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The threading specialists

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Goliath Threading Tools was founded in the UK in 1962 as a manufacturer of HSS taps, HSS dies, and related specialist threading tools. From its head office in Birmingham, England, the company rapidly established a worldwide distribution network based on its reputation for uncompromising quality. As threading tool specialists Goliath has long been known as a one-stop shop for most threading needs.

After over 50 years of distribution here in Australia, Goliath was acquired by Bordo International with a view to further strengthen that company’s ‘Engineering Excellence’ mantra.

Today, the Goliath range has expanded to include a range of cutting fluids and pastes, including a semisynthetic soluble fluid, aluminium cutting fluid, the world famous ‘Rapid Tap’ cutting oil and paste as well as ‘Stick-Kut’ wax lubricant for saw blades, grinding wheels and sanding belts.

For the precision required in threaded holes and threaded rod, Goliath is also a supplier of plug gauges, ring gauges and thread pitch gauges. And to clean up internal and external threads, Goliath supplies a range of Filon thread files.

With such an extensive range it is no wonder that many products sold by Goliath are unique. Tap extractors, for example, are often the only viable method of removing broken taps from holes without damage to the workpiece. Tap extractors have hardened steel ‘fingers’ that fit into the flutes of broken taps allowing them to be wound out simply and safely. As threading tool specialists a large and comprehensive range of products is essential. Goliath’s huge range of stocked taps and dies is the biggest in Australia and continues to be expanded year on year.

For more information on Goliath products contact your CSS Member Store

Sealants fit for purpose

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How do you choose the sealant that is fit for purpose?

Achieving the right movement capability is one factor, but what about chemical resistance, UV stability, paintability, fire ratings and compliance with potable water standards? “It is imperative that sealants are specified and installed correctly,” explains Colin Picton, Fosroc ANZ Product Segment Specialist for Waterproofing & Sealants.

For the construction industry, Fosroc is a one-stop shop for sealants. “We have polyurethanes, hybrids, silicones, polysulfides and now a polyurea sealant,” says Colin.

SILICONES

The Fosroc Nitoseal SC silicone range offers sealants for infrastructure, general construction and other specialist requirements, such as anti-pick sealants for prisons, bio resistance and AS4020:2018 potable water compliance.

POLYURETHANES

Polyurethane sealants are well known in the ANZ market, used in home renovations right through to large general construction projects. Fosroc Nitoseal PU polyurethane sealants enable gunning up to three times faster than other PU sealants on the market, especially in colder climates.

SILYL MODIFIED POLYMER (HYBRIDS)

“Fosroc Nitoseal MS250 and MS400 use polymer technology to blend silicone and polyurethane. They are friendlier on the world and the user, compared to PUs,” Colin says. “Excellent weathering and adhesion performance are key physical benefits.“ They have no isocyanate, low odour and very low VOC, they can

also be painted over, unlike straight PU sealants that can suffer from plasticizer bleed.

OTHER TECHNOLOGIES

Where fuel resistance and fast return to service are important, Fosroc’s Thioflex range is a trusted solution for roads, airfields and refuelling stations, bridges, carparks and transport hubs.

New Nitoseal PY350 is a hybrid polyurea sealant that offers quick return to service times and wheel resistant hardness for concrete floors in retail, warehousing, bunds and other industrial settings.

For information, visit fosroc.com.au

Sando sledge hammers

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With a well-known reputation for being the “Original Unbreakable Sledge Hammer”, Sando sledge hammers are the choice of demolition experts.

What makes Sando a strike above the others is confidence. The innovative locking plate design ensures the head won’t separate from the handle. The handle is made up of a  core of high tensile steel rods that are moulded to abrasive resistant rubber making it unbreakable. Great to hold and easy to use, the Sando Sledge Hammer will give you confidence to strike in wet and dry conditions.

In addition to the best selling Steel Sledge Hammer, Sando also makes a range of other striking tools including club hammers, ball pein hammers, soft face and copper sledge hammers.

