How to secure a 15 m tall rock devouring giant - heavier than a dozen jumbo jets - Official Loctite Customer Magazine no.
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Official Loctite® Customer Magazine no. 1/09 How to secure a 15 m tall rock devouring giant – heavier than a dozen jumbo jets Read more on page 18 – 21
10 The next generation of gasketing. Providing more flexible solutions. Read more on this topic on page 10 at work | no. 1/09
Editorial | 3 Dear Readers, have you ever wondered how to drill a hole into a mountain? If so, the story of Martin Herrenknecht and his rock-eating submarines might interest you. Maybe you were the kind of child who took grandpa’s mechanical alarm clock apart to see how it works? In this case, Rudolf Neumayer and his Tear Down Centre could be just what you were looking for. What we would like to do in the first issue of “Loctite® at work”, our new customer magazine, is to take you on a journey behind the scenes of some of the world’s most successful and sophisticated high-tech companies. This is why we gave this issue the title “Reliability at work”. We want you to share our fascination when we look over the shoulders of engineers constructing the world’s largest tunnel boring machines destined to drill the way through Cédric Berthod the Alps or building propellers that move tankers and cargo ships through the ocean. Vice President We believe that curiosity and an interest in how things work are the basis for creativity and innovation, two values Loctite Industrial Group that Henkel and the brand Loctite® stand for. That’s why in the first issue of “Loctite® at work” we are putting the Henkel Adhesive spotlight on two out of the many companies that embody those values, to show how they can impact on the Technologies EMEA practice and the success of a business. In our Trend Report, we will track the evolution of energy over the last 150 years and give an outlook on how the future of this most important resource of all might look like. And of course, with Henkel and Loctite® you'll ride shotgun in the Dakar Rally with the Loctite® brand. So, lean back and enjoy the ride. Yours sincerely, Cédric Berthod 4 6 14 18 Content 4 Highlight: Dakar 2009 Come along to the bivouac and learn more about the heroes of the Dakar. 14 Side Glance Energy – the breath of civilisation. 6 18 Reliability Report 1: Berg Propulsion Reliability Report 2: Herrenknecht Marine propulsion systems. High tech and Tunnel boring technology from Germany. maximum precision, hand made. Breathtaking How does Loctite® provide design support? technology from Sweden. 11 RD&E insights Adhesives aren't invented. They are carefully developed. Read more to find out how. 22 Handy Hints Insights online – the new web-platform from technicians for technicians. 12 Advanced Technologies The Tear-down process provides insights and creates new options. 23 Outlook Some of the topics for the next issue of Loctite® at work. at work | no. 1/09
4 | Highlight Live from the 2009 Dakar Rally Meeting the Loctite® “Desert Knights” in the Copiapo bivouac A cloud of dust on the horizon. A VW Touareg are also ready for action: Jean Gaborit from France, approaching at breathtaking speed. The towering Célio Renato Ruiz and Demetrio Santos from Brazil. The mountains and dunes of the Atacama desert rising up Dakar Service Center, set up as a common platform for all around Copiapo, in the northern part of Chile. The Euromaster, BF Goodrich and Loctite®/Pattex, is easily Copiapo – Copiapo special is a pretty tough challenge: visible from a long distance. Loctite® banners are snapping 476 kilometers of the steepest dunes, deep sand and stony in the wind – and the red Renault truck is parked in its tracks. According to the drivers it‘s the toughest one in the slot. It is fully loaded with products for repairing all kinds of history of the Dakar. vehicle damages: Teroson plastic repair and window glazing adhesives, Pattex Power Tapes, and the indispensable The Touareg whizzes by only a metre away at top speed, threadlockers, sealants, retaining compounds and instant the air filled with the powerful roar of the new turbo-diesel adhesives from Loctite®, used for maintenance and overhaul engine, a sound that makes every off-road fan‘s heart beat of the mechanical assemblies on engine and gearbox. faster. Next the field of competitors arrives hot on the heels, in rapid succession: the great Mitsubishi, Hummer and Just now, as dusk is falling, the Henkel Team is busy, BMW X-Raid desert racers. And then, following a short working at full steam: many of the drivers coming “home” distance behind, the monster trucks rumbling by, making – mainly the private competitors not accompanied by a the ground shake. Thick clouds of dust have engulfed the service armada of their own – urgently needing support terrain. The Atacama desert is said to be the driest in the to get their vehicles going again for the next day. “There world, with places where it hasn‘t rained for 400 years. were several difficult situations during this rally where my machine was quickly back in shape thanks to the Conditions for the drivers are tough: Rough terrain, difficult Loctite® Team‘s professional repair service. This navigation, extreme temperature differences and, most of helped me save valuable time when every minute all, the dry and dusty conditions, push all competitors to counts”, says Miran Stanovnik, a Slovenian KTM the limit. Vehicles are continually subjected to hard shocks rider in the top 20, sponsored by Loctite® and flying stones, the steep dunes demand the highest since 2005. level of performance from the engines. Right now there are three bikers That day the stage finishes at the Copiapo bivouac, the dragging their fairings to the northern most point of the rally. The “Desert Knights” – Loctite® service tent, where Henkel engineers, better known as the “Loctite® Charlies”, Célio Renato Ruiz and at work | no. 1/09
