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Colin Bennett

Canada starts copper fittings import review - 0 views

  • The Canadian International Trade Tribunal has initiated an expiry review of its Feb. 17 findings concerning the dumping of copper pipe fittings from the United States, South Korea and China and the subsidizing of copper pipe fittings from China.
Colin Bennett

Jungwoo Metal launches copper press fittings first in South Korea - 0 views

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    Jungwoo Metal recently launched the copper press fittings it has successfully developed for the first time in South Korea.
Colin Bennett

E-mobility cooled cable super-fast charging - 1 views

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    "One of the highlights at the booth will be the Cooled Charging Cable - the new technology which is an ideal fit for high-power charging stations. The Cooled Cable can multiply power-throughput of a charging cable and reduce charging times to below 20 minutes, making rapid charge times for all electric cars possible. This innovation puts super-fast charging within reach - even with big battery packs of new electric vehicles and trucks. The cables are thin, simple and easy to handle, bend-protected and have ideal grip position."
Colin Bennett

An Ill Wind Blows On China's Turbine Business - 0 views

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    The SERC (State Electricity Regulatory Commission) has released stricter technical regulations, especially for LVRT (Low Voltage Ride Through) reformation. Additionally, 18 industry standards have been released in November 2011 by the National Bureau of Energy. There are two immediate effects of the regulatory changes. Adding a LVRT capability will increase the cost of the Chinese turbines. This, coupled with slower demand, will lead to a squeezing out of the marginal producers who won't be able to afford to fit new equipment. Thus, the domestic wind power manufacturing sector in China is poised for tough times, when consolidation may even change the positioning of the top five players.
Colin Bennett

When it comes to conflict mining regulation, should one size fit all? - 2 views

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    "Conflict mining remains an important issue, and one we are beginning to see governments step in to address in different ways. With the global economy as interconnected as ever, it's important to note that many of the products and technologies we use in our daily lives begin at the same source: mines. With leading companies across industries such as electronics, retail and jewelry, auto manufacturing, lighting aerospace, construction, and other industries relying on these commonly used 3TG metals - tin, tungsten, tantalum and gold - implementing effective regulation is essential in order to further advance support to eliminate or reduce human rights violation."
Colin Bennett

A refrigerator inside your laptop? | Emerging Technology Trends | ZDNet.com - 0 views

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    They've developed a miniature refrigeration system small enough to fit inside laptops. Unlike conventional cooling systems, which use fans to cool chips down to ambient temperature, these small refrigerators will cool them below surrounding temperatures. It is an interesting idea to get compressors instead of fans in our laptops, but these tiny fridges are still more expensive than fans.
Colin Bennett

After the era of excess - 0 views

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    Instead, America's consumption binge drew support from two major asset bubbles-property and credit. Courtesy of cheap and freely available credit, in conjunction with record housing price appreciation, consumers tripled the rate of net equity extraction from their homes, from 3 percent of disposable personal income in 2001 to 9 percent in 2006. Only by levering increasingly overvalued homes could Americans go on the biggest consumption binge in modern history. And now those twin bubbles-property and credit-have burst, and so has the US consumption bubble: real consumer spending fell at an unprecedented 3.5 percent average annual rate in the two final quarters of 2008. While the original excesses were made in America, the rest of the world was delighted to go along for the ride. With the United States lacking in internal saving, it had to import surplus savings from abroad in order to grow-and ran massive current-account and trade deficits to attract that capital. This fit perfectly with the macro-imbalances of the export-led developing countries of Asia, whose exports exceeded a record 45 percent of regional GDP in 2007-fully ten percentage points higher than their share ten years earlier, in the depths of the Asian financial crisis. China led the charge, taking its exports from 20 percent, to 40 percent of its GDP over the past seven years alone. The export-led growth in developing Asia could well be described as a second-order bubble-in effect, a derivative of the one in US consumption.
Colin Bennett

Waste-Reducing Computers - Clear by Wataru Watanabe (GALLERY) - 0 views

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    His Clear PC concept is designed to increase the life span of mobile computers and improve their sustainability by fitting them with a smart upgrading system and an OLED display screen and stylus input that will minimize the need for peripherals.
Colin Bennett

