stencil printer customer

Creativity Fuels Increase in Sales For IMET

Tom Krol, President, IMET Corporation

Tom Krol, President, IMET Corporation
Tom Krol, President of IMET Corporation in their 15,000 sq. ft. headquarters in Southampton PA.
Not many chief executives can claim their company's sales have quadrupled over the past four years. One of the select few that can is Tom Krol, President of IMET Corporation, a multi-faceted electronics design and production firm in Southampton, PA.

What makes the 12-year-old company's sizeable increase all the more remarkable is that it occurred during the depths of the current recession. While numerous businesses struggled to stay alive in 2008, IMET expanded, more than tripling its staff. Mr. Krol's confidence in America's and his own company's future, IMET recently purchased a 15,000 sq. ft. building in suburban Philadelphia. They expect to have it filled to capacity within three years after moving in last March.

Fueling that positive outlook is the wide range of a la carte outsourcing services IMET provides for its growing roster of OEM clients. Starting with product conceptualization by their industrial designer, the mechanical and electrical engineering team then advances the product to prototyping and preproduction stages. With automated printed circuit board assembly and manufacturing available, the company can be a total or partial contract resource from design to full production of the end product.

"All of these much-needed services are propelling our growth," said Mr. Krol, "because American companies are now coming back home, disillusioned after negative experiences with outsourcing in China. But many of those OEMs refuse to get involved with in-house assembly. Instead they have IMET as their single-source provider while they concentrate on marketing and sales."

Mr. Krol regards IMET as an "incubator" for new products by established companies as well as those from future entrepreneurs. Many of the latter seek government grants that fund new products with possible sociological benefits that could also contribute to economic recovery. One successful example is "StreetLight™ — a cane with a powerful built-in LED bulb that lights the way for visually impaired pedestrians and seniors who have a tendency to fall.

Products that owe their birthright to IMET include complex medical and automotive devices as well as electronic toys and games. One of the most promising creations in the latter category is a groundbreaking new pinball machine based on the iconic 1930's movie, "Wizard of Oz™". IMET is assembling the complex circuitry for this action-packed game which features custom animation, music and actual clips from the original film. The manufacturer, Jersey Jack Pinball, Inc., Lakewood, NJ, reports that the initial run of 1,000 machines has already been presold.

Another notable example is "me-ality" — a body scanner that "sizes up" anyone for correctly fitting clothing. Installed in upscale shopping mall kiosks, this device also names and locates all the stores in the mall that stock the sizes specified.

Mr. Krol credits much of IMET's success to his company's ability to migrate from design to contract manufacturing made possible by an employee team with diverse skills and an affiliation with vendors that deliver what they promise. "This has been especially true with equipment we've purchased from Manncorp, particularly their MC-391 pick and place machine, which was our first major capital outlay back in 2008. On it rode the destiny of our company. Not only did the placer perform as advertised, it still is doing its job shift-after-shift, day in day out. As a result, we expect to add a second high-speed line with AP-2500 automatic stencil printer, the 4-head MC-388 pick and place with 10,500 cph throughput and a CR-8000 lead-free reflow oven. Of course, there was never the slightest doubt that these could only be Manncorp machines," he added.

With sales and support offices in three locations: East (Willow Grove, PA), West (San Diego, CA) and Mexico, Manncorp offers SMT stencil printer, pick and place machine, reflow oven, Turnkey SMT assembly line, vapor phase soldering oven, PCB and stencil cleaning machines, BGA rework station, automated optical inspection (AOI) machine, wave soldering machine, dip soldering machine, selective soldering and fluxing machines, component lead forming machine, PCB conveyor, component counter, PCB depaneling machine, dry box for electronics and more SMT equipment. Accessing www.manncorp.com/smt is an informational experience. Not only are full details and specifications provided for the 150+ products, but prices are also attainable immediately after minimal contact information is provided.

Flying High - A Great Post About Manncorp Customer

 By Brad Graves

It’s a land rush in the air.

Jordi Munoz Bardales is one of a handful of San Diego entrepreneurs staking out new territory in the rapidly commercializing field of unmanned aviation.

Munoz, 25, is CEO of 3D Robotics Inc. Working out of a Kearny Mesa business park, his enterprise produces and sells components for model-size unmanned aircraft, providing them to hobbyists, college engineering programs and other entrepreneurs.

Its specialty is autopilot electronics.

Early in the venture, Munoz said, he saw that he might be onto something when he assembled 40 autopilots and sold them in a single day. “I realized I had a business here,” Munoz said.

Munoz works at the micro level. At the macro level are Austin Blue and Eddie Kisfaludy. The two fly a small business aircraft that doubles as a test bed for cameras and other sophisticated new technology that may one day ride on unmanned aircraft.

“We operate a surrogate UAV,” said Blue, referring to unmanned aerial vehicles.

The military makes extensive use of unmanned aircraft, to spy on the battlefield and to deliver weapons. But they may have peaceful missions, too.