Highlight | 5 Demetrio Santos are busy doing a plastic repair on a BMW threaded assemblies such as motor mounting bolts remain body part. Their daily work and many exciting insights into safely and reliably locked – all the way to the finish line”, the heart of the rally are documented on the Loctite® live blog is Jean Gaborit‘s expert advice. This is truly “Reliability at www.dakaradventure.com work”, or, using rally parlance: “Dakar proven!” Chief Charlie Jean is nowhere in sight. I finally discover him with the Hummer team! Robby Gordon‘s box-shaped race vehicle is almost completely disassembled, sitting on the repair stand like a skeleton. Jean is explaining to the chief mechanic how to use Loctite® 243, a medium strength threadlocker that is capable of withstanding severe vibration but allows parts to be dismantled whenever required. “You need only a few drops to make sure that VW – The new Dakar Innovative solutions for racing Hummer H3 in action Loctite® repair area in the winner champions bivouac The Dakar winners The rally finished successfully on 18th January, with a great 7.0 liter V8 engine. He lost ground to VW as a result of winners‘ ceremony in the heart of Buenos Aires. several roll-over crashes during the rally. In the interview A double victory in the car category makes VW the new he stated: “Our only goal was to make it safely across the hero of the Dakar: Both Giniel de Villiers and Mark Miller finish line. And we did. The rally was an incredibly tough maintained their lead after Carlos Sainz‘ withdrawal from challenge. We will now work on improving the chassis to the race, and they were more than enthusiastic: “For sure: get an even better result next year”. Henkel – Official this is the toughest rally in the world - and we had the Marc Coma secured victory in the motorcycle class. Second Partner to the best marathon team in the world! I am overwhelmed by and third positions went to Frenchmen Cyril Despres Dakar Rally the surge of feelings at the finish line”, as de Villiers put it in and David Fetigne. Chilean motorcycle rider Francisco moving words, “I am proud to be part of it, proud of what Lopez finished fifth and was celebrated as a national hero First time participation: 2005 the team has achieved” . And his team colleague, second by his compatriots and ardent local fans. placed Mark Miller, adds: “De Villiers is a great champion. Loctite® KTM bikers Miran Stanovnik, Annie Seel and Team: "Loctite He deserved to win! For me as an American it‘s a dream Norman Kronseder successfully mastered the tough Charlies": Service team with 3 – 6 international to finish the rally in second place, and finish as the challenge and reached positions 13, 76 and 82. engineers best American. Our team did a fantastic job. Loctite® triumphed in the truck category! Another double We will gather new strength from this victory was achieved in the truck competition with Russia‘s Brands: Loctite®, victory!” Team Kamaz , supported by Loctite® since 2007. The two Teroson, Pattex Third position was claimed front runners fought a spectacular fight, finally decided by Products: Adhesives, by Robby Gordon driving Vladimir Chagin‘s tire damage. Firdaus Kabirov finished just Sealants, Surface a Hummer, the eye 30 seconds ahead to win overall victory. Treatment catching race car Major applications: from USA with Threadlocking, rear mounted, Gasketing, Sealing, Retaining, Plastic Repair, Windscreen Replacement, Glass Repair, Instant Bonding at work | no. 1/09
6 | Reliability Reader recruiting Report 1Reader High-tech from Sweden The rays of the morning sun reflect on the calm surface of the sea, before they reach the white lighthouse that has been operating for more than a hundred years. The small sailing boats are quietly bobbing up and down in their moorings, wooden houses with the characteristic low roofs line the waterfront and the cries of the seagulls are the only sounds that the wind carries. Production in Öckero Berg Propulsion headquarters Propeller blades ready for assembly High precision meets high-tech at work | no. 1/09
ReaderReliability recruitingReport Reader1 | 7 What sounds like the beginning of a bad novel or a holiday brochure for travellers with a taste for maritime nostalgia, actually describes the location of a modern production plant: The island Öckerö, off Sweden‘s West coast, is home to the ship propeller manufacturer Berg Propulsion, one of Sweden‘s leading high tech companies. Ensuring reliability with Loctite® at work | no. 1/09
8 | Reliability Report 1 Cleaning the hydraulic pipes with Locking & sealing the threads with a Assembly of the pipes – securing it The hydraulic system is embedded Loctite® 7063 single product – Loctite® 638 with Loctite® 243 into the shaft Loctite® 243 – securing the End cap fixing on hub shaft with A dowel pin controls the propeller After only one hour the system has propeller´s steering mechanism Loctite® 243 blades. Secured by Loctite® 243 to withstand 70 bar of oil pressure No room for error global leader in adhesive technology, have a lot in common: From modest beginnings, the company was founded as Both started as family businesses with an emphasis a shipyard for fishing vessels in 1912, Berg Propulsion on high-quality products and both have developed into has developed into a multinational company constructing successful companies operating on a global scale. Reliability propellers for all kinds of vessels. Tankers, containers, cargo ships and luxury yachts, to name just a few, all rely on Henkel had the opportunity to observe the production at work the experience and