13,756 research outputs found
A report on the survey carried out at W. H. Allens, Queens Works, Bedford
The original terms of reference under which the project was undertaken
are included in this report and the requirements requested are satisfied.
On initial contact at Aliens, I was introduced to Mr. Colson, who
informed me that his company of Consulting Engineers had introduced a
scheme of methods engineering work study and incentives payment and that
the results on the grinding section were not fully satisfactory. The
machine loading was based on synthetics which were working in other
factories. There was methods and planning charts from which the
Methods Engineering and Planning Sections worked when loading work onto
the shops and it was required that the shortcomings of these charts
should be corrected. I was then introduced to Mr. Sargent, Chief Methods
Engineer. He assigned one of his staff to me. It was suggested
that we went down to the shop floor and consider the Lumsden grinding
machine, as this machine stalled when the feeds and speeds suggested
from the methods sheets were applied, but the main problem which it was
essential to tackle as soon as possible was the grinding of gudgeon
pins. Details of the work carried out on each machine are included in
separate sections
Retirement Savings Accounts: President’s Budget Proposal for FY2005
CRS ReportCRSretiresavingsprop.pdf: 243 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020
Recommended from our members
Older Workers: Employment and Retirement Trends
CRSRetirement1001RL30629.pdf: 1464 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020
Experimental prediction of performance by superconducting cables
Broken superconductor method of short sample testing makes possible the prediction of the performance of well cooled, stabilized, superconducting cable coils. It yields a field-versus-current curve for a short sample of cable. Plots are given for the superconductor and copper currents at various magnetic field strengths
Recommended from our members
401(k) Plans and Retirement Savings: Issues for Congress
[Excerpt] Over the past 25 years, defined contribution (DC) plans—including 401(k) plans—have become the most prevalent form of employer-sponsored retirement plan in the United States. The majority of assets held in these plans are invested in stocks and stock mutual funds, and the decline in the major stock market indices in 2008 greatly reduced the value of many families’ retirement savings. The effect of stock market volatility on families’ retirement savings is just one issue of concern to Congress with respect to defined contribution retirement plans.
This report describes seven major policy issues with respect to defined contribution plans:
1. Access to employer-sponsored retirement plans. In 2007, only 61% of employees in the private sector were offered a retirement plan of any kind at work. Fifty-five percent were offered a DC plan. Only 45% of workers at establishments with fewer than 100 employees were offered a retirement plan of any kind in 2007. Forty-two percent were offered a defined contribution plan.
2. Participation in employer-sponsored plans. Between 20% and 25% of workers whose employer offers a DC plan do not participate. Workers under age 35 are less likely than older workers to participate.
3. Contribution rates. On average, participants in DC plans contributed 6% of pay to the plan in 2007. The median contribution by household heads who participated in a DC plan in 2007 was 15,500 in that year.
4. Investment choices. At year-end 2007, 78% of all DC plan assets were invested in stocks and stock mutual funds. This ratio varied little by age, indicating that many workers nearing retirement were heavily invested in stocks and risked substantial losses in a market downturn like that in 2008. Investment education and target date funds could help workers make better investment decisions.
5. Fee disclosure. Retirement plans contract with service providers to provide investment management, record-keeping, and other services. There can be many service providers, each charging a fee that is ultimately paid by participants in 401(k) plans. The arrangements through which service providers are compensated can be very complicated and fees are often not clearly disclosed.
6. Leakage from retirement savings. Pre-retirement withdrawals from retirement accounts are sometimes called “leakages.” Current law represents a compromise between limiting leakages from retirement accounts and allowing people to have access to their retirement funds in times of great need. In general, borrowing from a 401(k) plan poses less risk to retirement security than a withdrawal. Pre-retirement withdrawals can have adverse long-term effects on retirement income.
