#china two shot plastic parts factory
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avaantares · 1 year ago
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Wait, Zhao Yunlan's gun is actually a...?!
(I've never claimed production meta for @guardianbingo before, but after the amount of time and research I put in on this, I feel like I've earned the "Zhao Yunlan's Gun or Whip" square, haha)
SO. GUYS.
Maybe this is something fandom as a whole figured out back in 2018, but I, who didn't hear of Guardian until 2020, did not realize until now and I need to share the knowledge because when I finally noticed, I made an unholy sound.
I've tracked down where Zhao Yunlan's gun came from -- or at least, what it most likely started as. Not the in-universe dark-energy-maybe-uses-bullets-maybe-doesn't-device-that's-best-not-thought-about-too-long, but rather the actual fake-steampunk-revolver-that-is-best-not-looked-at-too-long-because-it's-awful prop.
Y'know, this disaster:
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I was actually working on a different Guardian Bingo fill and needed to look something up for continuity, so I'd flipped through a couple of episodes at super high speed trying to find a scene. As luck would have it, one of my skips forward happened to land on the scene I screencapped above, when ZYL confronts Zhang Shi.
Normally we don't get this clear (or this stationary) a shot of the godawful gun prop. I'd assumed all along they had just taken a plastic gun, glued some extra bits and bobs on it to make it look fancy, and hit it with some dry brushing (fun fact: you can watch the paint flake throughout the series; check out the top of the barrel and the side of the cylinder in the above screenshot!) to make it look #steampunk like the abandoned aesthetic of 25% of the show (as I've said before, I have theories about what happened in preproduction, but that's another post). This sort of thing is exactly what I've done for cheap cosplay weapons or background props for film work that aren't going to be seen at HD detail range.
Anyway, since the detail showed up better here than in other shots, I paused the video to look at the random screws and hex bolts (why??) they'd glued on it, since I recalled that I had the aforementioned gun/whip bingo square to fill.
That's when I noticed a detail that had eluded me before: An inverted V shape at the bottom of the grip.
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Only looking more closely, that's not an inverted V. It's a symbol that I've seen a whole series of variations of over the past 15+ years... every time there's a new installment of the Assassin's Creed video game series:
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So I started hunting. The principal weapons in each game turned up no matches, but eventually I found a gun that looks almost exactly like ZYL's:
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It's not a perfect replica, but the details are certainly all there: The stylized logo; the leaves and swirls on the grip; the feathers up the back; even the Victorian scrollwork beneath the barrel.
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Now, what's really interesting is that this gun isn't actually from the AC game series. It's part of an elaborate fan project by artist David Paget that started as a class assignment back in 2014. Even though it gathered a bit of steam in the AC fandom and generated a couple of forum role-play groups, OCs and the like, nothing about this artwork was ever connected to a real Assassin's Creed title. So why would there be a physical version of a gun that was only someone's fanart?
This is where the smoking gun (*rimshot*) goes missing, because I can't prove any of this, and it's been long enough that digging through the archives of the internet to find answers is going to take way more time than I can afford to spend on a project I'm not getting paid for. But there are two likely possibilities:
Scenario A: Some employee in a toy factory somewhere in China got told, "This Assassin's Creed franchise is really big, so we need to be producing replicas from those games to sell. Work up some designs." So the employee Googles "assassin's creed gun," finds David Paget's very professional-looking art, and whips up a replica to mass-injection-mold without realizing it's not actually from a game. Later, someone on the cash-strapped Guardian production team needs a gun to mod, and finds a cheap toy revolver on clearance after several years of sitting in storage because there was little demand for a replica of a gun that was never in a game. They buy several, glue hex bolts on the cylinder for reasons unknown, and poof! Instant pseudo-steampunk!
Scenario B: Other fans were involved in the design. Someone did build a 3D model of David Paget's design that's still available on Sketchfab (screenshot below), and it's not unreasonable to assume that other fans could have thought it looked cool and built 3D printable models. Later, someone on the cash-strapped Guardian production team needs a gun to mod, and acquires the 3D print file of one of those models from the interwebs. They mod the file a bit, print some, glue hex bolts on the cylinder for reasons unknown, and poof! Instant pseudo-steampunk!
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Personally, I find Scenario A far more likely than Scenario B, for two reasons: First, the hero prop looks more injection molded than 3D printed, especially given the technical state of 3D printing back in 2017-8. And second... Budget-challenged dramas do have a history of picking up bulk video game replicas and using them as cheap props. I made a post back in 2019 about the WoW Horde shields we spotted in a different drama...
Anyway, no firm answers about the source of the hero prop -- the world may never know! -- but we have now confirmed that in some alternate universe (possibly one of the first eighty?), Zhao Yunlan and/or Zhao Xinci is an Assassin.
Wait, wait, wait... *recalls mechanics of how the whole Assassin's Creed frame story is supposed to work* Uh... so... who wants to write a genetic memory explanation for the whole Kunlun -> [lots of lifetimes] -> Zhao Yunlan thing?
.
(I did actually check the catalogue of a friend of mine who makes replicas of props from various media franchises to see if he'd done a commission of the David Paget design, since a surprising number of his custom pieces actually do end up on film and television, but while he has a gorgeous replica of a revolver that actually appears in an AC game, it appears he has not done the Zhao Yunlan gun. I didn't really think it likely, since he's in the U.S., but you never know.)
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flagellant · 1 year ago
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I remember the movie basically making the old point about “and there’s no women CEO’s :c” and it was like, are you kidding me? The planet is dying and your solution is to make sure some of the CEO’s destroying it are girlbosses?
Loved the movie mostly, especially the set design, but it felt like the message was an afterthought because it was the weakest part of the movie.
I've walked past the Barbie branded selfie booth, sat through the reel of old commercials that precede the previews, and watched Margot Robbie learn to cry, and I’m still not sure what “doing the thing and subverting the thing,” which Greta Gerwig claimed as the achievement of Barbie in a recent New York Times Magazine profile, could possibly mean. This was the second Gerwig profile the magazine has run. I wrote the first one, in 2017, which in hindsight appears like a warning shot in a publicity campaign that has cemented Gerwig’s reputation as so charming and pure of heart that any choice (we used to call them compromises) she makes is justified, a priori, by her innocence. This is a strange position for an adult to occupy, especially when the two-hour piece of branded content she is currently promoting hinges on a character who discovers that her own innocence is the false product of a fallen world. But—spoiler alert!—the point of Barbie’s “hero’s journey” is less to reconcile Barbie to death than to reconcile the viewer to culture in the age of IP.
“Doing the thing and subverting the thing”: I haven’t finished working out the details, but I think the rough translation would be Getting rich and not feeling feel bad about it. (Or, for the viewer: Having a good time and not feeling bad about it.) One must labor under a rather reduced sense of the word “subvert” to be impressed with poking loving fun at product misfires such as Midge (the pregnant Barbie), Tanner (the dog who poops), and the Ken with the earring, especially given that the value of all these collectors’ items has, presumably, not decreased since the film opened. Barbie may feature a sassy tween sternly informing Robbie’s Stereotypical Barbie that the tiny-waisted top-heavy billion-dollar business she represents has made girls “feel bad” about themselves, but if anyone uttered the word “anorexia,” I missed it. (There was a reason Todd Haynes told the story of Karen Carpenter’s life and death with Barbies, and it wasn’t because an uncanny piece of molded plastic has the magical power to resolve the contradictions of girlhood and global capitalism.) There’s a bit about Robbie going back into a box in the Mattel boardroom, but Barbies aren’t made in an executive suite; they come from factories in China. On the one hand, it’s weird for a film about a real-world commodity to unfold wholly in the realm of ideas and feelings, but then again, that’s pretty much the definition of branding. Mattel doesn’t care if we buy Barbie dolls—they’re happy to put the word “Barbie” on sunglasses and T-shirts, or license clips from the movie for an ad for Google. OK, here’s my review: When Gerwig first visited Mattel HQ in October 2019, the company’s stock was trading at less than twelve dollars a share. Today the price is $21.40. 
Christine Smallwood, Who Was Barbie?
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made a great deal
found an Apex 210 ribbon mic, broken jangly ribbon and reeking of cigarette smoke for $40 a couple months ago….
It already had the inner wire mesh layers and any pop filtering fabric removed, and it was missing some screws and had the ribbon screws stripped by the previous owner.
Disassembled it all, washed it, and retensioned the ribbon the day i got it, and it worked but sounded a bit harsh in the highs; likely sounded as good as it ever had up to that point…
The gig bag for this mic smelled disgusting even after multiple washes with TSP substitute and various soap and detergent, so I let that go and replaced it with a padded wine bottle bag but it just isn’t padded enough. Not sure where to find a better padded bag or box that would stow the mic vertically!
Today i got replacement strain relief gland based spirals and they just happen to fit this body, so I added a Neutrik XLR connector and Star quad mic wire with braided shielding to that. Along with some foam and PVC card samples, i was able to deaden the gnarly body resonance that was making the harsh high frequency response. I cut the PVC card samples to make a front and rear rounded-E-shaped wall divider to slot between the magnets and the cup piece of metal that forms the bottom half of the mic. All told, I spent about $10 on the parts used here and wound up with a $50 ribbon mic that performs much better than if I had instantly gone off spending $100 on changing the ribbon thickness and output transformer. I still may give that a shot, but this is suddenly a lot closer to the sound of the AEA R84, whose neodymium magnet and (2”x5mm/2-micron thick) ribbon geometry these Chinese made long ribbons imitate. It is still less sensitive than an RCA type 74b mi-1036G strapped for 250-Ohm output; I believe this Apex output transformer was <200-Ohm impedance from the factory.
This cheap simple change works for any of the yoke-mounted made in China ribbon microphones that may need this, such as the Apex 210 or the improved version model 205, Nady RSM2, Alctron HRM-2, ShinyBox 23, t.Bone R500, SM MC-04, Cascade VinJet, ShinyBox 46, Nady RSM1, Golden Age Project R1 and others may have nearly the same motor and maybe some of the same shortcomings.
Here’s a good article on the subject: http://recordinghacks.com/2008/11/01/chinese-ribbon-microphone-designs/
A note on this PVC card sample stock I used, I have no real clue what I have. It came from a reuse place and they were a steel ring of samples of various colors of this stuff. It doesn’t really bend well and snaps after about 30°. The inside of this stuff is like a closed cell foam while the front and back look the same and form a more solid layer of plastic. Maybe sheets of this stuff were heat pressed from PVC. It’s 1.5-2mm thick and definitely wasn’t meant for this. You could use anything that will fit and stay and where you could fasten two halves with an overlap so that it stays put as a divider between the body and the ribbon motor. I used Ukraine 🇺🇦 colors with yellow on the front side :D
The strain relief was like a PG9 size iirc. Where the original pinch lock passthru strain relief had straight sides, the threads on the new strain relief grab and thread in juuust right, too! Much more like the AEA strain relief, to boot
Further mod ideas:
Replace the yoke with a shockmount like the GAP RSM
Unscrew the yoke flat piece from the piece that threads onto the mic stand and use a post style shockmount more like the one used in the RCA type 44 yoke
Or, replace the thumbscrew thread holes in the frame of the ribbon motor with a threaded insert shockmount bushing
stick some silicone damping instead of the foam
maybe improve sensitivity by using a higher turns ratio transformer
could sew more padding in to the bottle bag
high impedance input circuit or mic pre to pair with these types of things (i already have lots of 150-2200-Ohm inputs, some of which can change)
add a Crown Royal type cloth velvety bag both to pad the mic in the wine bottle bag AND to make the ideal 360° pop filter! They can even be stuffed with some foam and fitted with some fur on the outside to resist wind buffeting, it’s really great for that because it can enclose and keep wind off of the bottom and yoke of the mic as well, even if it is no Rycote zeppelin and dead cat. they even sell some raincoats for the dead cats that don’t make noise as they are hit by raindrops! i just don’t usually do it in the rain
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injectionmoldchina · 4 years ago
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New Post has been published on https://www.injectionmouldchina.com/this-articollapsible-core/
Collapsible Core
Split pit molds are frequently utilized when the part configuration incorporates complex and undermining outer surfaces. Folding centers are regularly utilized when the part configuration incorporates complex and undermining surfaces on the inside of the part. The plan of a shape which incorporates a folding center is appeared in high precision mould china, which was created to form the top of a doll with an almost uniform divider thickness [12]. The shape depression (14 and 15 together) is framed by two hole embeds 12 and 13, which are burrowed out by a folding center 17. In this plan of automotive mould made in china, the folding center is contained eight sections: 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, and 25. Four of the fragments 18, 19, 20, and 21 are generally three-sided in area and fitted at the corners with a molded external surface in the ideal type of the center. The other four portions 22, 23, 24, and 25 are generally planar in segment and fitted between the corner sections with a shaped external surface to finish the ideal type of the center.
A center pole 37 is situated at the focal point of the center, and forestalls the outspread uprooting of the eight fragments when the folding center is collected. To forestall the pivotal dislodging of the folding center, every one of the eight fragments have a stem 35 with outside strings 35a that draw in the inward strings 39 out of a sleeve 38.
