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Specifications to Manufacturer

Requirements specific to manufacturing and composition Conservation of natural resources by minimizing packaging (EN 13428) requirements for measuring... [Pg.231]

Specially processed and refined product derived from preselected and blended blast furnace slag. Normally sold on both chemical and physical specifications to manufacturers of various types of glass. Chemically, it offers four major oxides calcia, magnesia, alumina and silica. Physically, calcium-aluminum silicate is classified as a 16-mesh product. [Pg.741]

AWS) has issued specifications covering the various filler-metal systems and processes (2), eg, AWS A5.28 which appHes to low alloy steel filler metals for gas-shielded arc welding. A typical specification covers classification of relevant filler metals, chemical composition, mechanical properties, testing procedures, and matters related to manufacture, eg, packaging, identification, and dimensional tolerances. New specifications are issued occasionally, in addition to ca 30 estabUshed specifications. Filler-metal specifications are also issued by the ASME and the Department of Defense (DOD). These specifications are usually similar to the AWS specification, but should be specifically consulted where they apply. [Pg.348]

Colorants. According to U.S. regulations, colorants are divided into two classes certified and exempt (see Colorants for foods, drugs, COSMETICS, AND MEDICAL DEVICES). Batch samples of certified colors must be sent to the FDA for analysis and confirmation that the colorants comply with estabhshed specifications. Color manufacturers pay a small fee for each batch of color that is analy2ed. The number of certified colors available to food technologists has declined. Several of the historical colorants were found to have carcinogenic effects. Table 1 shows the certified colors that are permissible for food use in the United States as of 1993. [Pg.437]

Commercial Manufacture of Specific Pyridine Bases. Condensation of paraldehyde with ammonia at 230°C and autogenous pressure (eq. 22) is used to manufacture 5-ethyl-2-methylpyridine (7). This is one of the few Hquid-phase processes used in the industry to make relatively simple aLkylpyridines, and one of the few processes known to make a single alkylpyridine product selectively. [Pg.332]

Industrial sterilization cycles tend to vary considerably, not only from manufacturer to manufacturer, but often from product type to product type, depending on the bioburden present on a given load. Chemical indicators have historically been used only to differentiate between sterilized and nonsterilized packages. More recent developments have resulted in the availability of chemical dosimeters of sufficient accuracy to permit their appHcation either as total monitors or as critical detectors of specific parameters. [Pg.407]

Tide V of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 covers federally approved state operating permits for manufacturing faciUties. One requirement of this regulation is that manufacturers must report emissions information of identified ha2ardous air pollutants specific to thein operation from a list of 189 named in the Clean Air Act Amendments. Rubber and tine manufacturers had to meet this requirement by the end of 1995. The Rubber Manufacturers Association has begun an industrywide project to develop accurate and reliable emissions data to aid manufacturers to comply with these requinements (44). [Pg.500]

Fluid Specifications. The performance characteristics of all antifreeze solutions are governed by fluid specifications, that have been developed over the years by industry standards committees, such as the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) and the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE). Additionally, most engine and/or cooling system manufacturers have thek own compositional specifications to which the fluids must conform. [Pg.190]

Specialty plants. These plants are capable of producing small amounts of a variety of products. Such plants are common in fine chemicals, pharmaceutic s, foods, and so on. In specialty plants, the margins are usually high, so factors such as energy costs are important but not life-and-death issues. As the production amounts are relatively small, it is not economically feasible to dedicate processing equipment to the manufac ture of only one product. Instead, batch processing is utilized so that several products (perhaps hundreds) can be manufactured with the same process equipment. The key issue in such plants is to manufacture consistently each product in accordance with its specifications. [Pg.752]

Y = coefficient naving value in Table 10-50 for ductile ferrous materials, 0.4 for ductile nonferrous materials, and zero for brittle materials such as cast iron t,n = minimum required thickness, in, to which manufacturing tolerance must be added when specifying pipe thickness on purchase orders. [Most ASTM specifications to which mill pipe is normally obtained permit minimum wall to be 12V percent less than nominal. ASTM A155 for fusion-welded pipe permits minimum wall 0.25 mm (0.01 in) less than nominal plate thickness.] Pipe with t equal to or greater than D/6 or P/SE greater than 0.385 reqmres special consideration. [Pg.981]


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