Coming to U.S. Airspace

The federal government is loosening regulations for the use of unmanned aircraft in U.S. airspace. In February, President Barack Obama signed the Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization bill. One of its many provisions is to let drones fly in the national airspace by 2015.

Those drones might be handheld models able to hoist small cameras aloft. Or they might be bigger models able to carry heftier imaging equipment and the electronics that go with it.

Camera-equipped drones may one day be the choice of paparazzi. People already have used camera drones for real estate sales, taking pictures of properties from unique vantage points. Federal officials closed at least one such business, because drones can’t yet be used for commercial purposes.

Blue said farmers may one day use drones and sophisticated sensors to determine what areas of their fields need water or fertilizer; they use conventional aircraft now. Researchers might also use drones to find items of interest in wide expanses of forest or ocean.

These aircraft can be as small as four-rotor copters that resemble a flying letter X, and can be put together with a few hundred dollars. The copters built by 3D Robotics run on open-source software. College engineering programs like them, Munoz said, because students can analyze software code, modify the code, improve the product (or crash the copter) and learn in the process.

Munoz said his enterprise is a success because it uses open-source software. 3D Robotics operates a website called DIY Drones, which lets tinkerers compare notes.

He said he also tries to make everything he sells as inexpensive as possible.

Cruising Along

It’s a long way from 2007 and 2008, when Munoz disassembled components from a Nintendo Wii and integrated them into a model helicopter, making a drone of his own. He posted updates to the project on the Internet, including the code he wrote. The work attracted notice from Chris Anderson, editor in chief of New York-based Wired Magazine and author of “The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business Is Selling Less of More.” Anderson sent him $100 and a note of encouragement. Today, Anderson and Munoz are 50 percent owners of 3D Robotics.

3D Robotics has left garage and bedroom quarters in favor of 10,000 square feet of industrial space. The firm has 20 employees in San Diego and six in Tijuana, and relies on 20 software developers worldwide. It has three jobs open.

Its building houses specialized machines that churn out ArduPilot autopilots, which fit on purple circuit boards the size of business cards. Munoz said he would like to buy a second pick-and-place machine to mount components to circuit boards, and locate it in Tijuana. Eventually, he said, he would like to put most of his production in Mexico, while keeping the engineering team in the United States.

Seeking a Higher Ceiling

Current law states that model aircraft and UAVs must not fly higher than 400 feet. Preparing for the day when that ceiling might be lifted is SciFly LLC, based at Montgomery Field in Kearny Mesa.

SciFly said it can help camera developers today by carrying their inventions into the sky. Since sensors can often produce great amounts of data, the SciFly aircraft (a Cherokee Six model from Piper Aircraft Inc.) has room for people onboard. Those passengers can interpret that data, eliminating the need for a sophisticated wireless connection to transfer the data to the ground.

SciFly said commercial or government clients might one day want to send specialized instruments such as multispectral/hyperspectral cameras into the air. These cameras can key in on certain colors and ignore surrounding “noise,” accomplishing feats such as locating whales and dolphins in the open ocean. They might also locate wreckage, lost hikers or oil sheens.

A combination of cameras, software and computers might soon allow robots to pass over an area, then revisit the area and detect changes such as a moved vehicle, Blue said.

Large drones able to keep a lot of fuel onboard may someday work for long-endurance commercial or government missions, Blue added. Drones may also be best for dangerous missions, such as low flights in bad weather.

For now, some drone work is science fiction, or at least appropriate for April Fool’s Day.

One outfit in the San Francisco Bay Area recently promoted food delivery to certain GPS coordinates via small helicopter drones.

Some have dismissed TacoCopter Inc. as a hoax, though the business does seem to be offering a product — logo T-shirts — on its website.

Three And A Half Months To Plug In Our Machines Legally

Posted by Jan on 29 Mar 2012

Three and a half months to plug in our machines legally - Great post by Pololu Robotics and Electronics who share experience of getting permits to run their equipment (including Manncorp pick and place machines, reflow oven, stencil printer and PCB conveyors) at their new location for the past four months. Pololu’s primary products are small electronics modules for robot and motion control. They also make simple mechanical components on their laser cutters and 3D printer. In addition to items they manufacture, their online store offers small gearboxes, breadboards, servos, and robot kits that complement their products.

Click here if you want to read the whole post

Washington Times Blog Article Cites Immigrant-Turned-Entrepreneur: Jordi Munoz Gains Fame & Sizeable Income Building Model Drone Aircraft with Manncorp PCB Assembly Equipment

Posted by Mike Schwartz, Marketing Director of Manncorp

This fascinating story begins with Jordi Munoz’s arrival in America and describes how he parlayed a hobby into a lucrative business. Jordi would be the first to admit it would not have happened without Manncorp’s be-kind-to-startups pricing on a stencil printer, pick and place machine and reflow oven. (Jordi has since expanded his line to two upgraded pick and place machines and two reflow ovens, sure signs that business is indeed booming.)


For the whole article, please visit the website: Out of ‘hobby’ class, drones lifting off for personal, commercial use - By Patrick Hruby

Older Posts