The activity of the folding center depends upon the strings 37b of the center pole 37, and their commitment with the strung way 41 of the sleeve 38. In particular, preceding trim the center bar is turned inside the sleeve so it completely reaches out until its distal (far) end is flush with the finishes of the eight fragments to shape an inflexible center 17. The sleeve with the inflexible center is then positioned in the form cavity and the part is shaped by traditional practice. When the part is hardened, the shape is opened and the formed part is eliminated alongside the center and sleeve. The center pole 37 is then unscrewed from sleeve 38 and eliminated from within the center 17. With no help, the eight portions can implode and be eliminated from within the formed part. The fragments, center bar, and sleeve are then reassembled for the following embellishment cycle.
The folding center plan of oem/odm automotives moulding factory permits complex and undermining highlights to be shaped inside to the formed part. On account of its plan, notwithstanding, a lot of time is needed to collect and dismantle the moving center. To encourage the plan and assembling of molds with folding centers, standard folding center plans have been created and are accessible from various shape base and segment providers. In common plans, the activation of the ejector plate slides the portions along a holding sleeve, which gives a cam activity to implode the center sections during the discharge of the shaped part. This article is from https://www.injectionmouldchina.com/
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staley752x · 3 years ago
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Steel Industry Import Taxes
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At the point when we raised the steel import charge a couple of years prior it hurt many assembling areas who utilized steel in their creation. It additionally hurt more modest organizations, which use steel in their items. US Steel costs have cost our group huge number of additional dollars because of the import burdens that were forced. We told everybody on the off chance that they raise the expense of steel even 100 dollars for each ton we will look to construct the truck beds out of different materials, and when we do we won't ever return to steel. It is weighty, costs gas mileage, rusts, leaving iron oxide streaks on the outside paint. It is by the expense we even still use steel.
On the off chance that the steel organizations in this nation can't run more proficient and get their trade guilds to perform effectively then one ought not anticipate that the public should uphold that industry or purchase their items. We can construct the truck beds out of fiberglass, plastic or composite. We will actually want to construct uni-body shells and make them all the more austerely satisfying. So the organization and the steel industry better start acting responsibly. The vehicle industry likewise endured a shot and a significant number of the vehicles are moving to lighter materials and they won't return once they do on the grounds that the mileage reserve funds in effectiveness is significant too.
We need Brazil as an exchanging accomplice; we need Japan's economy to get back to development. We ought not give a prop to an industry that isn't imaginative and allows their laborers to kick back and do pretty much nothing if any work. The steel association is solid and they don't have faith in difficult hard working attitude like the opposition in their industry. We ought not help lethargy and give an organization an edge. Parting with free fish makes even awesome of us apathetic. This issue is influencing our group and costing our franchisees cash and return for money invested time, because of expanded expenses in new hardware. That harms their families and their capacity to develop their organizations. The import duty of half on steel, harms the remainder of the economy, it harms my group when we need better costs. This makes an imposing business model on steel for two or three steel organizations who are arranging a consolidation. I'm disturbed that we are assaulting American organizations who have won the market by serving clients and giving them what they need as we as a whole vote with our dollar and afterward the public authority makes syndications simultaneously. So obviously restraining infrastructures are Great as long as the public authority makes them. We are happy to see that these steel organizations are currently ready to create steel since the costs are up, yet a portion of these steel factories are shut to sell their energy agreements to different organizations and stay shut, in this manner who are we making a difference? Absolutely not my group; we will presently see occupations for vehicles and so forth move to Mexico and China this would likewise be intended for farm haulers and weighty industry trucks and trailer makers.
Assuming we help one industry briefly and, part with occupations and processing plant ability to different nations for reasons unknown. We are shifting more than one field by doing this. Indeed we won't represent these increments by any means. Screw that, it influences our group when we are making occupations and we all business people are attempting to uncover ourselves from underneath the downturn. It is great to see that organization had the option to re-view at this issue as right on time as July to bring down the import burden and in the long run dispose of it before long in that first year of expanded tax charges. Then, at that point, we can get the whole South American nations in our group as exchange accomplices, we might require them. Click here : steel buildings
To the extent squeezed orange, we can legitimize limitations for reasons of organic product flies, yet for steel, I don't know we can legitimize this now since we didn't sign the Kyoto Deal and presently we are expressing we can't accepting Brazilian steel because of the strategies for assembling harming the climate, two-faced strategy, we ought not go there. Other than we have innovation, modest innovation to forestall these contaminations in any case, we should simply see they are set up and given them access to the market to keep our steel industry on their feet and from getting lethargic, costing our assembling of truck beds excessively, in this manner harming our capacity to make occupations by giving our group the motivation to understand a reasonable benefit in when many little organizations are leaving business and enormous ones avoiding the annoyance of covering bills in their records payable offices by declaring financial insolvency, Kmart, PG&E, Enron, Worldwide Intersection and others in the news of late. We can't uncover America in case we are consistently driving more expenses on different businesses that need assistance as well. For example, the truck building industry, rail vehicle industry, even waste vehicle development is down 30%, school transports, extensions and framework. Steel is utilized for bunches of things and there is huge volumes; what was the issue with the industry that they couldn't make a benefit in the event that they had a little rivalry? Solid endure and that is a central essential of unrestricted economies. Mull over everything.
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vampearlgrey · 4 years ago
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Injection molded plastic auto parts
Injection molded plastic auto parts gives various preferences contrasted with different materials or production processes. Has been leading and supporting all engineering departments in various areas: being up to date in parts & process design, mold design, FEA analysis, GD&T and automation. Our team of experienced injection molding professionals works closely with automotive OEMs and Tier 1 clients to evaluate and define all technical requirements and therefore optimize the production of impeccable exterior vehicle components. Plastic injection molding is becoming a very popular technique for manufacturing. Automotive plastic injection molding using plastic is a common method of producing parts because it is sustainable and able to serve the increasing demand. Our expertise in chrome plating and wheel trims, along with our two-shot plastic injection molding capabilities, allow us to provide turnkey solutions that support customers in bringing their products to market successfully. KI automotive partners demand high levels of engineering, quality, and project management. Industry manufacturers are increasingly using plastic molded parts. For each of our products, we develop and maintain a Process Quality Document (PQD) that describes all the critical aspects of running that product. 
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Whether you are for group or individual sourcing, we will provide you with the latest technology and the comprehensive data of Chinese suppliers like Auto Part Mould Factory list to enhance your sourcing performance in the business line of manufacturing & processing machinery. From the raw material to the finished product, checks are carried out scrupulously and randomly, as scheduled by the customer or according to the complexity of the moulded pieces. Because it is auxiliary equipment, it requires no changes to the injection molding machine. Through our EG TranSpire subsidiary, we've been designing, developing, and manufacturing a wide range of components and sub-assemblies for the automotive market for more than 35 years. Letoplast focuses on co-design and engineering, high quality plastic injection moulding, painting and sub-assembling. A Full-Service Plastic Injection Molding Company. The mold is prepared for production right after the principal testing, which shaves off many weeks. SAC Plastics also helps small start-up companies with small production runs bring new parts to market by making high quality custom molded parts available at competitive rates. Many customers choose to source many electrical components through our electronics division of Cypress Industries. 6. The best advantage that can be gotten from the usage of plastic molding application to the car business is the expenses being driven down; it is an assembling method to bring down overhead costs by the utilization of parts from a few assortments of plastic materials.
Arkal's unique one-stop ‘design-to-manufacturing' approach enables its automotive customers to benefit from optimally cost-effective solutions by integrating Smart Product Design, Efficient Process Design and Automated Production under one roof - enabling our clients to meet and exceed aggressive targets for weight reduction, safety performance and cost reduction. WELCOME TO ELITE PLASTIC PRODUCTS, INC. The latest in equipment, computers, and software along with our greatest asset, trained and experienced personnel, allow Quality Mold Shop to provide injection moldings with shortened lead times, quality designs, made-to-last through production mold demands. We provide custom injection molding solutions, ranging from co-development, mold design and raw material expertise to the final delivery of products and services. Primex Plastics is a leading manufacturer of plastic injection molded components. The tools manufactured here in the UK by our partners are used to produce automotive, electronics, medical, engineering and the construction industries plastic parts, components, fittings and enclosures. After going over some technical innovations in this article, we should make a special mention of one of the main applications of plastic injection moulding: parts and equipment for the automotive industry. We prove that beautiful products can take shape using plastic. The ability to produce plastics in a wide variety of appearances, colours, and textures has made them an irreplaceable part of automotive design. Injection molding involves injecting molten material into a mold or pre-design. Complementing our tooling services are 10 injection molding machines, ranging from 50 to 600 ton capacity. In the automotive industry, injection molding is becoming necessary for manufacturers to keep up with competitors and climbing production rates. 
Aside from building parts with efficiency and affordability, injection molders have also been instrumental in reducing the cost of heavy metals by opening new material possibilities. Please contact us for more information on the benefits of working with the leading plastic injection mold manufacturers. MVA Stratford is an injection moulding company with a focus on manufacturing and supplying parts to the automotive industry. In addition, our cleanroom allows us to manufacture products for the healthcare industry and we have an ESD room for assembly. Exterior: Plastics are used in many exterior components of the vehicle, including body panels, bumpers, and grilles. Warehousing and engineering at our central U.S. location in Texas, or shipping from our manufacturing facilities in China gives Cypress Industries a unique edge in servicing customers with large custom plastics needs. Injection moulding consists of the high pressure injection of the raw material into a mould which shapes the polymer into the desired shape. Precisely engineered from optimum quality components and using best available technologies, these containers are extensively used in various industries including electrical, automobile and plastic manufacturing industries. Whether you are adopting the injection molding process in your business or seek an understanding of its capabilities, these depictions of how injection molders have shaped the automotive industry will enlighten and inspire you to learn more about this profound technology. Yuval has over 13 years of experience in the Plastic industry, starting in 2005 as a mold designer and project manager at Rimoni Industries. The industry expanded rapidly in the 1940s because World War II created a huge demand for inexpensive, mass-produced products.
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xtruss · 4 years ago
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U.S. Bets On Small, Untested Company to Deliver COVID Vaccine
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This undated image provided by ApiJect in July 2020 shows a prototype of their "BFS" prefilled syringe. (ApiJect file photo)
— AP | July 10, 2020 | By Martha Mendoza & Juliet Linderman
This story is part of an ongoing investigation by The Associated Press, FRONTLINE, and The Global Reporting Centre that examines the deadly consequences of the fragmented worldwide medical supply chain.
When precious vats of COVID-19 vaccine are finally ready, jabbing the lifesaving solution into the arms of Americans will require hundreds of millions of injections.
As part of its strategy to administer the vaccine as quickly as possible, the Trump administration has agreed to invest more than half a billion in tax dollars in ApiJect Systems America, a young company whose injector is not approved by federal health authorities and that hasn’t yet set up a factory to manufacture the devices.
The commitment to ApiJect dwarfs the other needle orders the government has placed with a major manufacturer and two other small companies.
“The fact of this matter is, it would be crazy for people to just rely on us. I would be the first to say it,” said ApiJect CEO Jay Walker. “We should be America’s backup at this point, but probably not its primary.”
Trump administration officials would not say why they are investing so heavily in ApiJect’s technology. The company has made only about 1,000 prototypes to date, and it’s not clear whether those devices can deliver the vaccines that are currently in development. So far, the leading candidates are using traditional vials to hold the vaccine, and needles and syringes in their clinical trials.
RELUCTANT SUPPLIER
ApiJect founder Marc Koska never intended to vaccinate the United States. For the past five years, he’s been working on his lifetime mission of creating an ultra low-cost prefilled syringe that would reduce the need to reuse needles in the developing world.
Instead, the company’s biggest customer has become the U.S. government.
ApiJect received a no-bid contract earlier this year from the Defense Department under an exception for “unusual and compelling urgency.” Authorities said the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, tasked with buying the necessary supplies, “does not have the resources or capacity to conduct procurements necessary to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic,” according to a June 5 military document.
The government promised ApiJect $138 million to produce 100 million of its devices by the end of the year, which will require the company to retrofit new manufacturing lines in existing factories. And it’s offered another $456 million as part of a public-private partnership contract to bring online several new factories to make another 500 million devices to “contain the pandemic spread to minimize the loss of life and impact to the United States economy,” said the document.
These amounts are more than double the per-syringe cost the government is paying other companies for the work.
ApiJect first appeared on the U.S. government’s radar almost two years ago when the company piqued the interest of Admiral Brett P. Giroir, HHS’s assistant secretary for health, at the World Health Organization’s Global Conference on Primary Health Care in Astana, Kazakhstan.
Koska said Giroir was “blown away” by their technology and told them that if a pandemic hit, the strategic national stockpile was going to need a very fast way to get injections filled with vaccines or therapeutics and ready to deliver.
According to Walker, the CEO, ApiJect wasn’t interested in a federal contract — they were aiming to change the developing world with quick, inexpensive injection devices that could save millions of lives.
But at the conference, Walker found himself at a table with Giroir at a luncheon, just two seats apart. The admiral was fascinated by the low-cost injection technology, Walker said, and when Walker showed him the prototype that he always carries in his pocket, Giroir asked how they plan to do this in the U.S.
Walker said he told the admiral that the company wasn’t planning to operate in the U.S. but was struck by Giroir’s enthusiasm.
“He was the first person, if not the only person at the event, who understood the revolutionary nature of this platform,” Walker recalled in an interview with AP. “And he said, ‘Wow this is amazing. You need to do this in the U.S.’”
Walker continued to resist, he said, but Giroir — who is also a doctor specializing in pediatric critical care — “wasn’t big on taking no for an answer,” Walker said.