7. Converting retirement savings into income. Retirees face many financial risks, including living longer than they expected, investment losses, inflation, and possible large expenses for medical care and long-term care. Annuities can protect retirees from some of these risks, but few retirees purchase them. Developing polices that motivate retirees to convert assets into a reliable source of income will be a continuing challenge for Congress and other policymakers
Stranded superconducting cable of improved design
High-current cable developed in liquid helium cooled magnets uses aluminum wire interspersed with the superconductor strands. The aluminum maintains higher electrical conductivity, is light in weight, and has low thermal capacity
The effect of water-soluble carbohydrate concentration and type on in vitro rumen methane output of perennial ryegrass determined using a 24-hour batch-culture gas production technique
peer-reviewedThe objective of this study was to examine the effects of water-soluble carbohydrate
(WSC) concentration and type on the in vitro rumen methane (CH4) output of perennial
ryegrass (PR) using a 24-hour batch-culture gas production technique. Dried and milled
PR was incubated either alone (PR-O) or with added sucrose (PR-S), inulin (PR-I), or
sucrose plus inulin (PR-S+I; sucrose:inulin ratio of 1:4) in sealed glass bottles [0.5 g
total substrate dry matter (DM) per bottle] at 39 °C for 24 hours with buffered rumen
fluid. The WSC types were added (except for PR-O) so that the WSC concentration in
each fermentation bottle at the start of the incubation was either 180 (i.e., PR-O), 225,
270, 315, or 360 g/kg of total substrate DM incubated. There were linear decreases in
CH4 output per gram of DM disappeared (CH4/ivDMD) and per mmol of total volatile
fatty acid output (CH4/tVFA) with increasing WSC concentration in the incubated substrate.
The WSC type had no effect on in vitro rumen CH4 output. It is concluded that
since CH4/ivDMD and CH4/tVFA were reduced by increasing the concentration of WSC
incubated with PR, it would be worthwhile to undertake in vivo experiments to examine
these effects on in vivo CH4 emissions per unit of animal product.Funding for this study was provided under the
National Development Plan through the Research
Stimulus Fund administered by the Department of
Agriculture, Food & the Marine (RSF no. 07 517)
A note on an investigation of the surface grinding process with examples of wheel and coolant selection and planning data
This note deals with an investigation into the establishment of
manufacturing techniques, on a production scale, for surface
grinding, high tensile heat resistant alloy sheet approximately
7 feet by 5 feet. Rigid manufacturing tolerances are demanded
in which surface finish must not exceed 10 micro-inches and
the thickness tolerance is plus or minus 0. 0002 inches.
The information contained in this report applies to the surface
grinding process in general and can be used to aid production
planning, as a correct estimate of wheel life when operating
under set conditions can be made, and the necessary time for
redressing allowed. Results from the work carried out suggest
that it may be beneficial to pass components to be surface ground
under a roughing wheel (Lumsden) type machine, which will set
the constant metal thickness for final finishing. In this way a
correct estimated time could be allowed for the operations
roughing and finish grinding at optimum conditions
Maser Source Finding Methods in HOPS
The {\bf H}{\bf O} Southern Galactic {\bf P}lane {\bf S}urvey (HOPS) has
observed 100 square degrees of the Galactic plane, using the Mopra radio
telescope to search for emission from multiple spectral lines in the 12\,mm
band (19.5\,--\,27.5\,GHz). Perhaps the most important of these spectral lines
is the 22.2\,GHz water maser transition. We describe the methods used to
identify water maser candidates and subsequent confirmation of the sources. Our
methods involve a simple determination of likely candidates by searching peak
emission maps, utilising the intrinsic nature of water maser emission -
spatially unresolved and spectrally narrow-lined. We estimate completeness
limits and compare our method with results from the {\sc Duchamp} source
finder. We find that the two methods perform similarly. We conclude that the
similarity in performance is due to the intrinsic limitation of the noise
characteristics of the data. The advantages of our method are that it is
slightly more efficient in eliminating spurious detections and is simple to
implement. The disadvantage is that it is a manual method of finding sources
and so is not practical on datasets much larger than HOPS, or for datasets with
extended emission that needs to be characterised. We outline a two-stage method
for the most efficient means of finding masers, using {\sc Duchamp}.Comment: 8 pages, 1 table, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in PASA special
issue on Source Finding & Visualisatio
A progress report on the application of numerically controlled grinding to the improvement of the fatigue strength of highly stressed ground gears
During the manufacture at the Bristol Aeroplane Works, of the research
Aircraft, Bristol 1880 difficulty was experienced when attempting to grind sheets
of stainless steel (spec. REX 443). The size of the sheets was 7 feet by 5 feet.
A surface finish of not more than 10 micro inch CLA together with a thickness
tolerance of 0.0002 inches was called for. This problem was put to a number
of production engineerin&researchestablishments0 one, pf which was Cranfield.
It was during the research work to find a solution to the above problem that a
numerical method of evaluating the performance of grinding wheels, coolants, and
the machinability of different materials was developed. This has now been further
developed to enable the cause of the limitations in any grinding process to be
diagnosed … [cont]
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