Sando Striking Tools have been around for almost 50 years and if the brand is as strong as their hammers, Sando will be around for 50 years more.

Sando Striking Tools are proudly distributed by White International. 

For more information about Sando and our other well-known brands, please visit www.whiteint.com.au or contact us 1300 780 876

ETA Rated Anchors

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In an endeavour to stay current and innovative, as technology advances, building codes change, and safety becomes increasingly more important, Macsim Fastenings is constantly evolving its products.

Proof of this evolution is the recently introduced NCC Compliant and ETA certified ranges of Wedge Anchors, Screwbolts, Drop In Anchors, and a DBZ Anchor. Our anchors are sourced from a leading manufacturer and have been designed for use in safety critical applications. All products comply with AS5216, and are fire rated. Wedge Anchors are Option 1 and C1/C2 Seismic rated. Screwbolts are Option 1 rated, and some sizes are C1/C2 Seismic rated. Drop In Anchors are Option 7 rated, and both the Drop In Anchors and the DBZ Anchor are for use for redundant non-structural systems.

Anchors that qualify under Seismic Category C1 and C2 provide capacities in terms of Tension, Shear Resistance and Displacement.

The concrete cracking effect is taken into account in the assessment for both seismic categories with different crack widths.

For Option 1, the Option number determines the scope of application for which the fastener performance has been independently verified. Factors determining the number include the state of concrete, concrete strength, direction of loading, effect of reduced edge and spacing distances, and design method. Option 1 (cracked and uncracked concrete) is one of the most demanding testing regimes.

Our Screwbolts are available in Hex Head, Countersunk, Button Head and Hanger, in 6, 8, 10mm diameters, and in 60 – 140mm lengths. Our Wedge Anchors are available in 8,10,12,16, 20mm diameters, and in 75 – 180mm lengths. Our Drop In Anchors are available in 8,10,12mm diameters, and in 30 – 50mm lengths. Our DBZ Anchor is available in 6mm diameter, and is 35mm in length.

For further information on the Macsim NCC Compliant and ETA certified ranges, please contact your nearest CSS branch.

 

When waste can build a wall

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Firing bricks and making mortar and cement is costly, but organic chemists at Flinders University are working on more sustainable alternatives, focusing on building materials made from waste products.

Researchers from the Chalker Lab have used low-cost feedstocks to make lightweight, durable polymer building blocks which can be bonded together with an adhesive-free chemical reaction.

Their latest study tested the strength of these materials and explored ways they can be reinforced in construction.

Matthew Flinders Professor of Chemistry, Justin Chalker, says the need to develop sustainable building materials is increasingly important, with cement, iron and steel production accounting for more than 15% of global CO2 emissions each year.

“In this study, we tested a new type of brick we can make from waste cooking oil, mixed with sulfur and dicyclopentadiene (DCPD). Both sulfur and DCPD are byproducts of petroleum refining. The bricks bond together without mortar upon application of a trace amount of amine catalyst. All the starting materials are plentiful and can be classified as industrial waste.”

The Chalker Lab’s new polymer research team at Flinders University’s College of Science and Engineering is collaborating with Clean Earth Technologies for further development, scale-up and possible commercialisation.

The latest study expanded the research to test the new bricks’ mechanical properties and look at ways to reinforce them in construction, including carbon fibre fillers.

Chalker Lab research associate Dr Maximilian Mann says as well as repurposing waste materials into value-added construction materials, the polymer bricks’ sulfur-sulfur bond means they can be bound together without mortar like traditional building method.

“The bonding in this novel catalytic process is very strong, producing a sustainable construction material with its own mortar which will potentially streamline construction,” Dr Mann says.

Create a healthy workplace

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New rules to help prevent psychological harm at work

Preventing psychological harm is an essential part of creating a healthy and safe workplace.

The model work health and safety (WHS) laws now include regulations on psychosocial hazards. A new model Code of Practice on Managing psychosocial hazards at work explains the laws and how to comply with them, including practical steps to manage workplace risks to psychological health.

