Imagine an injection molding machine that performed with the power of hydraulics, but used energy like an electric. That day is here. The Maverick Hybrid Press.
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Machine Tool Calibration
Laser Alignment
Machine Rebuilds and Repair
Postal Automation Refurb/Moves
We're Maverick Systems Corporation, and we're trusted across the nation for injection molding machine rebuilds, repair, maintenance; laser alignment and machine tool calibration; postal automation equipment moves, repair and refurbishment. We think for ourselves and do what's right. And we're always on top of the most current technological advances and government regulations. In short, we're straight talking, straight shooters straight out of Texas.
Hence our name.
Maintenance, repairs, rebuilds or moves. Every industry and manufacturing facility needs service. Call Maverick. We keep your machines running.
The Death Of US Manufacturing Is A Tragedy, Says Tilton -- We Need To Fix It Or We're Screwed
Business Insider had Lynn Tilton of Patriarch Partners on TechTicker this week. She made one of the simpler and more persuasive arguments we’ve heard as to why the U.S. needs to rebuild its manufacturing sector: Because there aren’t enough services jobs, and some folks just aren’t well-suited to “services” jobs and never will be.
Bring it Home America
In what could be called the saving of America, many manufacturers are staying home. Rather than shipping their products offshore for production, many companies are working with labor groups to keep on fighting the fight right here by creating better products, and keeping jobs, in many towns.
Manufacturers shipping their products offshore are finding themselves in competition with new startups willing to take their place in the new Made In The USA bandwagon.
Many people are looking for the Made in the USA label, and lots of entrepreneurs are meeting the demand.
Manufacturing Success from the Heartland
By showcasing the attention to detail and work ethic expected from Ohio’s Amish Country, SUPERB Industries at Sugarcreek is doing something rare among stateside manufactures: It’s growing. SUPERB President John Miller credits its Bottom-Up Management System and utilization of high-speed, near-net-shape manufacturing technology for giving SUPERB the edge needed to compete and win contracts away from foreign-based manufacturers for the production of metal and plastic components and fully-assembled parts for the automotive, electronics, home appliance, hardware, security and other industries worldwide. “I am passionate about manufacturing because our middle class quality of life depends on it,” Miller said. “We must take steel and build cars, take clay and make bricks, take wood and build homes or we will become a service economy in which we pour the tea and coffee for the people that do.”
Amen brother. Read the full TradingMarkets.com article here.
Laser Calibration
Maverick has been listed as an approved vendor for the exclusive Renishaw Laser for ISO and ANSI certification of machine tools in the aviation, aerospace, medical, and pharmaceutical industries.
Can the Postal Service be Saved?
With Losses Mounting, Postal Service Seeks Autonomy, Pushes to Cut Saturday Service; Rep. Danny Davis Calls for a Bailout
It’s been an ugly few years for the United States Postal Service.
The quasi-government agency announced this week that it lost $3.8 billion in the most recent fiscal year, which ended September 30th. It also delivered less mail – 26 billion fewer pieces less, a nearly 13 percent drop from the previous year. The bad news follows losses totaling $7.8 billion in 2007 and 2008.
The Postal Service, as it is quick to point out, is legally prohibited from taking tax dollars. But in order to stay afloat, the agency has been actively borrowing from the U.S. Treasury: At last count, according to Postal Service spokeswoman Yvonne Yoerger, it owes the government $10.2 billion.
Federal law dictates that the Postal Service can borrow up to $3 billion per year – but the debt cannot grow beyond $15 billion. That means that while the agency, which had revenues of $68.1 billion last year, could potentially borrow another $3 billion in 2010, it will soon no longer be able to legally borrow billions from the government.
See the full CBS article here.



