IQS NEWSROOM

A source for industrial products & services news and events.
Latest Insights in the Evolving Digital World

Concrete Vs. Plastic Septic Tanks

When it comes to septic tanks, you want to make sure you make the right decision. If you choose badly, you could end up with a backyard swamp of waste that is not only disgusting, but also unsanitary. The right choice of tank is essential to ensure your tank will provide the containment necessary for the system for years to come.
Usually, septic tanks are made from plastic or concrete. Both systems have their advantages and disadvantages, and it is important to consider all options before purchasing any new equipment.

Commercial Uses for Titanium

Titanium investment casting is the process of using a mold to create shaped pieces from titanium. Titanium is used in a variety of applications, although it is most famous for its use in airplanes, spaceships, and jewelry. However, many traditional commercial products have titanium or titanium alloy parts and pieces that help the products work daily.

Common Defects in Copper Casting

The metal casting process has changed little in the thousands of years since its original invention. Today’s copper casting companies have invented new machines and casting materials that make the process easier and defects less likely, but in the end, the overall casting process remains the same. First, the copper is melted, then poured into a mold and allowed to harden. After the metal hardens, it is removed from the mold and polished and modified until it reaches the desired shape, texture, and brightness.

Where Does the Wax Go When it Gets “Lost?”

One of the parts of the investment casting process that I initially found hard to understand was the process of removing the wax patterns and runner from the ceramic shell once it hardens. If you scour the Internet’s offerings on the lost wax casting process, if you find anything at all, it might not always be clear how the whole investment casting process works, let alone how each stage in the process is executed. This can be the case with a lot of industrial processes, and as someone who regularly writes about industry, I know that this can be frustrating.

Stainless Steel Investment Casting: Golf Clubs and More

I am a terrible golfer. That’s not to say that I don’t enjoy it, but I have no illusions about my abilities as a golfer or my prospects for improvement. This past summer, after having played golf maybe a dozen times every year since late elementary school, I sank my first par. It was simultaneously exciting and embarrassing (but mostly exciting). My current set of clubs is composed mainly of stainless steel club heads and, I think, stainless shafts. They’re certainly not professional quality, but I’ve never had a legitimate reason to complain about them.

Pros and Cons of Fluidized Beds

The purpose of a fluid bed dryer is to make a solid behave as a fluid. This is usually accomplished by introducing pressurized fluid through particulate medium. After this, the medium will have many similar characteristics and properties as fluids, such as the ability to free flow under gravity. One of the several applications fluidized beds are utilized for is chemical reactors. Some advantages of using a fluidized bed include uniform particle mixing and temperature gradients. Unlike pack beds which have poor mixing, fluidized normally allows for a more uniform product compared to other reactor designs. The reactor can also operate at a continuous state with a fluidized bed.

Heat Exchangers: Paper and Pulp Applications

Certain industries benefit more then others from specific industrial products or machines. Heat exchangers are pretty popular across the board, but are absolute essentials for the paper industry. Without heat exchangers, paper mills would have exceedingly high energy costs, which is bad for the environment as well as the purse size of the paper companies. There are a couple ways that the paper and pulp industry utilize heat exchangers, both of which are financial boosts, eco-friendly, efficient and effective methods.

The Differences Between Hot and Cold Casting

I have always imagined cold chamber die casting to look something like a scene from an old cartoon where the character is suddenly encased in an entire block of ice. I imagined the process froze the metal quickly into the shape of a mold. Of course, this is not really the case. Freezing hot metal suddenly can cause the metal serious stress and even cause breakage in the metal. Cold chamber casing does not have so much to do with adding cold temperatures to the metal as it does with carrying the melted metal from one machine to another for die casting.

Pros and Cons of Cold Casting

The process of die casting aluminum using the cold casting method is similar to the hot casting process, but has one major difference. Rather than the metal melting in the same machine as the mold itself, the melted metal is melted in a different machine, then transferred to the die casting chamber via a cold chamber. There are both advantages and disadvantages to the cold casting process for die casting aluminum, but cold casting is usually used with aluminum due to the high melting point of the metal.

Cleaning Rubber Rollers

Rubber rollers have a variety of uses, from use for installing wallpaper and fiberglass to flattening materials in industrial factories. Rubber rollers have been used to apply stickers and labels, paint walls, lay concrete, and much more. Whatever use you use with your rubber roller, the rubber can become dirty and sticky over time. Use this simple cleaning method outlined below to help keep your roller in top condition for the next time you need to use it. One word of caution, if you use the roller around food or other consumable products, make sure that you use a food-safe cleaner that will not leave an unhealthy scum or chemical residue on your rollers.

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