Safe Work Australia Chief Executive Officer Michelle Baxter said that “under work health and safety laws, people have a positive duty to do everything they reasonably can to prevent exposure to psychosocial hazards and risks. Psychosocial hazards are anything at work that may cause psychological harm.

“They can come from the way work is designed and managed, the working environment, or behaviours including bullying, harassment, discrimination, aggression and violence.”

Ms Baxter said work-related psychological injuries and illness have a significant negative impact on workers, their families and business.

“On average, work-related psychological injuries have longer recovery times, higher costs, and require more time away from work when compared with physical injuries.

“Workers’ compensation claims for psychological injury and illness have increased and impose high costs to employers through time off and workers’ compensation costs.

“Managing psychosocial risks protects workers, decreases staff turnover and absenteeism, and may improve broader organisational performance and productivity.”

The model Code of Practice: Managing psychosocial hazards at work is available on the Safe Work Australia website.

Construction cost is escalating

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Hyper-escalation of construction costs for contractors locked into fixed price contracts is emerging as one of the biggest challenges for Australia’s third largest industry, construction. If not addressed, it could significantly impact on the ongoing sustainability of the industry and in the process fracture Australia’s economy.

Australian Constructors Association CEO Jon Davies said the industry is seeing examples of price rises over a 12-month period of up to 70 per cent and yet clients continue to expect fix prices.

“The industry cannot continue to bear the cost of these steep price increases—some costs will need to be passed on to halt the growing trend of insolvencies,” said Mr Davies.

“This is a shared problem—government, contractors and the supply chain are in the immediate firing line, but company failures impact the wider economy.

“Construction underpins the economy—contributing to 8 per cent of GDP–and yet it accounts for more insolvencies than any other sector.”

The Australian Constructors Association is calling on governments to compensate contractors for projects suffering from major price increases regardless of whether the contract terms provide for such relief.

“Major projects are often entered into years before they are completed and no one could have foreseen the current environment and priced for it,” said Mr Davies. “Going forward contracts should contain transparent mechanisms to ensure future fluctuations are dealt with fairly. This also means contractors should not make windfall gains if price falls.

“Projects should not be delayed or deferred as this can have unintended consequences that are worse than the problem trying to be solved. Asset owners can keep to budget by using pre agreed positive/negative variations to adjust the scope to account for material price fluctuations or other risks for that matter.

“The industry needs to become more financially sustainable to properly focus on important issues such as improving productivity, sustainability and innovation.”

It’s a family affair

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They say the family that plays together stays together and it is certainly true for Australian rally star Simon Evans and his children.

By Liz Swanton

When both parents are the best at what they do, their offspring are likely to either follow in their footsteps … or not.

For Jackson and Eden Evans, now aged 27 and 24 years respectively, motorsport was part of life as father Simon and mother Sue conquered the country, winning four Australian Rally Championship crowns.

Now busy building their own careers, they have also joined their father to create a three-car Polaris side-by-side team, backed by Australian owned tools and equipment company, Kincrome. Without her knowing it, Eden was a major part of the deal.

“Last year I was talking to Kincrome about what we were doing and I said, ‘My daughter is going to race with us so we will be a three-car family team’, but Eden didn’t know because I hadn’t talked to her about it,” laughs Simon. Kincrome said yes and Simon left the meeting, ringing his daughter frantically.

When she didn’t answer after repeated attempts, he admits to getting very nervous. Finally, they connected. “I said, ‘Guess what, you’re driving this year. All you have to do is turn up. Please. I’ve sold you as part of the team.’

Previously she’d always said if an opportunity came up to just take it, so I was pretty sure what her answer would be.”

Announcing the deal, then Kincrome CEO, Nick Pritchard, said the three year partnership with Simon Evans Motorsport was the company’s first major sponsorship in racing.

“Simon Evans Motorsport obviously has a great pedigree in Australian motorsport and in rallying in particular,” says Pritchard. “The partnership with Simon, Jackson and Eden is a natural extension of our series sponsorship and I think provides some terrific opportunities for our brand, customers and staff.

