The Cool Parts Show
Published

American Precision Museum Launches Interactive Digital Exhibit

Support and inspire the future of manufacturing by honoring a manufacturing innovator, advocate or educator in new exhibit.

Share

The Manufacturing Ledger enables visitors to sort by industry sector, lifetime achievement awards or inventors and founders. Visitors can also search by name, company and job function.

The Manufacturing Ledger enables visitors to sort by industry sector, lifetime achievement awards or inventors and founders. Visitors can also search by name, company and job function. 

The American Precision Museum (APM) recently launched a new interactive digital exhibit called “The Manufacturing Ledger.” The exhibit is a collection of stories and profiles about individuals whose careers were devoted to manufacturing — whether the person’s career was spent on the shop floor, engineering department, sales department or in the corporate boardroom.

The exhibit — which is designed to support and inspire the future of manufacturing — is accessible online and will soon be integrated into a physical exhibit at the museum.

The Manufacturing Ledger embraces the “people” aspect of the manufacturing history, enabling the APM to tell the full narrative of manufacturing by providing a well-designed framework and functional platform to relay sponsored profiles and pictures of an infinite number of individuals. The museum welcomes submissions from a variety of manufacturing career categories, including machine tool builder, machine tool distributor/importer, manufacturer, educator and industry advocate (such as associations, media).

APM says interacting with the exhibit is easy and cross-referenced, enabling visitors to sort profiles by industry sector, job function, name and company so visitors can find former co-workers and learn more about their career path. There are also search functions to locate those who founded a company or who invented a technology used in manufacturing. Visitors can also search by various lifetime achievement awards from participating associations, such as AMT – The Association for Manufacturing Technology, National Tooling & Machining Association (NTMA), Precision Machined Products Association (PMPA) and Women in Manufacturing (WiM) as well as members of the Machine Tool Hall of Fame.

Participating in The Manufacturing Ledger supports the American Precision Museum financially and physically. Contributing your story or that of a family member, friend, colleague, mentor or educator enriches the content of the exhibit itself, while financial donations sponsoring each profile help fund the museum. The facility maintains the largest collection of historically significant machine tools in the nation, all housed in an 1846 armory building which is designated a National Historic Landmark.

The museum’s goals are to preserve, present and interpret its artifact collections and property; to inspire new generations of innovators; and build communities that foster a strong manufacturing future.

“The American Precision Museum is home to remarkable manufacturing breakthroughs,” says Lee Morris, chairman of Morris Group Inc. “To produce precise, interchangeable rifle componentry, engineering innovators replaced manual filing and fitting with water-powered, metal cutting machine tools of their own design. It is doubtful that these engineers had any idea of the impact of their creativity. They were at the forefront of a manufacturing revolution, but their individual stories are mostly lost. The progress of every decade since, is the product of people thinking, creating and improving in response to perceived opportunity. The story is repeated time and again. It’s the people behind manufacturing innovations who are so compelling. Along with the machinery that they have created, we also need to collect, share and preserve personal stories of the manufacturing innovators who have so strongly influenced the United States throughout the years.”

To begin the process of contributing your unique manufacturing story or to honor someone you know, visit The Manufacturing Ledger. For further information, contact Steve Dalessio at 802-674-5781 or ledger@americanprecision.org.

Your AM Superhero
The Hopper has Landed

Related Content

Aerospace

Avio Utilizes Velo3D Metal Printers for Developing Propulsion Systems

The Italian space propulsion innovator is installing the printers in its Colleferro, Italy, headquarters to produce mission-critical parts for its family of rocket engines.

Read More
Energy & Power

GE Sells Generator Technology for Stake in EV Startup

The company says the Karno generator is expected to be 20%+ more efficient than today’s leading generators — achieved by 3D printing of thermal components and innovative fuel-to-electricity conversion.

Read More
Inventors

6 Considerations When Launching an Additive Startup

Recent additive manufacturing (AM) startup owner, JP Kinerk, shares his experience by offering helpful advice for others just starting out in the additive realm.

Read More
Startups

3D Printing Startup to Deliver Thousands of Custom Hearing Aids Over Next Five Years

Starting with a pilot program in Jordan, nonprofit 3DP4ME is developing workflows to 3D print hearing aid earmolds and prosthetics near the people who need them.

Read More

Read Next

Hybrid manufacturing

Video: Intelligent Layering Metal 3D Printing at 3DEO

Contract manufacturer 3DEO delivers metal parts using Intelligent Layering, a binder jetting-like 3D printing process the company developed and operates internally. Here’s how it works. 

Read More
Metal

Looking to Secure the Supply Chain for Castings? Don't Overlook 3D Printed Sand Cores and Molds

Concerns about casting lead times and costs have many OEMs looking to 3D print parts directly in metal. But don’t overlook the advantages of 3D printed sand cores and molds applied for conventional metal casting, says Humtown leader.

Read More
Composites

To Improve Performance of Compression Molded Composites, Add 3D Printed Preforms

9T Labs' Additive Fusion Technology enables the manufacture of composite structures with as much or as little reinforcement as is necessary, using 3D printed continuous fiber preforms to add strength just where needed. 

Read More
The Cool Parts Show