Abstract: A one-sided oxidized silver-cadmium object is formed. One side of a silver-cadmium object is covered with a non-silver-cadmium shield to enable the one side to resist oxidation. Then the object is oxidized under conditions that leave substantially unoxidized a layer of the object adjacent the one side. An oxidized silver-cadmium object has a non-silver-cadmium, oxidation-resistant shield attached to one side of the object, the object having a substantially unoxidized layer adjacent the one side.
Abstract: An electrical contact has a general flat sheet metal support with a pad portion that is twisted (e.g., by about 90 degrees) out of the plane of the metal support, and a contact body attached to the pad portion. The contact may be made by welding a contact body on a pad portion of the contact support while the contact support is essentially in its original flat state; and using one progressive stamping die to isolate the pad portion, form a twist, and stamp out the contact, so that the pad portion is in a plane that is generally perpendicular to the plane of the contact support.
Abstract: Method of making electrical contacts by providing a continuous clad strip having a strip of contact material bonded to a base metal contact blade strip, removing contact material at spaced intervals from the strip, and severing the base metal strip in the intervals to form individual contacts in which the contact element is spaced inwardly from the margins of the contact blade.
Abstract: Method and apparatus for in line ultrasonic inspection of linearly extending brazed composite workpiece including a linearly extending bonded region, traveling linearly at a given speed. A source of ultrasonic signals is focussed on the workpiece and is reciprocated in the plane of the workpiece in a sweep transverse to the direction of workpiece travel, the sweep being at least commensurate with the width of the bonded region. The signals reflected from the workpiece are received and processed to derive control signals, which are input to a marker. The marker is reciprocated in phase with the reciprocation of the signal source. A linearly extending record medium is moved past the marker transversely to the reciprocation of the marker at a speed not greater than one-half the workpiece speed, whereby the marker traces successive generally parallel strokes against said record medium.