View allAll Photos Tagged Manufacturing
The ACC Manufacturing Careers Expo event at the Highland Campus, Building 2000, on Thursday, July 8, 2021.
DCCC, the Community College of Davidson and Davie Counties has worked with Trailers of the East Coast in Mocksville to create a mobile manufacturing lab. The mobile lab, which will bring advanced skills training to local manufacturers, was unveiled this morning at the Davie Campus of DCCC in Mocksville.
This is a "S.S. Stewart" prewar banjo, but, was manufactured by Gibson. During the prewar period Gibson produced instruments for a number of other companies, including Kel Kroyden and Montgomery Ward which sold Gibson-made instruments under the Recording King brand.
The pot of this banjo is identical to that of a Gibson style 11, featuring pearloid decorated with red and black silkscreened designs on the back of the resonator along with a blue finish on the rim, the sides of the resonator, and the back of the neck. Although other colors are seen on these banjos, blue seems to be the most common and style 11s are consequently sometimes referred to as "blue banjos". The hardware on this banjo is nickel-plated and the one-piece flange is pot metal.
Style 11 banjos had a small brass hoop which rested on top of the rim, but no Mastertone-style tone ring. The neck of this banjo differs from Gibson's style 11. Although it shares style 11's pearloid-veneered peghead overlay and fingerboard, the stenciled designs are not the same as those found on style 11 and the peghead is a non-Gibson shape.
National Manufacturing Day, celebrated on the first Friday in October brings together the misconceptions, the public perception and the career pathways that make up what many would argue is the most vital industry to our country. More than anything, Manufacturing Day is an opportunity to bring modern manufacturing to life for the public
For National Manufacturing Day, the Aerospace Joint Apprenticeship Committee (AJAC) partnered with the Tacoma School District, Rainier Beach High School, OMAX Corporation, Cadence Aerospace – PMW Operations, Gensco and South Seattle College to offer tours, hands-on activities and presentations about all things manufacturing. Many of the students we invited were currently enrolled in Career and Technical Education programs such as aerospace science, engineering and manufacturing.
2017 was a unique year for AJAC’s Manufacturing Day initiatives, particularly for the next wave of Youth Apprenticeship cohorts we will launch this school year. Students from every background and social-economic status came together and learned what a day in the life is like for a manufacturer. From concept to design, to fabrication and machining. These are the components each company utilizes to make their products world renown.
At Cadence Aerospace – PMW Operations, students saw larger-than-life CNC machines cutting metal parts for Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner and Airbus’s A320-Neo. They rode a 5-axis Cincinnati Milacron Gantry CNC machine as it spewed coolant over the airplane parts, cutting each part with precision. At Gensco, a company known for its fabrication of HVAC equipment, students were drawn to laser cutters and heavy sheet metal equipment to build commercial heating and ventilation systems we have in our very buildings. OMAX Corporation, the world leader in abrasive waterjet machining, demonstrated how 60,000 PSI of water can machine parts down to the thousands of an inch.
Throughout the three tours, students understood what it takes to become a journey-level machinist or fabricator. AJAC’s registered Youth Apprenticeship and Adult Apprenticeship programs brought to life the career pathways that gave them the freedom to earn while they learn, complete college-level classes and refrain from years of college debt.
National Manufacturing Day, celebrated on the first Friday in October brings together the misconceptions, the public perception and the career pathways that make up what many would argue is the most vital industry to our country. More than anything, Manufacturing Day is an opportunity to bring modern manufacturing to life for the public
For National Manufacturing Day, the Aerospace Joint Apprenticeship Committee (AJAC) partnered with the Tacoma School District, Rainier Beach High School, OMAX Corporation, Cadence Aerospace – PMW Operations, Gensco and South Seattle College to offer tours, hands-on activities and presentations about all things manufacturing. Many of the students we invited were currently enrolled in Career and Technical Education programs such as aerospace science, engineering and manufacturing.
