your gases and welding customers? If not, it’s definitely an avenue well worth exploring—both for the products you sell and for welder training and certification.

Correctional facilities have long strived to provide programs that teach inmates skills they can use once they have are released. Among the skills being taught at some of these facilities is welding—a smart move at a time when the welder shortage in the United States is so severe.

An example of this is taking place in Newcastle, Wyoming, where the state’s Department of Workforce Services has partnered with the Wyoming Department of Corrections to bring welder training to incarcerated individuals so that when they are released, they will be better prepared to enter the workforce.

Most recently, according to the Wyoming Business Report, welding training was offered at the minimum-security Newcastle Honor Farm. A similar program was conducted earlier this year at the Women’s Center in Lusk, Wyoming, to train inmates in heavy equipment operation.

Jeff White, the Employment Training for Self-Sufficiency Program manager for the Wyoming Department of Workforce Services, told the Wyoming Business Report: “The idea behind the program was to partner with Department of Correction. We contacted Eastern Wyoming College and arranged to use their mobile welding lab. They took their mobile welding lab to the Newcastle Honor Farm and conducted a six-week welding certification course on the Honor Farm site.”

The program just graduated six inmates at a ceremony at the Newcastle facility. The inmates participating in the training program were short-term felons who were incarcerated in Newcastle’s low risk facility.

“When these guys get released, they will have this certificate in their hands and be able to relocate wherever they desire, White said. “They will work with our local Workforce Centers to try and find a welding job.”

The goal of the program is to give inmates a chance to earn a livable wage and contribute to the betterment of their families, their children and themselves.

Multimillion-dollar engineering research project will advance deep-sea welding technology

Friday, November 6th, 2009

rigThe University of Leicester, in the United Kingdom, is spearheading a multimillion-dollar project funded by the European Community’s Seventh Framework Program to advance welding technology.

The project will analyze the tendency of small weld imperfections to grow into major cracks and flaws. The 11-member group will attempt to better understand the flaw process over multiple scales by using computer modeling and knowledge gained from state-of-the-art laboratory and industrial experiments. The information gathered will be used to develop technology for welding deep-sea gas and oil transportation systems.

According to the consortium, titled MintWeld, welding remains the most economical and effective way to join metals permanently, and is a vital component of the manufacturing economy. It is estimated that more than 50 percent of global domestic and engineering products contain welded joints. The welding industry has traditionally supported a diverse set of companies across the shipbuilding, pipeline, automotive, aerospace, defense and construction sectors.

MintWeld representatives add that the project is highly valuable given the potential catastrophic consequences a disaster would create, as exemplified by the famed capsizing of the Norwegian Alexander Kielland—a semi-submersible drilling rig—in which 123 lost their lives due to a faulty 6mm weld.

The project is being led by researchers in the engineering and mathematics departments at the University of Leicester. Other institutions involved in the project are the University Corig sinkingllege, Dublin, Ireland; the University of Oxford, UK; NTNU, Norway; the Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden; Delft University of Technology, Netherlands; the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale of Lausanne, Switzerland; and steel industry partners CORUS, UK; The Welding Institute, UK; Institute of Welding, Poland; and FRENZAK Sp., Poland.

Fabricator reproduces student art in steel

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

high-definition-plasma-cutter[1]Are you looking for ideas to draw attention to your gases and welding distributorship?

A great way to do that is through community projects—teaming with local schools, your gases and welding customers, city agencies and others to create activities and events that benefit the community while demonstrating your pride at being part of it.

A great example of this recently took place in Battle Creek, Michigan, where Cutler Enterprises and the Arts and Industry Council of Battle Creek Unlimited—the city’s economic development organization—created a competition for local students who were asked to create artwork representing their ideas of Battle Creek.

Shouldice Brothers, a Battle Creek metal fabrication shop, then took the artwork and reproduced it in steel panels that will hang in large arches at the entrance to the city as part of a downtown revitalization plan.

The steel images include Sojourner Truth, a man with a healthy heart, a Battle Creek Central High School girls’ basketball player and a cityscape featuring a giant bowl of cereal.

