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works+manager

  • 101 Betriebsdirektor

    Betriebsdirektor m works manager, (AE) traffic manager

    Deutsch-Englisch Fachwörterbuch Architektur und Bauwesen > Betriebsdirektor

  • 102 tehtaanjohtaja

    • plant manager
    • works manager
    • plant superintendent

    Suomi-Englanti sanakirja > tehtaanjohtaja

  • 103 šef pogona

    • plant manager; works manager

    Serbian-English dictionary > šef pogona

  • 104 директор предприятия

    Русско-английский словарь по экономии > директор предприятия

  • 105 Kettering, Charles Franklin

    [br]
    b. 29 August 1876 near Londonsville, Ohio, USA
    d. 25 November 1958 Dayton, Ohio, USA
    [br]
    American engineer and inventor.
    [br]
    Kettering gained degrees in mechanical and electrical engineering from Ohio State University. He was employed by the National Construction Register (NCR) of Dayton, Ohio, where he devised an electric motor for use in cash registers. He became Head of the Inventions Department of that company but left in 1909 to form, with the former Works Manager of NCR, Edward A. Deeds, the Dayton Engineering Laboratories (later called Delco), to develop improved lighting and ignition systems for automobiles. In the first two years of the new company he produced not only these but also the first self-starter, both of which were fitted to the Cadillac, America's leading luxury car. In 1914 he founded Dayton Metal Products and the Dayton Wright Airplane Company. Two years later Delco was bought by General Motors. In 1925 the independent research facilities of Delco were moved to Detroit and merged with General Motors' laboratories to form General Motors Research Corporation, of which Kettering was President and General Manager. (He had been Vice-President of General Motors since 1920.) In that position he headed investigations into methods of achieving maximum engine performance as well as into the nature of friction and combustion. Many other developments in the automobile field were made under his leadership, such as engine coolers, variable-speed transmissions, balancing machines, the two-way shock absorber, high-octane fuel, leaded petrol or gasoline, fast-drying lacquers, crank-case ventilators, chrome plating, and the high-compression automobile engine. Among his other activities were the establishment of the Charles Franklin Kettering Foundation for the Study of Chlorophyll and Photosynthesis at Antioch College, and the founding of the Sloan- Kettering Institute for Cancer Research in New York City. He sponsored the Fever Therapy Research Project at Miami Valley Hospital at Dayton, which developed the hypertherm, or artificial fever machine, for use in the treatment of disease. He resigned from General Motors in 1947.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Kettering, Charles Franklin