Copper Puts the "Power" in Power Tools - 0 views

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    "Generally speaking, the more copper mass in the motor, the more powerful the motor is," explains Deborah Brown, the component design manager for Bosch Tool Corporation. "To increase the power of our motors, manufacturing is challenged to fit more copper wire into the motor."
Colin Bennett

Plastic piping price issues - 0 views

  • KWD-globalpipe is a weekly information service directed at decision-makers in the Heating, Plumbing and Air Conditioning Industry
  • News
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    Three plastic pipe system manufacturers, Pipelife Hungaria, Wavin Hungary and BTH Fitting (Tessenderlo Group), two of them leading European players, are suspected of being part of a price fixing cartel operating in Hungary
Matthew Wonnacott

Mueller report stronger profits in Q4 2012 - 0 views

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    Mueller Industries Inc., the US based copper tube and fittings manufacturer, announced its end of year 2011 results, reporting net sales of US$491M in Q4 2011, down from US$527M in Q4 2010. The company attributed US$11M of the diffrence in net sales between Q4 2011 and the previous year period to a decline in the copper price. US$25M of the difference was attributed to lower unit shipment volumes, of which, the plumbing and refrigeration sectors accounted for US$14M. The company is optimistic that new housing starts will continue to rise through 2012, boosting copper tube demand.
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    Mueller Industries, a leading producer of copper tubes and brass products, reported net sales of $594.1M in Q2 2012. After accounting for changes of metals prices, this represents a decline of 1% y-o-y. The contraction was partially offset by a slightly higher sales volume y-o-y.
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    Mueller Inc, the US-based manufacturer of plumbing and commercial copper tube, announced on 5th February that its operating revenue for the fourth quarter of 2012 increased by 27.1% y-o-y, to USD16.4M, compared to the same period in 2011. CEO Greg Christopher said that the company is heavily dependent on the housing and commercial construction sector, and after five years of decline and stagnation," the industry finally appears to be gaining positive momentum."
Colin Bennett

Far-infrared electrodynamics of thin superconducting NbN film in magnetic fields - 0 views

  • We studied a thin superconducting NbN film in magnetic fields up to 8 T above the zero-temperature limit by means of time-domain terahertz and scanning tunneling spectroscopies in order to understand the vortex response. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy was used to determine the optical gap and the upper critical field of the sample. The values obtained were subsequently used to fit the terahertz complex conductivity spectra in the magnetic field in the Faraday geometry above the zero-temperature limit. These spectra are best described in terms of the Coffey–Clem self-consistent solution of a modified London equation in the flux creep regime.
Colin Bennett

Heathrow Terminal 5 lighting - 0 views

  • The terminal is a vast building and houses the world’s largest  controlled-lighting system, with 120,000 light fittings and 2,600 sensors designed to switch them off when no motion is detected. The airport’s operators now plan to replace all the bulbs in one go with LEDs that are expected to last at least five years.
Colin Bennett

Winners and Losers of Economic Boom in Africa - 0 views

  • But since the turn of the millennium, the world has a different take on Africa thanks to an economic boom that refuses to fit into the usual distorted picture. The same voices that once proclaimed the continent dead are now predicting a rebirth for Africa, the awakened giant with nearly incalculable natural resources (around 40 percent of the world's raw materials and 60 percent of its uncultivated arable land), fast-growing markets and a young, highly motivated population.
Colin Bennett

The BMW i3 begins production - 0 views

  • The stator, which forms the inner core of the motor, consists of around two kilometres of wound copper wire. Unlike other electric motors in the same power class, the motor of the BMW i3 is very small and compact due to the specially configured winding of the copper wiring. This results in further weight and space savings. Before the rotor is fitted in the interior housing, it receives a thin coating of resin.
Colin Bennett

Rio Tinto walks away from massive Pebble copper-gold project - 0 views

  • The company said the project does not fit its strategy, so it will donate its shares to two Alaskan charities. This way Rio becomes the second large diversified miner to back out of the project in less than seven months.
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