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WOMEN WAR WELDERS.

ABE HELPED BY NEW PBOCESS’ IN BBITISH WAS FACTOBY.

Managers of Britain’s war factories are discovering that the women now coming into their works from shops, offices, the professions and private life, have very definite likes and dislikes about the kind of work they wish to do. Some take to turning wheels, others prefer to use hand tools; some enjoy work calling for concentration, others would sooner have simple repetition work. Welding is a job that many women are turning to now, but even here there are two distinct camps, those who like the fireworks ol electric arc welding and those who prefer fusion welding. It is often very difficult to get women to transfer from one method to the other. But in one important British factory fusion welding has been made much simpler and more effective by a new process which eliminates the usual defects. Its main feature is the application of a controlled temperature applied before and during either a manual or a machine weld. Other features prevent the formation of gas crevices or pockets. Formerly, in spit of g-ray examination, weaknesses were lible to occur, and could be finally detected only in mechanical tests.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/KAIST19420319.2.3

Bibliographic details

Kaikoura Star, Volume LXII, Issue 22, 19 March 1942, Page 1

Word Count
200

WOMEN WAR WELDERS. Kaikoura Star, Volume LXII, Issue 22, 19 March 1942, Page 1

WOMEN WAR WELDERS. Kaikoura Star, Volume LXII, Issue 22, 19 March 1942, Page 1