Sunday, December 28, 2025

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : Magnesium’s Industrial Comeback

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

🚀 Magnesium’s Industrial Comeback - From Risky to Reliable 🌍


Five years ago, magnesium was on every “too risky” list.

Too costly. Too unstable. Too dependent.


Today, that perception is finally changing, and not by chance.

Working with OEMs scaling beyond 50k units/year, we’ve seen first-hand how magnesium has evolved from an experiment to a trusted industrial reality.


⚙️ Why Magnesium Matters Now

🛠 Longer die-life → −15% maintenance, +uptime

⏱ Faster HPDC cycles → +20% throughput

💵 Stable pricing → predictable budgets

🌏 Multi-regional supply & vertical integration → full traceability and reduced regional dependency

⚡ +25–45 kg Mg per EV → lighter, safer, more efficient


This isn’t theory, it’s what happens when OEMs and suppliers build stability, transparency, and scalability into every step of production.



📊 Real-World Proof


🈸 China’s “Technology Roadmap 2.0”: ~25 kg Mg per EV (2025) → ~45 kg (2030)

🚗 Chery eQ5 frame: 94 kg, 100% Mg (AZ91), industrially validated

🔩 Seres Motors: 19 kg/EV with AM60 & AE42, HPDC at scale

🏭 Baowu Group: AS21 & AE44 components, consistent throughput & quality


Magnesium alloys like AZ, AM, AE, AS are no longer experimental, they’re industrial standards shaping the next generation of EVs.



🔮 Looking Ahead


Aluminium solved yesterday’s EV challenges.

Magnesium is solving tomorrow’s.


Because the future of lightweight design isn’t about chasing the lowest cost, it’s about ensuring stable price, stable supply, and scalable performance.


💬 Join the discussion:

➡ Do you think magnesium will have its “aluminium moment” in EVs?

➡ Which component could lead that transition first?

➡ Tag an engineer or OEM who should weigh in on this conversation.


If you’re watching this shift in real time, you’re already part of the magnesium comeback.


source : Francisco Barea Silva


*Quality & Production: A Winning Partnership 🚀

 *Quality & Production: A Winning Partnership 🚀*

"Quality is not the enemy of production, it's the foundation of success!" 💯

When Quality and Production teams work together, everyone wins 😊



*Why It Matters*

- Rushing production without quality leads to defects, rework, and unhappy customers 😕

- Quality is a shared responsibility – everyone plays a part 📚

- "Quality should be 'built in', not 'inspected in'" 🔄


*The False Dilemma*

The conflict between Quality and Production hurts the entire organization 🚨

- Defects cost time and money 💸

- Customers remember poor quality 😞


*The Winning Approach*

- Collaborate, don't compete 🤝

- Focus on long-term success 📈

- Make quality everyone's priority 💪


*Together, Quality and Production drive success! 🚀*


source : Six Sigma Manufacturing

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Just because you fit does not mean you belong.

Just because you fit does not mean you belong.

You can meet the expectations.

You can check every box.

You can play the role.


And still feel out of place.

Fitting in is about adapting.

Belonging is about alignment.


Here’s the difference ↓


→ Fitting in asks you to shrink parts of yourself

→ Belonging lets you show up fully


→ Fitting in requires constant effort

→ Belonging feels steady, not forced


→ Fitting in focuses on approval

→ Belonging comes from shared values


If you constantly feel drained, cautious, or muted:

Pay attention.


That discomfort is information.


You do not need to force yourself into spaces

that were never designed for who you are.


The right environment does not just accept you.

It supports you.


Repost now with others

source : Jen Blandos

Sunday's THOUGHTFUL Post : Seaweed packaging! Myth versus reality!

Sunday's THOUGHTFUL Post

Seaweed packaging! Myth versus reality!

Seaweed-based bioplastics offer promise as an alternative to conventional plastics, but they still face significant hurdles before becoming a mainstream choice. Here's why:

1. Performance Limitations:

- Mechanical Strength: Seaweed bioplastics are often weaker and more brittle than petroleum-based or PLA/PHB bioplastics.

- Water Sensitivity: Many seaweed bioplastics are highly hydrophilic, limiting their use for packaging liquids or in humid environments.

- Durability: These bioplastics have a limited shelf life and degrade over time, suitable for composting but challenging for usability.


2. High Cost of Production:

- Raw Material Costs: Harvesting, drying, and processing seaweed are labor- and energy-intensive.

- Low Yield: Extracting usable biopolymer components results in relatively low material output.

- No Economies of Scale: Limited mass production leads to higher costs compared to fossil-based plastics.


3. Supply Chain and Scaling Issues:

- Limited seaweed farming infrastructure and suitable farming conditions.

- Lack of processing facilities equipped for seaweed feedstocks.


4. Inconsistent Material Quality:

- Variability in seaweed species' chemical composition leads to difficulties in standardization and inconsistent product performance.


5. Lack of Industry Adoption and Certification:

- Few major companies have embraced seaweed-based materials.

- Biodegradability and compostability standards are not consistently met.

- Regulatory approval, especially for food-contact materials, can be slow and costly.


6. Niche Applications Only:

- Seaweed bioplastics are currently more suitable for single-use, low-performance items and local or artisanal products.


7. Communication:

- Seaweed has a great potential in feed, biostimulants, fertilizers, food, cosmetics and pharmaceuticals. it also represents a true natural candidate for bioremediation or biogaz. Meanwhile it has been too often presented as the golden ingredient and many entrepreneurs have failed due to the slow demand or the cost of farming and transformation.


In conclusion, while seaweed bioplastics show potential in niche applications, they are not yet a viable replacement for conventional plastics. The technical limitations, high costs, and scalability challenges hinder their widespread adoption. At the same time Seaweed remains a good opportunity for industrial applications but the time and investment is more important. I'd like to advertise a few key actors that have found the way to make seaweed and industrial success.


source : Pierre Erwes

Vy Spine®, a spine for vertebral body replacement surgery

Vy Spine®, a spine innovation leader using differentiated materials and designs, announced today that it has received 510(k) clearance from ...