2017 was a unique year for AJAC’s Manufacturing Day initiatives, particularly for the next wave of Youth Apprenticeship cohorts we will launch this school year. Students from every background and social-economic status came together and learned what a day in the life is like for a manufacturer. From concept to design, to fabrication and machining. These are the components each company utilizes to make their products world renown.
At Cadence Aerospace – PMW Operations, students saw larger-than-life CNC machines cutting metal parts for Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner and Airbus’s A320-Neo. They rode a 5-axis Cincinnati Milacron Gantry CNC machine as it spewed coolant over the airplane parts, cutting each part with precision. At Gensco, a company known for its fabrication of HVAC equipment, students were drawn to laser cutters and heavy sheet metal equipment to build commercial heating and ventilation systems we have in our very buildings. OMAX Corporation, the world leader in abrasive waterjet machining, demonstrated how 60,000 PSI of water can machine parts down to the thousands of an inch.
Throughout the three tours, students understood what it takes to become a journey-level machinist or fabricator. AJAC’s registered Youth Apprenticeship and Adult Apprenticeship programs brought to life the career pathways that gave them the freedom to earn while they learn, complete college-level classes and refrain from years of college debt.
This cell was manufactured by the Pauly Jail Company of Saint Louis. It was located in the 1903-04 Donley County Jail, that once stood on the northwest corner of the courthouse square. That structure was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978, along with the courthouse. Unfortunately, the jail was demolished sometime thereafter, but the courthouse, thankfully, remains intact and preserved. This old jail cell is now on display on the grounds of the Saints' Roost Museum in Clarendon.
Clarendon is a friendly and fascinating West Texas town located to the southeast of Amarillo along U.S. Highway 287 in the Panhandle. It serves as the seat of Donley County.
Carl Sandburg College was presented with a proclamation from the State of Illinois on Tuesday morning in the Center for Manufacturing Excellence to celebrate Manufacturing Month. Participating on the stage included Dr. Seamus Reilly, President of Carl Sandburg College; Adrian Madunic, Northwest Region Manager, Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity; Sarah Hartwick, Vice President of Education & Workforce Policy, Illinois Manufacturers' Association, and Ellen Burns, Dean of Career and Technical Education.
Nelson Mackey (1825 - 1898) founder of Texas-based Mackey brick Company, was born Nelson Mackie Laraway in Catskill, New York. He grew up in the Hudson Valley where the name Mackey was synonymous with brick manufacturing. After business ventures in Iowa and Illinois, Mackey came to San Antonio area in the late 1870s. By the 1880s, he began to invest in a brick manufacturing company that would eventually become one of the most successful in the state. In 1887, he and several partners acquired land around Calaveras. Of this tract, 150 acres were set aside for the mining of clay for brick making, and the remaining acreage supplied the necessary 30,000 cords of wood needed to fire kilns. Mackey's employees had the choice to live on- site in company housing. Workers were paid in tokens that were redeemable at the company store. San Antonio and Aransas Pass railroad created a spur named the Mackie spur to pick up bricks on site.
With transportation readily available, Mackey bricks were soon shipped across the southern Texas. the buff colored bricks were used to build various downtown San Antonio businesses, as well as landmarks. Such as the foundation of the federal building, an addition to the Merger Hotel and the Vance building. Bricks were also used in construction outside of San Antonio. In 1891, the Southwest Texas State lunatic asylum was constructed using seven million Mackey bricks. Mackey often pointed out that if you lined end-to-end, they would have reached from San Antonio to Chicago. In 1889, the company added "tile" to their name and produced red clay pipe from a quarry south of San Antonio. Unfortunately, because of you fierce competition with south Texas And Mexico brick companies, the business declined by the late 1890s. Mackey passed away in 1898 and is buried in Perry, Iowa. (2016) (Marker No. 18379)
Carl Sandburg College was presented with a proclamation from the State of Illinois on Tuesday morning in the Center for Manufacturing Excellence to celebrate Manufacturing Month. Participating on the stage included Dr. Seamus Reilly, President of Carl Sandburg College; Adrian Madunic, Northwest Region Manager, Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity; Sarah Hartwick, Vice President of Education & Workforce Policy, Illinois Manufacturers' Association, and Ellen Burns, Dean of Career and Technical Education.
