Author: Serkadis

  • Secretive Patent Holder Sues Lots Of Companies For Remote Activation Software

    Brian points us to the news of yet another questionable patent lawsuit filed by yet another shell company, yet again in Eastern Texas against a ton of software companies. The patent in question (5,222,134) is for a “secure system for activating personal computer software at remote locations,” and was originally filed back in 1991 and granted in 1993 — meaning that the patent is actually nearing end of life. Odd, then, that it was suddenly noticed that all these companies were infringing. The lawsuit is filed by a shell company called BetaNet, and no one seems willing to speak. The lawyers representing BetaNet won’t say who is behind the company, or how they even got the patent. This is typical. Many of these types of lawsuits are filed by shell companies to hide who is actually behind them. As for the defendants, here’s the list:


    Adobe, Apple, Arial Software, Autodesk, Carbonite, Corel, Kodak, IBM, Intuit, Microsoft, McAfee, Online Holdings, Oracle, Rockwell, Rosetta Stone, SAP, Siemens, and Sony.

    Obviously, none of those companies could have come up with ways to remotely activate software without this patent (yes, that’s sarcasm). As the Register notes in the link above, even some of the software products listed as violating this patent don’t seem to involve activation at all, raising serious questions about how they could possibly violate this patent. This sounds like yet another case of someone having read the book Rembrandt’s in the Attic and deciding to go trolling for companies to sue with a meaningless patent.

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  • What Is The Origin Of The Superstition About Horseshoes?

    Many cultures consider horseshoes to be a good luck charm and their placement and shape are very important. A horseshoe is hung on a door with the ends pointing up as to have them pointing down brings bad luck. The idea behind this is that the good fortune will spill out if it is facing down. Some people also believe that you must find a horseshoe that has been lost by a horse for it to be lucky. A few traditions dictate that any luck – either good or bad– will only affect the owner/finder of the horseshoe and not simply the person who hangs it up. Some people believe that guests must enter and leave a house under the same door with the horseshoe hung over it in order to take the luck with them.

    The story of Saint Dunstan and the Devil tells of a blacksmith who becomes the Archbishop of Canterbury in 959 AD. It is said that Saint Dunstan once nailed a horseshoe to the Devil’s hoof when he requested re-shoeing. Seeing that the Devil was in great pain, Dunstan made the Devil promise never to enter a place that had a horseshoe hung over the door. Horseshoes are made by blacksmiths who work with fire and iron which were considered magical and so the trade was considered lucky. Many believed blacksmiths could heal the sick and that if they presided over a marriage it would be a lucky one. Another lucky aspect of the horseshoe is that it is held in place by seven iron nails. Seven has long been thought a lucky, significant number.

  • Economical price 3D laser scanning kit

    RIFTEK has just introduced a new low cost kit for 3D laser scanning. The kit has been developed for use with any type of working CNC machines with any type of control. The supply package includes an RIFTEK Series RF603 triangulation laser sensor, synchronization module and software package. In the scanning mode, the machine CNC system sequentially moves the laser sensor over the prototype of the product thus forming a digitized model of the prototype. The model obtained is memorized as a ‘cloud of dots’ as well as in a general STL format suitable for subsequent use in CNC machining

  • AC Servo Amplifier R built-in positioning function

    SANYO DENKI EUROPE SA. is pleased to introduce their “SANMOTION R ” with built-in positioning function AC servo drives. Available in both serial interface (RS-485 Modbus-RTU) and DI/DO interface version, this serie has been greatly simplified as the positioning control unit becomes unnecessary.

