MTI

MTI Prepares for Nadcap with Rigorous Special Meeting

HTD Size-PR Logo

The Metal Treating Institute (MTI) hosted a special meeting for members at the Embassy Suites by Hilton in Downtown Pittsburgh, PA, on Monday, October 17, to review key Nadcap and AMEC topics. During the meeting, members addressed challenges that heat treaters face in Nadcap/audit compliance, how to navigate audits more effectively, and what suggestions to present to the Nadcap committee so that heat treaters would be better equipped for audits.

MTI’s Technical Standards Committee Co-Chairs Bob Ferry, VP of Engineering and Quality at FPM Heat Treat, and Edward (Ed) Engelhard, VP of Corporate Quality at Solar Atmospheres, facilitated the meeting. It was hosted by Tom Morrison, CEO MTI Management, and Jim Orr, president of Penna Flame Industries and current president of MTI. Several attendees who made particularly significant contributions to the discussion were; Doug Shuler, lead auditor at Pyro Consulting, LLC; and Roy Adkins, director of Corporate Quality at Braddock Metallurgical and recipient of the 2022 MTI Award of Industry Merit.

A Room Full of MTI members
Including (l-r): Doug Glenn, Ed Engelhard, Bob Ferry, and Doug Shuler

At the meeting, attendees identified the number one challenge in Nadcap/audit compliance is understanding and implementing new Nadcap revisions; a close second was the challenge of ensuring quality when auditors give different feedback. These challenges were addressed in the meeting, especially when discussing two specific topics: first, Auditee Advisories – Type P (Potential Product Impact) and Type C (Confirmed Product Impact) as well as Audit Observations.

Several key points that came out of these discussions were to (1) always read up on the most recent revisions in order to be confident in your compliance with quality standards; (2) be sure to reference objective evidence on the Nadcap Checklist questions to help facilitate the audit; (3) let the Nadcap auditor do their job but address any clarifications/follow-ups to the staff engineer immediately; (4) investigate immediately when receiving a Type P write-up so that you can ask the auditor to add a comment on the limits of that product impact; and finally (5) always push-back on findings that are clearly not valid so that they are “voided” by the Performance Review Institute (PRI).

Another main point of the meeting was to address AMS2750H, an update consisting of editorial and language updates for added clarity.

Lastly, the facilitators of the meeting addressed aerospace standard AS13100: AESQ Quality Management System Requirements for Aero Engine Design and Production Organizations. The standard seeks to harmonize and simplify supplier quality requirements among the major aero engine manufacturers, supplemental to standard AS9100. This standard is in the process of being flowed down to the supply chain and compliance is required January 1 of 2023, meaning that heat treaters have a couple months to get up to standard.

This special meeting happens each year during the October Nadcap meeting in Pittsburgh, PA. MTI encourages heat treaters to attend the Nadcap meetings to share their invaluable voice to guide industry standards.

Photo caption for main image: Jim Orr speaks to members of MTI.


Find heat treating products and services when you search on Heat Treat Buyers Guide.com


MTI Prepares for Nadcap with Rigorous Special Meeting Read More »

Jim Oakes Recognized with First Ever FNA Industry Award

HTD Size-PR Logo

Jim Oakes, president of Super Systems, has been awarded the first ever Furnaces North America (FNA) Industry Award at the trade show's opening night kickoff reception.

This award is given to an individual in recognition of their contribution(s) and current/ongoing commitment to the betterment of the heat treating industry with one or more significant accomplishments in the last five years in the area of innovation, leadership, academia, or research.

The Metal Treating Institute’s 2018 President, Pete Hushek, who gave the award to Jim stated, "[No] one has been more deserving of this award than Jim Oakes. Having served as the President of ASM for two years and immediately being elected as president, serving two years during the pandemic, along with his service in a host of other technical standards groups, Jim’s leadership shined as he led two of the major associations the last five years."

Jim Oakes (pictured above in the center) stated upon receiving the award, "This is truly an incredible honor to be recognized by my peers. We don’t do what we do for awards. We do it to make a difference. It is through that difference that we make a better future for everyone. It has always been a pleasure to serve this great industry."

The FNA trade show is produced by the Metal Treating Institute in partnership with its media partner, Heat Treat Today.


Find heat treating products and services when you search on Heat Treat Buyers Guide.com


 

Jim Oakes Recognized with First Ever FNA Industry Award Read More »

Paulo Receives Commercial Heat Treater of the Year Award

HTD Size-PR Logo

Paulo Products was the recipient of the Commercial Heat Treater of the Year award presented by Heat Treat Today, in cooperation with The Metal Treating Institute (MTI). The award was initially decided and presented virtually in 2020, and was formally awarded in person on October 6, 2021 during the MTI Annual Fall Meeting awards banquet in San Antonio, Texas.