the craftsmanship of Berg Propulsion. process at Berg‘s island plant. The gigantic propeller, Customer: with a diameter of more than 9 metre, dwarfs the men Berg Propulsion, The demands placed on the reliability and durability of standing next to it. The shining bronze propeller blades Sweden Berg‘s CP (Controllable Pitch) propellers are enormous: appear almost menacing in their shining perfection. At every Task: Once the propeller is fitted to the vessel, alterations stage of the manufacturing process Loctite® products have Securing hydraulic become extremely difficult and the propellers are in use an important role to play: The threads of hydraulic pipes systems to assure for 25 years or more. There is no room for error, because responsible for controlling reliability for 25 years the safety of the ship and the vessel depend on the quality the individual and more of the product. Money is another aspect; every day that a blades Products: ship has to remain in the dock for repairs costs the owner Loctite® 243 between 15 and 20 000 $ a day, explains Berg‘s Managing Loctite® 638 Director Anders Christoffersson. (see interview) Family businesses gone global Technological progress has made its mark on every aspect of life, and the manufacturing process at the plant on the idyllic island of Öckerö is no exception to this rule. A lot has changed since Johann Wiktor Berg manufactured the first CP Propeller for a wooden fishing vessel in 1929; one of those changes is the use of Henkel‘s Loctite® products. Berg Propulsion and Henkel, the All the blades are assembled and the propeller is ready for use at work | no. 1/09
Reliability Report 1 | 9 are retained with Loctite® 638. They have to withstand pressures of more than 70 bar, which equals twice the force the blades will have to bear on the ocean. Developing tailor-made solutions The adhesive sealing has to be hermetical after an hour, because then the hydraulic pipes are embedded into the shaft. Another example for applied technological progress is the production of the spacer that protects the propeller‘s control units. The spacer is fitted to the units with 4 screws, locked with Anders Christofferson, Managing Director Berg Propulsion Technology AB Loctite® 243. “Loctite® increases the reliability of our products. We co-operate closely with Loctite‘s technical What is your position at Berg Propulsion? I am Vice President of our department during the development and the production technical division Berg Propulsion Technology. And we are developing Berg’s process” says Christofferson. products of tomorrow. Lars Andreasson, from Loctite‘s Industrial Engineering You use Loctite® threadlockers and thread sealants to secure assemblies in the hydraulic system and in the propeller hub. Can you tell more about the department explains: “We can assist the customer by specific requirements applying for these areas? The requirements which our calculating the pressures the product has to withstand, for systems must meet are that they have to be sealed, and this applies especially example. It‘s a form of team-work. Our goal is to assist the for our hydraulic systems, they have to be pressure resistant. Then in our threaded customer by developing tailor made solutions.” assemblies we have to lock the bolts and screws against vibration loads. The manufacturing process of ship propellers has come In which way can Loctite® be of help in those situations? Loctite® increases a long way. What is interesting to note about it, is the fact reliability of our products. that there is something like a conspiracy theory about Why do you use Loctite® products in this application? This gives us a quick and the origin of the technology. There is a possibility that the easy assembly. Englishman Francis Smith, who took credit for the invention was actually preceded by the Austrian enthusiast Josef Which products do you mainly use? We use threadlockers 243 and 2701, for Ressel. Unfortunately, however, that issue wasn‘t resolved retaining it is 638 and 603. in Ressel‘s lifetime and he never received the credit that in retrospect appears to be due to him. While technological Which benefits do you get, besides the technical reliability? We can reduce progress is unstoppable, like the co-operation of Berg inventories for mechanical locking devices and we have fewer item numbers, which Propulsion and Henkel on idyllic Öckerö shows, issues with gives us big savings in warehousing intellectual ownership seem to be here to stay. Why is reliability so important for Berg Propulsion? Reliability is important as Berg has safe and dependable products. Our customers expect ship propulsion systems with highest availability at all times. If there is some failure in the propulsion system, the boat can no longer earn money. And in this case, we talk about high amounts of money. This varies from 15 – 20 thousands US Dollar per day. This is not unusual. Do you make use of Loctite‘s technical service today? Yes, we use Loctite® technical support daily in form of calculations and application solutions. Then, we also get ongoing product training for our technicians and engineers. Do you know more about the brand Loctite®, e.g. the history or the other product ranges? Yes, concerning the history I know that it is a company from the 50-ies, and we’ve started to use Loctite® in 1964. It was a colleague, Erik Berg, son of the founder of Berg Propulsion. He was in England and came home with a Loctite® product as replacement for the locking washer. And it worked. Since then we have used Loctite® products and other products; those we know among others are your lubricants and flexible adhesives and instant adhesives. What do you think are the most important characteristics and benefits of Loctite® products today? Loctite® products have a lot of benefits. But the most important one for us is reliability and the technical support which Loctite® gives us. at work | no. 1/09