At Giroir’s urging they presented the prototype injector to U.S. officials. HHS declined to make agency officials available for interviews.
It wasn’t until later, when Walker was introduced by a friend to Col. Matthew Hepburn at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, that a plan for ApiJect to work in the United States began to take shape, he said.
HHS Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response Robert Kadlec approved a $10 million contract for ApiJect for research and development in January 2020, according to a document in the federal procurement data system. The company was responsible for securing private investments to create new production lines where the devices would be made over three to five years.
When the pandemic emerged weeks later, officials sounded the alarm about a potential shortage of needles and syringes to deliver a vaccine if and when one became available.
The federal Strategic National Stockpile of medical supplies had only 15 million syringes, according to Dr. Rick Bright, who later left his position at Health and Human Services and filed a whistleblower complaint.
Bright warned White House trade adviser Peter Navarro and his HHS colleagues of a looming needle shortfall, according to a series of emails disclosed in his complaint.
“We are hearing rumblings about the US inventory of needles and syringes … heading to other countries,” wrote Bright. “There is limited inventory in the supply chain, it could take 2+ years to make enough to satisfy the U.S. vaccine needs.”
Navarro said the U.S. would need 850 million needles.
“We may find ourselves in a situation where we have enough vaccine but no way to deliver all of it,” he said in a February memo to the White House coronavirus task force.
He recommended the task force “direct HHS BARDA to initiate a program to identify all alternate vaccine delivery methods and ramp up production.“ BARDA is the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority within HHS.
Suddenly ApiJect’s 5-year plan to mass produce its devices became a sprint measured in months with a new $138 million contract, announced in May, to produce 100 million devices by year’s end.
Jefferies Financial Group is acting as the leader of the public-private partnership with HHS and invested $10 million to help ApiJect build surge production facilities in March. The company said it would try to raise up to $1 billion more. There have been no additional announcements of funding.
Walker said due to nondisclosure agreements with both the government and investors, the company is unable to say what private funding they’ve secured so far.
OPERATION WARP SPEED
On a warm mid-May day in the White House Rose Garden, President Donald Trump introduced “a massive scientific, industrial and logistical endeavor” dubbed Operation Warp Speed.
The idea, he said, was to be ready to distribute a COVID-19 vaccine as soon as it was developed.
“We must not be caught short on our capacity to deliver emergency drugs to Americans in need,” said HHS Secretary Alex Azar.
An estimated 700 million injections may be needed to inoculate the nation — at least two shots for every person, according to the military document.
In early May, the government put in two orders, to Retractable Technologies in Little Elm, Texas, and Marathon Medical in Aurora, Colorado, totaling 320 million needles and syringes.
Later in May, the government announced plans for ApiJect to manufacture more than 500 million all-in-one devices that would come pre-loaded with the vaccine.
On Wednesday, the largest domestic manufacturer of needles and syringes, Becton Dickinson, announced the first U.S. order of $11.7 million for 50 million needles and syringes by the end of this year. It plans to ramp up manufacturing over the next year.
And earlier this month Retractable entered into a second contract with the government, this one for $53 million meant to boost domestic manufacturing.
Together that sounds like enough injection devices.
But Retractable, which was worried enough about its financial future that earlier this year it received a $1.36 million loan from the Paycheck Protection Program, has been doing about 80% of its manufacturing in China. And Marathon is a medical supply distributor, and there is no indication on its web site that it manufactures needles and syringes at all. The company did not respond to repeated requests for comment.
Despite the race to replenish the domestic needle and syringe supply, about 400 shipping containers of syringes have left the U.S. for countries including Germany, Colombia, Australia, Brazil and Italy this year, according to Panjiva Inc., a service that independently tracks global trade. That’s the same, on average, as syringe exports over the past five years.
Experts acknowledge that a mass vaccination campaign is going to be complicated.
“There are a lot of moving parts to this,” said Dr. Bruce Gellin, the Sabin Vaccine Institute’s president of global immunization.
Darin Zehrung, who studied medical devices at PATH, a nonprofit advocating for health equity, said it’s wise to invest in new injection technologies. But that only works if there are plenty of basic syringes and needles stocked up.
“Hedging bets is the best approach, but plan for the worst case scenario and hope for the best case scenario,” said Zehrung.
AWAITING APPROVAL
ApiJect’s devices are self-contained, with soft plastic blisters that are squeezed, like a nose spray or eye drop, to push the vaccine through an attached needle and into the patient.
The device includes a little computer chip — like the ones in credit cards — that can transmit information about the drug, dose, location and time of administration.
Other injection devices Koska designed have been used in the developing world, but this ApiJect technology has not.
The company said they have started discussions with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to review the device on a priority basis while the company moves ahead fitting factories to make their injectors. The agency wouldn’t confirm this, citing its policy against discussing products involved in clinical trials.
Testing different vaccine candidates in the ApiJect devices will be critical before injecting the public.
Plastic could interact differently with the liquid than the glass vials currently used in trials, experts say. And there are strict temperature requirements. ApiJect’s planned process is to pour vaccine doses into the warm plastic blisters as they come off the production line, the company says. ApiJect says they can instantly cool the devices as they are made.
Walker, the ApiJect CEO, who founded the online travel agency Priceline, acknowledges that the government’s decision to rely on “an emergency plan of refitting established pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities is risky. But we feel good about it.”
NO COMMENT
The Associated Press asked the Health and Human Services department over many weeks to explain the government’s approach. The agency didn’t allow an official to speak on the record for this story.
A senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the agency declined to allow him to identified by name, told AP he wasn’t familiar with ApiJect or the contract. But he said the government was buying a range of devices to deliver the vaccine because they don’t know what they need. And, he said, the Trump administration is looking to boost domestic manufacturing.
When AP reached out directly to Trump’s vaccine czar, Moncef Slaoui, to discuss the new technology, a spokesperson said the query was inappropriate.
“If this continues, we will make no one else available either,” Natalie Baldassarre, a special assistant at HHS, wrote in an email.
Last week, HHS Assistant Secretary of Public Affairs Michael Caputo wrote that the agency has “lost interest in assisting your story” and offered no further comment.
— Mendoza reported from San Francisco. Linderman reported from Baltimore. Lauran Neergaard and Stephen Braun in Washington contributed.
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coldlipsmag · 7 years ago
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PHONELESS IN BERLIN
Words: Kirsty Allison
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All photographs by Martyn Goodacre, except images of Danielle De Picciotto’s art, and Alexander Hacke’s studio…and the portrait of Morgan, by Kirsty.
Clouds’ shadows camouflage the sea. Sardine boats dodge the lifeboat wind farms. I jet-trash over last night’s cab, and the phone left on the back seat.
SCHONEFIELD AIRPORT
“Yes,” with an ‘of course’-face, “It has all the streets on it.” The tourist board office give me a map with the VisitBerlin travel card – 41E for 6 days, generous. I like free travel, and I like maps. Not Maps that rhyme with apps. I see the island of West Berlin – I put all the streets in my long black woollen notebook pocket.
U-BAHN/S-BAHN
Map in a glass cage – no index – I’ll take a photo – look at it when I’m moving – I can’t take a photo. My cogs shift from the cybernet dimension.
Alone. Letting go of my infatuation with being monitored, I feel an analogue glitch, a slip of fortune as I enter the low-rise city, uninterrupted with pings.
A watch. I could buy a watch – to tell the time.
I could walk rather than do the connection.
THE HORRORS / Synästhesie Festival / Volksbühne
“The people putting this festival together told me this granite floor was from Hitler’s Bunker,” says Anton Newcombe of the Brian Jonestown Massacre and A Records, DJing in the green room, two floors of sweeping staircases up in the People’s Theatre of Mitte’s Rosa-Luxemburg Platz – once the centre of East Berlin’s GDR.
“Do you believe them?” I ask, of the 8MM Bar promoters who put the festival together. We consider the plausibility, the Nazi star, in dirty creams and blood reds.
Mark Reeder later confirms it to be from the Nazi Vice Chancellor office. And of the cenotaphs stashed beneath the KuDamm – the Nazi spikes. Close enough. Anton is a hero – DIG! the film he stars in aside spars, The Dandy Warhols – an essential on the rock n roll rites-of-passage Reading List. Between his selection of classic psychedelia: “I was born in 1967, in California, of course I’m psychedelic”, with highlights such as Fabio Viscollios 7”, he sets the record straight on all kindsa connections that zip around my references of the night – the stars that guide us, the magnets who form us.
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Arrival in Neukölln
So 90s, no blue arrow locator. Without the digital psychographic veils of my screen, the meaning of wrong direction changes – I love to travel, to feel on top of the globe, wherever you walk, with only the weight of the identifiers you carry.
Natural order leads me to Stroke Order – my faux-god-sista, of the Sacred Sound Club – her haus is pink. Y3 shoes, high ceilings, dribble shower, CK mirror. She’s a costume designer for films, but has been hiding out here for a year. Making minimal techno – using autonomous sensory meridian response samples – sounds that turn us on.
Our mothers are pretend godmothers to me and her. She grew up in Vancouver. Dad is a motorcycle racer and ballet dancer in Japan.
Synästhesie Festival / Volksbühne
CAMERA take to the main stage of seated theatre hall. Brutalist fractal collage films of matrix shifting cities, juddering with intent. Projections of you watching me watching you – perhaps being shot live in the auditorium – full scope. Beaming around the physical force of a standing drummer triballing out for a 20 minute set on a bass drum, snare and cymbal. The centre-piece. Astral simulacrum to The Egg who I played with earlier this year. The standing drummer keels in sweat, throws a death white sheet over the drums as though he has beaten them dead, only to dampen their noise, and continue hitting and hitting. Keys, 2 x guitar, sitar bass, different genereration radical on sax – elf dancing.
I’m reminded of the need for parameters – the ones we invent to live inside. The significance of numbers plays on the screens – another hallucination. A replacement for seeing everything through snapshot Insagram lens. Abandoning our digital religion – is so FKK (freikörperkultur – the GDR East Berliners act of rebellion was to strip on Sundays around the lakes – to rip off the communist soaked nylons of identikit clothing*). So naked.
TANGERINE DREAM
A violinist in black – modular synth Memotron on one side – a bank of other buttons on the other side. One life. One nerve shatters and then rest follow. First they twitch, and glitch the matrix…
I catch a bit of THE PINS – all girls – superhot, riot grrrrl electronica.
THE HORRORS
Violent Lenin Uber Alles track shatters across the increased scale of the stage for this headline performance – punk anger of East Berlin, red deco chandeliers of alles Ku-damm Cabaret glory. Waiting for Faris Badwan, the singer who I first interviewed for Dazed and Confused, making a film about his illustration – and exhibition, I wonder about the symbolism of genre/sound/music/art as signs of the times – about resonance – of what we are creating and producing – of X Factor sounds as the capitalist panacea – of our art resonating our environment – or us gravitating towards it. Stroke Order making techno in Berlin.
The futurism of white noise perfection – the dystopian values, four albums in from when I first met Faris – he was maybe 23 then. Unsure if he was going to carry on at St Martins art school. By the time I interviewed him again for Vogue, he was not going back.
And here, seated in the very front row – I witness the evocation of destiny – he’s become less of the shy frontman, but someone who is commanding the respect of the universe – he violently whips the mic lead – he hails the pulses of front row screamers, bonding their necks with rubber wire – he in black PVC – guitarist in red lipstick – beautiful rockstar boys. Lyrics are lost in the Elritch reverb – Faris is crown stealing. Volatile black energy of goth industrial – contemporised by Tom Furse – and his techno pyramid synths. Ice sweat dripping Hackney vampire bassist Rhys Webb. Faris has become storming iconic balearic, striding over theatre seats, in smart city shoes. It’s cosmic goth, it is power – it is owning the depth of Poe hell to Blakean heavens. From voyeurs to submission, the audience leave satisfied.
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WEDDING/NW multi-cultural reaches of the city.
Fire station studio. Danielle De Picciotto walks us across a courtyard in twilight. Pyramid of flowers, split by stairs to a below-sea-level, waiting buddha, draped with beads. Left and right basement of Californian security doors, co-joined studios, His and Hers. Drums on the male side, Alexander Hacke, Einsturzende Neubatten – poles of metal to hit. Next door: paintings of black and white folklore S+M dolls with tripped out wings, and photograph reflections. Hers. With tea. Laughter. Discussion. Love. She is love.
***
Lost – ghetto kid guides me and Stroke Order to the ambient dinner in a bar beneath a block in Wedding: soundproof triangles of three-tone pastel shaved hardwood. Clean vegetables, and a series of performances from three post-Akai-ists. Poetry, soundscapes layering paranoic schizophrenic voices – a DJ girl in from Seattle. The residents, ex-pats, from across Germany, and the world – carrying less ego than London. A wholesome intellect carries through, it gets lost in the whirl of London survival. I think back to hanging with the man commonly known as Rodent, the Sex Pistols’ sound tech – he was saying everything is lost in our digital times – the lack of ability to hang out together, they had to live frugally, himself in the studio of The Clash. The intensity of art. It’s easier here. To get involved in your creativity – away from the grab.
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SUNDAY
Home jukebox, coffee, and Okay Cafe cinnamon swirls at Jason McGlade and Anne-Cathrin Saure’s (the art director/photographer, and designer of Cold Lips II, and co-createurs of the Shedville font). They moved back here recently – but Jason’s back and forth to London, working on an incredible analogue Polaroid project.
