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Microcap & Penny Stocks : THE OZONE COMPANY! (OZON) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jeffrey L. Henken who wrote (2386)1/20/1998 8:09:00 AM
From: JohnS  Respond to of 4356
 
News!!!!

Press Release.

Natural Chicken Processors Take Lead in Testing Ozone as a Food Safety Solution

January 20, 1998 07:30 AM

SALT LAKE CITY--(BW HealthWire)--Jan. 20, 1998--Cyclopss Corp. OZON Tuesday announced it has signed two agreements to pilot test its Eco-Pure Food Safety System(1) with a New York-based all natural chicken processor, Murray's Chickens Inc., and, New York-based prepared foods company, Gold Farm Natural Foods Inc. The Food Safety and Inspection Service ("FSIS"), an agency of the United States Department of Agriculture ("USDA"), requires the in-plant pilot testing if the chicken processors are to use an ozone technology. These pilot tests follow President Clinton's directive to food processors to better ensure the end customer that every step is being taken to provide a safer product. The pilot tests demonstrate that Murray's Chickens and Gold Farm Natural Foods is leading the industry in going the extra mile to investigate new, more natural technologies now being made available to the food processing industry. Ozone is generated by nature when lightning strikes and sends electrical charges through the air; and leaves the air smelling fresh. The same effect can be produced in controlled environments and can rid foods of microorganisms such as E.coli 0157, Campylobacter, Salmonella, and the like. In fact, ozone kills E.coli more than 3,000 times faster than does chlorine and unlike, chlorine, it leaves no chemical residue behind, making it a more natural, consumer-friendly answer to food safety issues. After ozone is introduced to food, it quickly reverts back to its close cousin, oxygen. The pilot tests will occur simultaneously in Murray's Chickens' South Fallsburg, N.Y. plant and in Gold Farm Natural Foods' co-packers plant in Troy, N.Y. The initial pilot tests begin in Cyclopss' Salt Lake City laboratory facility. Then, the tests progress to an in-plant phase once FSIS approves Cyclopss-submitted detailed protocols. All testing is expected to take three months. Once concluded, the data (including an independent lab's analysis of more than 600 samples) will be sent to the USDA (FSIS) as part of the protocols submitted for approval prior to a full-scale installation at the plant locations. Test chickens will be pulled off the production line and will be used for test purposes only. Test chickens will not be sold. Bill Stoddard, Cyclopss' president, said, "We applaud the USDA and FSIS and their directives; it ensures that all food processors use the most sound practices when implementing a new technology." Stoddard continued, "We also applaud Murray's Chickens and Gold Farm Natural Foods for taking the initiative here. Most companies will not come to the forefront of this issue unless they are going through a recall. Murray's and Gold Farm are on the cutting edge of this new, more consumer-friendly technology and we are impressed with their willingness to address it head-on." Steve Gold, president, Murray's Chicken Inc., said, "We are encouraged by President Clinton's approach to food safety. In our never ending search to bring the finest healthful food to the family table, we are proud to be part of this innovative pilot test that may change the standard of food safety as we know it today. "Our research has shown that the consumer not only worries about what is being fed to the chicken they eat, but also about E.coli and Salmonella. The Eco-Pure Food Safety System we will be testing will provide the piece of mind to the consumer that they are serving their families not only the healthiest product available, but also the safest." New York State Electric & Gas Corp. (NYSEG), the electric utility that serves Murray's Chickens, will finance a portion of the tests. Murray's Chickens lies within NYSEG's Economic Energy Zone, a dynamic 44-county business region in Upstate New York. Murray's Chickens joins hundreds of companies that can point to improvements in operational efficiency, better environmental compliance and improved business performance thanks to NYSEG's R & D-related services. Cyclopss Corp. is one of the nation's leading developers of ozone applications and technology for industries ranging from poultry-, beef- and produce- processing and hotel- and hospital laundry disinfection to medical sterilization and aerospace. Murray's Chickens Inc. is one of the nation's largest processors of "all natural chickens" which are grown without the use of any antibiotics and animal by-products. These "all natural chickens" are marketed under the brand name, Murray's Chicken. Murray's Chicken is available at better butcher shops, fine food markets and health food stores. Gold Farm Natural Foods Inc. is the processor of Gourmet Naturals -- a product line of safe, healthy, all natural poultry (Murray's) and meat cuisine in marinades made from fresh and natural ingredients. Gourmet Naturals will be available nationwide in February at better butcher shops, fine food markets and health food stores. NOTE TO EDITORS: Ozone white papers, 3-D computer-generated graphics showing how ozone kills microbes and video footage are available to members of the press only. Interviews with Steve Gold, President of both Murray's Chickens and Gold Farms Natural Foods can be conducted from executive offices in New City, N.Y. (914/639-3154). Interviews with Bill Stoddard, president of Cyclopss, can be conducted from offices in Salt Lake City (800/972-9091). Also, Dr. Amy Waldroup, Professor - Poultry Science, University of Arkansas, is available for telephone interviews (501/575-4409). (1)Eco-Pure is the name of Cyclopss' food safety system. It was a name given by a shareholder, Brenda Greer, who participated in an informal contest to name the food processing line. Some 467 shareholders who read and/or post on Silicon Investor, a popular web site visited by OZON shareholders, submitted possible names. Silicon Investor can be accessed by using the following link: www4.techstocks.com NOTE TO EDITORS: In the Internet/email address noted in this news release, there is a symbol, "tilde", between / and wsapi. This symbol may not appear properly in some systems.