10 | RD&E insights The stories behind inventions tend to have something romantic, something co-incidental about them: Archimedes allegedly had his big idea in the bath tub and Einstein is said to have been sunbathing in the park when the special theory of relativity occurred to him. If you listen to Martin Smyth and Peter Wrobel from the Henkel Technology Centre in Dublin, however, there seems to be little room for the picturesque co-incidents that make for a good urban myth about inventions. No room for myths It rather seems to be an efficient, well-organised process that leaves very little to chance. “We have something called Single Customer Project, which allows us to react very quickly to customer needs,” says Smyth. In this particular case, a customer needed an adhesive that cured on nickel-plated substrate with an extreme speed. The initial screening phase took about a month. After another month, during which three employees of the centre in Dublin devoted themselves full time to the project, the first prototype was ready. “It met 90% of their requirements, but it needed some fine-tuning,” says Smyth. By that point, market research had already shown there was a broader market for Loctite® 276, the new addition to the Loctite® product family. Co-adapting to industrial evolution Peter Wrobel’s story is an example for a more long term project. It was a 2 year process that led to the development of Loctite® 5188, a flange sealant aimed primarily at the automotive industry. “We are basically co-adapting to the evolution of car engines,” says Wrobel. “There is a shift from steel to aluminum in the industry, and accordingly, we constantly improve Loctite® sealants in order to work well with that material.” Before Mr. Wrobel and his team embark on such a project, though, there needs to be a solid business case. “If a successful commercial application seems less than probable, we don’t go into the lab, because that’s very cost-intensive,” explains the team-leader. Wrobel is a trained chemist, but he has acquired a good feeling for the business side of things through customer visits. While there is still a place for the coincidence and the power of the subconscious, after all success and failure is still down to people, individuals with their strengths and weaknesses, innovation depends today on to a large extent on exact planning and efficient use of resources. RD&E insights The evolution of new adhesives Peter Wrobel, Senior Development Scientist, Automotive Product Development Dept. Henkel Technology Centre Europe at work | no. 1/09
RD&E insights | 11 High-speed threadlocker Reliability Achieving fast fixture on passive metal substrates – such as nickel- & other plated at work surfaces – is quite a challenge for an anaerobic threadlocker, especially if requirements also call for good sealing performance and high strength, as well as very good thermal and Benefits – Overview: shock resistance. • Provides locking and sealing Finding the optimal solution: Loctite® 276, one of the latest innovations to come out of the Henkel • Ideal for gas pipes, R&D labs, meets all of these requirements. Originally developed in as little as two months within the scope valves & connectors of Henkel's so-called Single Customer Project in reaction to an urgent customer need, the product was fine- • Allows higher tuned to give an optimal combination of characteristics for the market environment. And, there could be no compromise production output where performance was concerned, because a high production output is one of the key criteria. Mission accomplished: Loctite® 276 is a high-strength anaerobic threadlocker that achieves fast fixture even on passive metal substrates. It provides locking and sealing of threaded assemblies. It cures reliably even at low temperatures but can withstand up to +150 °C. Loctite® 276 carries the European gas approval according to EN 751-1. Available in 50 ml and 250 ml bottles. Flexibility – a challenge in gasketing Loctite® 5188, the first anaerobic gasketing material surfaces, especially to aluminium, and provides immediate offering excellent flexibility even after heat aging, can be low pressure sealing. Resistance of the cured product used for many applications in the automotive and industrial to thermal and chemical stress is excellent. It provides area. Typical applications include metal-to-metal flange elongation to compensate for micro-movements resulting assemblies such as gearboxes, housings, covers, etc. from vibration, pressure and temperature changes. Because Loctite® 5188 allows flanges to come together with Anaerobic gasketing technology has revolutionized flange metal-to-metal contact, tolerances can be more sealing of rigid flanges in the automotive industry, and the accurately maintained, and the correct clamp load assembly of heavy equipment. Anaerobic sealants remain is ensured throughout the life of the assembly. liquid when exposed to air, but cure when the metal parts Loctite® 5188 has improved oil tolerance, allowing are assembled and the adhesive is confined between it to seal through slight oil contarmination. To suit mating flanges. OEMs and subsuppliers have long been all needs, the product is available in three sizes: enjoying the technical and economic benefits of anaerobic 2 l bag-in-box, 300 ml cartridge, and 50 ml accordion. gasketing materials, and Loctite® 5188 takes this technology to a new level. The use of aluminium to produce light-weight automotive castings has gained wide acceptance, and Loctite® 5188 meets the flexibility requirements Reliability of these modern concepts. The product is at work designed to function in the most demanding Benefits – Overview: applications. It has very good adhesion • Suitable for light- weight design to metal flanges • Can tolerate micromovements on highly stressed flanges • Ideal for e ngine compartment applications at work | no. 1/09