  • 106 Betriebsassistent

    m
    1. assistant production manager
    2. assistant to works manager

    Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch > Betriebsassistent

  • 107 директор завода

    factory manager, works manager, director

    Поставки машин и оборудования. Русско-английский словарь > директор завода

  • 108 Churchward, George Jackson

    [br]
    b. 31 January 1857 Stoke Gabriel, Devon, England
    d. 19 December 1933 Swindon, Wiltshire, England
    [br]
    English mechanical engineer who developed for the Great Western Railway a range of steam locomotives of the most advanced design of its time.
    [br]
    Churchward was articled to the Locomotive Superintendent of the South Devon Railway in 1873, and when the South Devon was absorbed by the Great Western Railway in 1876 he moved to the latter's Swindon works. There he rose by successive promotions to become Works Manager in 1896, and in 1897 Chief Assistant to William Dean, who was Locomotive Carriage and Wagon Superintendent, in which capacity Churchward was allowed extensive freedom of action. Churchward eventually succeeded Dean in 1902: his title changed to Chief Mechanical Engineer in 1916.
    In locomotive design, Churchward adopted the flat-topped firebox invented by A.J.Belpaire of the Belgian State Railways and added a tapered barrel to improve circulation of water between the barrel and the firebox legs. He designed valves with a longer stroke and a greater lap than usual, to achieve full opening to exhaust. Passenger-train weights had been increasing rapidly, and Churchward produced his first 4–6– 0 express locomotive in 1902. However, he was still developing the details—he had a flair for selecting good engineering practices—and to aid his development work Churchward installed at Swindon in 1904 a stationary testing plant for locomotives. This was the first of its kind in Britain and was based on the work of Professor W.F.M.Goss, who had installed the first such plant at Purdue University, USA, in 1891. For comparison with his own locomotives Churchward obtained from France three 4–4–2 compound locomotives of the type developed by A. de Glehn and G. du Bousquet. He decided against compounding, but he did perpetuate many of the details of the French locomotives, notably the divided drive between the first and second pairs of driving wheels, when he introduced his four-cylinder 4–6–0 (the Star class) in 1907. He built a lone 4–6–2, the Great Bear, in 1908: the wheel arrangement enabled it to have a wide firebox, but the type was not perpetuated because Welsh coal suited narrow grates and 4–6–0 locomotives were adequate for the traffic. After Churchward retired in 1921 his successor, C.B.Collett, was to enlarge the Star class into the Castle class and then the King class, both 4–6–0s, which lasted almost as long as steam locomotives survived in service. In Church ward's time, however, the Great Western Railway was the first in Britain to adopt six-coupled locomotives on a large scale for passenger trains in place of four-coupled locomotives. The 4–6–0 classes, however, were but the most celebrated of a whole range of standard locomotives of advanced design for all types of traffic and shared between them many standardized components, particularly boilers, cylinders and valve gear.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    H.C.B.Rogers, 1975, G.J.Churchward. A Locomotive Biography, London: George Allen \& Unwin (a full-length account of Churchward and his locomotives, and their influence on subsequent locomotive development).
    C.Hamilton Ellis, 1958, Twenty Locomotive Men, Shepperton: Ian Allan, Ch. 20 (a good brief account).
    Sir William Stanier, 1955, "George Jackson Churchward", Transactions of the Newcomen
    Society 30 (a unique insight into Churchward and his work, from the informed viewpoint of his former subordinate who had risen to become Chief Mechanical Engineer of the London, Midland \& Scottish Railway).
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Churchward, George Jackson

  • 109 Stanier, Sir William Arthur

    [br]
    b. 27 May 1876 Swindon, England
    d. 27 September 1965 London, England
    [br]
    English Chief Mechanical Engineer of the London Midland \& Scottish Railway, the locomotive stock of which he modernized most effectively.
    [br]
    Stanier's career started when he was Office Boy at the Great Western Railway's Swindon works. He was taken on as a pupil in 1892 and steady promotion elevated him to Works Manager in 1920, under Chief Mechanical Engineer George Churchward. In 1923 he became Principal Assistant to Churchward's successor, C.B.Collett. In 1932, at the age of 56 and after some forty years' service with the Great Western Railway (GWR), W.A.Stanier was appointed Chief Mechanical Engineer of the London Midland \& Scottish Railway (LMS). This, the largest British railway, had been formed by the amalgamation in 1923 of several long-established railways, including the London \& North Western and the Midland, that had strong and disparate traditions in locomotive design. A coherent and comprehensive policy had still to emerge; Stanier did, however, inherit a policy of reducing the number of types of locomotives, in the interest of economy, by the withdrawal and replacement of small classes, which had originated with constituent companies.
    Initially as replacements, Stanier brought in to the LMS a series of highly successful standard locomotives; this practice may be considered a development of that of G.J.Churchward on the GWR. Notably, these new locomotives included: the class 5, mixed-traffic 4–6–0; the 8F heavy-freight 2–8–0; and the "Duchess" 4–6–2 for express passenger trains. Stanier also built, in 1935, a steam-turbine-driven 4–6–2, which became the only steam-turbine locomotive in Britain to have an extended career in regular service, although the economies it provided were insufficient for more of the type to be built. From 1932–3 onwards, and initially as part of a programme to economize on shunting costs by producing a single-manned locomotive, the LMS started to develop diesel shunting locomotives. Stanier delegated much of the responsibility for these to C.E.Fairburn. From 1939 diesel-electric shunting locomotives were being built in quantity for the LMS: this was the first instance of adoption of diesel power on a large scale by a British main-line railway. In a remarkably short time, Stanier transformed LMS locomotive stock, formerly the most backward of the principal British railways, to the point at which it was second to none. He was seconded to the Government as Scientific Advisor to the Ministry of Production in 1942, and retired two years later.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1943. FRS 1944. President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1941.
    Bibliography
    1955, "George Jackson Churchward", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 30 (Stanier provides a unique view of the life and work of his former chief).
    Further Reading
    O.S.Nock, 1964, Sir William Stanier, An Engineering Biography, Shepperton: Ian Allan (a full-length biography).
    John Bellwood and David Jenkinson, 1976, Oresley and Stanier. A Centenary Tribute, London: HMSO (a comparative account).
    C.Hamilton Ellis, 1970, London Midland \& Scottish, Shepperton: Ian Allan.
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Stanier, Sir William Arthur

