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  2. Norton Abrasives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norton_Abrasives

    Norton Abrasives of Worcester, Massachusetts, USA is the world's largest manufacturer and supplier of abrasives for commercial applications, household, and automotive refinishing usage. Norton Company was founded in 1885 by a group of ceramists and entrepreneurs from Worcester, Massachusetts. The group set out to manufacture the first mass ...

  3. Grinding wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grinding_wheel

    Grinding wheel. Grinding wheels are wheels that contain abrasive compounds for grinding and abrasive machining operations. Such wheels are also used in grinding machines. The wheels are generally made with composite material. This consists of coarse-particle aggregate pressed and bonded together by a cementing matrix (called the bond in ...

  4. Charles Hotchkiss Norton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Hotchkiss_Norton

    Charles Hotchkiss Norton (November 23, 1851, Plainville, Connecticut – October 27, 1942, Plainville, Connecticut) was an American mechanical engineer and designer of machine tools. [ 1 ] After working for the Seth Thomas Clock company in Thomaston , in 1886 Norton became Assistant Engineer with the Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing Company at ...

  5. Grinding (abrasive cutting) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grinding_(abrasive_cutting)

    Grinding is a subset of cutting, as grinding is a true metal-cutting process. Each grain of abrasive functions as a microscopic single-point cutting edge (although of high negative rake angle), and shears a tiny chip that is analogous to what would conventionally be called a "cut" chip (turning, milling, drilling, tapping, etc.) [citation needed].

  6. The Churchill Machine Tool Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Churchill_Machine_Tool...

    The 1914 edition of the publication states Norton & Co was involved in "alundum and crystolon grinding wheels"; its appointment of Churchill as agents took place in 1910. [58] In 1921, there was a US patent application for a lathe assigned to Churchill directors and in which James Carson living in London was cited as the inventor.

  7. Electrochemical grinding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrochemical_grinding

    Electrochemical grinding is a process that removes electrically conductive material by grinding with a negatively charged abrasive grinding wheel, an electrolyte fluid, and a positively charged workpiece. [1] Materials removed from the workpiece stay in the electrolyte fluid. Electrochemical grinding is similar to electrochemical machining but ...

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