MTI awards the Commercial Heat Treater of the Year to the company that demonstrates they are making a positive impact in the community and the industry. The award is judged by a panel of previous recipients based on quality programs, pollution and hazardous waste control, community involvement, and leadership.

The award consists of a plaque and a $1,500 donation to the MTI Educational Foundation by Heat Treat Today in the name of the winning company. The donation was matched by MTI’s Educational Foundation. Paulo Products will award this $3,000 as a scholarship to a high school or college student pursuing an education towards heat treat.

Photo: Paulo Products being recognized as 2020 Commercial Heat Treater of the Year. (L-R) Jim Oakes, Super Systems, Inc. & MTI President; Will and Ben Rassieur Paulo Products; Doug Glenn, Heat Treat Today

Paulo Receives Commercial Heat Treater of the Year Award Read More »

Penna Flame Industries

Penna Flame Industries (PFI) was founded in 1968 by Garrett D. Orr, Sr. and his wife Mary Patricia (Pat) Orr to provide flame hardening services to the growing steel industry. Orr chose the Zelienople, PA site because it was centrally located between Pittsburgh, PA, and Cleveland, Ohio, which was then heavily into steel manufacturing. Garrett was employed as a sales representative for a foundry and was involved in other steel-related industries. Through this experience, he recognized the need for flame hardening in the steel industry. In 1968, at the age of 39, he founded Pennsylvania Flame Hardening. The groundbreaking took place on April 1, 1968.

Bert demonstrates the benefits of working with a collaborative robot to induction harden steel parts. The robot gives the operator the ability to work directly next to it, as opposed to conventional robot arms where fencing and distance is required.

In 1990, James P. Orr was named president of the company, continuing his father’s commitment to the industry by adding new technology and innovations in surface hardening and roll manufacturing.

In 1995 the company added a roll manufacturing and machining facility to meet the needs of customers who wanted highly polished rolls used in the automotive and other industries. Today, PFI also serves the military, mining, and agriculture (heavy equipment) sectors.

In 2008, the company added the industry’s first robotic cell that replaced manual scanning and reduced the amount of setup required for tooling, thereby increasing precision and repeatability. The company has since added three additional robotic cells.

The computerized robotic surface hardening systems have revolutionized the surface hardening industry. These advanced robots, coupled with programmable index tables, provide an automation system that helps decrease production time while maintaining the highest quality in precision surface hardening.

A few benefits of this service are:

  • Increased wear resistance
  • Higher hardness and longer life
  • Less processing time
  • Higher efficiency and productivity
  • Maintain tensile strength
  • Quick turnaround of the project
  • Consistent, repeatable process
  • Less distortion when compared to furnace treatment

A crane wheel, in the process of being flame hardened, glowing red hot about to submerged in a quench bath.

Additional services include flame hardening, robotic flame hardening, robotic induction hardening, roll hardening, roll manufacturing, roll straightening, hardness testing, wheel and axle assembly, deep cryogenics, stress relieving, and tempering.

In 2017, the company expanded its facility to incorporate the world’s largest spin flame hardening tank (80-inch diameter) and added a collaborative robotic cell that induction hardens and allows the operator to work right next to the robot without having safety fences.

Here’s a fun fact: while PFI doesn’t know the final destination of many of the parts they heat treat, they have flame hardened wheels that are in the roofs of professional sports stadiums and fields that roll out.

As they look to the future, James P. Orr, together with his sons Michael (Vice President) and Andrew (Vice President) are poised to lead the 28 employee-strong company into the next generation of products and services.

Penna Flame Industries Read More »

Paulo

"We want to make sure our customers succeed, and we do that by bringing our unique approach to every job." These are words that describe the mission of Paulo, a company whose areas of expertise reside in heat treating, brazing and metal finishing.

A family business founded in 1943 by Ben and Pauline Rassieur in St. Louis, Missouri, Paulo now employs 400 people and provides almost every form of heat treatment as well as zinc plating and phosphating, black oxide, brazing, and hot isostatic pressing (HIP)—their most recent addition.

(left to right) Scott Russ, William Rassieur, and Scott Herzing

The company’s large metallurgical engineering staff performs testing, process development and improvement, and compiles metallurgical reports. Through the strategic location of their six facilities and the varied processes offered, they are equipped to partner with organizations up and down the supply chain to handle everything from overnight tool and die work to millions of pounds of production work for a variety of industries all with the support of their control systems and built-in contingency planning.

A few of the services they offer are through hardening, carburizing, nitriding/FNC, solution treating/aging, austempering, and HIPing. A few of the equipment capabilities include integral quench, mesh belt, vacuum, tip-ups, and HIP.

