Manufacturers urged to stay open

In an open letter, business and industry secretary Alok Sharma MP (pictured) has stressed the importance of manufacturers remaining open during the current COVID-19 pandemic (while observing safe working practices).

Alok Sharma – UK Parliament official portraits 2017

“Our country needs your support to keep supply chains moving and key workers mobile, as well as to protect the economy as much as possible,” he stated. “Manufacturing is a critical part of our economy and I would like to be clear that there is no restriction on manufacturing continuing under the current rules. Guidelines from Public Health England provide best practice advice on how this can be done safely.”
He added: “I, my fellow ministers and department officials, are in regular contact with industry leaders and trade associations to monitor the effect of COVID-19 on manufacturing and its workforce, and this will carry on. I’m fully committed to continue engaging through the coming days, weeks and beyond to ensure that we can support our manufacturing sector. I realise this will be challenging, but you are contributing to the resilience of our nation and I am grateful for the enormous efforts you are making in order to support the UK at this testing time.”
For further information www.gov.uk

More appointments at Dugard

The restructuring of the sales division at machine-tool specialist Dugard is now complete, with the company adding six new employees over the past 18 months.

The latest phase in this restructuring programme has seen the company add two more area sales managers. In the southwest and Wales region, Dugard has employed Peter Tilsed, who joins the company alongside Kevin Searl, who will offer sales support to the East Anglia and Home Counties region.
Says managing director Eric Dugard: “We’ve added world-class brands to our portfolio and the sales of these high-quality machines will rest firmly upon the shoulders of our new team. The management team at Dugard are confident that our new sales engineers have the right blend of industry expertise and local market insight to really drive the advantages of the Dugard brand into manufacturing facilities the length and breadth of the UK.”
For further information www.dugard.com

Alloy Wire helps ventilator producers

Wire manufactured in the West Midlands is helping support the UK’s unprecedented drive to build more ventilators.

Alloy Wire International has been commissioned to supply more than 5 km of material that will be used to produce crucial parts for life-saving equipment deployed by the new Nightingale Hospital in London. The company, which holds more than 200 tonnes of EU/DFARS compliant stock at any one time, put its ‘Emergency Manufacturing Service’ (EMS) into action to meet the urgent requirements of a spring maker that, as part of the VentilatorChallengeUK consortium, is assisting in the ramp-up of Smiths and Penlon ‘Rapidly Manufactured Ventilator Systems’.
For further information www.alloywire.com

Babcock to build 10,000 ventilators

Defence industry specialist Babcock is set to manufacture 10,000 ventilators to help deal with the COVID-19 crisis.

The plan comes shortly after after Dyson said it had received a government order for 10,000 ventilators. Babcock’s statement said: “We responded quickly to the UK’s Ventilator Challenge and we are proud to have been awarded a contract to manufacture 10,000 Zephyr Plus ventilators – subject to regulatory approvals – a product being developed in collaboration with an established major international supplier of critical care ventilators.”
For further information www.babcockinternational.com

Seven lathes sold in two weeks

The manufacture of ventilator parts is driving demand for sliding-head lathes from Citizen Machinery.

For example, an existing customer in the West Country got in touch to say that a medical equipment OEM was requesting a fourfold increase in capacity to produce critical ventilator components. The subcontractor ordered two Cincom machines for urgent delivery. The first, a 32 mm capacity L32-XLFV, was installed two days later on 19 March. Citizen’s engineers worked around the clock to commission the machine so it could start making the ventilator parts. The second machine, a 20 mm bar capacity Cincom L20-VIIILFV, was installed on 27 March.
By then, in the space of a fortnight, Citizen had received further orders from another four customers for five more machines to be delivered at short notice for ventilator parts manufacture, and there is no sign of demand slowing.
For further information www.citizenmachinery.co.uk