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Injection moulding seminar in Bradford

A Kistler Instruments product story
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk editorial team Jul 1, 2005

Kistler Instruments will be holding a free, one-day seminar in the Polymer Engineering Laboratories at Bradford University on the 20th September 2005.

Kistler Instruments will be holding a free, one-day seminar in the Polymer Engineering Laboratories at Bradford University on the 20th September 2005.

The seminar, aimed at those with responsibility for injection moulding operational efficiency and product quality, will cover both the theoretical and practical application of mould cavity pressure monitoring to optimise the moulding process to increase productivity by reducing waste and reject product.

Two sessions in the morning will be led by Dr-Ing Oliver Schnerr, head of Kistler's injection moulding technology department, followed, in the afternoon, by three hands-on workshops demonstrating the practical application of the techniques.

The seminar, including all course material, lunch and refreshments, is free to injection moulding engineers and managers.

To ensure that all delegates can fully participate in the hands-on workshops, places on the courses will be strictly limited and places can be reserved by contacting Abbie Bell at Kistler Instruments on 01420 544477.

Established in Wintherthur (Switzerland) in 1957, Kistler is represented in over 50 countries and has subsidiaries in Germany, France, Italy, UK, Japan, USA, China, Korea and Singapore.

Heavy investment in research and development, 15% of staff worldwide are engaged in research and development, has generated a number of innovations using piezoelectric, piezoresistive and capacitive techniques to provide solutions to numerous force, pressure and acceleration measuring problems.

These innovations include the world's first commercial quartz sensor, two-wire constant current technology to integrate sensors with microelectronic circuitry, high-temperature pressure sensors for use up to 400 Deg C and three-component force measuring sensors.

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A Pro-talk Publication

A Pro-talk publication