    Specifications :

    •Main input voltage: 200 to 230VAC +10, -15%, 50/60Hz +/-3Hz 100 to 115VAC +10, -15%, 50/60Hz +/-3Hz
    •Control input voltage: 200 to 230VAC +10, -15%, 50/60Hz +/-3Hz
    •Power capacity: 6 models up to 300Amps
    •Interface: Serial interface (RS-485 Modbus-RTU) or DI/DO interface
    •R-Setup Software: Parameters setting, Auto-tuning, DI/DO configuration, Oscilloscope, Alarm History, Test mode
    •Standards: CE, UL and cUL
    •Positioning function specifications:
    configurable positions: up to 254 points (P000 to P253)
    maximum range of commands: from -2147483648 to +2147483647
    command unit: mm (linear axis) or pulse (rotary axis)
    point data setup: numerical input via PC, or setup by teaching
    travel point number setup: parallel 8 bits (binary code) or RS-485
    current limit
    travel modes: zero return, manual (JOG, 1step) and point-specified travel, JUMP, REPEAT, S-CURVE…
    zone signal: maximum of 8 zones

    Main features :

    •Simple System
    A maximum of 254 positions can be pre-registered. The amplifier allows to set 4 types of servo gain patterns, speed, acceleration / deceleration and S-curve acceleration/deceleration for each target position. After moving to the first point, it jumps to the next specified point. Point command is repeatedly executable for specified times. The system can be terminated when hitting any object while moving. Since positioning control unit is unnecessary, it saves wiring and system space.
    •Infinite or finite coordinates
    Either infinite coordinates (where object unlimitedly keeps moving), or finite coordinates (where object moves to a constant point) are selectable. Within infinite coordinates, the object may choose shortest way to the target point.
    •Serial Interface Model Added to Lineup
    only 3 wirings needed for serial interface, where to 50 wirings for I/O interface. PC is directly connected as a host device. The host device can change and rewrite travel data and the parameters of points.

    For further information on Sanyo Denki «SANMOTION R with built-in positioning function » AC servo drives, please contact us at +33 1 48 63 26 61 or email us at [email protected].

  • Top 10 Windows Mobile Apps – number 8

    Today we have number 8 of Michael Gannotti’s top 10 Windows Mobile applications, being published on the Windows blog.

    Number 8 is Microsoft’s My Phone service, which of course is the Windows Mobile automated backup and cloud service.  Cant say I disagree with him – My Phone is just great and can be found in the Windows Mobile Marketplace.

    Michael is a Technology Specialist for the Microsoft Corporation and the author of the blog SocialMedia Talk.

    Follow the series at the Windows Blog here.

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  • Google Browser Size, an Interesting Tool for Web Developers

    Google has its hands in a huge number of projects with wildly varied scopes and means yet they all center on one thing, the web. Weather it’s releasing a new DNS service or thinking how will people access web apps in five years time with Chrome OS it’s easy to forget one simple thing, for most people the web means what they can see in their browsers, everything else doesn’t really matter. Unsurprisingly, Google has people handling the more practical issues as well, and one of them has released a tool used internally to determine how many visitors actually see a portion of a web page.

    “To help you understand how everyone sees your website, we created a tool called Browser Size in our 20% time. Browser Size is based on a sample of data from visitors to google.com. Special code collects data on the height and width of the browser for a sample of users,” Bruno Bowden, senior software engineer at Google wrote.

    “For a given point in the browser, the tool will tell you what percentage of users can see it. For example, if an important button is in the 80% region it means that 20% of users have to scroll in order to see it.”

    Brower Size is a simple Labs project which can give web designers a lot of insight into what most people are going to see straight away on their … (read more)

  • Less TV Means More Activity

    Researchers found that adults who had a bit of help lowering their TV watching time also burned more calories. Any activity, other than sleeping, burns more calories than sitting idly in front of the tube.

    The study, published in Archives of Internal Medicine, is the first to measure the effects of a TV reduction intervention in adults. Researchers hope that a new focus on reducing sedentary behaviors may help to curb the obesity epidemic.

    play-board-games

    Some individuals in the study group received an electronic device that turned off the TV after a weekly limit of 50% of previously measured TV viewing time. The control group didn’t receive the device. An armband was used to measure physical activity in the groups.

    Study participants with the lock-out systems burned 119 more calories per day during the three-week intervention period than during the previous observation period. The control group burned 95 fewer calories per day during same period than they did during the observation period.

    The average adult watches five hours of TV per day. Have you considered what else you’d do with your TV viewing time? Even simple tasks like playing a board game or folding laundry burn more calories than TV viewing. With less TV, you may finally get around to organizing your junk drawer, putting together a scrapbook, teaching tricks to the dog, vacuuming under the sofa, exploring that new healthy eating book and much more.