Let the good times roll.
john



To: Jeffrey L. Henken who wrote (2386)1/20/1998 9:35:00 AM
From: Aishwarya  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4356
 
AUTOMOTIVE & Recreational Applications of The Novel Polymer:

Despite the potential benefits of lighter weight and durability resulting from corrosion resistance, advanced composites are not recognized as a material of choice in the near term for automotive applications.
Significant changes on a broad spectrum would be required to make advanced composites attractive for
widespread commercial use in cars and trucks. The principal barrier is the high cost of the raw and
converted materials when compared to existing options, and the perception that even with volume
production in yet-to-be-perfected processing methods, the costs would still be too high.

The general economic assessment has stalled research on significant immediate requirements, such as the design and engineering data base which would enable producers to employ advanced composites with acceptable risk, and the development of the processing technologies which would permit manufacture of components in the tens of thousands of units per year.

Nevertheless there are opportunities for advanced composites in specific components in the commercial automotive sector. In specialty vehicles of several types, produced in small numbers appropriate to manufacturing rates for advanced composites, these materials have an opportunity to demonstrate their performance benefits, apart from the requirements of the competitive marketplace.

Context

The world automotive market is dominated by three major manufacturers in North America, a so-called "Big Five" in Japan, and a slightly more fragmented market in Europe, where producers are less dominant in market share but formidable in their technologies. The business is global, rapidly changing, a significant source of horizontal and vertical employment, and intensely competitive. Management must continually balance the demand to invest in research and development in numerous technologies in order to appeal to consumers and respond to competition, with the demand to be the efficient, low-cost producer.

Advanced manufacturing of what we may call engineered composites is, however, a different story.
In the long term, these may lead to evolutionary development of advanced composites applications for the commercial market.

Applications

Pultruded Driveshafts. The first high-volume, true automotive application of aerospace technology is the driveshaft developed by the Spicer U-Joint Division of Dana Corporation. Following an earlier driveshaft introduction on 1985 Ford Econoline van models, the Spicer product on General Motors pickup trucks enjoyed a demand three times that of projected sales in its first year (1988). At approximately one pound of carbon fiber per unit, 250,000 lbs. of carbon fiber were consumed by this application in 1988. Volume has continued to grow well in excess of light truck growth rates during the 1988-97 period.

