Welding

Hawkeye Borescopes can quickly identify the quality and integrity of any weld, even inside long tubes or complex parts used in automotive and aviation fuel systems, medical devices and pharmaceutical and food processing.

Weld in 3/4″ stainless steel tube using a Hawkeye Pro Hardy 7”

 

Welded and drawn tube viewed with a Hawkeye Pro Slim 7”

Defects in medical arterial stent as seen with a Hawkeye Pro Slim 7”

Featured Video

A Welded Tube is inspected using a Hawkeye Pro Slim 12-inch Borescope.

Gradient Lens Corporation manufactures over 80 models of Hawkeye® rigid, flexible, and video borescopes, and a complete system of interchangeable borescope accessories. The Featured Products below are just three examples Welders find particularly valuable.

Featured Story

Kreisler Industries

Link to featured story: Kreisler Industries

When you’re building components for commercial and military jet engines, quality assurance is always on the front burner.  Kreisler Industries, founded in 1914, manufactures tube and manifold assemblies for aircraft engines.  Kreisler products show up in aircraft like the Boeing 787 engine and the latest F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.  A common characteristic among many of the company’s products is manual and orbital-welded joints. A build-to-print fabrication company, Kreisler focuses intensely on quality control for the obvious reason of flight safety.  Achieving its—and, of course, its customers’—stringent quality requirements is a daunting task in any circumstance.   In today’s world of designing for manufacture and implementing lean manufacturing initiatives on the shop floor, Kreisler has found an obvious and practical need to bring technology and increased quality to the operator in the manufacturing cell. According to Kreisler President Michael Stern, “We call a customer return an ‘escape,’ and no level of escapes is acceptable.  The passengers, pilot and crew are all counting on us to perform our inspection correctly in order to eliminate any risk to the safety and well being of the flying public.”  For Kreisler, “escapes” are very expensive, both in monetary terms and in customer satisfaction, and the company… read more

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