An important heat treating capability that helps them to succeed in the company’s mission is the ability to collect data and control furnace conditions in order to deliver consistent repeatable results. Additionally, as the largest privately held heat treater in North America, they can invest to support customer’s growth as they did recently in Monterrey, Mexico, announcing a large expansion that will double the square footage.

Derek Denlinger
Paulo

Paulo has heat treated interesting and memorable parts, from those used in space and on airplanes to those that supported PPE during the pandemic. Two that had big impacts on the company’s trajectory was the brazing of 106mm artillery shells and fuel pump housings.

"Datagineering" is a word the company created to explain the blending of the best in automation, data, and human expertise. As they look to the future, their continued implementation of the company-coined verb will aid in supporting customers, continuing overall improvement, and developing technically to push boundaries and deliver the best results.

Paulo Read More »

Metalex Thermal Specialties

Metalex Thermal Specialties is a Metal Treating Institute member and one of Colorado’s premier commercial heat treaters who prides themselves on high-quality and ultra-fast turnaround times. Originally founded in 2005, but recently acquired by James Legacy Corporation, they have been serving the industrial, medical, and automotive sectors as well as other industries in and around Colorado.

Their vacuum/bright hardening process sets them apart from other heat treaters. This process ensures parts come out clean with no discoloration. Bright hardening can be performed for a wide variety of processes.

Source: Metalex Thermal Specialties

Their pit furnaces allow them to perform age hardening under various atmospheres such as nitrogen, argon, or hydrogen. They even have a proprietary process for knife blades that allows them to be vacuum hardened without distortion. Metalex can even process some steels under vacuum that are typically oil hardened, which provides the required hardness without the issues oil hardening can create.

Metalex provides the following services:

  • Bright hardening (vacuum hardening) of many tool steels, stainless steels, and more
  • Oil hardening of 4000 series alloys, tool steels, and other oil harden steels
  • Age hardening of stainless steels and aluminum
  • Annealing of virtually any metals
  • Stress relieving of martensitic and austenitic steels, and titanium
  • Normalizing
  • Brazing
  • Induction hardening
  • Carburizing
  • Creep flattening
  • Cryo processing

Equipment capabilities:

  • 2-bar nitrogen quench large capacity furnace for vacuum hardening, age hardening, brazing, stress relieving, and annealing
  • Small vacuum furnace for age hardening, and tempering
  • Pit furnace for age hardening
  • Pit carburizing furnace for oil hardening, carburizing, tempering, annealing, normalizing, and stress relieving
  • 5 tempering ovens
  • 2 tempering furnaces for age hardening and tempering
  • 1 large capacity tempering furnace
  • Ultra-low temperature freezer

Source: Metalex Thermal Specialties

Customer retention is high because of the quality they receive from the vacuum hardening, the cleanliness of their parts, and most importantly, the expertise and customer care from the people that make up Metalex. Combined, their employees have over 50 years of experience in the heat treatment industry. Everyone is focused on providing the best quality to their customers.

Metalex is excited about the future. In addition to the current renovation of their building, they are looking to greatly expand their capacity and capability over the next 5 to 10 years. One way to achieve that is with the future addition of another large vacuum furnace, and a much larger oil and carburizing IQ furnace. They are working to become Nadcap and MedAccred accredited, improving quality, and expanding the industries they serve.

Metalex Thermal Specialties Read More »

MTI & FNA Announce Heat Treat Today as Exclusive Media Partner

HTD Size-PR LogoThe Metal Treating Institute (MTI) and Furnaces North America announced that they have signed a new media partnership with Heat Treat Today out of New Castle, Pa. Heat Treat Today is one of the heat treating industry’s leading publications, reaching heat treaters through their print, digital and social media platforms.

“2020 brought on many changes to many companies, and MTI,” says Tom MorrisonCEO of MTI, “was no different. After looking at the value proposition from numerous publications on who could provide the largest voice for commercial heat treaters, Heat Treat Today’s offerings matched up with the needs and future plans of MTI and FNA.”

Heat Treat Today founder and publisher, Doug Glenn, added, “We are excited about the media partnership with MTI and FNA. Our passion is the heat treating industry and we are looking forward to providing a strong voice for MTI members to the captive heat treaters throughout our readership.”

MTI will release MTI’s Commercial Heat Treating in Heat Treat Today’s printed magazine. This section will focus on sharing why outsourcing part or all of their heat treating to a MTI commercial heat treater could be beneficial. Content will also include articles on safety, Industry 4.0, digital business strategies, and automation.

 

 

Tom Morrison image provided by Metal Treating Institute. All other images provided by Heat Treat Today.

MTI & FNA Announce Heat Treat Today as Exclusive Media Partner Read More »

Heat Treating Show Update: Furnaces North America, the Virtual Show

Given the nature of this year's Furnaces North America (FNA) show, we are bringing updates from the event to you. What happened? What did they cover in the technical sessions? Who showed up? What is it like navigating a virtual platform? Learn about how the second day of the event went in the article below.