Stroke Order and I head out to Berghain – but instead collide with a very old friend who’s been living in Thailand for 14 years – Martyn Goodacre. He took the most iconic picture of Kurt Cobain, and many more. We tried doing music together when we worked on magazines. We go to a bar, meet with a midwife – talk about the horror show of birth, the guidance into the world, policed by the womb and the channel to birth and the rejection from the vulvic eye. The propulsion.
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MONDAY MORNING COMING DOWN FROM AN EMAIL THAT IS CHANGING MY LIFE
Space, China – coffee with Mark Reeder. His vinyl of Mauderstadt is out now. I’ve just run a trilogy of stories on him in DJ Mag, explaining his part in Berlin, from being the Factory rep in Berlin in Joy Division days, through to putting on punk gigs in East Berlin, recording the music in gay bars to play to New Order – thus Blue Monday – and since, from inventing trance music with his label MfS – getting Paul van Dyk on the map – he’s the man. His uniforms. Rare light.
“Danielle [De Picciotto] and Katia – Love Parade would never have started without them.”
[Love Parade was the street party that began in the ecstatic reunification of East and West Berlin. The wall came down in 1990. The old GDR was a wild land. Read Danielle De Picciotto’s Beauty of Transgression for more…or watch Mark Reeder’s B-Movie…and his forthcoming E-Movie.]
He realises he’s late for his lunch…
Alone, back on the Neukölln streets, I look into the door of a Moroccan cafe – get called in by a round-faced Muslim woman, grey jumper, jeans – trainers – Tangiers market vibes, enter – beans – good – no English – point at a box – I don’t know if she knows I don’t want a tagine but takeaway – they waterfall me mint tea – the door slams shut. There are stickers on the wall tiles – plastic table cloths. Am I about to be drugged? Locked in – I have few Euros and no phone to be stolen.
I sit, read the Unspoken Berlin I’ve picked up – and wait for either the drugs to kick in, or to relax. Oh, some brot on the table – no it ain’t Gucci Bloom sea hedgehog fennel and jerusalem artichoke, chestnut puree and scallop, purple watercress like the exquisite experience of Lokal where local ingredients will dance on plates for us later – nor is is it as refined as the Techno sauna we’ll meditate in around the bar – but it is E2.50 and beautifully wholesome – the chickpeas are larger than London.
—-
Neurotitan have taken Cold Lips and my last 3 copies of Unedited. Stefi there is lovely. It’s somewhere that’s always called me on previous trips to Berlin. Many putting a film together that became impossible, about Manuel Gottching, of Ash Ra Tempel – and E2:E4 – the most sampled record – inventor of ambient – before Eno, before the HANSA recordings of Iggy and Bowie. I tell Stefi of my gig last night with Whisky and Words at the Keith bar – where Stroke Order – her pals – and Jason McGlade come by – and Mark Reeder. And Rasp Thorne [post coming to Cold Lips soon, or buy the second edition for total spread]- the consumate performer – lighter over here – my lips are still red from the wine. Stephen Crane. Rasp’s performance of Crane. He’s so good.
Everytime I get on a train here the stasi black jacket ticket checkers are on the same carriage. It’s happened to Morgan 3 times in her year here – and 3 times with me in as many days. I am able to fight my usual paranoias from the top of my Maslow pyramid – the email from a publisher – saying he wants to publish my novel – the one I have had two agents hawk around in 11 years – during which time, I have changed, and so has the story. It is the best email I’ve ever had. Here, lying in bed on the Monday morning after meeting with Anton Newcombe and front row for Faris – Faris frow.Two days later, I’m still flying, as I hit EchoBucher, back in Wedding – they’re taking some Cold Lips…I drop into Potsdamer – meeting… No fucking way. Ticket checkers.
Zug Fallt aus!
You have amazing eyes – you look like Madonna said the guy from Milano – I’m hoping he means old skool hot Madz. En route to the airport – delays – nerves shot / triggering towards Parkinsons and spiked dreams. He calmed me – so did the guy who was also travelling to Stansted – as we ran for the plane, and vice versa. Detoxed from the phone, train home, to the temple – travelling with Alice A Bailey. Nanobotic karmic overide. More ticket inspectors – haunted by the stasi – on plane now – could do with some extra O2 from the overhead locker after running in a coat I just bought which I think I may be allergic to. But it’s so warm.
*German born LA-resident, Benedikt Taschen, the art collector and publisher, has directed the content of the new EAST GERMAN HANDBOOK. An encyclopedic collab with Wende Museum, a place of Cold War artefacts in Culver City. It’s a compendium of communist porn – picture-led, masonically-charged graphics of the whole nine yards of life behind the wall – from ideal weaponary to food, fags, appalling vodka, and the requisite communist shit shoes. It’s got 50s utopian vision written all over it.
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bigyack-com · 5 years ago
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The Price of Recycling Old Laptops: Toxic Fumes in Thailand’s Lungs
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KOH KHANUN, Thailand — Crouched on the ground in a dimly lit factory, the women picked through the discarded innards of the modern world: batteries, circuit boards and bundles of wires.They broke down the scrap — known as e-waste — with hammers and raw hands. Men, some with faces wrapped in rags to repel the fumes, shoveled the refuse into a clanking machine that salvages usable metal.As they toiled, smoke spewed over nearby villages and farms. Residents have no idea what is in the smoke: plastic, metal, who knows? All they know is that it stinks and they feel sick.The factory, New Sky Metal, is part of a thriving e-waste industry across Southeast Asia, born of China’s decision to stop accepting the world’s electronic refuse, which was poisoning its land and people. Thailand in particular has become a center of the industry even as activists push back and its government wrestles to balance competing interests of public safety with the profits to be made from the lucrative trade.Last year, Thailand banned the import of foreign e-waste. Yet new factories are opening across the country, and tons of e-waste are being processed, environmental monitors and industry experts say.“E-waste has to go somewhere,” said Jim Puckett, the executive director of the Basel Action Network, which campaigns against trash dumping in poor countries, “and the Chinese are simply moving their entire operations to Southeast Asia.”“The only way to make money is to get huge volume with cheap, illegal labor and pollute the hell out of the environment,” he added.Each year, 50 million tons of electronic waste are produced globally, according to the United Nations, as consumers grow accustomed to throwing away last year’s model and acquiring the next new thing.The notion of recycling these gadgets sounds virtuous: an infinite loop of technological utility. But it is dirty and dangerous work to extract the tiny quantities of precious metals — like gold, silver and copper — from castoff phones, computers and televisions.For years, China took in much of the world’s electronic refuse. Then in 2018, Beijing closed its borders to foreign e-waste. Thailand and other countries in Southeast Asia — with their lax enforcement of environmental laws, easily exploited labor force and cozy nexus between business and government — saw an opportunity.“Every circuit and every cable is very lucrative, especially if there is no concern for the environment or for workers,” said Penchom Saetang, the head of Ecological Alert and Recovery Thailand, an environmental watchdog.While Southeast Asian nations like Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines have rejected individual shipments of waste from Western countries, Thailand was the first to push back more systematically against the electronic refuse deluging its ports.In June of last year, the Thai Ministry of Industry announced with great fanfare the ban on foreign e-waste. The police made a series of high-profile raids on at least 10 factories, including New Sky Metal.“New Sky is closed now, totally closed,” Yutthana Poolpipat, the head of the Laem Chabang Port customs bureau, said in September. “There is no electronic waste coming into Thailand, zero.”But a recent visit to the hamlet of Koh Khanun showed that the factory was still up and running, as are many others, a reflection of the weak regulatory system and corruption that has tainted the country. Despite the headlines about the police raid, New Sky Metal was fined a maximum of only $650 for each of its licensing infractions. Since the e-waste ban, 28 new recycling factories, most dealing with electronic refuse, began operations in one province east of Bangkok, Chachoengsao, where Koh Khanun is located, according to provincial statistics. This year, 14 businesses in that province were granted licenses to process electronic waste. Most of the new factories are in central Thailand between Bangkok and Laem Chabang, the nation’s biggest port, but more provinces are allowing the businesses. Thai officials say that some incinerators may still be burning because factories are working through old stockpiles. Plants may also be processing domestic rather than foreign refuse, they say.But neither explanation is likely, according to industry experts. Hoards of imported waste wouldn’t last this long. And the amount of electronic trash that Thailand produces is far outpaced by the number of new factories.Foreign e-waste might be smuggled into the country mislabeled as scrap, said Banjong Sukreeta, the deputy director general of the Department of Industrial Works.“Ask customs about falsified declarations,” he said. “Rules are not enough if the people who implement them are not up to it.”But Mr. Yutthana, of the customs bureau, said every box that landed at his port was inspected thoroughly.“We are 100 percent careful,” he said.In October of this year, the Thai legislature unveiled loosened labor and environmental regulations for all factories, a move that has benefited the e-waste industry. Under one provision, small companies are no longer subject to pollution monitoring. At the same time, a draft bill that would ensure tighter control over Thailand’s electronic waste industry has languished in legislative purgatory. “Thailand is welcoming environmental degradation with its own laws,” said Somnuck Jongmeewasin, a lecturer in environmental management at Silpakorn University International College. “There are so many loopholes and ways to escape punishment.”The consequences are frightening. If some types of electronic waste aren’t incinerated at a high enough temperature, dioxins, which can cause cancer and developmental problems, infiltrate the food supply. Without proper safeguarding, toxic heavy metals seep into the soil and groundwater.Locals who fought against the deluge of trash have been attacked. “Why don’t you in the West recycle your own waste?” said Phayao Jaroonwong, a farmer east of Bangkok, who said her crops had withered after an electronic waste factory moved in next door.“Thailand can’t take it anymore,” she said. “We shouldn’t be the world’s dumping ground.”Phra Chayaphat Kuntaweera, a Buddhist abbot, has watched as several waste-processing factories opened around his temple. Two more are under construction.First, the monks began to cough, he said. Then they vomited. When the incinerators burned, their headaches raged.“Monks are people, too,” he said. “We get sick from the fumes just like anyone else.”Earlier this year, the abbot put a sign in front of his temple in Khao Hin Sorn, east of Bangkok.“Cheap temple for sale,” the banner read, blaming “fumes from burning factories” for the desperate measure.At King Aibo Electronics Scrap Treatment Center, one of the factories near the temple, schedules written in Chinese note the dates that shipments will be arriving. The three workers in the office on a recent visit were all Chinese.“We know that Chinese people set up factories in Thailand,” said Mr. Banjong of the industrial works department. But he said that since the ban on electronic waste was instituted, “we are more strict.” King Aibo is one of the factories that began operations this year. Other factories never shut down, despite repeated infractions. One, Set Metal, was ordered to shut in April 2018, officials said. It never had a license to import electronic waste, and locals complained about the stench. But on a recent visit, a Thai-Chinese interpreter, speaking through a gate, said the company was open for business, even if some operations had moved to a nearby village. Behind him, containers overflowed with electronic waste. About 100 Burmese workers live on the factory’s grounds.Even in cases in which wrongdoing is acknowledged, follow-through is weak. This year, officials admitted that 2,900 tons of electronic waste seized in last year’s raids had gone missing. The police had left the stockpile in the care of the Chinese manager, who later skipped the country.In September, Sumate Rianpongnam, an activist, campaigned against the e-waste industry’s polluting his hometown, Kabinburi. That night, men on motorcycles shot bullets into the air near his home and raced off.Shortly afterward, men in a pickup truck tossed small grenades, known as Ping-Pong bombs, at his friend’s house. The grenades exploded, but the friend was not injured.Others weren’t as fortunate. In 2013, a village chief spoke out about the illegal dumping of toxic waste. He was shot four times in broad daylight. The man charged with ordering the killing, an official in the local Department of Industrial Works, was acquitted in September.Mr. Sumate and his friend were campaigning against a landfill that illegally mixes electronic waste and household rubbish. On a visit to private land adjacent to the landfill, muscled men packed in a pickup truck tried to block the path out.“I’ve chosen to do this work,” Mr. Sumate said. “I am not scared of death.”In the shadow of the corroded smokestack at New Sky Metal, Metta Maihala surveyed her eucalyptus plantation. The lake that waters the farm has clouded over, and the smell is nauseating.Suddenly, through the rows of trees, a pair of Burmese workers emerged. The man showed burns on his arms from his work at New Sky Metal but said he had no idea what liquid had caused his wounds.The woman, Ei Thazin, said she received $10 a day for sorting metal. “I didn’t know this was dangerous work,” she said.In Thailand, millions of undocumented workers from poorer countries like Myanmar and Cambodia are vulnerable to abuse, environmental watchdogs say, adding that the need for such laborers will only intensify. Of the 14 factories granted licenses to process e-waste this year in Chachoengsao Province, six are in Koh Khanun. Five are linked to the man whose name is associated with New Sky Metal, or with his wife.“We can’t choose the air we breathe,” said Ms. Metta, the eucalyptus farmer. “Now there will be even more factories. We are all going to die a slow death.” Source link Read the full article
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alvarad982stedk · 5 years ago
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INSERT MOLDING VS COATING MOLDING
Injection molding of inserts is similar to other molding methods, but there are some differences in each process. Injection molding involves injecting one or more molten plastics into a mold to form a single finished product.
Coating molding
What is the coating molding? Simply put, the coating process can be plastic, flexible or flexible.
