Wednesday, February 24, 2010

LoudMo offers the highest payouts in the industry, pay you every time your users install a LoudMo product. LoudMo offers a wide variety of promotional products for publishers. End users will enjoy the free ChameleonTom Facebook layouts and the FLV Player. Also, Loudmo ensures that all users are protected and respected. All products are simple to uninstall and never collect or shared personal information.

LoudMo Install Rates

Loudmo pays up to $1.50 for each new install. Loudmo offers one of the highest pay-per-install programs available online today.

If you have any additional questions about our payout structure please dont hesitate to contact our affiliate team.


Install RatesTier 1Tier 2Tier 3Tier 4
FLV$1.50$0.60$0.15$0.03
Babelfish$1.50$0.60$0.15$0.03
Chameleon Tom$1.50$0.60$0.15$0.03
Gateway Creation Wizard$1.50$0.60$0.15$0.03

TierCountries
1United States
2United Kingdom, Canada, Italy, Spain, France, Germany
3Australia, Austria, Belgium, Finland, Ireland, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, South Africa, Sweden, Switzerland
4Rest of the World


Payment methods!

5 payment methods: Check, Paypal, Epassport, Wire Transfers (International only) and Direct Deposit (US only).
All minimum payouts are $100 and $1000 for Wire Transfers.

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Saturday, February 20, 2010



















Wigix is the new way to buy and sell online. Stop buying in a Web 1.0 world and start buying with the strength of your friends and fellow owners! . Profit from Your Expertise Become a Category Expert and earn money by sharing your knowledge and presiding over a whole category of items. No Listing Fees! No Transaction Fees! Have thousands of items to sell? List them all on Wigix for FREE. And pay no transaction fees for items below $25.

That’s a stretch. The company allows members to list their stuff (cars, electronics and ladies accessories are the most popular items so far), and see what other people might be willing to pay for it. For example, if I have a Nintendo Wii listed, I could set an “ask” price of $400 for it. If anyone meets that price then Wigix would automatically generate the transaction. If I merely listed my Wii I could see that others on the site are “bidding” $400 for them and set a price.

So for Wigix to make it as an eBay killer (or even as a successful market) it needs to combine its transparency with liquidity– by gathering a lot of users and selling goods that a lot of people want to buy and sell. In contrast, eBay made its claim to fame by finding a market for items that few people wanted (like vintage beer signs) and then became a liquid market over time. I’m not sure Wigix can duplicate such a feat, but I admire it for trying.

How can I make money on Wigix?

Wigix is more than a buying and selling platform. It's a product catalog with many ways to participate in making money.

Be a Page Owner.

Do you know of an item that isn't in the Wigix catalog? Add it! Once the category expert approves it, you'll be that item's page owner, and earn 5% of your page's ad revenue and referral payments from our trusted partners!! Learn how to submit a page!

If you find an incomplete item, you can also perfect it and become the owner of that page too!

There is no limit to the amount of pages you can own. As long as you're an active member, you'll own those pages.


Be a Category Expert.


You can be a Category Expert in up to three categories.

For your contribution, you'll get paid 1% of the ad revenue and referral payments from our trusted partners for every page in your category.


Be a Wigix Affiliate.
Own a website?

Website owners can help by telling their patrons about Wigix. Direct them to Wigix via provided widgets and when your referred visitor registers, you make money!

And there's more! Affiliates can make up to $3.00 per referral.


Join Wigix Now!

Buy and sell on Wigix. The community driven online marketplace.
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Sunday, January 31, 2010

Much has been written regarding design guidelines for injection molding. Yet, the design guidelines can be summed up in just a few design rules.

  • Use uniform wall thickness throughout the part. This will minimize sinking, warping, residual stresses, and improve mold fill and cycle times.
  • Use generous radius at all corners. The inside corner radius should be a minimum of one material thickness.
  • Use the least thickness compliant with the process, material, or productdesign requirements. Using the least wall thickness for the process ensures rapid cooling, short cycle times, and minimum shot weight. All these result in the least possible part cost.
  • Use ribs or gussets to improve part stiffness in bending. This avoids the use of thick section to achieve the same, thereby saving on part weight, material costs, and cycle time costs.

