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Plastics
Technology - Business Strategies by Jan
Schut
December 2003 |
| Welch
Fluorocarbon Inc. in Dover, N.H., produces nothing but
tiny, super-thin
thermoformed parts for critical applications. Evan Welch
started his business in 1985 in Massachusetts. He had to
develop his own processes for forming and heat-sealing
fluoropolymer films into unique shapes for aerospace, medical,
military, fire-protection and other high-value components.
Most of Welch’s products use fluoropolymer films
5 to 10 mils thick, though he has formed film as thin as
1 mil.
Welch’s training came in the 1970s while working
at American Durafilm in Holliston, Mass., where he developed
a way to vacuum form 8 x 12 in. sheets of DuPont’s
Teflon FEP into sheets of steep-sided bumps that were
then die-cut into tiny insulating sleeves for pacemaker
batteries. “That began a focus on vacuum forming
of fluoropolymers,” he recalls. “DuPont would
send me leads, and I would figure out how to make what
they wanted. I became the person to talk to.”
Once he started his own company, he continued to develop
that specialty, designing and building his own single-station
vacuum forming machines with very rapid heating and high-temperature
capability. The machines use two 6800-watt heater banks
made of a special Nichrome resistance ribbon fabricated
for Welch by Process Thermodynamics Inc. in Brandon,
Minn. These units heat up in less than a minute to a
surface temperature of over 1000 F. His three production
machines are identical to one lab line used for prototyping,
so when a part goes commercial, he simply moves the tools
from the lab to the production area.
No-fail
parts
In
Welch’s markets, there’s no room for product
failure. His custom products include corrosion barriers
for air regulators in gas masks and a liner of DuPont’s
Kapton polyimide for a smoke hood used by commercial
flight crews. The Federal Aviation Administration requires
the hoods to withstand 1000 F for 5 seconds and to keep
a person alive for 20 minutes in an oxygen-depleted environment.
NASA
came to Welch for PE bags that astronauts could urinate
into. Welch is the sole supplier of these vacuum-formed
bags, which are folded over and heat sealed with Kapton
adhesive tape to reinforce the edges. They cost $40 each
and take 28 manufacturing steps to make.
Welch
also makes dozens of types of pacemaker battery insulator
sleeves. One of the most challenging is formed of 10-mil
fluoropolymer film and measures just 0.25 x 0.5 in. but
is drawn 2-in. deep.
Quality
control for such critical products requires a positive
working environment, Welch believes. He pays extremely
generous benefits to his 25 employees: 100% of medical
insurance at a cost of $11,000 per family and a 401K
program with 50% matching of employee contributions up
to 10% of salary. When one employee developed multiple
sclerosis, Welch redesigned that man’s job so he
could keep working. As a result, Welch Fluorocarbon won
the National MS Employer of the Year Award in 2000.
Pro-active inventions
Sometimes
Welch develops a process before he has a customer, figuring
that once he can make it, someone will want
it. For example, in 1988 he successfully vacuum formed
Honeywell’s Aclar CTFE, a highly crystalline material
with a Tg of 360 F. He heated a sheet of Aclar to 440
F to make it amorphous and easily formable, then cooled
it to room temperature so fast, it didn’t have
time to regrow crystals. He thus obtained clear, thin,
flexible CTFE parts. He now vacuum forms over 20,000
lb/yr of CTFE for parts like moisture-protection covers
for electrical circuitry. He designed and built two special
automatic thermoforming machines just for the moisture
covers.
Welch recently developed a unique process to form a
sheet of 5-mil Teflon film over substructures like a
foam donut or a silicone gasket. It took him six months
of work. The process is being considered for gaskets
for sanitary piping. Welch charges customers the full
cost of his R&D time. “We’re not afraid
to charge the customer for that which is unique,” he
explains. “But mostly, I want people to look at
one of my parts and say, ‘How the hell did he do
that?’”
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Evan Welch, shown
with his son Seth, has built an unusual business on vacuum forming fluoropolymer
and other specialty films into small, super-thin, critical parts. |