enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Glass production - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_production

    Broadly, modern glass container factories are three-part operations: the "batch house", the "hot end", and the "cold end". The batch house handles the raw materials; the hot end handles the manufacture proper—the forehearth, forming machines, and annealing ovens; and the cold end handles the product-inspection and packaging equipment.

  3. SAP Ariba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAP_Ariba

    Ariba (now SAP Ariba) was founded in 1996 [4] by Bobby Lent, Boris Putanec, Paul Touw, Rob Desantis, Ed Kinsey, Paul Hegarty, and Keith Krach [5] on the idea of using the Internet to enable companies to facilitate and improve the procurement process, which was paper-based, labor-intensive, and inefficient for large corporations.

  4. List of SAP products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_SAP_products

    SAP Materials Management (MM), a module in SAP ERP Central Component (ECC), that provides companies with materials, inventory and warehouse management capabilities [2] SAP Master Data Management (MDM) SAP Plant Maintenance (PM), software for industrial companies, with which all important tasks of maintenance of technical systems can be ...

  5. Glass House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_House

    The house is an example of early use of industrial materials in home design, such as glass and steel. Johnson lived at the weekend retreat for 58 years; 45 years with his long time companion David Whitney , an art critic and curator who helped design the landscaping and largely collected the art displayed there.

  6. Early glassmaking in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_glassmaking_in_the...

    Glass was not pressed in the United States until the 1820s. [8] Until the 20th century, window glass production involved blowing a cylinder and flattening it. [9] Two major methods to make window glass, the crown method and the cylinder method, were used until the process was changed much later in the 1920s. [10]

  7. Foam glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foam_glass

    Foam glass or expanded glass is a porous glass foam material. It is used as a light weight, moisture- and fireproof building material with thermal and acoustic insulating properties. It is made by heating a mixture of crushed or granulated glass and a blowing agent (chemical foaming agent ), often carbon or carbonates such as limestone .

  8. Container glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Container_glass

    Container glass is a type of glass for the production of glass containers, such as bottles, jars, drinkware, and bowls. Container glass stands in contrast to flat glass (used for windows , glass doors, transparent walls, windshields ) and glass fiber (used for thermal insulation , in fiberglass composites, and optical communication ).

  9. Float glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Float_glass

    The molten glass is fed into a "tin bath", a bath of molten tin (about 3–4 m wide, 50 m long, 6 cm deep), from a delivery canal and is poured into the tin bath by a ceramic lip known as the spout lip. [18] The amount of glass allowed to pour onto the molten tin is controlled by a gate called a tweel. Molten tin is suitable for the float glass ...