12 | Advanced technologies Tear Down analysis improving industrial processes Have you ever felt the urge to take a washing machine product, to see whether the value of the product can be apart to see how it works? Or an oven? A fridge, maybe? enhanced or the cost of manufacturing can be cut. If your answer to any of the above questions is yes, you will probably envy Rudolf Neumayer: Because that’s what “Value Engineering or Value Analysis was conceived in the he does for a living. The friendly Bavarian lightens up when early 1940s by Lawrence D. Miles while he was employed he starts talking about taking things apart. by General Electric, a major defense contractor which was facing the scarcity of strategic materials needed to “Taking things apart” is not his official job description, of produce their products during World War II, according to a Rudolf Neumayer course. Rudolf Neumayer is Manager of European Technical paper published by the International Value Society in 2007. Manager of European Service and Engineering for Henkel in Munich. He works Technical Service and out of Henkel’s Innovation Centre in Munich and is part of From those humble beginnings, Value Engineering has Engineering, Henkel, Munich an interdisciplinary team of specialists that is responsible come a long way. One of the paths the development of for what Henkel calls the “Teardown Analysis”, also known the method has taken is the Tear Down Analysis practiced as taking things apart. by Neumayer and his team. “In the last 3 years, we have worked on over 60 projects with a broad range of major Tearing it down international companies,” explains Neumayer. Since the What is the rationale behind such an analysis, apart from customers enter a very confidential relationship with Henkel, the sheer joy it seems to bring to the people involved in the giving access to manufacturing sites and construction activity? A Tear Down analysis is a form of Value Engineering, plans, it is understandable than Neumayer guards their i.e. the attempt to look at each identities very carefully and refuses to even hint component of a at them during the interview. finished at work | no. 1/09
Advanced technologies | 13 Teamplay and interplay of our various technical specialists at the ETS in Munich brings all relevant facts and figures on the table. Value engineering Tear Down analysis Enhanced Lower product production value costs Dreaming of windmills And what kind of machine would he like to tear down What he does talk about is in what way next? “A windmill would be nice,” he says, with a dreamy he and his team have achieved some quite look in his eyes… stunning results on some of the projects: Adhesives, aka glue, are something else that Rudolf from Bavaria seems to feel passionate about. “It is a problem that in many vocational trainings, people aren’t taught enough about the possibilities that modern adhesives open up,” he says in English. Surprisingly, his English sounds a lot more polished and difficult to place than his German. The fact that he is responsible for the whole European area and speaks English most of the time seems to have taken its toll. “To give you an example: For a major customer (we only deal with customers that do mass-production, otherwise our process wouldn’t make any sense) we managed to replace a step in the production process of his washing machine by using Loctite. That way, the production has become cheaper and the customer was able to fit a larger drum inside the washing machine. So, it’s good for everybody: Good for us because we have new customer for Loctite, good for the manufacturer because they raise their margin, and good for the consumer because they get a larger drum,” he explains enthusiastically and it is hard to disagree with him. And it doesn’t stop here, at least not for Rudolf: “We have only just started, we have just scratched the surface of what’s possible,” he says and his eyes gleam. at work | no. 1/09
14 | Side Glance Energy – the breath of civilisation With every breath we take, according to Traditional Chinese Medicine, we receive our share of Chi, the universal energy keeping us alive. Normally we are not aware of breathing. Normally we are also not aware of the energy, equivalent to 120,000 TWh, produced and used each year around the world to keep our society alive, except when our cities stay dark, oil becomes too expensive or there is no gas for heating. at work | no. 1/09
Side Glance | 15 Watt – the man who brought the dawn of endless opportunity In 1776 James Watt installed the first industrial standard steam engine. This was the dawn of our modern, technology-driven society that soon became inseparably linked to and dependent upon a continuous and growing supply of energy. From these very first days, energy production and transport became a global network, as unobtrusive as it was reliable, always available and ready to work. The impact energy has on daily life, the way energy characterises society becomes apparent when malfunctions occur; only when cities remain dark, or when oil, gasoline or natural gas run short or become unavailable do we fully understand our lifestyle’s dependence on energy. Without an energy supply there is no mobility, no media, no information technology, no commodities nor a food supply; medical care and hygiene is reduced instantly, and in the worst-case-scenario there is iciness. others 18 21 USA Africa Share of world energy 3 India consumption 2007, 4 percentages. Middle