    Would you use a device to turn your TV off after a set amount of viewing each week?

    (Image via stock.xchng)

    Post from: Blisstree

    Less TV Means More Activity

  • Palestine and Israel Workshop – Making Monitoring Work: Strategic Action

    Diakonia, Avocats Sans Frontières and Al-Haq have the pleasure to invite you to a workshop about the exploration of strategic legal avenues to address accountability for violations of international law committed in the context of Israel and Palestine.

    The event will take place in Brussels on
    17 December 2009from 9:00 to 18:00 at
    Résidence Palace – International Press Centre
    Room Maelbeek
    Rue de la Loi 155 – Bloc C

    The workshop is a follow-up event to last year’s “Making Monitoring Work”, which brought together Palestinian, Israeli and European Human Rights NGOs and lawyers to discuss strategies to combat impunity for violations of international law.

    Last year’s seminar focused on legal accountability in Israel and on
    networking between local Israeli/Palestinian and European lawyers to
    discuss approaches to enforce international law in Europe. This year, the
    event will address access to legal remedies and strategic advocacy, and
    aims at consolidating networks and concrete action plans. The workshop shall be conducted, amongst others, by experts on corporate accountability and legal advocacy, offering the participants a valuable
    opportunity to network and to engage in discussion with international legal experts.

    Please find attached a draft programme of the workshop, the final version
    will be sent to you shortly. To confirm your participation, please contact grazia_diakonia palnet.com

  • Sierra Plays Pivotal Role in Biogas Production For Energy Savings

    MONTEREY, CA – November 25, 2009 – Santa Cruz Wastewater Treatment Facility in Santa Cruz, California has chosen Sierra’s Immersible Thermal Mass Flow Meters for their ground breaking renewable energy programs. Santa Cruz Wastewater Treatment Facility generates their own electric power by using internal-combustion engines which burn a mixture of methane gas produced by the sewage digestion process and purchased natural gas, producing 7.4 million kwH of electric power per year. In the conversion of solid wastes to high-efficiency fuel in this application, digestion plays a critical first step in producing raw biogas. For Santa Cruz Wastewater Treatment Facility, Sierra’s Immersible Thermal Mass Flow Meters deliver critical readings indicating exact digestive status while controlling the final step of precisely blending the cleaned and compressed biogas with natural gas. Using Sierra’s thermal meters to harness this alternative energy saves the wastewater treatment money in energy costs and the planet by preventing CO2 emissions from polluting the atmosphere. Read complete application story here https://sierrainstruments.com/chronicles/stories/santa_cruz_wwtf.html

    Complete technical information on Sierra’s Immersible Thermal Mass Flow Meters is available online at http://sierrainstruments.com/products/heavyindustry.html or free of charge from Sierra Instruments, Inc., 5 Harris Court, Building L, Monterey, CA 93940, phone 800.866.0200, fax 831.373.4402.

    About Sierra
    A global leader in flow measurement and control for over 35 years, Sierra instruments designs and manufactures high performance flow instrumentation for gas, liquid and steam applications commonly found in industries such as semiconductor, environmental, scientific research, petrochemical, energy, aerospace, and general manufacturing. With over 150 offices in 50 countries, Sierra is uniquely positioned to provide their innovative products and lifetime support for the leading companies of today and the growth enterprises of tomorrow.

  • Highest A1C in a LONG time…yay stress

    So, my A1C came back today, hope you’re sitting down…10.8% 🙁 I’m not really surprised though. So, for anyone who kept up on some of my earlier posts, my leave from work (a very demanding job that required commuting) started Saturday. I am not due to return to work until February 22nd (so that I can attend the Behavioral Diabetes Institute’s workshops in January-February). Papers for work and the medical leave through the state are all submitted…and my ENDO refused to sign off on the time off. My CDE (who is also a T1 and sees the same ENDO) is in full support of my decision and is going to talk to the @ss tomorrow to see if she can win him over and get the docs signed. Unfortunately, since I already started the leave (I did get a note from my primary to cover me until the end of the year) I stand to lose my medical insurance that is provided through my work if I do not get a doctors approval for the leave. California blows. Anyway, I start basal checks tomorrow morning (if I can get my blood sugar to agree with me that is…). I have never done basal checks before…not really looking forward to it. But I know it will REALLY help, as will being able to set a schedule for myself that I can follow. Looking forward to getting things in line and a better A1C result soon! Shouldn’t be too hard to do better than 10.8%…right? 🙁
  • UK Charities Find Out They Need To Pay Yet Another Music Royalty