If you have any videos, images, or thoughts from this year's event, email them to editor@heattreattoday.com!


Who's Who: Live Session

The live session on the second day was an enlightening look to the future as Tom Morrison of the Metal Treating Institute, Cory Padfield of American Axle & Manufacturing, and Chad Spore of John Deere discussed, "What's Next in Heat Treating For Aerospace, Automotive & Agriculture."

From left to right: Chad Spore, Cory, and Tom Morrison sit down to talk about the "next thing" in industry. (Source: screen shot at FNA 2020 Virtual)

The audience heard Tom talk about how millions of dollars can be taken out of the heat treat supply chain with the advent of 3D printing, followed by Chad's assessment of current developments in the world of agriculture.

Cory shared that changes in the heat treat design within the automotive industry may look like "a shift [in the heat treat processes] from cast iron parts which have been used in automotive to steel that may need heat treatment, or heat treated cast iron, like austempered iron." He also noted that there will "definitely" be more salt quenching in the future for precision components. Furthermore, as heat treat moves away from traditional steel usage, aluminum will continue to be the material of choice. Looking to the future, Cory says to focus on part-to-part variation within the automotive industry.

Chad honed into the matured state of affairs with Industry 4.0, particularly with service components with lower volume output and needs a quicker turn around. Additionally, he talked about "measuring the green-part prior to heat treating" while using data tracking systems in order to minimize material waste to create a more specialized process. "Technology is key part...the connectivity between your equipment and the manufacturing processes is going to be a key aspect to utilize within the heat treating industry."

Check out today's schedule here.


Technical Sessions

These sessions are available 24/7 at the Furnaces North America Show. Be sure to stop by the speaker's chat room to follow-up on their talk! Note: You must register to attend Furnaces North America the Virtual Show in order to view these sessions. Click HERE.

  • Matt Clinite
    Ipsen USA

    Matt Clinite from Ipsen shares 5 basic principles for vacuum furnace peak performance in his session "Vacuum Furnace Best Practices for Greater Reliability and Efficiency." He recommends that we "kick the tires to make sure it is running well!" But truly, Clinite offers great advice to check the status of a seemingly perfectly fine, operational vacuum furnace. Within his 5 steps, he notes 3 signs to look for in the hot zone including checking for degrading insulation and bare steel showing through. Listen to more of his great illustrations ("furnaces are a bit like children") and follow up with him today in the FNA chat. Technical Session HERE

  • Jenna Alder
    AFC-Holcroft

    Jenna Alder over at AFC-Holcroft. "Getting it Done Right: Manage Equipment Maintenance and Alarms with Integrated Software Solutions." Computerized Maintenance Management System alleviates the pressure of remembering and tracking every detail of maintenance processes. Alder emphasizes that should any operation go into lapse or run into error, the computerized system can track where a task was incomplete and when a task needs to be performed. More technical abilities of this type of system are elaborated in Alder's technical session. Watch it, and catch up with her today! Technical Session HERE.

  • Dan Herring
    Herring Company

    "How Predictive Maintenance will Increase Your Profit Margins": Dan Herring -- you were waiting for us to mention him! -- talks about predictive (or preventative) maintenance that come in all shapes in sizes. Two distinct styles of maintenance practices? "Planned Preventative Maintenance Programs" (plan-execute-evaluate-revise) or "Repair As Needed Strategies" A key take-away: "Neither [maintenance style] has been proven to show a distinct cost advantage over the other," but the style of planned programs optimizes production demands of manufacturing. Technical Session HERE.

Check out today's schedule here.


Navigating the Virtual

Take advantage of...

  • AFC-Holcroft’s exhibit features a brief “How Heat Treat Are You” quiz.  Those who answer all the questions correctly are eligible for some really nice prizes! (Yes, another prize option!) Go to their booth HERE.

    Screen capture from the FNA 2020 Virtual booth highlighting the bio section
  • (Again, stealth mode...) Check out the company bios to get the most out of your visit. These are great ways to learn if this is a company that you can do business with after the event.

Videos etc.

  • Personal booth videos featuring drone footage (AFC-Holcroft) and golfing (Super Systems)
  • Live Sessions can be accessed in the FNA after the are broadcasted, but attend live so that you can chat with other viewers and speakers.
  • Technical walk-through of personal product are frequently shared on the front of an FNA booth. (Azbil North America, Inc.)

 


Looking for live updates of the event? Check out our social media pages @HeatTreatToday on Twitter and LinkedIn to see the current happenings. Search #HeatTreatToday and #FNA2020 to watch our content!