There are physical and chemical methods to realize the coating moulding (including overmolding). The former, for example, relies on snap design, surface tapping threads, and then coated with the second material to achieve the coating forming. The physical joints have strong adhesion, while the parts outside the physical joints have little adhesion.
Chemical method is based on the molecular affinity between two materials and the bonding force of chemical bonds. The two materials are bonded together to form a single component, two or even many kinds.
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                                                    china mold factory
Insert molding
Inserts for plastic inserts are usually made of brass, steel or stainless steel and have threaded surfaces to provide better adhesion to plastics. Injection molding inserts are placed in the molds manually or vertically by a machine.
This position allows gravity to keep the plug-in in place when the mold is closed. As the molten plastic is slowly poured into the mold, it helps to fix the insert in a fixed position.
About JasonMould Industrial Company Limited
Jasonmould is a China mold maker of plastic molds- injection mold, die casting moulds, plastic blow molding, rotational molding, medical plastic injection molding, two shot plastic injection molding, insert molding, overmolding, metal injection molding, micro injection molding, powder injection molding, ceramic injection molding, liquid injection molding, husky injection molding, household mold, casting mold, die mold tool, custom molds, china moulds, rapid prototyping tooling, plastic prototyping tooling, punch press tooling, die and tooling for mobile/ cell phone parts, automotive parts, vacuum cleaners, rechargeable tools, telephones, copiers, computers, multimedia speakers, and many other electronic products and household appliances. And also a plastic product manufacturer, mold manufacturer China– plastic parts, plastic water tank, plastic balls, plastic containers, plastic buckle, plastic anchor, plastic hanger, plastic spoon, plastic pipe fitting, plastic tumble, plastic tableware, plastic cups, plastic bottles, plastic tray, plastic cosmetic container, plastic case, plastic food container, plastic chairs, plastic caps, plastic cap closure, plastic tubes, plastic water pipes, plastic knobs, plastic tubing, plastic utility boxes, plastic racks and so on.
Contact: Person: James Yuan Company: JasonMould Industrial Company Limited Add:  LongGang Village,LongXi Town,BoLuo County,HuiZhou City,GuangDong Province, China Tel: 86-752-6682869 Email: [email protected]
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keyboardio · 8 years ago
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March update part two: Plastics, Pollution, and Programming
TL;DR: Plastic parts are looking good; Wooden parts are looking good; Raw material costs in China are skyrocketing; Open source is amazing.
Hello from Oakland!
This is part two of our March 2017 update. If you missed part one last week, you can read it on Kickstarter.
Baseplates
One of the ongoing problems we've had with our manufacturer is the quality of the plastic baseplates being produced for us.
First, here's a recap of the saga of the baseplates up to now.
When we started this process, we'd specified metal baseplates. We'd also specified press-fit nuts and standoffs for anchoring the keyplates and wooden enclosures to the baseplate.
The factory proposed swapping out the metal for plastic. While we were a little bit nervous about this, plastic has the dual advantages of weighing less and better fitting our design. With the plastic baseplates, the factory was able to mold in features to help protect the RJ45 and Type C jacks. They were able to mold the metal tripod mounts right into the plastic.
And back when we thought there were going to be flip-out feet on the bottom of the keyboard, they were going to be able to hide the feet inside baseplates.
Well, it turned out that the flip-out feet just weren't going to work. The factory took a gamble and had their partner start on the baseplate injection molding tooling before we signed off on this part of the design.
The first versions of the baseplates came back with numerous "hot points" where you could see sinking due to the plastic cooling at a different rate. That's not great, but is entirely normal for a first (called a "T0") injection sample.
Entirely aside from the issue with the feet, the quality of the baseplates provided by the factory's partner was not up to snuff. There were many issues, both small and large. The biggest issues centered around the quality of the tooling. The internal "ribbing" on the parts looked like they'd been hand-cut by a CNC operator. The lines were too thin and not quite in the right place. There were places that two of the ribs were supposed to touch, but instead they were about a millimeter apart. Because the structural stability of the part depends on those ribs being fused together, this was less than ideal.
We asked them to try again.
The injection factory blew their self-imposed deadline by a week or two. The parts they came back with looked a little better, but as we looked at the details, we found that the structural lines hadn't really been made thicker. They'd just cut new lines next to them which… almost lined up.
This is right about when the factory read them the riot act. They told the injection supplier they had one more chance to fix things.
The injection factory blew their self-imposed deadline by a week or two. The next version was a little better, but still just didn't match the design files sent to them in a number of places. What's worse was that the injection factory thought they'd done a decent job.
By now, it was early January and we were at T5 or T6. We were pretty frustrated.
The factory relented and asked the injection molding factory to take one more shot at things.
The injection factory blew their self-imposed deadline by a week or two. The samples they came out with were ok, but still not production quality.
This was the point at which our factory started shopping for a new injection molding partner in earnest. Just before Chinese New Year, the factory told us which of the three bids for the baseplates they thought we should accept. The only real details we had were the pricing and the factory's opinion, so we ran with it.
They told us that the new factory expected to finish tooling the week of March 5, with samples sometime that week.
Once Jesse got to China, the factory took Jesse to visit the new baseplate supplier. They confirmed that tooling and "T0" injection samples would be ready on March 8.
The tooling supplier showed us the work-in-progress injection molds, as well as their fancy test equipment.
Well, March 8 rolled around and the injection factory asked if we could delay our visit until the afternoon. With a little bit of trepidation, we agreed. When we showed up sometime after lunch, we were brought straight to one of their injection machines. The factory manager, in a suit, was pulling out baseplates, "hot off the presses."
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The first "T0" sample of the left baseplate from the new supplier
We took them upstairs to the injection shop's offices, pulled out our sharpies and started marking up issues as we found them. There were a reasonable number of "hot point" sinkholes, but that's very much part for the course as molds get dialed in.
The first samples didn’t have tripod mounts on the bottom. To add them, it was just a matter of adding tripod mount inserts into the tool as it made each sample. We then found that the tripod screw inserts, while exactly as long as we'd specified, were missing a bit of headroom above them. The problem with this is that longer tripod screws wouldn't be able to screw all the way into the baseplates, leaving them extra wobbly. We'd picked a depth of 6mm because that's what the ISO standard for camera tripod mounts says. Perhaps unsurprisingly, some of our test commercially available camera tripods actually have screws as long as 7 or 8mm. After talking things through with the injection supplier, we decided to switch to 10mm long threaded inserts. There was a little bit of stress because the injection factory's supplier claimed they couldn't actually do 10mm inserts while still making them from stainless steel. We'd have to switch to brass or galvanized iron. This seemed a little bit nutty to us. We agreed that brass was the better of the two choices. (While it might deform a little bit, it's unlikely to start rusting after repeated use wears it down.) The next day, with help from our friends at HWTrek, we got the injection factory to recant and switch back to stainless steel. We're still not quite sure what happened, but we're happy with the result.
Back to the baseplate inspection. These samples looked good. Surprisingly good. The baseplate supplier agreed to run the samples through their fancy 3D measurement machine to compare them to the CAD designs. We handed them our marked-up samples showing off the issues we'd found.
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A report showing how well the first version of the new baseplates matched the CAD designs
At that point, it was again time to talk about texture. The injection factory pulled out their texture sample card. We settled on texture number 48, which is a moderately dense texture we found both attractive and a little bit "grippy."
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After that, the factory's R&D manager marked up samples with a white paint pen to show the surfaces that should have the texture applied. The injection molding factory said they expected to be able to turn new samples fixing the substantive issues by the time Jesse left China four days later. They warned that we shouldn't expect the texture to be applied yet.
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Lo and behold, four hours before Jesse left China, a team from the factory met him at his hotel with a fully assembled sample keyboard. Including new textured samples of the baseplates. We’re very happy with the new samples, though the factory found a few small things that needed touching up. The baseplate supplier is making those changes now.
The stands
We didn't know this until we turned up at the factory, but the supplier that the factory selected for the baseplates is also the supplier making the stands.
The story for the stands is much the same as the story for the baseplates, starting from the injection mold factory's promise date of March 8. Shortly after the sample baseplates came popping out of the injection molding machine, sets of stands started to accumulate on a work table.
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We went through the same process as with the baseplates, looking for hot points and other molding issues.
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If you look carefully, you can see some small issues with the stand circled in green marker
One thing that came up was that the screw bosses on the top halves of the stands were inconsistent sizes. We figured this out as we tried to assemble a stand. One or two screws fit well, but most of them just spun in place, never finding any plastic to bite into.
Another problem was that in the top half of the stands, a bit of the support structure seemed to be a mite short. This resulted in the part feeling slightly less sturdy.
The molding factory promised to run the stands through their measuring system, too.
We marked up a sample stand, showing which parts should be textured and which parts should be left flat so the adhesive for the feet and top piece would get a better grip.
Four days later, the factory presented us with a pair of stands with just about every issue corrected.
One item we've found since is that the screw hole in the stands is...not quite a circle. Our best guess is that the mechanical engineer modeled the hole as a cylinder, but started from the wrong "ground plane." In testing, this issue doesn't affect the keyboard's usability or stability at all (nor is it visible when the keyboard is on the stands), but it makes us a little bit sad to have missed when it was still an easy fix.
Screws for the stand
The tripod screws we're using for the stand have been working pretty well, but the factory thinks they can be improved.
Apparently, the way all-metal screws like this are made is that they're CNCed. Because of this, the cost difference between a "standard" screw and a custom screw is minimal. They tell us that the lead-time for this new screw is similar to the lead time for the "standard" design, too.
The factory had a sample of a custom screw made and is sending it along to us for our review and (possibly) our blessing.
Center bars and rails
The center bars and rails are the bits that keep the two halves of the Model 01 connected in a flat or tented configuration. You don't have to use them, but many of us want our keyboards to be one-piece units most of the time.
The design of the center bars and rails has been fixed for months, but the factory has been working through fit and warping issues.
These parts are going to get a lot of weird stresses put on them. On the factory's advice, we ended up deciding to make them out of glass-filled nylon rather than ABS+PC. Glass-filled nylon should be more resilient.
As it turns out, the factory has had a hard time getting the nylon versions of the bars to lie flat. When they've come out of the molds, they've ended up a little bit warped. This is… less than ideal for a part whose role in the world is to be flat and keep another part flat and aligned. The factory's been able to make nice, flat versions out of ABS and ABS+Polycarbonate for months. With the glass-filled nylon version, they've been stuck tweaking the injection molding machine's pressure, cycle time, and other parameters.
They even went so far as to build a straightening jig to fix the parts as they come out of the mold. It works similar to a how a set of braces helps a poor tween's teeth end up nice and straight. This seemed like a bit of a cop-out to us, so we asked around and found out that this is a relatively common strategy for parts like this that have warping problems.
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These are the straightening / flattening jigs
In the past couple days, the factory finally sent over pictures of glass-filled nylon center bars that look to be perfectly flat. They say that the solution ended up being a change to the percentage of glass in the nylon.
Previous versions of the rails that screw onto the bottoms of the enclosures have been a little bit loose, resulting in unnecessary wobbling. They've gotten a tiny revision to make sure that they fit snugly into the center bars.
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We're excited to test new samples of both parts when the factory sends them to us in the next week.
Keycap laser engraving
One of the most frustrating aspects of the preparation for mass production has been an ongoing series of quality issues with the painting and laser-engraving of the keycaps.
The first paint and laser supplier the factory was working with promised turnaround times of two to three days.
The first keycap samples they sent back had the key labels centered on the keycaps, when we'd specified that they should be anchored to the lower left hand corner.
The second samples that came back had the per-key alignment pretty much correct, but had put the left hand key labels on the right hand and vice-versa. Some labels ended up misspelled, which must have taken serious work, since we'd sent "camera-ready" copy.
The third samples just had... sloppy alignment. It looked like they'd gone in and modified our key layout to change the spacing between the symbols on a few keys and a number of keys had their labels engraved at a funny angle. A few keys had been engraved...upside down. We noticed that the sides of some of the keycaps didn't have great paint coverage.
This was the point at which we decided to stop trying to get the labels right until Jesse was on the ground in Shenzhen.
Early in the trip, he visited the keycap laser engraving factory in Dongguan, the next city over from Shenzhen. Their operation seemed pretty professional and they appeared to know what they were doing. Our questions about how things had gone so badly wrong got kind of weird answers, but the supplier asked that we give them a chance. They promised to carefully check every sample before they sent it back.
While there, we took the time to ask them about the UV clearcoating they spray onto the keys to protect them after laser engraving. We asked if we could pay extra for higher-quality UV clearcoat "paint". The factory boss said that we weren't going to see any real quality increase from changing it out. We asked about whether they could do multiple coats to protect your keycaps better. The boss said that they already do two coats. When we asked "how about three?", he told us that we'd be wasting our money and that two was really totally sufficient. We left with the understanding that they'd paint and engrave new samples and get them back to us in a few days.
It wasn't until a day later that we found out that this was a new laser engraving supplier and that the factory was ditching the first supplier.
Well, the promised keycaps didn't show up after two days. Or three. Or four. Or five. And then they finally showed up with exactly the same problems we'd seen before Jesse met with them.
After a very tense meeting, we finally figured out that somebody in the factory's logistics department had sent the keycaps out to the old supplier again.
Early this week, the factory finally sent us photographs of newly-engraved keycaps from the new supplier. They look much, much better. We see a few small issues, though we can't properly check them until the factory sends them to us.
