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ALCOA ALUMINUM COMPANY THE STORY OF METAL IN MOTION DIE, PUNCH & SLUG 54164 

PeriscopeFilm
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Presented by the Aluminum Company of America (ALCOA), “Impact The Story of Metal in Motion” is a 1960s informational film detailing how aluminum is used to create parts and components for a variety of uses, primarily through extrusion and impact techniques. It was probably aimed at engineers and designers who were tasked with making parts of various kinds, to get their creative juices flowing. The narrator explains (starting at mark 01:45) that ALCOA makes many of its parts using extrusion, a moving punch, a stationary dye, and a slug of aluminum, with the film continuing on illustrating each process and type of impact, aided by animation. The film explains how different parts can be combined into a single impact (ark 03:50) thus eliminating the need for welding or joint assembly. “If you want larger impacts we have the know-how,” the ALCOA narrator boasts at mark 05:50. The film focuses on tolerances starting at mark 06:18, and the ALCOA “alumilite” process (mark 07:50) which is an electro-chemically applied coating that protects against wear. The film rolls on with the narrator praising the ALCOA impact process, its methodology, and its ease of use. At mark 10:48 the narrator further explains how such pieces can be used for electronics, and automation “reduces costs to a minimum.”
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This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFilm.com

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17 апр 2017

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Комментарии : 6   
@Mikey300
@Mikey300 7 лет назад
This is how Alcoa planned to produce aluminum beverage cans in the early 1960s--impact extrusion. The competing process was Reynolds Metals' "draw and iron" or D&I technique, where a cup is formed from a circular blank of flat sheet aluminum and is stretched (ironed) to the final length. D&I can produce cans at a higher rate than impact extrusion, so ultimately it dominated the production of the aluminum cans that drove steel makers out of the beer and soft drink can business. Years after impact extrusion was supplanted by D&I, it was revived by Alcoa to produce aluminum bottles for beer and soft drinks. Our "impacts" were sort of little brothers to the big forgings produced by the guys at Ladish.
@1978garfield
@1978garfield 4 года назад
Did you work for Alcoa? I was impressed at all the different shapes they could make. I would have liked to have seen how that thing with 3 arms coming off of a circle was made. I also wonder how long the dies lasted on some of the more complicated shapes.
@n1663r
@n1663r Год назад
Now I know how all those 1960's aluminum cups and container's were made.
@brosefmcman8264
@brosefmcman8264 2 года назад
Great video
@rapman5363
@rapman5363 2 года назад
Alcoa can’t wait for tomorrow Alcoa can’t wait
@zeroyeti563
@zeroyeti563 5 лет назад
фильм класс
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