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Author: rusty

Author: rusty

News:

EMS Today conference a major success for Luxfer Medical product lines

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (April 30, 2007) - The recent EMS Today conference and tradeshow in Baltimore showcased new Luxfer Medical 3,000-psi Voyage™ and Odyssey™ cylinder product lines to a record-breaking number of visitors.

Now in its 25th year, EMS Today is a leading healthcare event for emergency medical service first responders, including paramedics and firefighters.

Lisa Stano, Luxfer’s medical market manager, said: “EMS Today, as always, was a highly successful exhibition for our Luxfer Medical products. The event provided us a unique opportunity to meet with those who are already benefitting from Luxfer lightweight cylinders and to demonstrate increased capacity and weight saving advantages to those who are still using heavier alternatives.”

Made from Luxfer’s patented L7X® higher-strength aluminium alloy and up to 40% lighter than steel cylinders, Luxfer’s Voyage cylinders reduce the risk of job-related injuries during patient and equipment handling, especially in high-rise and confined spaces.

Odyssey carbon composite cylinders are up to 70% lighter than conventional steel cylinders, making them ideal for resuscitation and pain relief in emergency situations. Widely used around the world by paramedics and other first-response teams, these ultra-lightweight, high-performance cylinders combine strength and durability and in a very compact, portable package.

Since both Voyage and Odyssey cylinders can be charged up to 3,000 psi, they offer a 50% increase in cylinder capacity compared to conventional cylinders.

For more information, please visit www.luxfercylinders.com.

News:

Luxfer Gas Cylinders launches new Alternative Fuel Cylinder Division

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (March 31, 2007)—Luxfer Gas Cylinders, the world’s largest manufacturer of aluminum and composite cylinders, has announced the formation of its new, global Alternative Fuel Cylinder Division to manufacture and sell high-performance cylinders for compressed natural gas.

The new division will be officially launched on April 2 at the Alternative Fuels and Vehicle 2007 Conference + Expo in Anaheim, Calif., where Luxfer will be exhibiting at booth number 412. Dr. Mark Lawday, Luxfer’s international AF marketing manager, will make a Technology Showcase presentation about Luxfer’s AF product line at the conference on April 2.

Luxfer also announced that a new, 21,500-square-foot cylinder manufacturing plant devoted exclusively to alternative fuel cylinders is now being built and equipped at the company’s large manufacturing complex in Riverside, Calif. A June opening is planned for the plant, which will initially specialize in Type III fully wrapped carbon composite cylinders.

Luxfer’s Hydrospin affiliate, located in Huntington Beach, Calif., is supplying aluminum liners for the Type III tanks. Another Luxfer affiliate in England, BA Tubes, may begin supplying liners for Luxfer AF cylinders in the future.

Luxfer also manufactures Type II hoop-wrapped cylinders, and the company is planning to expand its product line to include Type IV composite cylinders with plastic liners.

Luxfer cylinders are being used as part of a new Enviromech fuel system for Crane Carrier refuse trucks being built for Rainbow Disposal of Huntington Beach, Calif. A Crane Carrier truck will be unveiled at the Waste Expo Show in Atlanta, Georgia, from May 7-10.

For more information, visit www.luxfercylinders.com or contact Mark Trudgeon (951-341-2395, mark.trudgeon@luxfer.net) in the U.S. or Dr. Mark Lawday (+44-115-980-3811, mark.lawday@luxfer.net) in the U.K.

News:

Luxfer sponsors Childline’s polo challenge

NOTTINGHAM, England (March 27, 2007) — Luxfer Europe will be amongst the companies featured in ChildLine’s Polo Challenge fund-raising event to be held in Richmond Surrey on June 8, 2007.

Since its launch in 1986, the UK charity ChildLine has given hope to thousands of children by providing counseling, refuge and a free, 24-hour helpline for young people who are in distress or danger.

Vicky Butler, Luxfer’s international medical marketing manager, said: “ChildLine campaigns on behalf of children by providing trained volunteer counselors who comfort, advise and protect children who may feel they have nowhere else to turn. We are delighted to help support the Polo Challenge, which raises much-needed funds for this deserving and hard-working charity.”

For more information on the ChildLine Polo Challenge please visit www.childline.org.uk.