Despite the success of the technical and production aspects of the part, economics limit the growth of this application. Essentially, the graphite driveshaft is limited to longer-bodied truck vehicles, which require a two-piece shaft in steel. When the part length is less than 58 inches, a one-piece steel shaft is substantially less expensive than the one-piece composite unit. In the GMC truck potential of 500,000 units annually, the composite eliminates a multi-piece driveline, thus reducing assembly time, inventory cost, maintenance, and part number complexity. In addition, the composite assembly is 60% lighter than its two-piece predecessor, delivering a 20-lb. weight saving per vehicle, offering better fuel economy and mileage. Other benefits are the elimination of warranty associated with center bearings, noise and vibration dampening in the passenger compartment, corrosion- resistance, and custom design of driveshaft performance based on model use and power train system.

Production begins with a seamless aluminum tube. A proprietary vinyl ester resin, with both glass and
graphite continuous fiber, is then pultruded over the tube in pultrusion equipment purpose-designed by the Morrison Molded Fiber Glass Company (MMFG) -- formerly a unit of Shell Oil Company (now an
independent company), Bristol, VA. It is the composite formulation which is responsible for eliminating the center bearings. The part is engineered with an isolation barrier between the tube, and graphite fiber eliminates electrolytic galvanic corrosion.

Production rate and economics for the Spicer unit are not available. In 1985, competitors estimated that full production would demand one unit, or five to six feet per minute. A mid-1980s study by a
filament-winding manufacturer, however, revealed interesting cost analyses: contemplating a unit three and one-half inches in diameter, 60 inches long, capable of 5,000 RPM, 2,500 lb.-ft. ultimate torsion load, and a volume of 100,000 driveshafts per year, a 24% reduction in carbon fiber price would lower the cost of the assembly by only 2%. Assuming carbon fiber at $17/lb., and epoxy resin to meet boil and ultimate torque tests, the materials bill was $6.57. Completing analyses, with slightly different dimensions and some variation in materials, gave total part cost at $60 to $133 per unit.

The panel learned in an interview with a planning official of Toyota that the company has licensed driveshaft technology from a European unit of the Spicer/Dana organization. But the company has no plans to introduce the advanced composite driveshaft in production models.

RESIN TRANSFER MOULDING Panel. A second advanced composite production component, although at a low volume, is the structural panel which covers the torsion box running between the two seats of the Dodge Viper. Called the "Top-of- Tunnel" or "T-o-T," it is molded by resin transfer by Dow-United Technologies Composite Products, Inc. This component consists of skins of ¤45o woven graphite fabric, and a core of continuous strand fiberglass mat. The advanced composites part of 3.1 lbs. replaced a steel part with an estimated weight of 10 pounds.

The Viper model appeared as a prototype at the January 1989 auto shows. Introduction of the model by
the first quarter of 1992 was considered an innovation by Detroit. In some respects it was Chrysler's
answer to the GM Corvette; the entire 1992 production run of 300 units was sold out within one month.
The body skin consists of 35 fiberglass/acrylic panels molded by two conventional RTM suppliers, although the hood will be converted to SMC when full production levels are reached.

Fiber Epoxy Springs for Heavy Trucks and Trailers. Fiber epoxy springs for heavy trucks
and trailers became commercial in the U.S. in 1992, after several years of lab and over-the-road testing.
The Delco Chassis Division of General Motors in Dayton, Ohio molds the single-leaf springs with
unidirectional fiber glass in a specially-formulated epoxy. The design, materials, and process are similar to those for the original "Liteflex" spring introduced on the 1981 Corvette. The big difference, of course, is size. A epoxy spring for heavy-duty trucks and trailers is 3.5 feet long and 3 inches thick, but weighs only 22 pounds - about one-third as much as steel.