(photo source: Gert Aldman from pixabay.com)

 

 

 

 

 

 

original content

 

Heat Treating Show Update: Furnaces North America, the Virtual Show Read More »

Heat Treat Radio #35: Reasons to Attend Furnaces North America with Tom Morrison, CEO of the Metal Treating Institute

Welcome to another episode of Heat Treat Radio, a periodic podcast where Heat Treat Radio host, Doug Glenn, discusses cutting-edge topics with industry-leading personalities. Below, you can either listen to the podcast by clicking on the audio play button, or you can read an edited version of the transcript. To see a complete list of other Heat Treat Radio episodes, click here.


In this conversation, Heat Treat Radio host, Doug Glenn, interviews Tom Morrison, CEO of the Metal Treating Institute (MTI) to reveal the new look of Furnaces North America (FNA) 2020. The engaging online platform will allow heat treaters and suppliers to network, share information, "shake hands," and more virtually. Additionally, Tom will talk about how heat treaters can attend technical talks at the FNA 2020 Virtual.

Click the play button below to listen.


The following transcript has been edited for your reading enjoyment.

DG:  We want to talk about Furnaces North America which obviously in these COVID days has taken a little bit of a turn, right or left depending on how you want to look at it.  My understanding is that Furnaces North America is moving from a live face to face event to a virtual event.  Tell us why.

TM:  For months we have been tracking the status and trends.  Our executive team has been meeting every single week for months and really watching the trends and developments of COVID-19 and its impact on meetings.  I'm a part of a number of forums and I'm connected with hundreds, if not thousands of associations, and everybody is canceling their meetings.  So there is too much liability and risk and we don't want to our attendees and exhibitors in that moment with COVID-19 and just the dangers and stuff that are associated with it.  There came a moment when we decided: “You know what? The timing is right for us to do this.”  So we went virtual.  Typically, about 1% of the industry attends a heat treat show.   What we're very excited about is that we're going to be able to bring all that energy and excitement, that you'd experience live, into a virtual event, right to the front doorstep and computer screens of every captive and commercial heat treater, as well as suppliers in the marketplace. It is just an incredible and unique opportunity as we go into this digital age of training and trade shows in the future.

DG:  Is it still going to be September 30 through October 2, but not full days, correct?

TM:  That is correct.  We've learned in watching other trade shows out there, and conferences that go virtual, that people don't sit on the computer for eight hours, but they can take breaks at their leisure and also you can watch at a pace you want.  It's going to be September 30th through October 2nd   You can actually go onto www.furnacesnorthamerica.com and click 'schedule' at the top, but it's going to from 11:00 in the morning until 5:00 in the afternoon.

DG:  And just to be clear, that's going to be east coast time?

TM:  Yes.  That's kind of a funny story, Doug: When we were looking at the times, I said, yes, we can start at 9:00 in the morning.  Because when you go to a live show, everybody is in the city under that time zone.  But one of my very perceptive staff said, “Tom, if we do it at 9:00, the people on the west coast are going to be getting up and getting in there at 6:00 a.m.”  So yes, it's going to be at 11:00 EST which will then make it 8:00 a.m. on the west coast.

DG:  Tell me why else your team, yourself and some of the exhibitors you've talked to so far are excited about this new virtual event.

TM:  The sponsors have stepped up.  We had a webcast with over 100 exhibitors telling them about the transition and we had to transition our sponsorships from the live show to this show, and I think about the caliber of sponsor that came to the table within that first day selling out.  We've got ECM USA, Gasbarre Furnace, Thermal Processing Systems, McLaughlin Furnaces, Super Systems, Surface Combustion, Honeywell in the burner market, RoMan Manufacturing in the power market.  And think of vacuum technologies.  Eight companies that jumped right out of the gate and said, “We believe in this and we think this is the future and we want to be a part of it and in the building of it.”  That's where some of the excitement is coming from.

But the biggest excitement to me personally, and my staff and the leadership that are putting this on, is virtual meetings are never going to do away with live meetings.  Live meetings, as soon as there's a vaccine, or we see it go away and people are comfortable getting back together, live meetings are going to come back to everywhere.  It's just a matter of when.  But while we're waiting for that to happen, the digital marketplace is going to grow like never before.  I've had so many sales agents say that they have sold more furnace equipment in the past three or four months than they have in the previous 6 months, and they haven't seen a single customer.  So I think there's a market for that.  And so we're excited.  This is a stepping stone into that marketplace and taking our furnace show to the 99% of the people that don't typically attend the show.  Most people can't bring their seven furnace operators to a Furnaces North America, but now they can take the content and the trade show right to their computer screen which is really exciting.

DG:  I want to ask you two questions, first about exhibitors and then about attendees.  Let's knock it down to the very basics.  Why should an exhibitor get involved?