News:

Luxfer supports breast cancer charity

NOTTINGHAM, England (March 27, 2007) — Luxfer Europe will be amongst the sponsors of the Breast Cancer Haven’s annual Blush Ball to be held at the Natural History Museum in London on May 3, 2007.

Attended by HRH The Countess Of Wessex and various media celebrities, the Blush Ball is traditionally a highly successful fund-raising event for the charity, which relies heavily on the revenue generated through auctions and pledges made during the evening.

Vicky Butler, Luxfer’s international medical marketing manager, commented: “Breast Cancer Haven is a UK charity supporting the physical and emotional needs of anyone affected by breast cancer. We are delighted to be able to play a part in helping them provide much-needed day centres, which offer free support, information and complementary therapies.”

For more information on Breast Cancer Haven please contact www.breastcancerhaven.org.uk.

News:

Xtreme Everest expedition is right on schedule

NOTTINGHAM, England (March 7, 2007) – After four years in the making, the Caudwell Xtreme Everest team’s plans to reach Mount Everest’s summit in mid-May are exactly on schedule following the arrival of team logistics experts in Kathmandu earlier this month.

Luxfer Gas Cylinders is providing oxygen cylinders for the expedition. Vicky Butler, Luxfer’s medical marketing manager, explains: “We first became involved in the project after a meeting with Dr Roger McMorrow, one of the ten medics who will be studying the effects of low oxygen and how the body naturally adapts to extreme conditions. The goal is to place a research team on the summit of Mount Everest and make the first-ever measurement of oxygen in human blood at this extreme altitude.”

Among the medical equipment used on the expedition will be Luxfer’s revolutionary Superlite™ cylinders, which will deliver oxygen in a closed circuit breathing system for up to 20 hours. Most of the key equipment for the expedition, including the Luxfer cylinders, has already been tested in altitude chambers and freezers and in the Alps.

Dr McMorrow adds: "Our new system is designed to assist patients, ranging from children with cystic fibrosis to adults with chronic lung disease, to anyone dependent on supplementary oxygen, to be as mobile as possible. Where better to test the new CXE closed circuit system than in one of the world's most inhospitable locations, Mount Everest, where less than half the amount of oxygen prevails than exists at sea level."

For more information about the expedition visit: www.caudwell-xtreme-everest.co.uk.

News:

Fleur’s new job gets off to a dramatic start

NOTTINGHAM, England (Feb. 21, 2007)—Luxfer Nottingham’s new marketing assistant, Fleur Foster, had every reason to be nervous on her first day at work—she spent most of it being cut out of a mangled car surrounded by firefighters!

No, she wasn’t involved in an actual car crash.

The day in question coincided with a photo shoot at Nottinghamshire Fire and Rescue’s Ollerton Training Centre, where Fleur had volunteered to be ‘rescued’ by Nottinghamshire’s world champion extrication team during their training drills. Luxfer Gas Cylinders sponsors the team, which uses Luxfer products in competition as well as actual rescue work.

Preparing to defend their British and world titles in the forthcoming World Extrication Challenge, the “Notts” team demonstrated the skills and expertise needed to win the challenge again by quickly extricating Fleur from a crushed vehicle in a timed, simulated car crash exercise.

“I was very impressed with how quickly and efficiently the whole procedure took place and how the firemen reassured me throughout the process,” Fleur said. “One fireman talked to me in a very calm way all the time, explaining what was going on, because I often couldn’t see.” Fleur observed that being extricated was a scary experience even in simulation. “To be in that situation for real would be terrifying, so the skill and reassurance provided by the rescue team would be even more important.”

At the World Extrication Challenge, which will take place in Barcelona from 15 through 19 October 2007, teams from around the globe will be judged on their expertise in rescuing trapped casualties from simulated road traffic collisions as safely and quickly as possible. The event enables fire and rescue services to share specialist skills and techniques aimed at improving survival rates, as well as reducing deaths and injuries from road traffic accidents.

In 2005, the Nottinghamshire team was the only fire service in the world to qualify for every single extrication event at the Challenge. They went on to win the limited equipment category, which involves casualty rescues within 20 minutes without the use of hydraulic cutting equipment. Nottinghamshire’s Stewart Key was also awarded second place as the competition’s best team captain for outstanding leadership and technical skills.

