4th of July Remembrance

I, like many U.S. citizens enjoyed the festivities over this past 4th of July. Let us not forget the 8,000 patriots that gave their lives for our independence as well as the 848, 163 others who perished in subsequent wars protecting our freedom. Below is the top 10 wars ranked by casualties.

 Top 10 wars ranked by casualties

  1. World War II (1941–1945)………………………….291,557
  2. U.S. Civil War (1861–1865)…………………………212,938
  3. World War I (1917–1918)…………………………….53,402
  4. Vietnam War (1955–1975)……………………………47,424
  5. Korean War (1950–1953)……………………………..33,746
  6. U.S. Revolutionary War (1775–1783)…………….8,000
  7. War on Terror (2001–present))………………………5,281
  8. War of 1812 (1812–1815)……………………………….2,260
  9. Mexican–American War (1846–1848)…………….1,733
  10. Northwest Indian War (1785–1795)………………1,221
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EXAIR’s U.S. Armed Services Veterans

We have a lot to be thankful for and owe a debt of appreciation to our service personnel past and present. EXAIR honored our employees that served by awarding them a commemorative plaque. Each branch of the armed services were served by one of our employees.

Also the Grand Lodge of Ohio Masons presented them with a commemorative medallion celebrating the laying of the cornerstone at Perry’s Monument Put-In-Bay, Ohio.

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Perry’s Monument is the only federal monument dedicated to peace.  The memorial is a great Doric Column of pink-white granite 45 feet in diameter and 352 tall. Beneath the stone floor of the monuments lie the remains of three U.S. officers and three British officers.

Thank you EXAIR veterans and all veterans. Your service appreciated and humbling.

Joe Panfalone
Application Engineer
Phone (513) 671-3322
Fax (513) 671-3363
Web: http://www.exair.com
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/exair_jp
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/exair

The First Night In A Tent Was A Success

Well, the first night in a tent, camping in the backyard for my oldest daughter went well.   However, instead of it just being her and myself, we ended up with some company.   My two nieces, and nephew all came down and decided to partake.   The bad news? – We needed a bigger tent.  Fortunately for us, sourcing a larger tent was not an obstacle we could not overcome. Once we were done making S’mores and everyone was ready for bed, my oldest of course thought it was time to play in the tent.   When I finally got her to lay down that was it, she was out, sound asleep.    It was rather nice listening to the sounds of a small township at night, lol.   Everyone made it through the night, the only problem was my daughter was like a rooster on a farm in the morning.  Once the sun even peeked into the sky she was wanting to get up.   Luckily I convinced her that 5:30 was not morning and that we should go back to sleep.   Once the clock hit a little after 8 I finally let her wake up the others and go running into the house to tell my wife of her accomplishment.  Since the camp out was a success, and we are now into the next weekend, I am thinking of tackling yet another project and another milestone with my daughter…. fishing.

Speaking of milestones and projects, as Russ mentioned earlier this week, it’s getting hot.  Make sure that the heat this summer doesn’t creep up on you like that giant spider did to me.  Granted it wasn’t a spider and it was only a lightning bug.  When it lands on your neck while you are laying down in my book that means it is a black widow and you are about to die, so scream like a girl.

Super Air Amplifier

EXAIR Cabinet Cooler Systems are a great way to help beat the heat in your electrical enclosures, but sometimes you have a drive that may be mounted on the outside of the enclosure, or the heat sinks are mounted outside of the enclosure.  This is the perfect location to utilize an EXAIR Super Air Amplifier.    This is due to the fact that a heat sink is designed to have as much air moved over the surface of the fins as possible.   The air doesn’t need to be cold but it needs to have a large volume to help dissipate the heat.  The Super Air Amplifier is going to utilize a small amount of compressed air and then entrain a large volume of ambient air to blow over the surface of the heat sinks in order to keep that external drive cool.

If the heat is beating down your machines, give an Application Engineer a call and we’ll help you fight back.

Brian Farno
Application Engineer
BrianFarno@EXAIR.com
@EXAIR_BF

An Independence Day Blog

The flags are flying in my neighborhood, again, just like they do the first week of July every year. As I wrote a while back, this is indeed a time for celebration…one of my neighbors throws a pool party every Fourth of July, complete with food, drink, fireworks, and entertainment: this year, he’s arranged for a real-live Elvis impersonator, confirming, once again, that I live in the best neighborhood EVER.