Dave Van Middlesworth, one of the owners of Shouldice Brothers, said he thought the project was a good chance to give back to the community. “It’s kind of neat that we’re doing something for the entry to the city,” he told the Battle Creek Enquirer, “and trying to give back a little bit along the way, work with the kids and promote them along the way.” Van Middlesworth said the combined supplies and labor cost about $23,000.

The student artists were invited to the fabrication shop to see the steel panels being made. A Shouldice Brothers employee showed them how the artwork was scanned and sent to fabrication. The demonstration quickly moved over to the high-definition plasma cutter, which used electricity and compressed gas to slice through steel plates and make the artwork.

Welding & Gases Today is Now on Facebook!

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

In our ongoing efforts tofacebook[1] stay abreast of the latest in online networking, Welding & Gases Today now has its very own Facebook fan page. If you’re a Facebook aficionado, we hope you’ll take the time to visit our page and join our fan club. We already have more than 100 fans, and there’s plenty of room for more. Check it out!

Welding Students Help Revitalize Downtown

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

aaBicycleRackIf you’ve been exploring ways to connect with the community through a service project that taps into the expertise of the gases and welding industry, you may want to take a look at recent event that took place in the city of Marion, Ohio.

In an effort to help their hometown, students at Tri-Rivers Career Center in Marion teamed up with the local United Way to perform 16 service projects in honor of Make a Difference Day, which is being celebrated this year on October 24.

Among those who participated in the Marion event, which took place October 19, were welding students, who create steel bicycle racks designed to coordinate with city architecture and reflect the art and culture of Marion’s downtown area. The students welcomed the opportunity to tackle the project because they were given the opportunity to perform the entire task from design through construction.

Created by USA Weekend Magazine more than 15 years ago, Make a Difference Day is held the fourth Saturday of every October. According to the magazine, millions of people have completed thousands of community service projects in towns throughout the United States during Make a Difference Day.

Other student projects included creating floral designs inside the windows of vacant storefronts, cleaning up local parks, digitally cataloguing downtown buildings, painting boarded-up windows and visiting nursing homes.

Certified Arc Welding Technician Among Top Infrastructure-Related Jobs

Monday, October 12th, 2009

lincoln arc welding robotThe Infrastructurist, a Web site for the construction industry, recently took a look at ten infrastructure-related jobs with bright prospects.

According to the site, in spite of the economic downturn, the global infrastructure sector is poised to see $35 trillion in spending over the next two decades. Moreover, the jobs in question tend to be the sort that can’t be outsourced overseas.

“Most infrastructure work is domestic by nature, after all,” the report says. “And these jobs also tend to be tied to real-world technical skills—unlike many that were lost when America’s bubble economy deflated last year.”

As a follow-up to that report, The Infrastructurist recently added five more “hot jobs” to that initial list. At the top of the list—Certified Arc Welding Technician.

“Arc welding is a common technique of fusing metals, and robotic arc welding—as the name suggests—is this process as preformed by robots,” the site says. “Automation ensures a higher quality of the weld—up to 50 percent better—and increases productivity by up to three times. Who maintains these armies of welding robots? A robotic arc welding technician, of course. As Jeff Noruk, president of industry firm Servo Robot puts it, ‘Robots are like babies. They need care every single day.’”

This is very good news for GAWDA distributors, especially considering that before anyone can claim this “hot job,” somebody else has to invest in the technology and the gases and welding products necessary for this technician to do his job.

$35 trillion in infrastructure spending over the next two decades. Now that’s what I call a market!

Happy Birthday Bar Code

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

label5[1]Considering that cylinder tracking through bar coding has become such an important part of many gases and welding distributors’ businesses, I thought you might be interested to know that today is the 57th anniversary of the first patent for the bar code.

Inventors Norman Woodland and Bernard Silver filed the patent in 1949, which was granted on October 7, 1952. The original patent was for a system that would encode data in a bulls eye pattern so that it was scanable in any direction.

In the world of gas cylinder distribution, the bar code is a technical innovation that has become an essential part of business. So much so, in fact, that the feature section of most recent issue of Welding & Gases Today devotes considerable space to the topic of bar codes as an invaluable tool for your business.

If you haven’t done so already, be sure to check it out at Welding & Gases Today Online.

You can learn more about the history of the bar code here.