“Just like Kincrome, Simon Evans Motorsport is a generational operation, and we really relate to those family values and the loyalty that goes with them.”

With the power of a major sponsor behind them, Simon Evans Motorsport and its three drivers set to work, but only three rounds of last year’s championship were run before COVID intervened and the title was called.

Eden was leading the points tally in her category. It’s the only bragging the family does about last year, because the Evans trio now has their eyes firmly on the prize for 2022, hoping for a full round of events and a chance to put themselves in contention for round wins and titles.

Team leader Simon Evans is rightly regarded as one of Australia’s all-time great rally drivers. In 1999, he and then-wife Sue teamed up as driver and co-driver (navigator), tackling both the national series and rounds of the Asia-Pacific rally championship. They won their first ARC crown in 2006, then again in 2007, 2009 and 2010.

In 2016, Simon was taking another tilt at the ARC and helping his brother Tom who had entered what was then the Polaris RZR Australian Championship (later the SXS series) when another competitor offered him the chance of a drive. It was too good to refuse and after tuning the vehicle to his liking, Simon put it on the podium at his first outing.

“I really enjoyed the racing and the style of racing we were doing at the time which was on motocross tracks with big jumps, which really suited my personality.

“Then it just happened that rallying was getting expensive and there wasn’t much manufacturer support, and I didn’t really know if I wanted to commit to something like that again, at the levels we were operating in the past. The Polaris thing looked so good and ticked all the boxes, so I just went with it.”

For a few years, Simon raced as a ‘factory driver’ for Polaris. Then the company asked him to run the team. He took over in 2018 and won the title the same year.

“We showed them what we could do and then they had a big pull-back and cut budgets and I thought that was it, to be honest. But I said I would like to keep racing and we struck a deal. I built a new car and Jackson started running with me, as a two-car team, in 2019.

We had a brilliant year, finishing one and three, with Jackson winning the championship.

“Everyone was very excited because Jackson was young, and it was his first year in the championship. So Polaris decided to get behind us a bit more, but then COVID hit. We had all these new cars and new plans and we pretty much just sat at home and didn’t race.”

Fast forward to 2022 and Kincrome now sponsors Simon Evans Motorsport as well as the entire SXS Motorsport Australia Championship series which the team is competing in. The side-by-side series has also become a category of the Motorsport Australia BF Goodrich Off Road Championship and the combination means huge fields (around 100 vehicles with half of them in the SXS category) and tight competition.

Simon admits it is hard work running his ‘day job’, Enhanced Concrete Pumping, and the team—and racing in his ‘spare’ time—but 24/7 is the only way he knows how to operate. Even with those pressures, he is still fiercely competitive.

“I love to run at the front, so I want to fight for wins and the championship. Clearly my son is very fast and Eden too, so I want to create the memories and have fun with them.

“If you go racing you don’t do it half-arsed. Well, I don’t. I’ll fight all the way to the end. I like to think I have a few race brains about me so I can still hold my own, and that’s good. I’ve still got toys and I’m still racing, and I will be racing until I die. That’s the plan.”

The paper route

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David Irvine waxes lyrical about family business, Caprice Paper, and why there’s still hope for the future of Australian manufacturing.

By Lynne Testoni

Sometimes it’s best to do just one thing—but do it well. That’s certainly been the philosophy of the Irvine family and their business, Caprice Paper, for more than 32 years.

CEO David Irvine has been with Caprice for most of his working life, working alongside his parents in the early years, plus various uncles and aunts, his sister, as well as his wife Kate and their two daughters, Sam and Ally.

The company specialises in manufacturing paper goods for the ‘away-from-home’ market, which includes industry and hospitality, so paper towel, toilet rolls and napkins predominantly. The majority of products are manufactured in their Victorian factory, located at the foot of the Dandenong Ranges, complemented by a warehouse in Sydney.

It’s a wholesale business, with the Caprice team selling to distributors, who then supply their range of product to the end customers.