Vicky Butler, Luxfer’s international marketing manager, commented: “As a local manufacturer and sponsor, we have established a much-valued relationship with Nottinghamshire’s Fire and Rescue Service, and we are extremely proud to be associated with such a professional, dedicated and hard-working team. We look forward to working with the team on other sponsorship initiatives throughout 2007.”

News:

Luxfer-sponsored London Tigers paintball team looks strong for new Millennium Series tournament

NOTTINGHAM, England (Feb. 6, 2007) — Players for the London Tigers, a Luxfer-sponsored paintball team, have been in intensive training for their first game in the international Millennium Series tournament scheduled for April 7–9 in Toulouse, France.

Based in Kent, the London Tigers are a professional team who have the advantage of using Luxfer’s lightweight full-wrap carbon composite paintball cylinders as part of their standard equipment.

Veronique McKellican, Luxfer Gas Cylinders international marketing manager, said: "As silver-level sponsors of the Millennium Series and the only cylinder manufacturer in the world directly involved with paintball as a sport, we at Luxfer are delighted to offer our continued support. We wish the London Tigers great success throughout the new season."

Luxfer’s sponsorship of the team is part of the company’s paintball “Target Safety” campaign, specifically designed to provide information on safe, responsible paintball play, as well as proper cylinder operation, maintenance, transportation and inspection. The campaign was launched in 2004.

Dates for the 2007 Millennium Series tournaments are:

TOULOUSE WORLD CUP, FRANCE, APRIL 7-9

MILLENNIUM CUP, BELGIUM, MAY 18-20

MAXS MASTERS or CAMPAIN CUP, GERMANY or ENGLAND, JULY 6-8

MAXS MASTERS or CAMPAIN CUP, GERMANY or ENGLAND, AUGUST 31-SEPTEMBER 1-2

PARIS DISNEY, FRANCE, OCTOBER 12-14

News:

Luxfer’s Nottingham plant sets new production record by manufacturing one million cylinders in a single year

NOTTINGHAM, England (Dec. 25, 2006)—The production team at the Luxfer Gas Cylinders manufacturing facility in Nottingham set a new production record by making one million cylinders in 2006—and they did it just in time for Christmas.

A special holiday celebration was held at the plant to commemorate the achievement.

Luxfer invented the world’s first cold-extruded aluminium cylinder in 1958, and Luxfer Nottingham, the company’s original plant, began mass-producing cylinders in 1960. Since then, Luxfer Nottingham has made more than 20 million cylinders. But 2006 marked the first time that the plant had produced a million cylinders in a single 12-month period.

The new record was due to improved efficiencies throughout the production process, including a 4 percent increase in the extrusion rate. “Over the last 12 months, the production team has dedicated itself to providing optimum efficiency to meet growing customer demand, and the commitment has reaped rewards,” said Trevor Bryan, production manager. “Longer working days, including 23 extra hours at weekends, and new training programmes have resulted in greatly improved efficiency all around, together with faster changeovers.”

David Rix, managing director of Luxfer Europe, congratulated the Nottingham plant on their signal accomplishment. In a special ceremony, Mr. Rix personally presented the millionth cylinder—a fire extinguisher—to Eric Richards, owner of Saffire’s Company, Nottingham, the customer that bought it.

Luxfer Gas Cylinders, the world’s largest producer of aluminium and composite cylinders, has produced nearly 50 million cylinders over the last half-century. In addition to Nottingham, the company operates cylinder manufacturing facilities in Gerzat, France; Riverside, California; Graham, North Carolina; and Shanghai, China. Luxfer was founded in 1898 as a producer of glass prisms and other construction materials.

News:

Luxfer donates scuba tanks in support of underwater archaeology in Florida Keys

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (Dec. 19, 2006)—Sometime between 1740 and 1780, a fierce storm engulfed a two-masted sailing ship in treacherous waters off the Florida Keys. The storm drove the ship into the shallows, where it struck a reef and rapidly sank. About 250 men went down with the vessel, including her crew and a number of British soldiers who were being transported.

The fate of the ship was unknown until 1960, when a Florida treasure hunter discovered the skeletal remains of her rotting hull in relatively shallow water several miles southwest of Key Largo. But not long after the wreck was discovered, a storm stirred up the sea bottom and covered the ship once more.