East 5 China Source: BP 17 Latin America 5 5 Japan 6 16 Russia EU Sources and uses of energy For more than a hundred years, the world’s energy consumption has increased rapidly. Today the demand for energy is nearly twenty times greater than in 1900 and twice as big as in 1970. Of the energy consumed globally, 58 % is produced by oil and coal, 24 % by natural gas, and 18 % by biomass, renewable energy and atomic power plants. In the distant past, coal was a less-than- ideal solution for those who could not afford wood and had to use these putrid, smoking stones for cooking and heating. But the growing demand for metal, and James Watts’ steam-engine paved the way to a coal-driven era. Soon large cities like London, Boston, New York and Berlin were illuminated by coal-produced town gas. From 1800 to 1850, coal consumption grew from 10 million tons (mt) to 76 mt. In 1900, 760 mt of coal were used in a single year. In those days, coal covered 90 % of global fuel needs. (Mtoe) nuclear power 10,000 hydropower 9,000 8,000 firewood 7,000 6,000 Timeline of energy demand coal by sources. 5,000 gas Source: Exxon 4,000 oil 3,000 2,000 1,000 1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 (Year) at work | no. 1/09
16 | Side Glance A 1.7 kilometre cube in The rise of industrial nations would not have been on the convenience, warmth and cosiness that natural New York, equivalent to possible without the combined power of coal and the gas offered as a replacement for coal-produced town the world oil consumption steam engine. Even today, coal production is still rising. gas. Today, natural gas is still a major fuel for generating each year. Due to the increasing demand for energy, especially in electricity and for residential domestic use. The total Source: SDI-Research China, coal production was at an all time high of 5.4 bn worldwide amount of natural gas extracted in 2007 was tons in 2007 – equivalent to a 1.4 kilometre cubic block 2940 bn m3 – this time enough to make a cube with 14 of coal, and an increase of more than 30% within only kilometre-long sides. five years. However, progress was followed by adverse effects. In The rise in demand for crude oil started with an ingenious total, burning oil, coal and gas produces 26.100 bn tons marketing campaign. To sell more petroleum, J.D. (13.300 bn cubic kilometres) of carbon dioxide a year – Rockefeller gave away free oil lamps. So people bought imagine a cube with sides 23.7 kilometres long. This is the his oil instead of expensive and rare whale oil. Some years problem of growing energy consumption – nature cannot later, refined oil played a key role in developing the newly recycle all the man-made CO2 and so the atmosphere invented motorcar, and oil became the basis of mobility. is becoming overloaded with this gas. In addition, fossil From then onwards, a global distribution network was resources are limited but in the future there will be a vital introduced that included drilling rigs, pipelines, crude oil need for these precious raw materials – for synthetics as vessels, refineries and gas stations. Since 1960, crude well as for life-saving pharmaceuticals and hundreds of oil has been the most important fossil fuel, covering one other products derived from crude oil. Dependency on third of world energy consumption. A 60% share of oil fossil resources has also become an economic and a production is used for traffic and transport. In 2008 the political source of crisis. The Cold War as well as power average daily production and use of crude oil was 85 million games with and between main oil-producing countries barrels (one barrel =159 litres) a day or 31 bn barrels a year, has led to economic imbalances. Long-distance transport which is 4933 bn litres or 4.9 cubic kilometres – this would routes, volatile prices, geopolitical instability, trouble spots make a cube with sides 1,68 kilometres long. and economic dependency on a few energy providing countries are causing a worldwide re-evaluation of energy Natural gas has been available since the beginning of oil systems. production, was mainly considered as an unimportant and dangerous by-product. In the 1980s, natural gas The breath of the sun – light, heat, wind became established as a basic energy resource for In contrast to fossil energy production, atomic energy, industrial production, the production of electricity, and for hydro power, biomass and renewable energy represent households. This economic breakthrough was founded only one fifth of world energy production. Nevertheless, the at work | no. 1/09
Side Glance | 17 hope for an enduring and stable energy supply depends on renewable resources such as the wind, sun, biomass Primary energy 100 % and water. The reason is obvious; in only three hours the sun sends as much energy as the whole world needs in Conversion in power plants, a year. Only a fraction of primary refineries etc... Conversion loss energy is used. Therefore only 3 % of the Sahara‘s land area would be 22.5 % Source: Paeger enough to cover the world’s usage of electricity. Only a transport fraction of available solar energy is used now even though Private consumtion, loss of power solar power capacity increased from 2 Petajoules (Pj) to 13 Pj in the period from 2004 to 2008. In 2008, wind energy 5% plants, mainly in Germany, the USA and Spain, produced Non-energetic Final energy 65% consumption 94.000 MW of electricity. A huge potential remains untouched. The overall potential of renewable energy 7.5 % also depends on technical as well as geographical and Useful economic conditions. Only a fraction of the solar energy we energy Consumer consumption Reliability receive is usable but the figures are still impressive: 36 % at work Technical Glossary Type of Energy Amount