Northwest Aerospace News June | July 2019 Issue No. 9 | Page 24

T he custom-built facility is bright, modern and clean with a clear process flow. It is evident in a factory tour that Jorgenson has a background in industrial engineering and through the set-up of this plant, he hasn’t missed a beat. There are nine forming presses and the composite materials use high-performance engineered thermoplastic polymers which are processed at up to 700 degrees Fahrenheit. They use a variety of composite materials with continuous carbon and glass fiber reinforcement in fabric or unidirectional tape form. “Unidirectional tapes make for stiffer and stronger materials which can be tailored to the loads on the parts,” said Leach. The parts made for Boeing include brackets, angles, beams, channels, stiffeners and ribs. They do this through the fol- lowing processes: stamp forming, press molding and contin- uous compression molding (CCM) of flat laminates, and profiles. The advantage of the products, according to their website, is, “A major advantage of thermoplastics is the rapid processing. The polymer is simply heated, formed to shape and cooled with no chemical reaction or cure. Aero- space applications demand the highest performance, a wide service temperature range, environmental resistance and very low flammability. The select polymers have desirable characteristics for aerospace structures and interiors. All the polymers have high service temperatures, represented by the glass transition temperature (Tg).” 24 NORTHWEST AEROSPACE NEWS “I had a God-given talent to look at material and to figure out how to build parts out of it,” said Jorgenson. He added, “I had some pretty good ‘Imagineering’ ability. Someone once asked me, ‘How do you make so many good parts?’ — the answer is I made a lot of bad parts first.” He said that’s how you learn what a material can do — through testing it and making more parts. DAN JORGENSON ATC Manufacturing Founder/CEO