    Just in time for the holiday season, SteveD alerts us to the news that PPL, Phonographic Performance Limited — a separate UK licensing group, which collects for performers and producers (unlike PRS, which is for songwriters/record companies) — is pushing forward with demands for charity shops to pay up for a license on top of the license they already pay PRS. In the past, the UK government exempted charities from having to pay the PPL license, but they’ve now removed that exemption, and like so many music collections societies, PPL didn’t bother to consider how it would look to shake down charity shops, and apparently just drove forward with plans. Nice of them. This is what happens, of course, when you create the statutory ability to shake down anyone who plays music. That right just expands more and more, and the musicians and songwriters never have to actually give people a reason to buy: they just sit back and collect.

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  • An Extra Quart of milk in Pure-Pak… please (Jan, 1950)

    An Extra Quart of milk in Pure-Pak… please

    . . . EXTRA quarts are easier to buy in Pure-Pak It’s so much easier to carry extra milk when you buy it in Pure-Pak, your personal milk container. There are no deposits and no “dead weight” glass bottles to carry to and from the store. Pure-Pak takes much less refrigerator space too … and when it’s empty, just toss it away!

    Pure-Pak is safe. It won’t shatter, if dropped. It’s sanitary. It’s formed, sterilized, filled and sealed in the dairy, all in seconds . . . without the touch of human hands! Ask for your milk in Pure-Pak!

    Pure-Pak Council 1200 OAKMAN BLVD. • DETROIT 32, MICH.

    SPONSORS: Ex-Cell-O Corp. • Dairypak, Inc. • Fibreboard Products, Inc. • International Paper Co. • Kieckhefer Container Co.

    DAIRIES: Get the facts on the operating efficiency and customer satisfaction now offered by Pure-Pak containers in 45 states—write or wire today!

    Pure-Pak YOUR PERSONAL MILK CONTAINER is available NOW in hundreds of cities

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  • Santa Needs a Makeover

    The current image of Santa promotes obesity, speeding and possibly “drink-driving,” complained Australian researcher and public health expert Dr. Nathan Grills. His work on Santa’s image was published online this month on BMJ.com. The analysis is called Santa Claus: a public health pariah?

    santa-fat

    According to Grills, Santa is the only fictional character more highly recognized by American school kids than Ronald McDonald. And a recent study confirmed that Santa awareness is almost universal. With that kind of recognition, it stands to reason that perhaps Santa’s rotund figure could use some trimming down to promote more healthful living. And maybe he could ride a bike instead of sitting in a sleigh powered by magic reindeer. Yet, who’s ready to mess with an icon? It’s like making the Cookie Monster less fond of cookies. Oh, that’s been done…

    Grills also argues that Santa has been used to promote harmful products, and he could also promote driving after drinking due to the tradition of leaving a brandy out for Santa. Other popular Santa treats include cookies and mince pies — not exactly healthy either.

    Grills noted, “Santa only needs to affect health by 0.1% to damage millions of lives.” He’d like to see Santa’s popularity used to promote healthy living instead of magical laziness.

    Grills thinks more research on Santa’s influence is needed, but he’d like to see a slimmer Santa next year. Despite Santa’s faults, he does have some good points, like symbolizing the spirit of giving and helping to create a reverence for old guys.

    Do you think that Santa is bad for public health, or should he get a break?

    (Image via stock.xchng)

    Post from: Blisstree

    Santa Needs a Makeover

  • Household Inventions (Dec, 1928)

    Good job Scientific American! Hard to get more high-tech than a bathroom dresser.