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The Fourth of July, also known as Independence Day, commemorates the day when a group of brave patriots publicized their names in a Declaration, telling the world exactly who the British would be hanging, should their rebellion fail. A brave act indeed, considering a large contingent of the world’s most powerful army, with a fair amount of recent combat experience, was on their way. But it didn’t fail, and the rest, as they say, is (literally) our history.

Yesterday, at our monthly “all hands” meeting, EXAIR recognized the veterans in our company. I’m proud to be counted among these folks, and was humbled by the company’s appreciation for our service, and our contribution to defending our country’s independence.

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It’s no coincidence that the country that developed the universally accepted model of independence has also led the world in innovation…technical, industrial, artistic, and the list goes on. The individual freedoms detailed in the Bill of Rights have provided very fertile ground for these advances, and EXAIR is a superb example of how it’s done. For thirty years, the people of EXAIR have worked to create the best line of compressed air products on the market, and I’m happy to be a part of it.

EXAIR will be closed tomorrow as we celebrate the Fourth of July and we hope you have a great day!

Russ Bowman
Application Engineer
EXAIR Corporation
(513)671-3322 local
(800)923-9247 toll free
(513)671-3363 fax
Web: http://www.exair.com
Blog: http://blog.exair.com/
Twitter: twitter.com/exair_rb
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/exair

Line Vac Conveys Small Parts Directly From Mold Cavity to Shipping Box

In the U.S., EXAIR Corporation works factory direct with our customers. Occasionally, we will discuss applications and come up against some questions for which we don’t have a solid answer for the customer. One of the solutions we have for this circumstance is a risk free 30 day guarantee the customer can take advantage of to return the product if things don’t work out for any reason. This applies to any stock item we have and is always there to act as a reasonable back stop so that the customer isn’t stuck with a solution that is not really working for them.

Another solution we offer is our Efficiency Lab. In those cases where the customer is trying to justify the energy savings for their application but don’t have the right tools at their disposal, we can arrange to have them ship their current “air solution” to us and we can measure, force, flow, sound level and even static decay rate if necessary. We then provide a full report of what they have submitted and make a recommendation of a suitable EXAIR product that could take the place and provide a higher efficiency in operation which will translate into operation cost savings, process improvement, increased safety, lower sound operation or all of these combined.

A customer in the plastic injection molding industry contacted me the other day and wanted to know if he could convey his parts (a small, barrel-shaped component used in coax cable connections). He wanted to use a ¾” Line Vac model 6080 to do it. I had some reservations about it because his part had an outside diameter of .435” and a length of .62”. Since it was a barrel shape and was so close to the ½” inside diameter dimension of the Line Vac,  I was concerned that they could cock in the tube leading to the Line Vac and get stuck. Another concern was that the customer wanted to mount multiple, ¾” hoses side by side on a fixture and have the fixture come up to within 7” of the parts and have the parts drop off their ejector pins and go right into the throat of the hoses. Again, I had serious doubts.

I mentioned our options above and he asked if I could run a quick test for him if he sent me some of his parts. I agreed and a couple days later I had the parts laying on my desk. We pulled together a model 6080 ¾” Line Vac and some ¾” ID hose, connected the air and began testing. I started with a healthy 80 PSIG and those parts shot out of the output hose like a bullet. Nothing got stuck, no matter how I oriented the parts to the suction hose, the capture velocity at the tip of the suction hose worked to properly orient the part and pull it in.

After I determined that it would work at 80 PSIG, I wanted to see how low I could go with the input pressure and keep good performance. I went down to 30 PSIG and did have some problems with parts getting stuck just before the Line Vac. So, I bumped the pressure up to 40 PSIG. Everything worked smoothly and nothing became stuck.

Next I wanted to actually drop the parts into the suction hose to see if they could manage to go in. It worked beautifully!  I held the parts directly above the hose at about 7 inch height and the capture velocity of the vacuum flow oriented the parts properly again and pulled them right on through.

Now, the customer will be buying one himself to run his test. If all goes well on his end, we’re looking at another 15 pieces to be used on a single molding machine and there are multiple machines to outfit.

Neal Raker, Application Engineer
nealraker@exair.com