  • 110 Worsdell, Thomas William

    [br]
    b. 14 January 1838 Liverpool, England
    d. 28 June 1916 Arnside, Westmorland, England
    [br]
    English locomotive engineer, pioneer of the use of two-cylinder compound locomotives in Britain.
    [br]
    T.W.Worsdell was the son of Nathaniel Worsdell. After varied training, which included some time in the drawing office of the London \& North Western Railway's Crewe Works, he moved to the Pennsylvania Railroad, USA, in 1865 and shortly became Master Mechanic in charge of its locomotive workshops in Altoona. In 1871, however, he accepted an invitation from F.W. Webb to return to Crewe as Works Manager: it was while he was there that Webb produced his first compound locomotive by rebuilding an earlier simple.
    In 1881 T.W.Worsdell was appointed Locomotive Superintendent of the Great Eastern Railway. Working with August von Borries, who was Chief Mechanical Engineer of the Hannover Division of the Prussian State Railways, he developed a two-cylinder compound derived from the work of J.T.A. Mallet. Von Borries produced his compound 2–4–0 in 1880, Worsdell followed with a 4–4–0 in 1884; the restricted British loading gauge necessitated substitution of inside cylinders for the outside cylinders used by von Borries, particularly the large low-pressure one. T.W.Worsdell's compounds were on the whole successful and many were built, particularly on the North Eastern Railway, to which he moved as Locomotive Superintendent in 1885. There, in 1888, he started to build, uniquely, two-cylinder compound "single driver" 4–2–2s: one of them was recorded as reaching 86 mph (138 km/h). He also equipped his locomotives with a large side-window cab, which gave enginemen more protection from the elements than was usual in Britain at that time and was no doubt appreciated in the harsh winter climate of northeast England. The idea for the cab probably originated from his American experience. When T.W.Worsdell retired from the North Eastern Railway in 1890 he was succeeded by his younger brother, Wilson Worsdell, who in 1899 introduced the first 4– 6–0s intended for passenger trains in England.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    C.Hamilton Ellis, 1958, Twenty Locomotive Men, Shepperton: Ian Allan, Ch. 15 (biography).
    E.L.Ahrons, 1927, The British Steam Railway Locomotive 1825–1925, London: The Locomotive Publishing Co., pp. 253–5 (describes his locomotives). C.Fryer, 1990, Experiments with Steam, Patrick Stephens, Ch. 7.
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Worsdell, Thomas William

  • 111 главный инженер завода

    Engineering: works manager

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > главный инженер завода

  • 112 директор завода, управляющий заводом

    Metallurgy: works manager

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > директор завода, управляющий заводом