Rocker arm covers, suspension arms, wheels, and engine shrouds are examples of automotive applications which have been prototyped with ACM. But design refinements such as precise fiber orientation, or the use of integral ribs, have shown that E-glass composites in lower cost resins can be used to make these articles more cost-effectively.

Filament-Wound Fuel Tanks. A European pioneer in all-composite compressed natural gas (CNG)
cylinders put its first units in service in 1989. These were thermoplastic-lined units, with carbon epoxy
overwrap. Since that time international developments have proceeded, with at least a dozen major
composites entities contributing to development of the technology and toward the adoption of International Standards Institute specifications. No consensus has been reached on material combinations. In addition to the advanced fibers and resins within the scope of this topic, steel, aluminum, and E-glass are still contenders for various elements of a viable CNG cylinder.
production, size, weight, performance, and cost issues which are affecting fuel tank research at this time.

Several companies in North America are in commercial production of at least partially-advanced
composite CNG tanks in the hundreds of units for municipal bus and utility truck contracts. World-wide, there are half a million to 800,000 such tanks on the road, according to the International Association for Natural Gas Vehicles.

Although a U.S. Department of Transportation standard exists to support this use of composites, the
American National Standards Institute (ANSI) draft standard and the ISO document do not fully
accommodate all-polymeric composite material systems.

Electrical Vehicle Body Components and Assembly Units. Electrical vehicle body components and
assembly units such as battery trays would appear to be suitable uses for advanced composites. The
lightest possible weight is desirable in this application. Yet strength-to-weight ratio is not an exclusive
concern. Cost and proven manufacturability also influence materials selection decisively. Advanced
composites would seem to have a role only when high specific strength is required for a specialized
function.

In cooperation with funding from an environmental group and an electric utility, Mitsubishi Kasei has
perfected the conceptual elements for one-shot molding of the entire body and platform for an electric
motor scooter. Candidate resin materials for this application would be polyurea, an epoxy-polyurethane blend, or other thermosets suitable for reaction-injection molding (RIM). The reinforcement would be conventional E-glass, unless it were determined later in commercial development that "patches" of higher-performance reinforcements were required at points of exceptional stress on the frame. The accomplishment demonstrated by this program is the feasibility of molding a very complex structural part, in only several minutes cycle time, using only a single resin injection port, and without preform "drift" within the mold.

While this project showed world-class development capability, it cannot be said that the RIM process
demonstrated is advanced beyond the research work published by Ford Motor Company in cooperation
with Dow Chemical, relative to structural cross- members for automotive use, or beyond the research on bumper beam assemblies that has been completed by the U.S. Automotive Composites Consortium. Like the latter, the Mitsubishi Kasei technology has produced parts which meet apparent physical performance requirements, but the scooter bodies have not been put into commercial production.

Aftermarket and Specialty Components

A number of uses for advanced composites in the automotive sector are being developed for modular or stand-alone components which could be retro-fitted to existing vehicles (an example is tanks for
compressed natural gas [CNG] as an alternative fuel). Other applications which should be noticed are
specialty parts for prototype transportation whose commercial future is uncertain (examples in this category are components for electric vehicle bodies).

Automotive Conclusion

One of the "heavy industry" interviews, people were shown visuals of aluminum honeycomb-core panels stamped for use as monolithic, configured floor pans for conventional passenger cars. The host research team said this structural part is in production for a low-volume model which is having a very good reception in the domestic market.

CONCLUSIONS

There are five emerging "techno-paradigm" shifts that are apparent in this sector of Industry
companies.

1.manufacturing companies -- from producing to thinking organizations
2.business dynamics -- from single to multiple-technology base (diversification)
3.R&D activities -- from visible to invisible enemies (competition from other industries rather than from industries within the same industrial sector)
4.technology development -- from a linear to a demand articulation process (a focus on how to put
existing technology to the best possible use)
5.technology diffusion -- from technical to institutional innovation

Hope this information was useful to all.
Regards

Sri