    Household Inventions

    INSECT CONTROLLER
    Getting into the crevices where insects breed and multiply may now be done efficiently with the equipment shown above and to the right. The special container full of insecticide is attached to the handle of a vacuum cleaner and the blower attachment then thoroughly spreads the insecticide.— Airway Electric Appliance Corp., Toledo, Ohio

    DUSTLESS FIREPLACE
    Despite the very modern heating equipment of today, the open fireplace is still in vogue. Thus there remains the problem of ash removal. The illustration at the left shows a skeletonized fireplace which has a special ash trap and chute to the basement. Above is shown the trap. Instead of shoveling the ashes into a can and carrying them out, all that is necessary when this device is installed is to give the lever a pull and the ashes fall into the basement—Fireplace Devices Co., 136 W. 83rd St., New York

    ELECTRIC IRON CABINET
    To be installed in the wall next to the folding ironing board or other convenient place, this cabinet prevents electric iron fires. The hot iron may be safely closed in the steel and asbestos cabinet. — The Cunningham Mfg. Co., Los Angeles, California

    NON-SLIP HANGER
    A push on the triggers of this device causes the upper arms to fly up. When a button is pushed, the padded arms spring down on the garment.—Kno-Fall Garment Hangers, Inc., 720 Madison Ave., New York

    SERVING SCOOP
    Like the “cut-out” scoops used for ice cream at soda fountains, this new one of aluminum is sold in five and ten cent stores. It is useful for serving ice cream, rice, or mashed potatoes. —Lorraine Metal Mfg. Co., New York

    BATHROOM DRESSER
    A handy cabinet that takes only a few inches of floor space and offers a dresser top for toilet articles, an open shelf for towels, storage shelves for soaps, sponges, brushes, et cetera, and a ventilated compartment for soiled linen. It is made in several sizes to be set into or against the wall.—El Paso Sash and Door Co., El Paso, Texas

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  • New Slant on Bicycles (Jan, 1936)

    New Slant on Bicycles

    EVERY man his own streamline is the idea of Fred Strecker, English rider, in the bicycle design at right.

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  • IDEAS AT WORK (Jan, 1949)

    IDEAS AT WORK
    A MONTHLY PICTURE REPORT ABOUT SCIENCE IN INDUSTRY

    New turbines help meet soaring demand for power In New York, an electric power expert looked at a wall chart. A jagged line, crawling across a graph, showed a soaring sweep upwards. It was like the fever chart of a patient with double lobar pneumonia. “You see that line?” the power man asked. “That is the amount of electric power America is using today. If it goes up at the same rate in 1949 we are going to have to add more paper to the top of the chart.”

    On these pages you can see more evidence of how much power is being used. To meet the demand, to pull the needed power out of oil and water and coal, America’s turbine engineers have been swamped with work.

    In 1948, General Electric, biggest turbine maker, set an all-time record: around 60 giant turbine-generators, enough to supply power for most of the. 7,000,000 residents in the state of California. With power needs approaching 6 billion kilowatt hours a week in 1949, compared with around 4.3 billion in 1946, G.E. this year will open at Schenectady, N. Y., one of the world’s largest factories, a $30,000,000 turbine plant: a sort of Willow Run for the power industry.

    Trend in turbines is toward higher speeds and higher pressures. 1940 turbines roared under 1,300 pounds of steam per square inch; today’s newest machines whirl faster than sound at a terrific steam pressure: one runs at 2,300 pounds, or over a ton against every square inch of its blades.

    In 1949, G.E. plants in Pittsfield, Mass., and Portsmouth, N. H., will use turbine-generators driven by mercury vapor, which may be more economical than steam. (These are now used in Kearney, N. J., Hartford, Conn., Schenectady.) In time, atomic energy will unleash new hurricanes of vapor in these turbine windmills.

    Main reason for the tremendous power demand is that there are 6,000,000 more power users in the U.S. today than when the war ended.

    SECRET-KEEPER Burgess Smith uses no labels on the bottles Smith, who thinks bank checks can be made to talk (see text). in his laboratory, identifies their contents by smell or taste. mistrusts labels and files, and so keeps most secrets in his head.

    An idea for the future: checks that talk?