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One ongoing issue has been the quality of the painting toward the bottoms of the keycaps. This is because the "painting jig" for the keys places them too close together. When we asked why the painting jig packs the keys in so tight, we were told that it was designed to match the injection mold for the keycaps. And indeed it does. As best as we can tell, the keycap factory economized on steel when designing our mold, which has led to cascading problems down the line.
There's a second issue with the painting jigs. Because they're built without tall side-walls and ribbing, they have a tendency to, you guessed it, warp. This means that it's much harder for key labels to end up aligned correctly. This issue, at least, is easy to fix. The jig maker is currently modifying the jig design.
Our factory tells us that the painting and laser engraving supplier has committed to taking responsibility for high-quality painting and engraving of all keycaps. As we understand it, the current process has the painting and laser engraving supplier's staff manually moving keycaps between jigs to make sure there's plenty of space for the paint to coat the keycaps. On top of this, the factory has committed that their QC team will reject any keyset with an error.
This is, somewhat understandably, stressing us out a bit.
RJ45 cables
The two halves of the Model 01 are connected by an 8P8C RJ45 cable, known to most of the world as an "ethernet cable."
We've gone back and forth a number of times with the factory in our quest to get decent cables. The first few suppliers they reached out to had a hard time actually coughing up any sample cables at all, which isn't exactly a great sign for a cable company.
One of the first samples we got back had such long cables that it couldn't actually fit inside the Model 01.
Eventually, the factory found a cable supplier that seemed both willing and able to make us the cables we wanted.
We'd asked for samples of three different weights of cable: 24AWG, 26AWG and 28AWG. The goal was to find a cable that was heavy enough to get the power from one half of the keyboard to the other, but not so heavy (and stiff) that it was unwieldy. We ended up settling on the 26AWG cable weight for the 1M long cable.
The problem we're dealing with now is the short (10-15cm) cable. When we use 26 AWG cabling, it's stiff enough to put lateral stress on the RJ45 jacks on your keyboard when the two halves are connected by the center bar. If we ship with this cable, it will shorten the life of your keyboard. We've asked the factory to work with the cable supplier to find a more reasonable option. We showed them a "flat" cable as one possible solution, but the cable vendor nixed it, saying that they've seen far too many quality issues with those flat cables. We're hoping to hear back about the factory's meeting with the cable vendor in the next day or two. This isn't a major issue and should be pretty easy to resolve, but we have to actually, you know, resolve it.
USB Type C cables
We've previously talked about the Type C cable we thought we were going to use. Its construction was good. It met the part of the USB spec so many cables cheat on. (It had a 56k resistor to identify itself.)
There's just one problem with it that we didn't catch. Its Type C connector is big and blocky and… slightly out of spec physically, meaning that it doesn't mate cleanly with the Model 01 when the circuit board is inside the enclosure.
The factory is talking to the supplier, as well as other possible vendors. The long and short of it is that we may end up deciding to ship with "straight" USB A to Type C cables, rather than cables with a right-angle Type C connector. At the end of the day, a good cable with a solid connection is more important than the cable shape.
In a previous update, we mentioned we’d rejected a good-looking Type C cable because its internal resistor violated the USB specifications. One of us accidentally started to use the sample to charge a phone. The cable did a good job of reminding us that it was out of spec. It got so hot that the glue inside melted and leaked out!
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Long lead-time electrical components
We’ve previously mentioned that the APA 102C LEDs we’re using are in short supply. We have enough on hand for the first 900 or so keyboards, but are still waiting on delivery of the rest of the order. The factory has a call in to the manufacturer to get a firm delivery date, but as of now, we have no reason to suspect that the LEDs are going to cause a delay in mass production.
The factory has about 500 keyboards worth of keyswitches on hand, with the balance to start showing up over the next month. This is later than we’d expected, but shouldn’t have a measurable impact on production. The factory had told us that their purchasing department was on top of switch procurement. When we asked them to confirm, they said that they had all of our switches sitting in their warehouse. When we asked them to confirm again, they realized that they’d made a mistake and only had 10% of the switches they thought they did.
The RJ45 jacks we’re using are another item with a bit of a longer lead time. These, at least, got ordered before Chinese New Year. The factory has enough of them on hand for the first 1800 keyboards and say that they’re expecting the balance of the order any day now.
As of now, the factory believes that none of the other electrical components they don’t have on hand have a lead time longer than a couple weeks.
Wooden parts
While in Shenzhen, we paid a visit to our wood supplier to check in on timelines for PVT, as well as a few special projects.
When we asked about the lead times for the enclosures for the first 100 units, we got a pleasant surprise. "Oh. Those are done. We have them in the warehouse. Do you want to see?"
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This was tied to another surprise. They'd gone ahead and made 100 sets of the stands out of wood. We hadn't asked them do and hadn't signed off on them, but they did it as a favor to the factory to help cut down timelines. They weren't actually thrilled about making the parts, since the "organic" contoured shapes are very slow to CNC.
There are a couple issues we're working through with the stands they made. The big one is that in some cases, their post-CNC sanding was a little bit aggressive, so some of the stands have a few edges that are a little flatter. We've asked them to go through the sets they've made and cull out the worst of the lot.
Our original plan had been to ship wooden stands with the PVT units because the plastic stands weren't going to be ready. Given the other schedule slippage, that's no longer an issue.
On the one hand, these are parts we didn't order. On the other, we really like the wood factory and they've done a lot of spec work for us over the past two years.
The current plan is to offer them as a special-order after-market accessory. More on this front as it develops.
After that, we talked a bit about the lead times for mass production. It sounds like the first 2000 keyboards worth of enclosures will take 3 weeks from when we say "go." The current plan is to say "go" once PVT units start arriving in folks hands and they verify that everything looks right.
Costs
One thing we haven't talked a whole lot about over the course of this project has been money. There are a bunch of reasons for that. Many of them center on us feeling uncomfortable talking about money in public.
We've been pretty frugal throughout this whole process. While we've had outside help, we haven't hired full time staff to work with us. Instead, we've brought in contractors for shorter gigs as we've needed their skills. We pay ourselves, but at nowhere near market rates. There have been times when we could have used more of your money to speed the project up, but we judged that doing so was more likely to hurt us down the road.
The upshot of this is that we've been in a very healthy cash position leading up to mass production.
One of the reasons we've been so conservative about cash is that it's been our plan to use most of the Kickstarter and preorder profit to invest in inventory via a larger initial order with our factory.
That's a very, very normal plan for a crowdfunding campaign. Heck, it's a big part of the "kickstart" in Kickstarter.
We've been finalizing everything with the factory, now that the keyboard's design is final, tooling is nearing completion, packaging has been designed, and accessories have been selected.
Even before Jesse went to Shenzhen, we'd been hearing stories from reputable sources about costs and lead-times for raw materials in China going up.
Even when you know it’s coming, a big increase in costs is never a welcome turn of events. The updated pricing we got from the factory just before Jesse left China was a good deal higher than the update we'd gotten before Chinese New year, spiking more than 20% due to materials costs. Some of the biggest jumps came in the costs of bare PCBs and the packaging itself. In the case of the packaging, it's not just that materials costs have gone up. We've ended up with something nicer and more protective than originally planned.
But really, everything from aluminum to ABS pellets to cardboard has gotten a bunch more expensive. The only thing that (thankfully) hasn't spiked is the price of the Canadian maple the enclosures are being milled from.
The factory is working to negotiate some of these increases with their suppliers and says they'll have an updated proposal for us this weekend.
On the one hand, this was a pretty big shock and we're pretty unhappy about it. On the other, the reason for most of the increases is something we support. China's been in the process of tightening environmental regulations and significantly increasing enforcement of those regulations.
Cardboard boxes are a lot more expensive than they had been because, we're told, the Chinese government has shut down a number of paper mills that were polluting the environment more than they should have.
So, where does this leave us?
We're still figuring that out.
We're not screwed.
This does not impact our ability to ship your keyboards.
It may or may not impact the number of keyboards we order for sale (rather than presale) to customers, as well as our ability to sell the Model 01 through channels (like brick and mortar boutiques or other websites) because there's less margin to go around.
While we're a bit stressed out about this, you don't need to be. We're being very careful to make sure that we still have enough cash on hand after ordering your keyboards to pay for shipping and to pay our taxes.
Right now, we need to sit tight and wait for the factory to finish negotiating with their suppliers. We know that the negotiated costs will go down a bit from the last quote. Once that's done, we have folks who have been doing this for many years helping us out with vetting and negotiating the quotation. They've already been doing spot checks of a couple items and are digging into a few issues for us.
Firmware
There's this particular feeling for an open source project author. It's somewhere between pride, awe and abject terror.
We're new parents, so we're not entirely sure, but we suspect that it's the same feeling you get when your kid moves out of the house.
In November 2013, Jesse created a trivial keyboard firmware for our prototype keyboards. He wrote it in an evening. While watching a movie. After having had a drink or two. (Jesse insists that while he was intoxicated when writing the first version of our firmware, he "never does this")
Over the course of our time at Highway 1 and through the progression of prototypes we've built, he tweaked the firmware, always planning to throw it away before keyboards ever got into customer hands.
Last October, this guy showed up on #keyboardio, our IRC channel, to chat about the Model 01's firmware. He quickly started to submit small patches to fix obvious bugs. And then we started talking about "advanced" features.
Before we knew it, Algernon (Gergely Nagy) had built some libraries for the Model 01's Firmware. (At that point, we might have been calling it “Arduino-Keyboard” or “Model01-Firmware”). But he quickly found that the stuff he wanted to do wasn't easy to do in the firmware structure we'd built.
He created his own firmware for the Model 01 called Akela. It had all sorts of neat features we really wanted in our firmware.
It should be noted that at this point, he didn't have a Model 01 prototype, but it was clear to us that if anyone in the world should have one, it was him. It took a little bit of work, but we got FedEx to deliver a keyboard to him in Budapest on December 23. You can read about it on his blog: https://asylum.madhouse-project.org/blog/2016/12/24/the-package/
That's when things really started to take off.
We somehow suckered Algernon into porting all of his cool code back into the Keyboardio firmware, developing a plugin infrastructure, and then splitting out just about all the functionality into plugins.
Before we knew it, our firmware had a couple of dozen plugins spread across the "Keyboardio" and "Akela" namespaces.
Algernon mentioned that there was another keyboard maker he'd been talking to who thought they might be interested in running our firmware on their board. He asked if we'd have a problem with that.
We don't have a problem with that. It's pretty much the validation of everything we'd hoped for with the firmware. The more keyboards running our firmware, the more users we have. That directly drives more people to be interested in hacking on the firmware, resulting in better firmware for everybody.
This did make one thing abundantly clear. Calling the firmware "Keyboardio Firmware" was no longer right. We wanted a name that references Keyboardio and/or the Model 01, but was broader and more inclusive.
We ended up settling on Kaleidoscope. A kaleidoscope make an infinite number of beautiful and unique works of art from a bunch of shiny baubles. Plugins are like shiny baubles, especially when they control neat LED effects.
As it happens, "kaleidoscope" is also one of the collective nouns for butterflies.
After we settled on the name, Algernon went and renamed all of our code and all of his code into the shared namespace.
To date, we have more than 40 firmware plugins for Kaleidoscope. You can read an overview of many of the plugins in Algernon’s blog post: https://asylum.madhouse-project.org/blog/2017/03/10/rose-tinted-glasses/
Over the past couple weeks, he's been churning out new functionality so fast we can barely keep up.
First was AlphaSquare, which uses the Model 01's LEDs to draw ASCII characters on your keyboard in a 4x4 pixel font.
Then came Focus, our long-promised bidirectional serial communication protocol. Plugins can register themselves with Focus to either send data back to your computer or let themselves be configured or updated remotely.
Over the past couple weeks, Algernon has been working on moving keyboard layouts and LED effects out of static program memory into EEPROM. What that means is that you're now able to use Focus to change onboard key layouts without needing to change the Model 01's program. Based on an offhand comment from Jesse on IRC, Algernon extended this support to let you remap a keyboard's layout from the keyboard, using a scheme similar to the way older Kinesis Advantage keyboards did it.
One of the cool things he’s put together that he hasn’t announced anywhere yet (but said we could talk about here) is the first version of a tool that changes the Model 01’s keymaps based on your current application. His first implementation is for Linux, but the concept is very similar to a prototype we built for macOS a while back, so we’re pretty confident that ports for more platforms should be pretty straightforward.
Next up, it sounds like he might be working on a "fingerpainting" mode for LED lighting effects or letting you "record" macros on the keyboard.
Chrysalis
Of course, not everybody wants to hack their keyboard from their keyboard or to use a serial console to change their layout.
We've long promised a GUI tool for configuring your keyboard. As recently as a month ago, we were 100% sure that this was going to be something we built...a bit later, after we'd had some time to recuperate from shipping your keyboards.
Well, Algernon and @thebaronhimself (Simon-Claudius Wystrach) got to chatting about things on IRC and somehow Simon-Claudius ended up volunteering to start building the desktop GUI.
So far, our only contributions have been suggesting the name and some encouragement.
It's very much early days, but Simon-Claudius sent over this animation of the core of the SVG+Javascript code that will let you use your mouse to configure your keyboard. We're very, very excited.
