r/Industrial

▲ 144 r/Industrial+1 crossposts

Tube magazine feeder

Hello. I would like to get some ideas on how I could extend this tube feeder magazine while staying inside the safety fence. Or does anyone have a complete redesign for a much better design? I need to be able to feed it from the outside of the cage. I don't have too much room in the cell and I am looking to find a way to fit more of the tubes. The machine goes through about 1 tube every 4 or 5 seconds. With only room for 8 tubes that's only about a 40 second
buffer.

It would be nice to have at least a few minutes buffer so the operator had time to do other small things
while feeding the machine.

Thanks.

u/Individual_School_81 — 9 days ago
▲ 3 r/Industrial+2 crossposts

Hannay Reels to be sold, will stay in Westerlo

This is one of the saddest articles I’ve read in a long time. “Our friendly competitor will let us do our own thing!” Madison Industries has liquidated 70% of its portfolio in the last year and has tried to sell its reels business for years. PE will shut this thing down and ruin that family legacy in about 9 months. I can’t believe this owner really believes what he says here.

altamontenterprise.com
u/BirdIllustrious4858 — 8 days ago
▲ 1 r/Industrial+2 crossposts

Industrial Engineer Needed: Sense Check Design and Material Choices for a Injection-Moulded Pet Toy (TPE/Silicone/NR) to Survive ~3+ Months Chewing – Material + Tooling Advice.

Hello. I am looking for an industrial engineer to give unbiased advice regarding choice of material for an injection moulded chewable pet toy. The product needs to be flexible with strong puncture resistance.

I am torn between the following choices: silicone, natural rubber and TPE
Ideally I wanted NR but cost per unit is putting me off (coming off the tool as £2 and over) and was told if I choose the wrong shore hardness the tool couldn't be used on a different rubber with a higher shore hardness due to the way NR cures. Plus not many people who like working with it in the UK.
Silicone was the next choice but its puncture resistance seems lower and so far with my prototypes don't look like they stand the test of time very well - still in testing though. Plus less people who working with it in the UK compared to plastic.
TPE keeps coming up as perhaps a good medium but I have not had much exposure to it plus liked the idea of being non plastic reliant due to ingestion risk and environmental factors.

I have in progress silicone and latex rubber prototypes to test out but I am unable to find if you can create TPE prototypes at home (liquid pourable TPE) - I found one liquid TPE replica (PT Flex Liquid Rubbers) but it was sold out.

Anyway I have read online that I could perhaps use two materials, one tougher part to reduce puncturing and softer part moulded over the top however I have concerns this would rapidly increase costs.

I am a small start up business so can't just throw money at the tool and hope for the best as I really only have one shot. Looking for the option with affordable - medium price tooling and low cost per unit off the tool ideally. The part is small which helps <100g.

Looking for someone who has experience working with these materials and can give advice on longevity and puncture resistance for each material. Is there anyone that can give some advice on materials and their physical application / point me towards a suitable consultation services or freelancer?
I would be looking for a 60 minute chat. NDA signing will be required due to the part being complex so adviser would need to know the full product and its application.

I have spoke to various tooling companies to get rough quotes so know the making the tool itself is possible but each company is recommending their own material as the most suitable but from preliminary testing I am cautious of rushing into the tooling and having a finished product which doesn't last long enough due to nature of item.

I am knew to manufacturing so I hope this is okay question to ask, any tips would be amazing. Based in the UK. Thank you

reddit.com
u/CourtneyMixOk3667 — 8 days ago

Is bachelors in industrial engineering worth it??

hi everyone, i got into Industrial engineering bachelors program in germany at DIT. im having second thoughts if this bachelors degree is really worth it or not? ive heard multiple opinions but lowkey im doubtful. Please, i really need your true advice.

reddit.com
u/Brilliant_Egg_7624 — 8 days ago
▲ 43 r/Industrial+1 crossposts

Any advice? ( plus some of my work )

I recently got a job at roofing plant in working in the shipping department and honestly the job is really easy and low stress so far. I found out after 6 months we can apply internally to different departments, and I’ve been thinking about trying to move into maintenance eventually.

I talked to one of the maintenance guys today and he told me it was good I already have around 3 years of welding and pipefitting experience, but he also told me to “lie a little to get in the door” and say I know things like hydraulics on lifts and stuff like that.

That kind of threw me off because I don’t want to completely fake experience with something dangerous, but I also don’t want to come off unsure or inexperienced when I ask questions or eventually apply.

For people already in industrial maintenance:
- What should I realistically learn before applying?
- Is it better to just learn on the job?
- Should I go back to school or do certifications?
- What mechanical/electrical skills are most important in plants nowadays?
- How would you approach talking to maintenance supervisors without sounding unconfident?

For context:
- I already know welding, fabrication, and pipefitting pretty well
- I’m comfortable with tools and industrial environments
- I want stable long-term work and something I can grow in
- I also don’t want to get thrown into something way over my head

Any advice?

u/thugwafflee_222 — 14 days ago