“Our client base is pretty diverse,” says Irvine. “Basically, anywhere that you class as ‘away from home’ is a potential customer. So it can include anything from healthcare to education, offices, and factories.”

 

THE HUMBLE TOWEL

Caprice started by manufacturing paper roll towels, which remains one of their main products, but the product range now also includes toilet tissue products, other types of paper towel, such as interleaved towels, all the dispensers for the products, plus paper tableware and napkins for restaurants and hotels.

“We are consistent,” says Irvine. “A case in point is the roll towels that we started with. They’re still our biggest seller, which is incredible for such a straightforward product that had been around in the market for probably 30 plus years before we started selling or making them.

“And now it’s 30 years later and the demand is still there, because they are such an easy product to use—convenient, and people can tear off as much as they want for their purpose.”

The company has a staff of 36, a compact size that makes it quite agile, with no middle management, and allows David and Kate to keep a close eye on business all the time. “Everyone answers to either myself or my wife,” says Irvine.

 

COVID BUSINESS BOOST

Caprice has thrived in the last two years, despite the pandemic, partly because the increased focus on hygiene in factories and companies generally has helped to sell more of their product.

“People and business owners had been fairly blasé about hygiene,” Irvine says. “One of the biggest problems out there was that people just weren’t washing their hands and that was spreading a lot of germs around. We saw a really strong demand for dispensers for interleaved towels and roll towels through that period. It tapered off last year, but we’d never sold so many dispensers as we did in 2020.”

COVID-19 has also helped to reinforce the importance of having goods manufactured in Australia, because local companies such as Caprice have managed to weather the supply chain issues that have plagued industry as a whole.

“Despite all the things that have gone on including, most recently, the shipping delays, it’s been a real boon for us too,” says Irvine. “As long as we’ve had enough raw material, which we have, we have been able to produce whatever we want when we want it, and not get overstocked, and keep our customers happy.”

 

LOST BUSINESS

Irvine says that it has been sad to watch many companies move to offshore manufacturing in recent years.

“Large manufacturers were still manufacturing here up until five to 10 years ago; they were still making many of their products here,” he says. “And then the retailers said, ‘Well, unless you start manufacturing in China, we won’t be buying off you.’ So, what were they to do?”

When these manufacturers did move manufacturing to China, it had a detrimental effect on Caprice Paper.

“A lot of our products were being sold into those factories,” says Irvine. “Our towel and tissue products were being sold through our distributors into many factories. Melbourne was the most manufacturing-related economy of all the cities in Australia, so it has been hit the hardest with that change.

“I think if people had been more prepared to stick things out, not throw their lot in with China, there would have been a lot more product around, but unfortunately a lot of people were forced into this cheaper mindset and much was lost.

“I would hope that people have really paused and thought about what they’ve done.”

The Irvine family is committed to staying in manufacturing, even investing in high-speed machinery for their factory. “We used to have a lot of small machines and then we invested heavily in some real state-of-the-art machinery to allow us to stay competitive with manufacturing in Australia,” says Irvine.

 

A FOCUS ON SUSTAINABILITY

The company has also moved to using recycled paper for many of their products, a feature that is now a significant part of the Caprice business.

Irvine also worked hard to get FSC and PEFC certification for their raw materials, which ensures that the paper they use has come from sustainable sources, such as plantation timber. It was an arduous process, but worthwhile, he says.

“It goes all the way down the line,” he explains. “Everyone involved has to be certified, from the foresters to the pulp mill, to the paper mill, then to us as a converter. So the consumer can be comfortable they’re not getting timber or pulp from timber out of a rainforest.”

 

Pre-fabulous

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Prefabricated modular plumbing is not just a new, innovative way to fit plumbing hardware – it’s a real game changer.

By Frank Leggett

During every build, various plumbing parts or components are manufactured away from the work site. So, while prefabricated plumbing has always been a part of the industry, it takes place on a very small scale.