A work-in-progress view of Chrysalis
What’s next
Right now, we’re working on getting the manufacturing and shipping logistics set up while we wait for the latest sample parts from the factory and the factory waits for the keycap tooling supplier to finish fixing the issues we talked about in the last update. As we wrote last time, the ETA for all of that to be wrapped up is early April.
If all goes according to plan, the next backer update should find Jesse back on the ground in Shenzhen doing quality control checks on the first 100 Model 01s to roll off the line. If that’s not the case, we’ll be back next month with more exciting stories from the trenches.
<3 j+k
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injectionmoldchina · 4 years ago
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New Post has been published on https://www.injectionmouldchina.com/ejector/
Ejector
The utilization of a molded ejector pin configuration requires cautious ejector pin configuration just as cautious arrangement of the ejector pin to the part includes. Besides, there is a potential issue that can emerge with the utilization of formed ejectors stretching out external the splitting line of the shape pit as shown in oem/odm industrial injection mold factory. In particular, in the event that the ejector pin is too short, at that point a hole will shape between the highest point of the ejector pin and the contrary surface of the pit embed. In the event that this hole is bigger than the thickness of a vent, at that point streak is probably going to happen. In the interim, in the event that the ejector pin is too long, at that point the pin will meddle with the restricting plate and be packed upon shape conclusion. With rehashed discharge cycles, the pin can exhaustion and clasp. Given that the necessary length of the ejector pin is hard to definitely decide because of the stack-up in resistances over the form get together, the shape fashioner may wish to utilize a”steel-safe” approach with various length changes. Then again, the shape architect may decide to put the ejector pin inside the form cavity and shape the pin with respect to the rib in china mold component machining. In these cases, slight blunders in the shape of the pin will be on non-aesthetic surfaces as be less huge as for the nature of the embellishment.
After the number, format, and math of the ejectors have been resolved, the detailing of the plan should be finished to guarantee hearty shape gathering and activity, There are a few unmistakable issues that should be tended to. To start with, the form architect ought to perceive that the shape gathering is muddled by the enormous number of ejector framework segments that must be at the same time mated to the center supplements. This issue is compounded by resistance stack-up over various plates in the form gathering. Taken together, the shape gathering can devour a decent measure of time and result in harm of important form parts.
To encourage the form get together, cautious enumerating is required any place the ejector framework segments interface with different parts in the shape. mold manufacturing factory gives a top and area perspective on a round ejector pin (left) and a molded ejector pin (right). china automatives injection overmould manufacturers shows that a leeway can be given between the pin and the drag of the ejector opening to vent uprooted air during the embellishment cycle. The investigation of the vent’s leeway was given in china high precision mold manufacturer, demonstrating that commonly a freedom of 0.02 mm (0.001 in) is accommodated a sliding bearing length of the request for a few widths of the ejector pin. Past this bearing length, the ejector opening should venture to a bigger size So as to not confine the sliding of the pin. The size of the leeway isn’t basic yet rather just restricted by the impedance with other close by parts. A chamfer should be given from the bigger distance across to the bearing/venting breadth.
Something else, the ejector pin would will in general hang up on the sharp corner during mold get together, which can hamper the shape gathering when attempting to find a large number of ejector pins.
This article is from https://www.injectionmouldchina.com
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biofunmy · 5 years ago
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The Price of Recycling Old Laptops: Toxic Fumes in Thailand’s Lungs
KOH KHANUN, Thailand — Crouched on the ground in a dimly lit factory, the women picked through the discarded innards of the modern world: batteries, circuit boards and bundles of wires.
They broke down the scrap — known as e-waste — with hammers and raw hands. Men, some with faces wrapped in rags to repel the fumes, shoveled the refuse into a clanking machine that salvages usable metal.
As they toiled, smoke spewed over nearby villages and farms. Residents have no idea what is in the smoke: plastic, metal, who knows? All they know is that it stinks and they feel sick.
The factory, New Sky Metal, is part of a thriving e-waste industry across Southeast Asia, born of China’s decision to stop accepting the world’s electronic refuse, which was poisoning its land and people. Thailand in particular has become a center of the industry even as activists push back and its government wrestles to balance competing interests of public safety with the profits to be made from the lucrative trade.
Last year, Thailand banned the import of foreign e-waste. Yet new factories are opening across the country, and tons of e-waste are being processed, environmental monitors and industry experts say.
“E-waste has to go somewhere,” said Jim Puckett, the executive director of the Basel Action Network, which campaigns against trash dumping in poor countries, “and the Chinese are simply moving their entire operations to Southeast Asia.”
“The only way to make money is to get huge volume with cheap, illegal labor and pollute the hell out of the environment,” he added.
Each year, 50 million tons of electronic waste are produced globally, according to the United Nations, as consumers grow accustomed to throwing away last year’s model and acquiring the next new thing.
The notion of recycling these gadgets sounds virtuous: an infinite loop of technological utility.
But it is dirty and dangerous work to extract the tiny quantities of precious metals — like gold, silver and copper — from castoff phones, computers and televisions.
For years, China took in much of the world’s electronic refuse. Then in 2018, Beijing closed its borders to foreign e-waste. Thailand and other countries in Southeast Asia — with their lax enforcement of environmental laws, easily exploited labor force and cozy nexus between business and government — saw an opportunity.
“Every circuit and every cable is very lucrative, especially if there is no concern for the environment or for workers,” said Penchom Saetang, the head of Ecological Alert and Recovery Thailand, an environmental watchdog.
While Southeast Asian nations like Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines have rejected individual shipments of waste from Western countries, Thailand was the first to push back more systematically against the electronic refuse deluging its ports.
In June of last year, the Thai Ministry of Industry announced with great fanfare the ban on foreign e-waste. The police made a series of high-profile raids on at least 10 factories, including New Sky Metal.
“New Sky is closed now, totally closed,” Yutthana Poolpipat, the head of the Laem Chabang Port customs bureau, said in September. “There is no electronic waste coming into Thailand, zero.”
But a recent visit to the hamlet of Koh Khanun showed that the factory was still up and running, as are many others, a reflection of the weak regulatory system and corruption that has tainted the country.
Despite the headlines about the police raid, New Sky Metal was fined a maximum of only $650 for each of its licensing infractions.
Since the e-waste ban, 28 new recycling factories, most dealing with electronic refuse, began operations in one province east of Bangkok, Chachoengsao, where Koh Khanun is located, according to provincial statistics. This year, 14 businesses in that province were granted licenses to process electronic waste.
Most of the new factories are in central Thailand between Bangkok and Laem Chabang, the nation’s biggest port, but more provinces are allowing the businesses.
Thai officials say that some incinerators may still be burning because factories are working through old stockpiles. Plants may also be processing domestic rather than foreign refuse, they say.
But neither explanation is likely, according to industry experts. Hoards of imported waste wouldn’t last this long. And the amount of electronic trash that Thailand produces is far outpaced by the number of new factories.
Foreign e-waste might be smuggled into the country mislabeled as scrap, said Banjong Sukreeta, the deputy director general of the Department of Industrial Works.
“Ask customs about falsified declarations,” he said. “Rules are not enough if the people who implement them are not up to it.”
But Mr. Yutthana, of the customs bureau, said every box that landed at his port was inspected thoroughly.
“We are 100 percent careful,” he said.
In October of this year, the Thai legislature unveiled loosened labor and environmental regulations for all factories, a move that has benefited the e-waste industry. Under one provision, small companies are no longer subject to pollution monitoring.
At the same time, a draft bill that would ensure tighter control over Thailand’s electronic waste industry has languished in legislative purgatory.
“Thailand is welcoming environmental degradation with its own laws,” said Somnuck Jongmeewasin, a lecturer in environmental management at Silpakorn University International College. “There are so many loopholes and ways to escape punishment.”
The consequences are frightening.
If some types of electronic waste aren’t incinerated at a high enough temperature, dioxins, which can cause cancer and developmental problems, infiltrate the food supply. Without proper safeguarding, toxic heavy metals seep into the soil and groundwater.
Locals who fought against the deluge of trash have been attacked.
“Why don’t you in the West recycle your own waste?” said Phayao Jaroonwong, a farmer east of Bangkok, who said her crops had withered after an electronic waste factory moved in next door.
“Thailand can’t take it anymore,” she said. “We shouldn’t be the world’s dumping ground.”
Phra Chayaphat Kuntaweera, a Buddhist abbot, has watched as several waste-processing factories opened around his temple. Two more are under construction.
First, the monks began to cough, he said. Then they vomited. When the incinerators burned, their headaches raged.
“Monks are people, too,” he said. “We get sick from the fumes just like anyone else.”
Earlier this year, the abbot put a sign in front of his temple in Khao Hin Sorn, east of Bangkok.
“Cheap temple for sale,” the banner read, blaming “fumes from burning factories” for the desperate measure.
At King Aibo Electronics Scrap Treatment Center, one of the factories near the temple, schedules written in Chinese note the dates that shipments will be arriving. The three workers in the office on a recent visit were all Chinese.
“We know that Chinese people set up factories in Thailand,” said Mr. Banjong of the industrial works department. But he said that since the ban on electronic waste was instituted, “we are more strict.”
King Aibo is one of the factories that began operations this year.
Other factories never shut down, despite repeated infractions.
One, Set Metal, was ordered to shut in April 2018, officials said. It never had a license to import electronic waste, and locals complained about the stench.
But on a recent visit, a Thai-Chinese interpreter, speaking through a gate, said the company was open for business, even if some operations had moved to a nearby village. Behind him, containers overflowed with electronic waste. About 100 Burmese workers live on the factory’s grounds.
Even in cases in which wrongdoing is acknowledged, follow-through is weak. This year, officials admitted that 2,900 tons of electronic waste seized in last year’s raids had gone missing.
The police had left the stockpile in the care of the Chinese manager, who later skipped the country.
In September, Sumate Rianpongnam, an activist, campaigned against the e-waste industry’s polluting his hometown, Kabinburi. That night, men on motorcycles shot bullets into the air near his home and raced off.
Shortly afterward, men in a pickup truck tossed small grenades, known as Ping-Pong bombs, at his friend’s house. The grenades exploded, but the friend was not injured.
Others weren’t as fortunate.
In 2013, a village chief spoke out about the illegal dumping of toxic waste. He was shot four times in broad daylight. The man charged with ordering the killing, an official in the local Department of Industrial Works, was acquitted in September.
Mr. Sumate and his friend were campaigning against a landfill that illegally mixes electronic waste and household rubbish. On a visit to private land adjacent to the landfill, muscled men packed in a pickup truck tried to block the path out.
“I��ve chosen to do this work,” Mr. Sumate said. “I am not scared of death.”
In the shadow of the corroded smokestack at New Sky Metal, Metta Maihala surveyed her eucalyptus plantation. The lake that waters the farm has clouded over, and the smell is nauseating.
Suddenly, through the rows of trees, a pair of Burmese workers emerged. The man showed burns on his arms from his work at New Sky Metal but said he had no idea what liquid had caused his wounds.
The woman, Ei Thazin, said she received $10 a day for sorting metal. “I didn’t know this was dangerous work,” she said.
In Thailand, millions of undocumented workers from poorer countries like Myanmar and Cambodia are vulnerable to abuse, environmental watchdogs say, adding that the need for such laborers will only intensify.
Of the 14 factories granted licenses to process e-waste this year in Chachoengsao Province, six are in Koh Khanun. Five are linked to the man whose name is associated with New Sky Metal, or with his wife.
“We can’t choose the air we breathe,” said Ms. Metta, the eucalyptus farmer. “Now there will be even more factories. We are all going to die a slow death.”
Sahred From Source link Business
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enssubaby-blog · 5 years ago
Text
Is there a company that offers quality custom plastic injection molding services in Shenzhen or Dongguan China?
Not all companies that plastic injection molding can meet the needs of their customers.
Sometimes, a company can not offer a complete service to a client because it has certain limitations, either of space, speed of manufacture and also of the customized creation of the requested design.
The companies involved in plastic injection molding know that sometimes customers request certain types of elements that are outside the standards they have in their most common designs, therefore, many of these have been forced to refuse produce a certain type of piece in mass.
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For JasonMould, this proved to be an impulse to offer custom injection molding services to all those clients that required personalized attention to develop a solution according to their purposes and needs.
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Since the main idea emerged, and the concept of the services that would be provided by this company, that is to say, for almost 10 years, JasonMould was clear that he would offer custom injection molding services for all, in this way he would be satisfying the needs of his customers to have options to their measure, preventing in turn that these were limited at the time of creating their products and each of the pieces that would conform.
The 55 machines that are within the great physical structure of the company, are distributed in a timely manner to create the custom pieces they have manufactured for so long for others.
Every day the company has sought to perfect all its practices to design the best pieces of a quality far superior to existing ones. All the products created by JasonMould undergo the most stringent quality tests to offer only the best for all its customers, ensuring that the useful life of the product is quite long.
It is difficult to find a manufacturer that offers personalized products of an excellent quality, since many are unaware of the tests they must perform on each piece to ensure the duration of the material. However, JasonMould knows well the structures of all the possible designs, and also to what proofs the piece will have to expose to show the client that he is acquiring a high-end product.
What are custom injection molding services?
It is basically the molding of various structures and parts that were designed by customers who do not comply with the standardized figures already existing in the molds of the factories that use the plastic injection method. Through these services, companies are able to manufacture in large quantities each piece they have created within certain parameters determined by the structure of certain elements. In this way it can be said that each design will be done in a personalized way, since it will have shape and size determined by the client and not by the machine.