    IN Rochester, N. Y., one of the world’s top experts on printing and engraving has been playing with an exciting idea. Your checks may some day carry a hidden sound track, and your own voice may protect your bank account from forgers.

    It hasn’t been perfected yet, but Burgess Smith, research chief for the Todd Co., which prints forgery-proof checks, says preliminary laboratory work indicates it can be done.

    When you write a check, you also speak identifying words. When the bank passes your check through a sorting machine your voice okays the check. It will also be possible to record your voice on a sound track concealed beneath your handwriting; if the writing has been changed, additional words become audible by a secret method.

    Over a period of years, the Todd Co. has brought out one invention after another for protecting checks, payrolls and securities. The first, in 1899, was the familiar “protectograph” which presses the numbers into the fibers of a check so they cannot be altered.

    The powder that hardens steel

    Machinists and metallurgists are beginning to hear about a gray metallic powder which makes a blade of soft steel become hard enough, in a few seconds, to cut through tough tool steel. Now a mechanic or amateur can dip a tool of ordinary low carbon steel in powder and produce a tool that will cut satisfactorily and resist battering.

    A dime-store drill, or a home-made chisel fashioned from “poor stuff,” is heated cherry red, then dipped into a powder named by its inventor “Hi- Speed-It.” Bubbling and fusing, the powder is drawn into the metal—and seconds later the tool is ready. The inventor, Samuel Necamp, New York metallurgist, makes the compound of expensive alloys, but what the constituents are and how he puts them together he hasn’t disclosed. Unlike earlier hardening preparations, this requires no bath, contains no cyanide, is non-poisonous. In his laboratory, recently, and in a test at Columbia University, Necamp showed what “the stuff,” as he calls it, will do.

    “I drove into a garage one day,” Necamp says, “and heard a mechanic grumbling because his drills had lost their edge and would not go through an auto bumper. I went to a store and got a soft carbon drill. I heated it, dipped it in a can of the stuff I had in my car. ‘Now try it,’ I said. He did. It went through that tough bumper steel in five seconds.”

    Until recently, Necamp produced only limited amounts of his powder, but this year plans large scale production. Among his customers are such varied industries as American Can Co., Wilson & Co., U.S. Rubber and Bethlehem Steel.

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  • Spinworx® – We’ve got the knack!

    +++ “Inserts have to be rigidly coupled with the cutter body!” +++
    General statement in milling technology, or did you have other alternatives?

    SPINWORX® – the new system of milling cutters with round inserts puts into question, which has been an effective operation for decades.: the insert has to be rigidly coupled to the cutter body. In case it would be loose in its insert-seat, it would break, earlier or later!
    Not at all with SPINWORX® – the insert rotates and thus, manual re-locating becomes redundant. Through the rotating insert in the seat of the milling cutter, notch wear is not occuring any more; so you get a 100%-utilization of the existing cutting edge and you are able to use maximum capacity without any loss.
    SPINWORX® sets new standards!

  • Announcing a new model in the NMV Series, ideal for small workpieces!

    Mori Seiki Co., Ltd. will start accepting orders for the NMV3000 DCG high-precision, 5-axis control vertical machining center from July 9, 2009.

    In recent years, the production of various parts that can help improve energy efficiency has been increasing in many industries including automobiles and aircraft. In accordance with this trend, the demand for high-precision, high-efficiency machining of small, complex-shaped workpieces has been growing, and so the need for machine tools that can meet these machining requirements and offer excellent ease of use has also been increasing.

    In response to this need, Mori Seiki has developed the NMV3000 DCG, the latest model in our NMV Series of high-precision, 5-axis control vertical machining centers.

    For the NMV Series, we started with the aim of developing the ideal 5-axis control machine, which combines high-speed, high-precision machining and excellent operability. The existing models in this series include the NMV5000 DCG (Max. workpiece size: Æ 700 mm x 450 mm, Max. loading capacity: 300 kg) and the NMV8000 DCG (Max. workpiece size: Æ 1,000 mm x 500 mm, Max. loading capacity: 1,000 kg). Both machines employ Mori Seiki’s original technologies of DCG (Driven at the Center of Gravity), DDM (Direct Drive Motor) and ORC (Octagonal Ram Construction), and have the Top Box-in-Box construction. By fully utilizing these features, both machines have achieved high-speed, high-precision machining and received high praise from many customers.

