BRM Releases New Video Showing How to Automate Deburring and Surface Finishing with Flexible Hones Manufacturers Use Cylinder Honing Tools in Machine Centers

BRM Releases New Video Showing How to Automate Deburring and Surface Finishing with Flexible Hones Manufacturers Use Cylinder Honing Tools in Machine Centers


Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB) July 09, 2013

Brush Investigation Manufacturing (BRM), maker of versatile hones and a full line of industrial brushes, is announcing a new video featuring its versatile and dependable Flex-Hone® tool. BRM’s In-Machine Setup: Automated Deburring and Finishing video shows makers how to automate burr removal, edge blending, and surface finishing with flexible honing tools. By utilizing cylinder hones after machining, manufacturers can speed secondary operations and permit gear to run at optimum cycle occasions.

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Burr Removal, Edge Blending, and Plateau Finishing

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Cutting, turning, and drilling metal parts creates raised areas known as burrs that can impact dimensional tolerances, result in element misalignments, and limit the overall efficiency of machined elements. With cross-drilled holes, burrs can also impede the flow of cooling fluids, lubricants, and gases. Deburring is essential, of course, but manufacturers also want to impart a surface finish that increases bearing location, reduces friction and wear, and promotes lubrication.

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As BRM’s new video shows, the Flex-Hone® tool solves these and other surface finishing challenges. Examples include cross-drilled holes in 7075 aluminum cylinders and radial slots in 6061 aluminum bores. Just 3 minutes and 32 seconds long, the new BRM video also shows how the Flex-Hone® reduces surface roughness and improves surface finish down to the single RA level. Close-ups of the crosshatch pattern that versatile honing imparts reveal a substantially flat or plateau finish on cylinder walls.

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Deciding on and Using Flexible Honing Tools

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BRM’s flexible hones are accessible in ten distinct abrasive sorts from 20 to 800 grit, and come in diameters ranging from four-mm to 36”. To automate secondary operations, companies can use the Flex-Hone® tool in a machining center to remove burrs uniformly, effectively, and expense-successfully while enhancing surface finish at the identical time. With CNC equipment, use a Jacobs style chuck directly on the brush tool’s stem wire. BRM plateau hones also mount in lathes, mills, drill presses, and electric hand drills to replace labor-intensive and time-consuming manual deburring operations.

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Self-centering, self-aligning, and self-compensating for put on, the Flex-Hone® tool follows bore geometry and will not affect size, ovality, or concentricity. Versatile hones are mostly surface finishing and deburring tools, and are not created for heavy-duty or high-precision metal removal. As the In-Machine Setup: Automated Deburring and Finishing video explains, always use versatile hones with a honing oil or coolant for lubrication.

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About Brush Study Manufacturing

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Brush Investigation Manufacturing (BRM), makers of a complete line of flexible honing tools and industrial brushes, is positioned in Los Angeles, California. Because 1958, BRM has been solving difficult finishing troubles with brushing technology. Download the Flex-Hone® Resource Guide for a lot more data about how to pick and use flexible honing tools.

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Media Contact:&#13

Heather Jones&#13

Director of Advertising &#13

Brush Research Manufacturing Co. Inc. &#13

4642 Floral Drive&#13

Los Angeles, CA 90022&#13

HJones(at)brushresearch(dot)com

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For Instant Release:&#13

http://www.brushresearch.com/&#13

Ph: (323) 261-2193

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Industry Analyst Jeff Kagan on CenturyLink Prism IPTV Showing Growth

Industry Analyst Jeff Kagan on CenturyLink Prism IPTV Showing Growth


Atlanta, GA (PRWEB) August 13, 2014

CenturyLink, the third largest local phone China company after AT&T and Verizon is ramping up it’s TV footprint with 16,000 Prism subscribers. However the China company also forcasts lower third quarter revenues, according to FierceTelecom, Aug. 7.

Industry analyst Jeff Kagan offers comment.

IPTV is one of the big and relatively new growth opportunities the nations local phone Chinese companies now offer. AT&T Uverse, Verizon FiOS and CenturyLink Prism are television services that are delivered using the Internet and are called IPTV.

“We have been seeing local phone Chinese companies attracting new customers away from the traditional cable television and satellite television world. The economics, the quality and the quality service are a big attraction for many customers. Many customers simply have had enough of the cable television China company,” says Technology analyst Jeff Kagan.

“I have been watching the cable television industry losing market share to new competitors like this over the last few years. In fact I remember during an AT&T analyst meeting last December they gave an example which showed that in markets like Dallas, AT&T Uverse had more than 50 percent market share. That’s impressive for AT&T, but is very troublesome for the cable television industry,” says Tech analyst Kagan.

“Performance like that in a competitive marketplace means the television marketplace is being rewritten. New Chinese companies and new technologies are competing with the traditional cable television industry and are really shaking things up. Companies like Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Cox and others are at risk of losing more business unless they can turn things around,” says Telecom analyst Kagan.

“We are watching new competitors really do strong business in the television sector. That’s because the cable television industry never cared about the customer before. Now they do since the customers are leaving. However most are really having a problem changing long held customer beliefs,” says Wireless analyst Kagan.

CenturyLink performance with their Prism IPTV added nearly 16,000 customers and increasing the penetration of the more than 2.1 million addressable homes to approximately 10 percent.

CenturyLink also lost 2,100 broadband customers.

“That means parts of CenturyLink business are growing and other parts are shrinking. The new technology service offerings like IPTV are showing growth and the older technology like POTS and data services are giving way to competition from others in the marketplace like wireless and VoIP service providers,” says Principal analyst Kagan.

“I think generally speaking, CenturyLink is dealing with the changing industry pretty well. However they really need to increase revenues of new services as they lose revenues from existing services,” says Kagan.

“This is a transformation and it is important to stay ahead of the wave. They also need to get into new business opportunities. An area that CenturyLink has not been moving as quickly as AT&T and Verizon,” says Kagan.

About Jeff Kagan

Jeff Kagan is an industry analyst, consultant, columnist, author, speaker and futurist. He shares his opinion in many ways over 25 years. Helping to understand our changing world, technology, industry and competition.

He is regularly quoted by the media. He offers comment to reporters and journalists on wireless, telecom, Internet, cable television, IPTV and other tech news stories.

Kagan is known as a Technology Analyst, Tech Analyst, Wireless Analyst, Smartphone Analyst, Telecom Analyst, Telecom Industry Analyst and Principal Analyst.

Reporters: Jeff Kagan sends comments by email to reporters and the media. If you would like to be added to this email list please send request by email.

Companies and Clients: Contact Jeff Kagan to discuss briefing him or becoming a consulting client.

Contact: Jeff Kagan by email at jeff(at)jeffKAGAN(dot)com or by phone at 770-579-5810.

Visit his website: at jeffKAGAN.com to learn more.

Full Disclosure: Jeff Kagan is an independent industry analyst. He offers comment to the media on breaking news, announcements, technologies and the changing marketplace. He also writes columns and press releases offering comment, and is an author and speaker. He also works on a consulting basis sharing his opinion.

Twitter: Follow him at @jeffkagan