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MM2004
04-12-2011, 08:01 AM
Ford's use of a nylon resin made from 100 percent recycled carpet, known as EcoLon, has kept more than 4.1 million pounds of carpet out of landfills, EcoLon is used for cylinder head covers, the first automotive product of its kind manufactured from recycled nylon for use in the Ford Escape, Fusion, Mustang and F-150.

The cylinder head covers are just one example of Ford's use of sustainable materials in vehicles. They also utilize soy foam seat cushions, recycled yarns on seat covers and recycled blue jeans for sound-dampening material (must be all the hard rock they’ve soaked up).

The carpet you walk on usually ends up in overused landfills and thanks to Ford's efforts to use more sustainable materials in vehicles carpets are now forming the cylinder head covers on some Ford engines at great benefit to the environment.
During 2010, the use of EcoLon® material, a nylon resin made from 100 percent recycled carpet, the equivalent of nearly 154 football field from landfills. It also amounted to recycling more than 985,000 yards of carpet and freeing for other uses the oil once consumed in making head covers, a reduction of more than 430,000 gallons.

The EcoLon material, made by Wellman Engineering Resins, offers an eco-friendly, alternative to traditional cylinder head covers. They are manufactured by Dana Holding Corporation.

"By working with Wellman and Dana, Ford has found a way to bring green applications to a new, unique location in our vehicles," said Brett Hinds, Ford manager, engine design. "This single use has made an incredible impact, and we're continuing to look for ways to expand the use."

The cylinder head covers can be found on the 3.0-liter Duratec engine in the Ford Fusion and Escape. They’re also on the 5.0-liter engine, which powers Mustang and F-150.

"We didn't have to make compromises for this application," said Roy Ford, Ford engine sealing supervisor. "With a fixed raw material cost that delivers cost savings compared to oil, along with the green benefit, this application adds to the ways Ford is minimizing our impact on the environment."

The cover is the first automotive product of its kind manufactured from recycled nylon. To give nylon a new life and purpose, Wellman grinds used nylon carpeting into fiber and recaptures the material through a patented, proprietary process. The result is a high-quality nylon resin, which Dana then molds into cylinder head covers through an injection-molding process.

Ford's Reduce, reuse and recycle program is part of a broader global strategy to reduce its environmental footprint and accelerate the development of advanced, fuel-efficient technologies worldwide.

Ford has recently concentrated the use of nonmetal recycled and bio-based materials, including soy foam seat cushions, recycled resins for underbody systems, recycled yarns on seat covers and natural-fiber plastic for interior components.

Mike.

SC Cheesehead
04-12-2011, 08:18 AM
Interesting.

BTW, trivia question of the day:

Do you know where the name "Nylon" came from?

CBT
04-12-2011, 08:18 AM
Interesting.

BTW, trivia question of the day:

Do you know where the name "Nylon" came from?

Your panty hose?

fastblackmerc
04-12-2011, 08:42 AM
Interesting

BTW, trivia question of the day:

Do you know where the name "Nylon" came from?

Was originally "No Run". Nylon sounded better.

Haggis
04-12-2011, 08:45 AM
DuPont!
..........

DOOM
04-12-2011, 09:10 AM
That's pretty cool.

SC Cheesehead
04-12-2011, 10:32 AM
DuPont!
..........

Correct, DuPont pioneered and patented Nylon.

One of my first assignments with Fluor was at a project located at the original Nylon production facility up in Seaford, DE. The site had a little Nylon "museum" set up near the main plant entrance that detailed the history of Nylon. I had always figured the name "nylon" was an abbreviation for some exotic chemical compound, but as I found out from the Seaford info, I'd way over-analyzed that.

As it turns out, the two chief DuPont research scientists that developed the chemical process that produced nylon were based out of labs an ocean apart, and they named the new material in honor of their two cities:

New York and London.

And now kiddies, as the man says, you know the rest of the story... ;)

sailsmen
04-12-2011, 10:48 AM
The Best Green Program was the Fed "Clunker Program". Kill a Clunker and prevent it from being recycled. Boy are we smart!;)

Fosters
04-12-2011, 02:45 PM
So the question is, do they come rcoated black or not? my 4v motors are one of each, wish they were all black... :)