Uniform Walls

  • Parts should be designed with a minimum wall thickness consistent with part function and mold filling considerations. The thinner the wall the faster the part cools, and the cycle times are short, resulting in the lowest possible part costs.

Also, thinner parts weight less, which results in smaller amounts of the plastic used per part, which also results in lower part costs.

  • The wall thickness of an injection – molding part generally range from 2mm to 4mm (0.080 inch to 0.160 inch). The wall injection molding can produce walls as thin as 0.5 mm (0.020 inch)

The need for uniform walls

  • Thick sections cool slower than thin sections. Then thin section first solidifies, and the thick section is still not fully solidified. As the thick section cools, it shrinks and the material for the shrinkage comes only from the unsolidified areas, which are connected, to the already solidified thin section.
  • This builds stresses near he boundary or of the thin section to thick section. Since the thin section does not yield because it is solid, the thick section (which is still liquid) must yield. Often this leads to warping or twisting. If this is severe enough, the part could even crack.
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Burn Marks - Problem Solving Guide

Use the following as a checklist for potential solutions:

  • Check mold venting
  • Remove “fines” from material
  • Reduce back pressure
  • Reduce injection velocity
  • Reduce screw speed (RPM)

Weld Lines - injection Molding – Problem Solving Guide

Use the following as a checklist for potential solutions:

  • Increase mold temperature
  • Check vents (increase?)
  • Runners and/or gates too small
  • Sprue or nozzle opening too small
  • Increase material temperature
  • Increase injection speed
  • Check melt for inconsistencies

Flash - Injection Molding - Problem solving Guide

Use the following as a checklist for potential solutions:

  • Reduce injection velocity
  • Clean parting lines
  • Reface parting lines
  • Mold faces are not parallel
  • Land too large (no shut off)
  • Reduce material temperature
  • Reduce mold temperature
  • Reduce material pressure (pack and/or hold)
  • Reduce packing time
  • Increase clamp pressure (check for consistency)


Sink mark – Injection Molding – Problem Solving Guide

Use the following as a checklist for potential solutions:

  • Increase gate size
  • Reduce material temperature
  • Texture mold surface (hidden)
  • Reduce flow lengths (add gates)
  • Increase runner size
  • Increase injection pressure
  • Check for a “cushion”, increase shot size
  • Increase injection/pack time
  • Increase injection velocity

Short Shot – Injection Molding – Problem Solving Guide

Use the following as a checklist for potential solutions:

  • Increase mold temperature
  • Increase injection velocity
  • Runner too small
  • Inadequate cold slug well
  • Gate too small (note enough)
  • Inadequate venting
  • Hesitation (non – uniform walls, etc.)
  • Not enough plastication capacity
  • Insufficient feed
  • Material temperatures too low
  • Increase injection/packing pressure
  • Increase packing time
  • Increase back pressure

Flow lines – Injection Molding – Problem Solving Guide

Use the following as a checklist for potential solutions:

  • Increase gate size
  • Increase clamp pressure
  • Increase melt temperature
  • Increase mold temperature
  • Maintain a more consistent cycle
Continue Reading...

Friday, January 29, 2010

Toy Safety Tips

WHEN BUYING TOYS

Choosing toys with care. Keep in mind the child's age,
interests and skill level.

Look for quality design and construction in all toys for all ages.

Make sure that all directions or instructions are clear -- to you,
and, when appropriate, to the child. Plastic wrappings on toys
should be discarded at once before they become deadly playthings.

Be a label reader. Look for and heed age recommendations, such as
"Not recommended for children under three". Look for other safety
labels including: "Flame retardant/Flame resistant" on fabric
products and "Washable/hygienic materials" on stuffed toys and dolls.

