All of our gauges are manufactured in the great state of Ohio. In honor of the National Championship Advanced Gauging Technologies would like to say GO BUCKS!
A.G.T. Celebrates The Holidays
Every year, as a company, Advanced Gauging Technologies celebrates Christmas together. We believe the holiday season is a special time of year to reflect on the year’s journey and spend time with those you love. This year, we enjoyed each other’s happiness over dinner. While mingling, many memories were made and shared and laughter filled the air. From our family to yours, we wish you a very delightful season and a joyous new year!
A.G.T. Visits Chicago
With new employees comes training, which can sometimes be stressful for the employer as well as the employee. To make training simple, it is always best to offer some sort of hands on learning. Hands on can mean a lot of different things for different industries.
At A.G.T. we pride ourselves on having high end, high performance equipment and feel it is essential for each and every employee to use and train on actual thickness gauges so that they have real world experience. Enabling employees to work with our products first-hand helps them provide better service and allows them to share their own ideas on how to improve our software and products.
We also encourage employees to visit our customer’s facilities whenever the opportunity arises. These visits allow us to gain a better understanding of how our customers operate, to see our gauges in action, and interact one on one with plant personnel. Tiffany Rea, our new Sales and Marketing Assistant got to do just that as she recently traveled to Chicago with Steve Venters and John Fearing. There, she was able to experience the “plant life” in person and see a few different thickness gauges in operation on various steel processing lines. During this trip Tiffany was also able to observe how leak tests are performed and participated in customer meetings which focused primarily on technical issues along with sales related topics. We consider this type of exposure a valuable part of the overall training process.
AGT800 Laser Gauge Featured In American Metal Market 2014 Spotlight Article
Metals Testing Transformed By 21st-Century Technology
While larger companies dominate a significant portion of the testing equipment market, some breakthrough technologies still come out of tiny mom-and-pop companies, reminiscent of the computer technology that came out of California garages a half-century ago. For much of the past few decades, the thickness of coil, sheet or strip metal has been measured by service centers with isotope gauges such as the AGT400 manufactured by Advanced Gauging Technologies, LLC. An isotope gauge typically consists of a computer, monitor, printer and advanced electronics located in an electronics cabinet connected to a C-frame that includes a source head and a detector head. The C-frame is mounted on the processing line so that the material being measured passes between the source and the detector head. Isotope gauges such as the AGT400 use a very small amount of radioactive material to measure the thickness of the material passing through the C-frame. “There is a shutter in the source head that opens and releases the radiation. The detector head located on the other side of the material measures the amount of radiation that passes through,” Steve Venters, Sales Manager at Advanced Gauging Technologies, explained.
Entrepreneur Ronald Cook and his son, Scott, co-founded Advanced Gauging Technologies nearly 20 years ago in Plain City, a small town halfway between Columbus and Marysville, Ohio. The company’s small staff manufactures several AGT400 isotope thickness gauges annually and services more than 400 gauges, most located in metal service centers across North America. About half the devices serviced are isotope thickness gauges manufactured by Advanced Gauging Technologies. Isotope thickness gauges comprise only a small part of the total cost of a production line, and Advanced Gauging Technologies said its product typically “pays for itself within a year or less.” But there is one drawback to an isotope thickness gauge: the radioactive material used in the gauge. “It’s a very small amount of radioactive material, basically the same material used in many smoke detectors,” Venters said. Still, because the material is radioactive it must be licensed by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (USNRC) and inspected at regular intervals, which means paperwork requirements for both the vendor and the customer.
As a result, Advanced Gauging Technologies has spent the past two years designing and testing its new AGT800 laser thickness gauge, which it released for commercial use in late 2013. “It works the same way as the isotope gauge,” Venters said, “except it uses laser sensors mounted on the C-frame to measure the thickness of the material. One of the biggest advantages, of course, is that there are no federal or state licensing requirements.” Advanced Gauging’s first production AGT800 has been installed on a new 96-inch Butech Bliss stretch leveler/cut-to-length line at an Alabama service center. “We’re very excited about the opportunity to offer the AGT800 to our customers. It also gives us the capability to measure additional types of materials, such as films and plastics, which opens the door for new markets,” Venters said. “Accordingly, we are anticipating a pretty good period of growth over the next few years.”
A.G.T. Welcomes New Production And Inventory Assistant
The newest member of the A.G.T. family is Mike Collier, our new Production and Inventory Assistant. His responsibilities include quality control, shipping, purchasing and receiving. Mike’s previous experience in the Army and in the food distribution industry gives him many of the tools necessary to perform these tasks, and he is capable of assisting in other areas as needed.
Mike is originally from northwest Ohio near Lima where he graduated from Allen East High School. After high school he joined the U.S. Army and served as an Infantryman in the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault). He was deployed to Panama and Egypt for peace keeping operations. He served two years in Germany where he helped trained American and European military forces for their normal NATO commitments, as well as peace keeping operations in Bosnia. His training includes Airborne, Air Assault and is a recipient of the Expert Infantryman Badge.
After 8 years in the Army, Mike attended The Ohio State University where he studied History and German. In 2012 Mike married Jessica, and became the father to his wife’s daughter Lila. In April 2013, they gave birth to a baby girl named Merida. Besides spending time with his family, Mike is an avid reader of fantasy and military history with a special interest in Napoleonic and medieval history. During the fall he can be found rooting on his favorite football teams The Ohio State Buckeyes and the Green Bay Packers. He also enjoys painting and modeling miniatures for war games.