  • 113 Werk(s)leiter

    Werk(s)·lei·ter(in)
    m(f) factory [or works] manager

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Werk(s)leiter

  • 114 Betriebsdirektor

    Betriebsdirektor
    operations (plant, works) manager

    Business german-english dictionary > Betriebsdirektor

  • 115 verksmester

    subst. works manager subst. shop foreman, head foreman, overseer

    Norsk-engelsk ordbok > verksmester

  • 116 direttore di stabilimento

    direttore di stabilimento
    works manager
    \
    →  direttore

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > direttore di stabilimento

  • 117 Betriebsassistent

    m.
    assistant to works manager n.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Betriebsassistent

  • 118 capofabbrica

    capofabbrica s.m. e f. foreman;* works manager.

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > capofabbrica

  • 119 индивидуальное производство

    Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > индивидуальное производство

  • 120 незавешенное производство

    Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > незавешенное производство

См. также в других словарях:

  • works manager — ➔ manager * * * works manager UK US noun [C] WORKPLACE ► a person who is in charge of a factory: »He is a works manager for a plastic moulding company …   Financial and business terms

  • works manager — įmonės direktorius statusas T sritis profesijos apibrėžtis Asmuo, paskirstantis įmonės personalo pareigas, prižiūrintis rinkodarą, gamybą ir administravimą. atitikmenys: angl. chief general manager; general manager; managing director; plant… …   Lithuanian dictionary (lietuvių žodynas)

  • works manager — įmonės vadovas statusas T sritis profesijos apibrėžtis Asmuo, kuris rūpinasi įmonės produkcijos gamyba, gaminamų produktų ir gaminių kokybe, naujų technologijų įdiegimu, sudaro darbuotojams sveikas ir saugias darbo sąlygas, rūpinasi kitais įmonės …   Lithuanian dictionary (lietuvių žodynas)

  • works manager — vyriausiasis gamyklos inžinierius statusas T sritis profesijos apibrėžtis Asmuo, kuris rūpinasi gamyklos produkcijos gamyba, produktų ir gaminių kokybe, prižiūri mašinų ir įrangos eksploatavimą, bandymus ir organizuoja techninę jų priežiūrą,… …   Lithuanian dictionary (lietuvių žodynas)

  • works manager — gamyklos direktorius statusas T sritis profesijos apibrėžtis Asmuo, kuris rūpinasi gamyklos produkcijos gamyba, gaminamų produktų ir gaminių kokybe, numato gamybos plėtros gaires, sudaro darbuotojams sveikas ir saugias darbo sąlygas, rūpinasi… …   Lithuanian dictionary (lietuvių žodynas)

  • works manager — vyriausiasis gamyklos inžinierius statusas T sritis profesijos apibrėžtis Inžinierius, kuris rūpinasi gamyklos produkcijos gamyba, produktų ir gaminių kokybe, prižiūri mašinų ir įrangos eksploatavimą, bandymus ir organizuoja jų techninę priežiūrą …   Inžinieriai, technikai ir technologai. Trikalbis aiškinamasis žodynėlis

  • works manager — / wɜ:ks ˌmænɪdʒə/ noun a person in charge of a works …   Dictionary of banking and finance

  • works manager — noun : an official in a manufacturing company who is usually the head of the production departments …   Useful english dictionary

  • manager — A medium level participant established according to final take. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * manager man‧ag‧er [ˈmænɪdʒə ǁ ər] noun [countable] JOBS someone whose job is to manage all or part of a company or organization, or a particular… …   Financial and business terms

  • works — [wɜːks ǁ wɜːrks] noun [plural] 1. old fashioned MANUFACTURING a building or group of buildings in which goods are produced in large quantities or an industrial process happens: • The brick works closed last year. 2. the activity involved in doing …   Financial and business terms

  • Manager (professional wrestling) — In professional wrestling, a manager is a secondary character paired with a wrestler (or wrestlers) for a variety of reasons. The manager is often either a non wrestler, an occasional wrestler, an older wrestler who has retired or is nearing… …   Wikipedia

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