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NEWS


Adding new dimensions to wire forming


Taking full advantage of its experience and mechanical production capabilities possibilities, LÜSEBRINK is expanding its production activity using CNC-bending technology. The company will now be able to meet two and three dimension bending demands.


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ÜSEBRINK has been a manufacturer of one and two dimensional wire bending articles for more than 160 years. Wilhelm Lüsebrink started the family company


in Öckinghausen, Halver, Germany, when it used to produce screw eyes with a woodscrew thread - a product that is still one of the major items in the range. As a result of the reduction of tooling costs


compared to those for the conventional bending technology, LÜSEBRINK has been able to produce smaller quantities, starting at a minimum of 250 pieces. Larger quantities are also possible and are produced around the clock, through up-to-date


control engineering. LÜSEBRINK can also offer flat printing and thread rolling.


“With a good mixture of


tradition and modern technology, we are able to produce and supply our products to the world’s markets. Modern production methods and logistics, as well as top quality and in-time delivery, coupled with the ability to react to particular customers needs with maximum flexibility, represent the decisive competitive advantages, and are the guarantor for success in the fifth generation.”


Hague Fasteners name returns


The Ralin Group has been renamed Hague Fasteners Limited, returning to an identity ‘lost’ during a group consolidation ten years ago.


ounded in the 1970s, Hague Fasteners specialised in the manufacture and supply of high integrity special fasteners. Ten years ago the company merged alongside sister company, Richards & Allan (Nuts and Bolts) under


their parent company, The Ralin Group, which identified that the future of British manufacturing excellence lay with servicing high integrity and Superalloy bolting solutions. The group fine-tuned its expertise and focused on manufacturing small batches of unique customer designed bolts and nuts. In November 2012, Managing Director Jon Hague decided the time was right for the iconic Hague name to make a return. “Many of our long established clients around the world were so aware of our roots and continually referred to old experiences of


SEAC relocates SEAC, the UK manufacturer and trademark owner of Polytops® and Con-Sert® S 22 fixings, has relocated its business to a new facility located at Chartwell Industrial Estate, Wigston, near Leicester.


EAC operated from a number of old different buildings at its old premises for over 30 years and needed to upgrade to improve its organisation and efficiency to better serve its customers. The new premises provides nearly 2,400 square metres of manufacturing, warehouse and office space, accommodating all of the company’s existing staff, manufacturing operations and warehousing.


“As our products continue to be in demand in the market and our company continues to strive in providing top quality


products and service, we needed to find the right facility in the right location for our business. It made great sense for our company to select Wigston with its excellent transport links,” said David Buckley, managing director of SEAC. “The Chartwell Industrial Estate location is also a key factor due to the convenience it offers to our valued employees.”


Fastener + Fixing Magazine • Issue 79 January 2013


Hague Fasteners solving their bolting headaches. When people keep on talking so fondly, it kind of forces you to take note. It’s made me realise that a rebrand was long overdue. Whilst I am so proud of where we’ve come in the last 10 years, I am even more proud of where we’ve come from.” Mike Field, Hague Fasteners’ general manager, said:


“The response has been overwhelming, our customers old and new have been full of praise and compliments at the return of the Hague Fasteners name. We are now manufacturing and exporting to all corners of the globe, from metal fabricators to government research facilities, pushing British manufacturing to countries we were told, 20 years ago, would destroy engineering in the UK.”


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www.luesebrink.de


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