WHEN MAINTAINING TOYS

Check all toys periodically for breakage and potential hazards.
A damaged or dangerous toy should be thrown away or
repaired immediately.

Edges on wooden toys that might have become sharp or surfaces
covered with splinters should be sanded smooth. When repainting
toys and toy boxes, avoid using leftover paint, unless purchased
recently, since older paints may contain more lead than new paint,
which is regulated by CPSC. Examine all outdoor toys regularly for
rust or weak parts that could become hazardous.

WHEN STORING TOYS

Teach children to put their toys safely away on shelves or in a toy
chest after playing to prevent trips and falls.

Toy boxes, too, should be checked for safety. Use a toy chest that
has a lid that will stay open in any position to which it is raised, and
will not fall unexpectedly on a child. For extra safety, be sure there
are ventilation holes for fresh air. Watch for sharp edges that could
cut and hinges that could pinch or squeeze. See that toys used
outdoors are stored after play -- rain or dew can rust or damage a
variety of toys and toy parts creating hazards.

SHARP EDGES

New toys intended for children under eight years of age should,
by regulation, be free of sharp glass and metal edges.

With use, however, older toys may break, exposing cutting edges.

SMALL PARTS

Older toys can break to reveal parts small enough to be swallowed
or to become lodged in a child's windpipe, ears or nose. The law bans
small parts in new toys intended for children under three.
This includes removable small eyes and noses on stuffed toys and
dolls, and small, removable squeakers on squeeze toys.
LOUD NOISES Toy caps and some noisemaking guns and other
toys can produce sounds at noise levels that can damage hearing.
The law requires the following label on boxes of caps producing noise
above a certain level: "WARNING -- Do not fire closer than one foot
to the ear. Do not use indoors." Caps producing noise that can injure
a child's hearing are banned.

CORDS AND STRINGS

Toys with long strings or cords may be dangerous for infants and
very young children. The cords may become wrapped around an
infant's neck, causing strangulation. Never hang toys with long
strings, cords, loops, or ribbons in cribs or playpens where children
can become entangled. Remove crib gyms for the crib when the
child can pull up on hands and knees; some children have strangled
when they fell across crib gyms stretched across the crib.

SHARP POINTS

Toys which have been broken may have dangerous points or prongs.
Stuffed toys may have wires inside the toy which could cut or stab if
exposed. A CPSC regulation prohibits sharp points in new toys and
other articles intended for use by children under eight years of age.

PROPELLED OBJECTS

Projectiles -- guided missiles and similar flying toys -- can be turned
into weapons and can injure eyes in particular. Children should never
be permitted to play with adult lawn darts or other hobby or sporting
equipment that have sharp points. Arrows or darts used by children
should have soft cork tips, rubber suction cups or other protective
tips intended to prevent injury. Check to be sure the tips are secure.
Avoid those dart guns or other toys which might be capable of firing
articles not intended for use in the toy, such as pencils or nails.

ALL TOYS ARE NOT FOR ALL CHILDREN

Keep toys designed for older children out of the hands of little ones.
Follow labels that give age recommendations -- some toys are
recommended for older children because they may be hazardous
in the hands of a younger child. Teach older children to help keep
their toys away from younger brothers and sisters.

Even balloons, when uninflated or broken, can choke or suffocate
if young children try to swallow them. More children have suffocated
on uninflated balloons and pieces of broken balloons than on any
other type of toy.

ELECTRIC TOYS

Electric toys that are improperly constructed, wired or misused
can shock or burn. Electric toys must meet mandatory requirements
for maximum surface temperatures, electrical construction and
prominent warning labels. Electric toys with heating elements are
recommended only for children over eight years old. Children should
be taught to use electric toys properly, cautiously and under adult
supervision.

INFANT TOYS

Infant toys, such as rattles, squeeze toys, and teethers, should
be large enough so that they cannot enter and become lodged in
an infant's throat.

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