TM:  Exhibitors should get involved because this is an opportune step into the digital mode.  Our booth fee for the exhibit show is only $1500 compared to if you came to the live show, the smallest you're going to pay is $5000 for everything, including travel up to 50 – 60K if you're one of the bigger companies.  This gives any heat treat supplier an opportunity to get involved.  If you consider that between industrial heating magazine as our media partner, we're going to have a $200,000 valued marketing campaign with direct mail, email, social media going for the next two and a half months until the show happens.  There's going to be a lot of activity.  We expect that we're going to have

Virtual Booth for Exhibitors

great attendance.  So, an exhibitor that doesn't get involved in this is going to lose out on the one opportunity in the next 12 months to get new customers.  That's what this show is about – connecting them to leads.  Our platform, if they go onto www.furnacesnorthamerica.com and click on exhibitors, they can see a webcast of 38 minutes where we actually unveil the digital platform where they're going to be able to connect them with customers to build their digital exhibitor booth.  I know that most exhibitors out there are used to that live handshake format, and some ask, “How do we shake hands through the computer?”  Well, you're going to see how you do that if you go watch that video.  Exhibitors should do it for one reason:  leads, leads, leads.  If you're not in the show, you're going to miss out on the opportunity to get access to leads that carry you into 2021.

[blocktext align="right"]"Exhibitors should do it for one reason:  leads, leads, leads..."[/blocktext]DG:  So I understand that every exhibitor will get a complete list of attendees at the conclusion of the show, but not with email addresses. Can you elaborate on what exhibitors have to do to capture email addresses?

TM:  There is a box in your exhibit booth where it says contact needs more information and it gives you the ability to click on what you want to see more of from that exhibitor.  When you click that, it's just like being in the live show – remember how they scan you badge?  Well, it's like a badge scan.  But here's the cool thing:  On the day of the show, the exhibitors are watching their exhibit dashboard and anybody that is looking at your screen on their computer, you can see how many are looking at it.  But if they click on anything in your booth, their demographic data and contact data go right into your real-time exhibit lead dashboard.  And you can download those leads at any time.  You get everything but the email.  Now if they click on the 'contact me for more information', that's like scanning a badge and you get their email address at that very moment.  At the end of the show, you're going to be able to download a list of the entire database of attendees to your computer right after the show so you can then reach out to them and contact them for sales.  We're trying to make this very content rich and very data-driven rich and giving the exhibitors the information in real-time so they can follow up on it.

DG:  Why should manufacturers with their own in-house heat treat be coming to the event?

TM:  The cool thing about attendees is that in every shop, everybody has three or four people that really 'get' everything they need to know about being an effective employee.  And then there are about four or five others that are always saying, “I wish I could be like them.”  And the difference in those two employees traditionally is training knowledge.  So the ability to bring the latest trends, technology to their computer screen and have them watch that, they're going to be a better employee because they're going to know more.  One key thing that's going to be really cool about this show for attendees, is that we've made it affordable for everybody to be involved.  Just like our live show, you can log in and register just to go look at the booths and the trade show.  And that's very powerful.  But here's what's going to happen.  There's a space on the exhibit booth where you can watch product demonstrations and we're encouraging every exhibitor to do a 7 – 10 minutes product demonstration video and upload it to their booth.  Let's say there are 100 exhibitors, your furnace operator, or your manager for that matter, can go in and watch every one of those product demonstrations on everything that you can imagine heat treat, that's going to be highly educational.  And that is free.  That is just if they go in and look at the booths.  On an upgrade, you can upgrade to the conference session, in which there are 35 conference sessions and four live sessions, that when they happen, they're going to be recorded live and then they're going to be made available immediately after that.

FNA seminar in 2018

DG:  Tell us about the highly informative and cutting edge content that will be covered in the technical sessions at Furnaces North America 2020 virtual event.

TM:  Let me share with you what some of the sessions are.  In the live format, we're going to be talking about the seven questions someone should always ask before buying heat treat equipment, the key behind managing and controlling distortion (that's a big issue and one of the most read things in your publication and Industrial Heating magazine), and the aerospace, automotive and agriculture.  What's next for that?  In the world of 3D printing technology, processes and materials that could impact more heat treating or less heat treating in a particular product.  When you've got the coming economic boon, reshoring with all of this COVID-19, things happening in China and other countries, how many companies are going to reshore their products back to America?  What does that mean for manufacturing, which can boost heat treating and the level that it is done in the states?  That's the four live sessions.  Then if we look at the technical track, there are four or five technical tracks that are going to be highly informative.  We've got furnace equipment and controls, processes and quality, emerging technologies, furnace maintenance and operations and productivity; all key things to any captive and/or commercial heat treater in operating a productive business that maximizes through-put.  Everything that we're doing this year is focused on helping a commercial or a captive to be very efficient.  Here's what's happened.  COVID has ransacked employeeship.  People have had to let people go and they're operating on minimal staff in a lot of cases.  So it's imperative that both captive and commercials learn how to operate with 20-30% staff, and you can only do that if your people know what they need to do knowledge-wise in order to that.