of back to power plants. If losses cause a reduction of energy bn: world energy from say 100 produced units to 10 units output, an increase billions 1 billion = consumption 1,000,000,000 = covered of efficiency from 1 unit on the output side will save 10 units 1x109 on the input side. Therefore energy efficiency is the most promising power source of the future. barrel: 1 barrel = 159 litres or 42 US Gallons Solar Energy 3,8x The Evolution of Technology Wind 0,5x For more than 150 years the increasing availability of energy CO2: has improved access to resources and the production and Carbon Dioxide Biomass 0,4x supply of food. It has enabled unprecedented mobility, PJ: Geothermal Energy 1,0x information availability, communication, and the usage Petajoule Tidal Power 0,05x of sophisticated technical devices. New technologies 1,000,000,000,000,000 J evolve whenever existing applications turn out to be ~ 278,000,000 kWh, Hydrogen Power 0,15x unit of energy too costly to resolve new problems. Old technologies will either be optimised or gradually substituted by their MW: Less is more – power efficiency successors, unless the problem itself is altered or changed Megawatt = 1,000,000 The largest power plant does not produce any energy; by new perspectives and solutions. It is obvious that Watt it is designed to save energy by intelligent and efficient an environmental and socio-economic driven change Mtoe: usage. On the road from power production to the end- in energy-technology lies ahead. It is also obvious that million tons (of) oil user there are often losses of up to 90% measured against essential technologies already exist or are in development, equivalent, unit of energy. 1 Mtoe = energy input. There are losses within the power-plants, ready to compete to provide useful and practical solutions. 11,630,000,000 kWh losses of transmission and distribution, and losses in power Even now there are numerous inventions and innovations, conversion, for example: such as new technologies to produce and save energy or Km: • A bulb converts only 3 % of electric energy into visible efficient production solutions to preserve natural resources. Kilometre, 1 Km ~ 0.62 light Miles New materials, components and drives are steadily • Only 13 % of gasoline energy reaches a car’s wheels. reducing the energy demands of industry and transport. kWh: • 80 % of heating and climating losses in buildings could New concepts of mobility will evolve to a essential criteria. kilowatt-hour = 1,000 be avoided by efficient thermal insulation. Wh, unit of energy The final goal should be, as Traditional Chinese Medicine The reduction of losses is multiplied as the energy travels advises, to keep the flow of energy alive – with every breath we take. Dr. Oskar Villani, SDI-Research World EU 25 D A fraction of the area of the Sahara could cover the world’s energy demands Source: TREC at work | no. 1/09
18 | Reliability Report 2 A German masterpiece Imagine a 82 m long, rock-eating submarine with four floors, as tall as a high rise building with 20 floors lying on its side. This monster is heavier than a dozen 747 jumbo jets and creeps forward through the earth behind a more than 9 m tall rotating cutting face. Sounds a little outlandish to you? Product of a hyperactive imagination? If you thought that, you were wrong. This is not Hollywood, this is the Discovery Channel. Engineering Know-How from Every mm counts – even when 9t of 82 m of pure power – ready for action This threaded fitting has to resist up Germany for the whole world steel are waiting at the hook to 350 bar oil pressure at work | no. 1/09
Reliability Report 2 | 19 at work | no. 1/09
20 | Reliability Report 2 The main drive of a tunnel boring machine is an assembly of no less than four large gear units that are bonded and bolted together. Flange faces are coated with Loctite® 586 using a roller, which increases friction 2 to 2.5 times. Forget Star Wars, forget Star Trek, forget the Matrix. Insane pieces of engineering If you are the kind of person that doesn‘t like the science- Wherever one of the machines operate, Malaysia, China, Reliability fiction, because you are interested in reality, Allmannsweier in Baden-Württemberg is the place for you. Switzerland or Brazil, Henkel‘s Loctite® products always play an important role during the construction of those at work insane pieces of engineering. Loctite® threadlocker 243 is Customer: Allmannsweier in Baden-Württemberg is one of the more used to lock all the screws in the machine, which has to Herrenknecht, pleasant regions of Germany, famous for its good food and withstand enormous pressure while it eats its way through Germany the friendly locals. It‘s also the home of Herrenknecht, the the rock. world‘s leading manufacturer of tunnel boring machines. Task: And it‘s those machines which dwarf the imagination of Another application which makes good use of the Securing flanges on your average Hollywood screen writer. It’s not surprising reliability that Loctite® stands for, is the machine’s rotating the main drive with a that the company and its charismatic founder, Dr Martin cutting head. The cutting head's power unit relies on a 2 to 2.5 times higher Herrenknecht has attracted a lot of attention from the variable number of single engines. The superstructural friction coefficient within it. global media lately. part's flange ring and main bearing as well as transmission case and main bearing are cemented repeatedly in a Products: “An insane piece of engineering” is how the American laminary fashion, using Loctite® 586. This process allows to Loctite® 7070 Discovery Channel describes the Herrenknecht machine transmit more than twice the turning moment that would be Loctite® 586 that drilled a 5.4 and a 3.9 kilometer