For more about china custom plastic injection molding services ,you can pay a visit to jasonmould at https://www.jasonmolding.com/
About JasonMould Industrial Company Limited
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Contact:Person: James Yuan
Company: JasonMould Industrial Company Limited
Add:  LongGang Village,LongXi Town,BoLuo County,HuiZhou City,GuangDong Province, China
Tel: 86-752-6682869
Site: https://www.jasonmolding.com/low-volume-manufacturing/
Kinja:https://jasonmould.kinja.com/
Engineering:https://www.engineering.com/tabid/76/xmmid/518/xmid/22751/xmview/2/default.aspx
Flipboard:https://flipboard.com/@mouldjason/top-best-plastic-injection-molding-maker-service-manufacturer-from-china-103oj7q8y
Tumblr:https://jasonmould-china.tumblr.com/
Inube:http://jasonmolding.inube.com
Owler:https://www.owler.com/company/jasonmolding
Pearltrees:https://www.pearltrees.com/jasonmould
Article Original From:https://www.jasonmolding.com/is-there-a-company-that-offers-quality-custom-plastic-injection-molding-services-in-shenzhen-or-dongguan-china/
0 notes
jbtbattery-blog · 5 years ago
Text
Is there a company that offers quality custom plastic injection molding services in Shenzhen or Dongguan China?
Not all companies that plastic injection molding can meet the needs of their customers.
Sometimes, a company can not offer a complete service to a client because it has certain limitations, either of space, speed of manufacture and also of the customized creation of the requested design.
The companies involved in plastic injection molding know that sometimes customers request certain types of elements that are outside the standards they have in their most common designs, therefore, many of these have been forced to refuse produce a certain type of piece in mass.
Companies like JasonMould offer fully customized solutions for each of their clients.
For JasonMould, this proved to be an impulse to offer custom injection molding services to all those clients that required personalized attention to develop a solution according to their purposes and needs.
As a result of this idea the company entered the small group (compared to other industries) of factories that offer custom injection molding services, and, therefore, many clients will request of their methods to achieve their objectives.
Since the main idea emerged, and the concept of the services that would be provided by this company, that is to say, for almost 10 years, JasonMould was clear that he would offer custom injection molding services for all, in this way he would be satisfying the needs of his customers to have options to their measure, preventing in turn that these were limited at the time of creating their products and each of the pieces that would conform.
The 55 machines that are within the great physical structure of the company, are distributed in a timely manner to create the custom pieces they have manufactured for so long for others.
Every day the company has sought to perfect all its practices to design the best pieces of a quality far superior to existing ones. All the products created by JasonMould undergo the most stringent quality tests to offer only the best for all its customers, ensuring that the useful life of the product is quite long.
It is difficult to find a manufacturer that offers personalized products of an excellent quality, since many are unaware of the tests they must perform on each piece to ensure the duration of the material. However, JasonMould knows well the structures of all the possible designs, and also to what proofs the piece will have to expose to show the client that he is acquiring a high-end product.
What are custom injection molding services?
It is basically the molding of various structures and parts that were designed by customers who do not comply with the standardized figures already existing in the molds of the factories that use the plastic injection method. Through these services, companies are able to manufacture in large quantities each piece they have created within certain parameters determined by the structure of certain elements. In this way it can be said that each design will be done in a personalized way, since it will have shape and size determined by the client and not by the machine.
For more about china custom plastic injection molding services ,you can pay a visit to jasonmould at https://www.jasonmolding.com/
About JasonMould Industrial Company Limited
Jasonmould is a China mold maker of plastic molds- injection mold, die casting moulds, plastic blow molding, rotational molding, medical plastic injection molding, two shot plastic injection molding, insert molding, overmolding, metal injection molding, micro injection molding, powder injection molding, ceramic injection molding, liquid injection molding, husky injection molding, household mold, casting mold, die mold tool, custom molds, china moulds, rapid prototyping tooling, plastic prototyping tooling, punch press tooling, die and tooling for mobile/ cell phone parts, automotive parts, vacuum cleaners, rechargeable tools, telephones, copiers, computers, multimedia speakers, and many other electronic products and household appliances. And also a plastic product manufacturer, mold manufacturer China– plastic parts, plastic water tank, plastic balls, plastic containers, plastic buckle, plastic anchor, plastic hanger, plastic spoon, plastic pipe fitting, plastic tumble, plastic tableware, plastic cups, plastic bottles, plastic tray, plastic cosmetic container, plastic case, plastic food container, plastic chairs, plastic caps, plastic cap closure, plastic tubes, plastic water pipes, plastic knobs, plastic tubing, plastic utility boxes, plastic racks and so on.
Contact:Person: James Yuan
Company: JasonMould Industrial Company Limited
Add:  LongGang Village,LongXi Town,BoLuo County,HuiZhou City,GuangDong Province, China
Tel: 86-752-6682869
Site: https://www.jasonmolding.com/low-volume-manufacturing/
Kinja:https://jasonmould.kinja.com/
Engineering:https://www.engineering.com/tabid/76/xmmid/518/xmid/22751/xmview/2/default.aspx
Flipboard:https://flipboard.com/@mouldjason/top-best-plastic-injection-molding-maker-service-manufacturer-from-china-103oj7q8y
Tumblr:https://jasonmould-china.tumblr.com/
Inube:http://jasonmolding.inube.com
Owler:https://www.owler.com/company/jasonmolding
Pearltrees:https://www.pearltrees.com/jasonmould
Article Original From:https://www.jasonmolding.com/is-there-a-company-that-offers-quality-custom-plastic-injection-molding-services-in-shenzhen-or-dongguan-china/
0 notes
mcdouglecompany-blog · 6 years ago
Text
John Stossel, Dick Morris, Glenn Beck, MRCTV’s Brittany Hughes.
John Stossel, Dick Morris, Glenn Beck, MRCTV’s Brittany Hughes.
How Joe Biden’s Son Got 1.5 Billion Dollars From China!
Inequality Myths
Green New Deal: Fact versus Fiction
The Right to Print Arms
CRISIS: Border Agents Are Releasing 1,400 Illegal Aliens PER DAY Into the U.S TEEN SUICIDE: An ancient evil is rearing its ugly head
The War in Heaven: Continues on Earth Today
  How Joe Biden’s Son Got 1.5 Billion Dollars From China! Dick Morris TV.
https://youtu.be/Fj5aiDsilYA
dickmorrisreports
Published on Apr 29, 2019
Order 50 Shades Of Politics By -- Click Here! https://amzn.to/2ry30rs
    John Stossel. Inequality Myths.
Watch this video at- https://youtu.be/rrkHn5Fd6zM
John Stossel
Published on Apr 30, 2019
Politicians and reporters often rail about "the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer." But John Stossel explains it's not true.
In fact, the incomes of poor and middle-income Americans are up 32% since the government began keeping track several decades ago. https://www.cbo.gov/system/files?file... Yes, that increase is adjusted for inflation. Another misleading claim, says Stossel, is the idea that the U.S. "no longer has economic mobility." But a paper in The Quarterly Journal of Economics found that most people born to the richest fifth of Americans fall out of that bracket within 20 years. (Table 2: https://academic.oup.com/qje/article/... ) Likewise, most born to the poorest fifth climb to a higher quintile. Some climb all the way to the top. Another claim is that inequality itself is a huge problem. New York City mayor Bill DeBlasio warns: "There's inequality in this country right now that is threatening to tear us apart." Stossel says that it might tear us apart -- but only if people come to believe that all inequality is evil. But it isn't, he says. It's just part of life. Some people are better singers than others. The best athletes are just physically different. Society doesn't try to equalize those things -- or many others -- for good reason. Former investment banker Carol Roth tell Stossel, "I have two kidneys. There are people out there who need one, don't have one that functions. Should the government be able to take my kidney because somebody else needs it?" "There's inequality in everything," she adds. "There's inequality in free time. There's inequality in parents. I don't have any parents or grandparents. Life is unfair … unfair is a feature. It's not a bug."
--------- Subscribe to my YouTube channel: http://youtube.com/johnstossel Like me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JohnStossel/ Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/johnstossel ---------
    Green New Deal: Fact versus Fiction.
Watch this video at- https://youtu.be/RIOiGtO2UBA
John Stossel
Published on Apr 22, 2019
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Green New Deal proposes to save the planet. It calls for the United States to reduce carbon emissions to zero in 10 years. James Meigs, former editor of Popular Mechanics, tells me “That's a goal you could only imagine possible if you have no idea how the energy economy works or how energy is produced in this country.”
The Green New Deal calls for a transition to 100 percent renewable energy, many more wind turbines and solar panels. But the wind doesn’t always blow and the sun doesn’t always shine. Because of that, Meigs explains, “You also have to build all this infrastructure to connect [renewables] with energy consumers possibly very far away, and you always need some kind of backup power.” That means many more transmission lines and bigger batteries. But “batteries are lousy way to store energy” says physicist Mark Mills, a Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute. He also points out that wind mills and solar panels are anything but green, “I have to dig up a 1,000 pounds of stuff to process it … digging up is done with oil, by the way, big machines, so we're consuming energy to quote, save energy. It's not a good path to go.” It would also be very expensive. Mills points out, "We're charging more for people who can't afford it and we give money to wealthy people in the form of subsidies to buy 100,000 dollar [electric] cars, put expensive solar arrays on their roof or to be investors in wind farms. We have an upside down Robin Hood in our country to the tunes of 10s and 100s of billions of dollars." The bottom line, the Green New Deal, even if it were scientifically possible: Would hurt the poor. Cost everyone more. And make energy less reliable.
--------- Subscribe to my YouTube channel: http://youtube.com/johnstossel Like me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JohnStossel/ Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/johnstossel ---------
    The Right to Print Arms.
Watch this video at- https://youtu.be/5ERWnlFb67s
John Stossel
Published on Apr 16, 2019
The media often scare us about 3D-printed guns. "Anyone can print it, no background checks, mental illness not a factor, virtually undetectable," a CNN anchor warns.
Politicians scare us too. It's "a direct threat to our national security," former Senator Bill Nelson claimed last summer. But are they? For a video collaboration with the Federalist Society, I talked with Josh Blackman, the lawyer representing Defense Distributed — the company that posted blueprints for making 3D guns online. Blackman says posting the 3D-gun blueprints is protected by the First Amendment, since the blueprints are a form of speech. "The law can treat firearms like firearms. They can't treat the speech used to make them like firearms... We're fighting for the constitutional right to share these files with the world," Blackman tells me. But Massachusetts legislator David Linsky, who has sponsored a bill to ban 3D-printed guns, doesn't buy that. "It's not censorship when the national security and public safety are at stake," he tells me. "You shouldn't be able to make a gun in your own basement,” Blackman asks, why not? "If we had a ban on home manufacture of weapons during the time of the American Revolution, we would probably still be under the King's rule." The Constitution protects free speech and gun rights -- but it also says “provide for the common defense.” Could that be cited as a reason to limit these guns? Politicians call them a “windfall for terrorists.” Blackman disagrees: "Terrorists have access to far more dangerous weapons than 3D-printed guns. The notion that ISIS is having a factory of 3D-printers, and making these stupid little plastic guns that can fire one shot at a time, it really strains credulity." Even if the government wants to regulate 3D-printed guns, it will be nearly impossible. Blueprints are already all over the internet. I showed Rep. Linsky some websites with blueprints. He was surprised, but said: "I understand that some people might think that the genie is out of the bottle… But let's put as much of that genie into the bottle as we possibly can." "You can't put the genie back in the bottle,” Blackman responded. "One of the reasons why these efforts to regulate the internet are kinda silly is you can't shut down information. We believe in free speech. This is an important principle and the state can’t take us down."
--------- Subscribe to my YouTube channel: http://youtube.com/johnstossel Like me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JohnStossel/ Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/johnstossel ---------
    CRISIS: Border Agents Are Releasing 1,400 Illegal Aliens PER DAY Into the U.S.
Watch this video at- https://youtu.be/v4UI_Y7xbgY
MRCTV
Published on Apr 25, 2019
Not to mention instances of human smugglers abandoning toddlers in corn fields and escorting migrants across the border while armed with ACTUAL assault rifles.
    TEEN SUICIDE: An ancient evil is rearing its ugly head.
https://youtu.be/s0EhQfdWiLY
Glenn Beck
Published on May 1, 2019
Teen suicide is on the rise. Some of the most valiant and amazing young people in the history in the world are now contemplating taking their own life. Watch this clip to hear Glenn's theory on why this is happening now.
 ► Click HERE to subscribe to Glenn Beck https://bit.ly/2UVLqhL ►Click HERE to subscribe to BlazeTV: https://www.blazetv.com/glenn Connect with Glenn on Social Media: http://twitter.com/glennbeck http://instagram.com/glennbeck http://facebook.com/glennbeck
  The War in Heaven: Continues on Earth Today
Watch this video at- https://youtu.be/KxEUATS8bx8
ldsconservative
Published on May 29, 2009
Support this channel in making more videos: https://www.paypal.me/brimmm This is a video about the War in Heaven, between Christ and Lucifer, between good and evil, agency and force, Liberty/Freedom and captivity. (Messages from LDS/Mormon Prophets, Apostles, 70's)
Some of the sources for the video are found here: http://tinyurl.com/27jpqhw (or you can just google what they are saying)
Click here to download the episode
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