DG:  Somebody potentially wanting to attend, let's say some captive heat treater or even a commercial heat treater, they can go on the website, I assume, and look now at what the topics are going to be, correct? They can see what the technical sessions will be.

TM:  The entire Furnaces North America website has been transformed into our virtual show information.  You can go there right now and look at everything – the schedule, if you want to exhibit, you can hover over exhibitor and click exhibit information and it gives you all the details, and then a place to click to sign up your exhibit booth and we'll get that set up for you.  Registration is going to open August 1 for everyone.

[blocktext align="left"]"In the live format, we're going to be talking about the seven questions someone should always ask before buying heat treat equipment, the key behind managing and controlling distortion..."[/blocktext]I don't want to go too far without mentioning the pricing.  We are so determined to get people that never attend a live event to get involved in the show, here's the special offer we're making.  The first two people that register with any show (and you have to register at the same time) is only $199 and you get everything.  You get the trade show, you get the live session, you get the 35 technical sessions.  Everybody that registers after that for that show is only $49.  Literally, for $500, a captive or commercial could register up to six people into the show.  That is going to have a proton impact on that operation because that's six people that are more educated on what heat treating is about than they were before the show.

DG:  So that's $199 per person for the first two, and then $49/person after that.

TM:  That's correct.  That way you can get it down to the furnace operators.  Most people bring their managers, but if you could put your two managers in there and then get your six furnace operators in there, that's a really good deal.

DG:  The show covers September 30, October 1 and 2; I assume $49 or $199 gets you into all three days, correct?

TM:  That is correct.  Once you're signed in, you'll have logged in for the entire show, all three days, all six hours each day, to do whatever you'd like to do.

DG:  So, I'm a captive heat treater, I come to the show, I want to walk the exhibit hall.  How do I do it?

FNA Virtual Lounge

TM:  You're going to log in, and as soon as you log in, at the bottom you're going to see a place where you can go to the online networking lounge where you can actually meet people online.  You can click on exhibit hall where when you click on the exhibitor, the exhibitor will pop up.  You can look for them by category.  There are 15 categories.  There are air atmosphere furnaces, vacuum furnaces, control sensors, etc.  Pick what you want and all the exhibitors will pop up.  You can then go in and out of the booths from left to right.  And here's the powerful thing about the system: there's a search engine that you can type in calibration, every discussion, every session and every exhibitor that is involved with calibration and have it in their description is going to pop up for you.  We're making this really easy for you to get to the information, the sessions and/or the exhibitors that you want.

Here is the cool feature that is going to make this dynamic.  When we were building out the system, we were wanting to make the online experience as close to the live experience as possible.  So when you're looking at an exhibitor, and you like what they have to say and you want to speak to someone, you can click exhibit booth contact and that will pop up 6 people, or however many they have in the booth at that time. And when you click on one of them, clicking video call, just like you would a zoom or a skype and they're going to get a request.  They're going to then click yes, and you're going to be talking to someone right on your screen live like you would a zoom call.  You can see them, you can talk, you can virtual handshake if you want.  But here's the other cool factor: If you want to see a presentation they have, they can share their screen with you and you can walk through a short little power point presentation.

Our goal is give attendees the opportunity to see the data that they need to make purchases that they're looking to make over the next 12 months or so.

DG:  Let's wrap up with the details then.  Let's say I want to be an exhibitor.  Where do I need to go?  When do I need to do it?

TM:  Right now, you can go to www.furnacesnorthamerica.com, click on exhibitors and you'll see a space there where you can watch a video to tell you a little bit more about exhibiting at the show, or you can click down at the bottom where it says 'click here to get our booth', fill that out, and we will get your booth set up.  On August 1st, the exhibit hall is going to open for the exhibitors to go out and get their digital booth customized.  They get to pick colors.  They can link up their videos and documents so you can see those.

DG:  And if I'm thinking about attending, bringing my heat treat department, when and where?

TM:  Same thing.  August 1st, go to www.furnacesnorthamerica.com, click on attendees and click on register and then follow the prompts to register your team.

 

 

Doug Glenn, Publisher, Heat Treat Today
Doug Glenn, Heat Treat Today publisher and Heat Treat Radio host.


To find other Heat Treat Radio episodes, go to www.heattreattoday.com/radio and look in the list of Heat Treat Radio episodes listed.