tunnel in Kuala Lumpur possible otherwise. The cementing with Loctite® enhances Loctite® 243 in 2006. the reliability and allows the power unit to withstand the forces that can come to bear on it underneath the earth. The defining project of Herrenknecht‘s career and one of the greatest public works of any kind is the Gotthard Base Loctite® Sales Engineers are also involved in the planning Tunnel. The tunnel, which has been under construction process of the machines, liaising with the various since 2002, will run from the village of Erstfeld, in central Herrenknecht departments in order to meet the customer’s Switzerland, to Bodio, in the southeast, a distance of more construction needs as early as possible. Henkel and than 57 kilometers. When completed, in 2017, it will be Loctite® are ideal partner for Herrenknecht’s tunnel-boring the longest traffic tunnel in the world; it is also one of the machines, which never quite know what kind of rock they most geologically challenging, The Gotthard crosses nine will have to taste next. Loctite’s Rapid Response Process geological zones. It cuts through granite and quartz, along (see Product Development Article), allows to respond to fault lines and beneath a sugar like layer of dolomitic marble new requirements in a matter of weeks. – a challenge to anything going through it. The next stop for the tunnel No rock too hard, not mountain too high: boring machines is Paris, Loctite® and Herrenknecht where the new tunnel for the Herrenknecht has been growing ever since its foundation Metro 12 has to be drilled. in the 70s. It now employs around 3000 people worldwide and sales reach 1 billion Euro for the first time in 2008. This impressive success story is partly due to the fact that Herrenknecht took advantage of the opportunities offered by the globalisation. China is one of the countries which Herrenknecht focused on early and in 2008 they were able to celebrate the delivery of the 100th machine to the power- house of the world economy. Completed main drive waiting for the assembly into the machine. at work | no. 1/09
Reliability Report 2 | 21 Christian Draeger, Traffic Tunnelling Sales Wolfram Lais, Head of Subassembly, Department, Herrenknecht AG Herrenknecht AG Interview You're using Loctite® products for a wide variety How does such a tunnel boring machine get from this of applications in the manufacturing process of production facility to its final destination ? your equipment. What Loctite® products do you Mr. Draeger: The tunnel boring machine is fully assembled use in the manufacture of tunnel boring machines? right here in the factory. But, to move the machine to the Mr. Lais: In our department we mainly use Loctite® 586 construction site, it must be disassembled again. for bonding flanges and 577 for thread sealing, 243 for That's why the machine is completely modular in design, threadlocking and Loctite® 7070 as a cleaner. and modules are assembled with bolts. We will disassemble these bolted joints to get accurate structures which we Where do you use Loctite® adhesives on your can transport to the construction site. Once they have machines? Mr. Lais: We use Loctite® mainly on the arrived at the construction site, these structures are then cutting wheel drive. We apply product 586, to increase re-assembled, tightened with bolts or welded. friction. In general, what parts of a machine are most severely stressed during operation of the equipment? Mr. Draeger: The cutting wheel and the main drive are subjected to very high loads. Just imagine that the cutting wheel is moving through the ground, encountering a variety of soil types and loading conditions. There may be hard rock or loose rock. In the case of hard rock it's mainly the pressure and the force to be transmitted by the cutting wheel when it's carving away the rock. With loose rock, it's mainly the torques, the rotating or twisting forces that act there and cause very high stresses. at work | no. 1/09
22 | Handy Hints Insights online The new web platform designed by engineers for engineers! Ready for more action? Watch full-length videos of our most exciting application stories and get inspired for your own professional tasks on www.loctitesolutions.com Benefit from the latest technology trends WIN amazing prizes Get insightful application tips Witness fascinating real world application cases Get entertained with captivating video features Get connected and order the next issue of the magazine. at work | no. 1/09
Outlook | 23 Come along and visit the “kings of earth”. Discover the plant of TEREX in Scotland. Get insights into the production of 100 ton rigid trucks. ... coming soon Discover reliability in the most extreme racing conditions. Learn more about the Porsche Mobil 1 Supercup and Loctite's technology partnership with the fastest one make cup in the world. at work | no. 1/09
Imprint Publisher Henkel AG & Co. KGaA Adhesive Technologies Henkelstraße 67 40191 Düsseldorf Germany www.henkel.com Editorial Department Marketing Department EMEA: Christian Scholze Andreas Engl Beate Schneider Isabelle Feix Erik Edelmann Frank Fischer Contact Andreas Engl (Project lead) Phone: +49-211-797-6758 Andreas.Engl@henkel.com Creation blösch.partner Werbeagentur GmbH www.bloesch-partner.de Henkel Nederland B.V. Henkel Belgium n.v. Adhesive Technologies Adhesive Technologies Postbus 2100 - NL-3430 CM Havenlaan 16 Nieuwegein BE-1080 Brussel Brugwal 11 - Nl-3432 NZ Nieuwegein Tel. +32 2 421 25 55 Tel. +31 30 607 38 50 Fax +32 2 421 25 99 Fax +31 30 607 38 51 www.loctitesolutions.com/be www.loctitesolutions.com/nl ® designates a trademark of Henkel AG & Co. KGaA or its affiliates, registered in Germany and elsewhere © Henkel AG & Co. KGaA, 2009
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