Richstone Group has taken this concept and expanded it, designing and manufacturing common elements in a controlled environment and then assembling and installing onsite. A study compiled by Richstone revealed that 54 per cent of all bathrooms have the same layout. When a bathroom contains washing machine cupboards, this figure is increased to 66 per cent.

“We started with simple elements,” says Shannon Egglestone, CEO and founder of the Richstone Group. “Now we go right through to bespoke. In an apartment building, 80 per cent of what we install is manufactured in our factory. Everything we prefab is designed from a manufactured drawing. This ensures it meets all requirements of the ASC500 plumbing code of Australia.”

 

PREFAB MODULES

The Richstone Group, through its manufacturing arm Modular Prefab Solutions, also builds full modules where a plumber simply connects drains and water lines. This works extremely well for multi-unit dwellings provided there is accurate scheduling.

“If we’re supplying a 40-storey building, all 40 storeys are not built at once,” says Egglestone. “The design drawings are made once, the manufactured drawings are made once, but the modules are made and supplied multiple times over the two year life of the build. Each module must arrive onsite on the day it needs to be installed.”

While prefab works well on large-scale projects, it’s also effective on small bespoke projects. The big advantages, across the board, are huge time-savings and material control.

“Our wastage of PVC pipe on a module is 1.9 per cent,” says Egglestone. “Our wastage of PEX pipe is 0.9 per cent. Copper wastage is not even measurable because it’s fully recyclable and the smallest amount can be reused. On an in-situ build, you would generally allow for 10 per cent wastage on everything.”

 

EFFICIENCY AND ACCURACY

The Richstone Group, based in Melbourne, is a parent company with plumbing at the heart of its business. It includes Richstone Plumbing that has about 140 staff and the manufacturing arm, Modular Prefab Solutions, that employs 27 staff. Modular Design provides all the hydraulic and prefabrication design, employing 10 people.

Shannon Eggleston is involved in all areas of this vertical business model. While his vision is to create effective prefabrication of plumbing, his plan is to change the way the industry operates.

Richstone first started prefabbing components in 2008. As digital technology improved, it allowed for more accurately surveyed set-outs, which allowed for more components to be prefabbed. This is particularly important when it comes to drainage.

His team worked with the University of Melbourne on prefabricated wall elements as part of a research grant with the School of Architecture.

“The government grant was to build pre-plumbed prebuilt wall elements for commercial construction,” says Egglestone. “A Multiplex project was our test case. We built an apartment in all elements within the factory. We then transported it to site and installed it. All the walls were stood up at the work-front in about 11 minutes. We then connected the drains and the prefabbed hot and cold spine. The entire apartment was plumbed up within 45 minutes.”

Richstone is currently trialing the use of automated reality where designers wear reality goggles and design in 3D space instead of off a plan.

 

CHANGING THE CULTURE

The ultimate flow-on from prefabrication is faster build times and lower costs. All components are built in a controlled environment that allows for extreme accuracy. There is little or no rework and everything is designed to meet code. Provided the plumber installs the product in the correct manner, it will meet all standards.

“We’re changing the culture of plumbing and I understand why some tradies and plumbers have concerns,” says Egglestone. “The simple fact is that prefabrication doesn’t take work away; it just allows you to do more work in a shorter period of time. It increases efficiency without putting any undue stress on tradies.”

The most important part of prefabrication is logistics. Everything is taken into account—how it’s packaged, how it’s delivered to site, how it’s moved around the site.

“The key to prefabrication is making sure it gets there on time, in full, and in the right sequence of packaging. Packaging the product is just as important as the actual design in the module.”

 

MANY BENEFITS

Using prefabricated plumbing elements offers benefits right across the board. There are significant cost-savings for clients by utilising common parts with an efficiency of labour and drastically reduced wastage. The builder saves on installation time and reduces high-risk work when components are manufactured in a controlled environment. The project benefits from increased design quality and consistency.

“I truly believe that prefabrication is the way of the future,” says Egglestone. “Plumbers have always relied on innovation of product, but to achieve significant improvement, innovation must be driven through a change in process.”