    The newly released NMV3000 DCG boasts a maximum workpiece size of Æ 350 mm x 300 mm and a maximum loading capacity of 100 kg (150 kg as option). By employing Mori Seiki’s original technologies, like the existing models in the series, the NMV3000 DCG achieves high-speed, high-precision machining. In regard to operability, we have shortened the distance from the front of the machine to the table to offer even better accessibility and visibility than the existing models.

    We have also prepared a large-capacity AWC (Automatic Workpiece Changer) and a variety of tool storagecapacity options, which allow long-term, unmanned operation and high-efficiency machining for multi-item, small-lot production. Customers can choose the ideal specifications for their machining needs.

  • New Compact Integrated Mill Turn Center Joins NT Series Lineup

    Mori Seiki Co., Ltd. will start accepting orders for the NT1000 integrated mill turn center from July 1, 2009.

    Recently, large machine tools have been drawing attention in the aircraft and energy industries. Meanwhile, in the field of small precision parts manufacturing, including medical equipment, watches and measuring instruments, there is a growing demand for machine tools that are capable of high-precision machining of complex-shaped workpieces.

    To respond to this demand, Mori Seiki has developed the NT1000, the latest model in our NT Series of high-precision, high-efficiency integrated mill turn centers.

    The NT1000 has a maximum turning diameter of Æ 370 mm and maximum turning length of 400 mm, and employs Mori Seiki’s original technologies of DDM (Direct Drive Motor) and ORC (Octagonal Ram Construction).

    As measures against thermal displacement, the headstock of Spindle 1 has a mechanism in which the center of the spindle always stays the same height, and both Spindle 1 and the tool spindle use a high-accuracy cooling system. By taking advantage of these features, the NT1000 offers high-precision machining of small precision parts. It is also equipped with the workpiece ejector as standard. The workpiece ejector, mounted opposite to Spindle 1, can transfer workpieces, enabling the machine to handle the whole process of bar machining.

    With a compact body, the NT1000 reduces floor space by approximately 40% compared to our previous models, dramatically increasing productivity per unit area.

    The NT1000 is available in three variations: the NT1000/W (with workpiece ejector), the NT1000/WZ (workpiece ejector + Turret 2), and the NT1000/WZM (workpiece ejector + Turret 2 (with milling function)). The machine with Turret 2 can perform simultaneous machining using both the turret and tool spindle, which leads to improved productivity.

    There are a variety of other options available, including a loader system for automation, enabling customers to choose the ideal specifications for their machining needs.

  • The NV7000 joins the NV Series of high-precision vertical machining centers!

    Mori Seiki Co., Ltd. will start accepting orders for the NV7000 high-precision vertical machining center from August 19, 2009.

    As one of our flagship products of vertical machining centers, the NV Series has been highly praised by customers since the release of the NV5000 in February 2002. The lineup in the NV Series is further expanded by adding the NV7000 with a table size of 1,700 mm x 760 mm and Y-axis travel of 760 mm. The
    NV7000 features a high-rigidity structure, which has been inherited from the MV Series, as well as versatility and simplicity equivalent to those of the DuraVertical Series. The NV7000 is also equipped with our new high-performance operating system, MAPPS IV, which has been released in July.

    The NV7000 that improves the rigidity by increasing the width of guideways 2.4 times wider than the conventional machine offers superior damping performance with the use of slideways in all axes. The NV7000 also achieves an 18% larger work envelope than the conventional machine while reducing the floor space by 15%. The NV7000 has three spindle variations to meet a wide range of customers’ needs from high-speed to heavy-duty cutting.

    By incorporating a DDRT (Direct Drive Rotary Table), which was developed by Mori Seiki to achieve high-efficiency machining, simultaneous 4-axis machining is also possible. Even when a DDRT is attached to the machine, no cable running from the ceiling is seen in the interior of the machine because the interface
    to connect a DDRT to a machine has been improved.

    We have also prepared No. 40 taper spindle specifications to suit customers’ needs.