The manufacturing industry’s night of nights, the 2019 Victorian Manufacturing Hall of Fame Awards, is a celebration of manufacturing excellence.
Kentucky Wagon Mfg. Co. – 1879-present located in Louisville, Kentucky and made the DIXIE FLYER, HERCULES, and CROWN automobiles. Address: Kentucky Wagon Works. 2601 S. 3rd St. Louisville, Kentucky. By 1919, horse drawn vehicle production was curtailed except for farm wagons and in 1920 Studebaker sold their wagon works to The Kentucky Wagon Mfg Co of Louisville. In so doing, Studebaker became the only wagon maker to successfully transition to automobiles.. In 1916 the Kentucky Wagon Manufacturing Company decided to go into the car manufacturing business and was renamed the Dixie Motor Car Company. It only lasted from 1916 to 1923. Only car manufactured here was the Dixie Flyer which had a Lycoming and Herschell-Spillman four cylinder engine. Company sold out to the National Automobile Company of Indianapolis.
Carl Sandburg College was presented with a proclamation from the State of Illinois on Tuesday morning in the Center for Manufacturing Excellence to celebrate Manufacturing Month. Participating on the stage included Dr. Seamus Reilly, President of Carl Sandburg College; Adrian Madunic, Northwest Region Manager, Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity; Sarah Hartwick, Vice President of Education & Workforce Policy, Illinois Manufacturers' Association, and Ellen Burns, Dean of Career and Technical Education.
Meghan Hunscher, President of the Morris County Chamber of Commerce addressing the audience at the Groundbreaking ceremony for the Advanced Manufacturing and Engineering Center at County College of Morris.
National Manufacturing Day, celebrated on the first Friday in October brings together the misconceptions, the public perception and the career pathways that make up what many would argue is the most vital industry to our country. More than anything, Manufacturing Day is an opportunity to bring modern manufacturing to life for the public
For National Manufacturing Day, the Aerospace Joint Apprenticeship Committee (AJAC) partnered with the Tacoma School District, Rainier Beach High School, OMAX Corporation, Cadence Aerospace – PMW Operations, Gensco and South Seattle College to offer tours, hands-on activities and presentations about all things manufacturing. Many of the students we invited were currently enrolled in Career and Technical Education programs such as aerospace science, engineering and manufacturing.
2017 was a unique year for AJAC’s Manufacturing Day initiatives, particularly for the next wave of Youth Apprenticeship cohorts we will launch this school year. Students from every background and social-economic status came together and learned what a day in the life is like for a manufacturer. From concept to design, to fabrication and machining. These are the components each company utilizes to make their products world renown.
At Cadence Aerospace – PMW Operations, students saw larger-than-life CNC machines cutting metal parts for Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner and Airbus’s A320-Neo. They rode a 5-axis Cincinnati Milacron Gantry CNC machine as it spewed coolant over the airplane parts, cutting each part with precision. At Gensco, a company known for its fabrication of HVAC equipment, students were drawn to laser cutters and heavy sheet metal equipment to build commercial heating and ventilation systems we have in our very buildings. OMAX Corporation, the world leader in abrasive waterjet machining, demonstrated how 60,000 PSI of water can machine parts down to the thousands of an inch.
Throughout the three tours, students understood what it takes to become a journey-level machinist or fabricator. AJAC’s registered Youth Apprenticeship and Adult Apprenticeship programs brought to life the career pathways that gave them the freedom to earn while they learn, complete college-level classes and refrain from years of college debt.
The ACC Manufacturing Careers Expo event at the Highland Campus, Building 2000, on Thursday, July 8, 2021.
Armstrong is a lunar defense bot manufactured secretly by Rothchild for his own personal security. From Ashley Wood, they are some of the most advanced bots produced: "Armstrong is the smartest bot from Rothchild, it has independent goal based decision making routines, which is a first for any bot. just tell it what is needed and he will work out the rest." M.O.D. were reportedly able to steal some Armstrongs and modify them for their own purposes.