HTT · Heat Treat Radio: Tom Morrison, CEO of the Metal Treating Institute

Heat Treat Radio #35: Reasons to Attend Furnaces North America with Tom Morrison, CEO of the Metal Treating Institute Read More »

Publisher’s Page: Where to Find the Best Aerospace Heat Treat Training

Heat Treat Today publishes four print magazines a year, and included in each is a letter from the publisher, Doug Glenn. This letter first appeared in Heat Treat Today‘s Aerospace Heat Treating magazine, March 2019.


Doug Glenn, Publisher, Heat Treat Today

If this is your first exposure to Heat Treat Today, welcome to the heat treat industry’s newest and most innovative media brand. You’re perusing our very first Aerospace Heat Treat special print and digital edition, but we have a host of other cutting-edge aerospace heat treat resources that you might find helpful.

Here’s what we’ll cover in this brief column. I’m going to tell you about a few other Heat Treat Today resources that might help your in-house heat treat crew and then we’ll highlight some of the industry’s best heat treat training opportunities. If you have any questions about anything you see here, contact me at doug@heattreattoday.com.

First, some shameless self-promotion of resources that the team at Heat Treat Today is providing or plans to provide in the near future.

? On our website, www.heattreattoday.com, we have a special section dedicated to aerospace. If you’re reading this column by means of the digital edition, you can click on the following link and you’ll be taken directly to that special aerospace section. If you’re reading a hard copy, just type this URL into your browser: https://www.heattreattoday.com/category/industries/aerospace-heat-treat/

? We have a daily e-newsletter that sometimes – on average once or twice a week – highlights aerospace heat treat news. You can subscribe to that e-newsletter by clicking on this URL: www.heattreattoday.com/subscribe.

? Every Tuesday as part of the daily e-newsletter mentioned above, we publish a technical article. We call it Technical Tuesday. These articles are not all specific to aerospace, but you might find them of interest.

? How about a podcast? Heat Treat Radio is something unique only to Heat Treat Today. We interview movers and shakers in the heat treat industry, many of whom have something to say about technologies in the aerospace industry. Click here to be taken to a list of recent episodes: www.heattreattoday.com/radio.

Two more:

? Heat Treat Consultants is a unique resource provided exclusively by Heat Treat Today. Essentially, this resource is a comprehensive list of heat treat industry consultants, many of whom have expertise in aerospace heat treating. Click here: www.heattreattoday.com/consultants.

? And, how about something brand, spanking new? If you’re social media savvy, why not join Heat Treat Today’s new “Leaders in Aerospace Heat Treating” LinkedIn Group – see the image in the center of this page. If you have a LinkedIn account, sign in and search for “Leaders in Aerospace Heat Treat.” Join the group and stay current on the latest technologies, products, processes, and discussions with other leaders in aerospace heat treat.

But enough about us! How about other resources for your in-house heat treat team? Consider the following:

? Our friends at ASM International are ALWAYS the go-to guys for heat treat training and education. They really can’t be beat. If your team is not a member of ASM’s Heat Treat Society, a special affiliate organization of ASM International, they really should be. ASM is constantly cranking out on-site and virtual training opportunities covering a wide range of heat treat topics – many pertinent to aerospace. Take, for example, Aeromat 2019. This event is billed as “Engineering the Future – Cutting Edge Aerospace Materials & Processes.” It just so happens that ASM publishes a journal called Advanced Materials & Processes. If you want more information about Aeromat 2019, here’s the website: https://www.asminternational.org/web/aeromat-2019.

? Industrial Heating Equipment Association (IHEA) also offers several training resources that might be helpful. The group’s “Fundamentals of Process Heating On-Line Course” runs from April 15 through May 26, and their NFPA 86 Update Seminar is scheduled for May 14 in Elgin, Illinois. More information can be found at www.ihea.org.

? Metal Treating Institute (MTI), the world’s largest network of commercial heat treaters, offers a very comprehensive Heat Treat Academy. Space doesn’t allow us to list all of the courses provided, but I would strongly recommend you check out this resource. Go to MTI’s website, www.heattreat.net, and click on “MTI Online Academy for Heat Treaters” under the “Training” tab.

? There are two other good heat treat publications in the industry besides Heat Treat Today, both offering excellent heat treat technical and news content. The industry granddaddy is Industrial Heating. They’ve been around since the 1920s. Good people and good product being published by these folks every month. Then there is Thermal Processing, which is published by a competent group in Alabama. They are relatively new to the heat treat industry, but you can’t tell by the high-quality content they produce. Check either of these publications on the web at www.industrialheating.com or www.thermalprocessing.com.

Enjoy the content in the following pages and know that it is just the tip of the iceberg. You can nd more at www.heattreattoday.com.

Publisher’s Page: Where to Find the Best Aerospace Heat Treat Training Read More »

Skip to content