She remained hidden for more than 10 years until a salvaging crew rediscovered her in the early 1970s. Imbedded in the sand and silt around the wreck, divers found numerous silver and pewter buttons bearing the insignia of several British regiments—all that remained of the troops who had lost their lives. Thus the ship became known as the “Button Wreck.” This time her location was carefully charted, but for another 30 years, the wreck went largely untouched except by the sea. She was just one of about a thousand shipwrecks in an undersea graveyard known as the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary.

Enter Dr. Simon Q. Spooner of the Bristol University Centre for Maritime Archaeology and History in England and founder of a nonprofit organization called the Anglo-Danish Maritime Archaeological Team (ADMAT). Dr. Spooner and his ADMAT colleagues obtained permission from the United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to undertake underwater archaeological expeditions in the Florida Keys, beginning with the Button Wreck. Dr. Spooner was intrigued not only by the evident age of the wreck, but its relatively good condition. “All the timbers and the keel are still in place,” he said. “That’s highly unusual in a location with so many storms.”

Dr. Spooner began recruiting students and divers from around the world to join in the undersea “dig.” He also issued an appeal to philanthropic organizations and businesses to donate funds and equipment in support of ADMAT’s efforts.

Luxfer U.S.A. responded by donating aluminum scuba tanks and valves to ADMAT. “Because of Luxfer’s ties both to Great Britain and the United States, we felt a special affinity for this project,” said Kathryn Gamboa, Luxfer’s scuba market manager. “Luxfer is proud to support this important historical and educational work.”

And so, in the summers of 2005 and 2006, Dr. Spooner and 30 student divers from the U.S. and Europe have been meticulously mapping, measuring and exploring the centuries-old wreck using a survey grid made of white and orange PVC pipe. “It’s like trying to piece together a giant, underwater, three-dimensional jigsaw puzzle without a picture of the finished product,” Spooner observed.

Thus far, here’s what the ADMAT team has learned about the Button Wreck: The ship was about 90 feet (27 meters) long with a 30-foot-wide (9-meter) beam. Since she was two-masted, she may have been a brig, a brig-sloop or a brigantine, common ship designs in that era. She may also have been American-made, because her timbers do not show construction characteristics typical of British ships built in the mid-eighteenth century. But since she was transporting British troops, it is possible that she was a “prize” taken by the Royal Navy.

“We suspect this was an American vessel captured by the British and manned by a British crew,” Spooner said. This scenario raises the intriguing possibility that the ship may have gone down during the American Revolutionary War. Spooner speculates that she might have carried eighteen cannons, nine on each side. No cannons have been found, but they could have been taken many years ago by early salvagers and treasure hunters. “We have found one grapeshot ball,” Spooner said, which raises the possibility that the ship was armed.

All ADMAT divers are trained to respect delicate ocean ecology, and those taking part in the Button Wreck expedition have been careful not to damage soft corals and sea grass that grow on and around the ship.

Many local volunteers have been supporting the work, donating their time and boats to transport dive teams to and from the wreck site. “These people have been fantastic,” Spooner said.

Over the next decade, ADMAT plans to investigate as many as 40 other shipwrecks believed to be in an area 13 miles long and three miles wide. “We plan to come back as often as possible,” Spooner said. “Our educational field schools will enable all who participate to learn about the preservation of U.S. historic shipwrecks, ship construction, survey methodology, geophysical surveying, archaeological diving methods, in-situ artifact recording and many more aspects of maritime archaeological work.” An upcoming project is a dive on an American Civil War ship.

For more information, visit ADMAT’s www.admat.org.uk.

News:

Luxfer launches next-generation oxygen cylinders for ambulatory patients

NOTTINGHAM, England (Nov. 28, 2006) – Luxfer Gas Cylinders launched its revolutionary new range of Luxfer Medical oxygen cylinders for ambulatory patients at Medica 2006 in Dusseldorf, Germany.

Marketed under the trade names Voyage™, Excursion™ and Odyssey™, these next-generation cylinders were specifically developed to enhance freedom and mobility for ambulatory patients reliant on oxygen both in and out of home.

Voyage products are all-metal cylinders manufactured from Luxfer’s patented, higher-strength L7X® aluminium alloy. Excursion products are hoop-wrapped cylinders with exclusive L7X aluminium liners. Odyssey products are ultra-lightweight carbon composite cylinders.