Armstrongs come in 2 "G" variations: 0G and 1G. The "G" designation refers to gravity, with 0G representing Luna gravity, and 1G representing Earth gravity. All WWR Armstrongs are made in the 0G variant with the exception of one announced 1G.
"Please do not reproduce or use this picture without my explicit permission.
If you ask nicely i will probably say yes, just ask me first!
All rights reserved"
Collection: Caley Postcards
Filename: 9015-028-000-02328.jpg
State: Delaware
County: New Castle County
City/Town: Townsend
Color/BW: BW
Image Type: Photo
Publisher:
Stamp: 1c Benjamin Franklin
Postmark year: 1907
Size: 5.5 x 3.5
Comments:
Amphora ceramics manufactured in the mosaic panel is embossed, all pieces are hand-cut, 37 / 47cm.
Manufactured by Johann.
The manufacturing industry’s night of nights, the 2019 Victorian Manufacturing Hall of Fame Awards, is a celebration of manufacturing excellence.
This video discusses why pre-diffusion cleans are important in removing impurities during semiconductor manufacturing. Visit www.modutek.com/wet-processing-applications/wafer-cleanin...
National Manufacturing Day, celebrated on the first Friday in October brings together the misconceptions, the public perception and the career pathways that make up what many would argue is the most vital industry to our country. More than anything, Manufacturing Day is an opportunity to bring modern manufacturing to life for the public
For National Manufacturing Day, the Aerospace Joint Apprenticeship Committee (AJAC) partnered with the Tacoma School District, Rainier Beach High School, OMAX Corporation, Cadence Aerospace – PMW Operations, Gensco and South Seattle College to offer tours, hands-on activities and presentations about all things manufacturing. Many of the students we invited were currently enrolled in Career and Technical Education programs such as aerospace science, engineering and manufacturing.
2017 was a unique year for AJAC’s Manufacturing Day initiatives, particularly for the next wave of Youth Apprenticeship cohorts we will launch this school year. Students from every background and social-economic status came together and learned what a day in the life is like for a manufacturer. From concept to design, to fabrication and machining. These are the components each company utilizes to make their products world renown.
At Cadence Aerospace – PMW Operations, students saw larger-than-life CNC machines cutting metal parts for Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner and Airbus’s A320-Neo. They rode a 5-axis Cincinnati Milacron Gantry CNC machine as it spewed coolant over the airplane parts, cutting each part with precision. At Gensco, a company known for its fabrication of HVAC equipment, students were drawn to laser cutters and heavy sheet metal equipment to build commercial heating and ventilation systems we have in our very buildings. OMAX Corporation, the world leader in abrasive waterjet machining, demonstrated how 60,000 PSI of water can machine parts down to the thousands of an inch.
Throughout the three tours, students understood what it takes to become a journey-level machinist or fabricator. AJAC’s registered Youth Apprenticeship and Adult Apprenticeship programs brought to life the career pathways that gave them the freedom to earn while they learn, complete college-level classes and refrain from years of college debt.
The manufacturing industry’s night of nights, the 2019 Victorian Manufacturing Hall of Fame Awards, is a celebration of manufacturing excellence.
Fresno State Industrial Technology Industrial Manufacturing Processes Class - Professor Don Austin, Jordan College of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, photo by Geoff Thurner, March 29, 2016, Copyright 2016.
saigonsquare.vn - balotuixach.biz - balokipling.com
Chuyên sỉ & lẻ các loại balo laptop Kipling - Túi xách kipling - Balo du lịch Kipling - Và kipling
Liên hệ 093 5527 949 - 0902 668 135 (Mr Tình)
Email : balokipling@yahoo.com
Specialized in whole sale and retail, manufacturing follow order : Handbags, backpacks, briefcases for laptop,suitcases...
With brands :
+ Kipling
+ Crumpler
+ Jack Wolfskin
+ Samsonite
+ Northface