Vicky Butler, Luxfer’s international medical marketing manager explained: “Luxfer’s new range of carbon composite and hoop-wrap cylinders provide patients with up to 50% more oxygen than conventional aluminium cylinders of the same size—with the added advantage of a compact, lightweight design. For example, Odyssey and Voyage cylinders can be filled to 300-bar pressure, increasing oxygen delivery time considerably and thus allowing users much greater freedom and mobility than ever before.

“Increased oxygen capacity is important to patients who gain much more ambulation time and need to change cylinders far less often,” she continued. “Homecare providers also benefit, saving money on deliveries since fewer trips to patients’ homes are required in this era of ever-increasing fuel costs.”

Long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT), when properly prescribed and maintained, is the only non-surgical therapy clinically proven to extend the lives of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and low blood-oxygen levels. In addition to prolonging life, LTOT improves the quality of life for many patients who use oxygen-dispensing units in homes and vehicles.

During the Medica 2006 exhibition, Luxfer hosted a fund-raising event on behalf of the British Lung Foundation’s ‘Find the Missing Millions’ campaign by inviting visitors to donate one euro in return for a decorative piggy bank.

Lightweight Luxfer Medical cylinders are widely used throughout Europe, North America and Asia.

For more information on Luxfer’s revolutionary range of ambulatory oxygen cylinders, visit www.luxfercylinders.com.

News:

Luxfer-sponsored student attends European Respiratory Society congress

NOTTINGHAM, England (Oct. 19, 2006)—Veronika Melhuish-Williams, a Luxfer-sponsored PhD student at the University of Southampton, recently attended the European Respiratory Society's 15th annual congress held in Munich, Germany.

Representing the university’s School of Health Professions and Rehabilitation Sciences, Veronika and her colleagues developed and presented a poster entitled ‘A Breath Of Fresh Air – Activity Needs In COPD‘ aimed at promoting the benefits of physical exercise in pulmonary rehabilitation.

With over 5,000 members from 90 countries, the ERS congress is Europe’s biggest annual respiratory medicine event that provides a crucial platform to address specific approaches to lung health across Europe.

Luxfer’s European Marketing Director Veronique McKellican said: “Luxfer has a long history of working alongside specialists within the field of respiratory medicine, and we are proud to be able to help sponsor Veronika and her team’s important contribution to this year’s ERS congress. We wish Veronika every success in her future research career.”

News:

Luxfer sponsoring historic Xtreme Everest medical expedition to summit of world’s highest mountain

NOTTINGHAM, England (Oct. 10, 2006)—Luxfer Gas Cylinders is sponsoring the next Xtreme Everest medical research expedition, the aim of which is to place a team on the 8,850-metre summit of Mount Everest, the world’s highest mountain, in March 2007 to take the first-ever measurement of oxygen levels in human blood at high altitude.

Xtreme Everest is a research project coordinated by the UCL Centre for Aviation, Space and Extreme (CASE) Environment Medicine. The 20-person team of doctors, scientists and volunteers are now in Tibet, where they are rehearsing their Mount Everest expedition on the slopes of Cho Oyu, the sixth highest mountain in the world. At its 5,650-metre base camp, the team will put various types of medical equipment through its paces under conditions similar to those expected on Mount Everest, located a short distance to the west. Both mountains straddle the border between Tibet and Nepal.

Among the medical equipment used on the expedition will be Luxfer’s revolutionary Superlite™ cylinders, which deliver oxygen in a closed circuit breathing system for up to 20 hours. Most of the key equipment for the expedition, including the Luxfer cylinders, has already been tested in altitude chambers, freezers and in the Alps.

The idea for the £2-million expedition took shape five years ago when the London-based team decided to study body functions in extreme environments with a view toward applying their findings to patients undergoing critical care. Team leader Dr Mike Grocott, who specializes in high-altitude physiology and high-risk surgery, explained: “When we, as critical care doctors, look at our patients, low oxygen levels are a universal phenomenon. What we would like to see is something we may be able to manipulate in the critical care environment so that individuals become more efficient and use less oxygen to do the same amount of work.”

Extreme conditions on Everest will mimic what it is like for patients in intensive care, and studying the human body in this environment will teach the medical team invaluable lessons in the science of survival.