Logan at Vortex
Welcome!
editHello, VortexMKTG, and welcome to Wikipedia! I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Unfortunately, one or more of the pages you created, such as Salina Vortex Corporation, may not conform to some of Wikipedia's guidelines, and may not be retained.
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Speedy deletion nomination of Salina Vortex Corporation
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A tag has been placed on Salina Vortex Corporation, requesting that it be speedily deleted from Wikipedia. This has been done under section G11 of the criteria for speedy deletion, because the page seems to be unambiguous advertising which only promotes a company, product, group, service or person and would need to be fundamentally rewritten in order to become encyclopedic. Please read the guidelines on spam and Wikipedia:FAQ/Organizations for more information.
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Your username
editWelcome to Wikipedia. I saw that you edited or created Salina Vortex Corporation, and I noticed that your username, "VortexMKTG", may not comply with our username policy. Please note that you may not use a username that represents the name of a company, group, organization, product, or website. Examples of usernames that are not allowed include "XYZ Company", "MyWidgetsUSA.com", and "Foobar Museum of Art". However, you are invited to use a username that contains such a name if it identifies you personally, such as "Sara Smith at XYZ Company", "Mark at WidgetsUSA", or "FoobarFan87".
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Copy for Salina Vortex Corporation
editPer your request, below is the copy from your deleted article. Feel free to delete the copy below once you save it elsewhere. Also, be aware of conflict of interest issues, as others have pointed out, as you work on this article. --SouthernNights (talk) 20:45, 27 March 2017 (UTC)
Company type | Private |
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Industry | Bulk solids and material handling components |
Founders | Neil Peterson and Lee Young |
Headquarters | , |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | |
Products |
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Subsidiaries |
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Website | www |
Overview
editThe Salina Vortex Corporation (often referred to as Vortex, Vortex Valves, or Salina Vortex) is an American multinational corporation headquartered in Salina, Kansas. The company develops custom iris valves, slide gates, diverter valves, loading spouts, and other engineered solutions for use in product transport, flow control and the material handling of dry bulk solids in manufacturing processes. Vortex operates global offices in Europe, Latin America and Asia Pacific, and is represented in more than 40 countries.
History
editHow it all started
editIn 1977, Lee Young, co-founder and chairman of Vortex, and his father-in-law, Neil Peterson, founded Vortex.
Neil, a mechanical and process engineer, discovered that traditional butterfly valves and {Gate valve|knife gate valves]] were well designed for handling gas and liquid, but had deficiencies in handling dry bulk solids. Both butterfly valves and knife gates tended to pack dry material against the seals, preventing the valve from actuating to a fully closed position. In addition, the soft seals utilized in butterfly valves and knife gates were susceptible to deterioration when impacted by dry bulk solids. This caused material and air leakage when a valve was in the closed position. Replacement of the seals and worn parts created expensive downtime issues for manufacturers, as the valves had to be removed from the process line for maintenance. The disk of a butterfly valve also creates an obstruction in material flow, causing the disk and the dry materials to bridge and degrade.
To address these key issues, Neil made an initial prototype of the Vortex Orifice Gate in a vacated military building from the Cold War, located on Schilling Air Force Base in Salina, Kansas. The pneumatically actuated gate features a sliding, stainless steel plate situated between two hard polymer seal plates. A hole is machined into the sliding steel plate to match the diameter of a manufacturing process’ conveying valve, allowing dry material to pass through it. The design also incorporates shims, allowing maintenance personnel to perform simple adjustments while the valve remains in-line. Neil also incorporated a variable position control package, allowing the valve to act as a metering device for material dosing and weighing applications.
In 1980, Vortex was awarded a patent on the Orifice Gate.
Vortex "Baby Boom"
editThroughout the 1980s decade, Vortex invented and patented the Wye Line Diverter, the Roller Gate, the Clear Action Gate, the Flex Tube Diverter, the Gravity Vee Diverter, the Multi-Port Diverter and the Quick Clean Orifice Gate.
Now housing 94 employees, Vortex left its 5,000 sq ft military building in 2006 and built a state-of-the-art, 125,000 sq ft manufacturing facility and office complex near Interstate 135. Soon after, Vortex created and patented the Aggregate Diverter and the HDP Slide Gate. The HDP’s “rising blade” allows the valve to seal demanding conveying pressures, as well as handle sticky or abrasive dry bulk solids.
By summer, Vortex offered 14 different slide gates and diverter valves.
Vortex still growing
editIn 2013, Vortex acquired a loading spout company and added dustless loading spouts to their product mix. This allowed Vortex to offer a product mix of retractable loading spouts, positioners and loading spout filtration systems for loading and conveying dry bulk materials into open or enclosed trucks, lorries, railroad cars, tankers, ships, barges or for stockpiling.
In October 2014, Vortex added 64,000 sq ft to its shop floor, added another wing of office space, incorporated lean manufacturing methods, and built a new cafeteria and storm shelter to better accommodate its now more than 200 employees.
Operations
editVortex Headquarters
editAs the parent company, Vortex Headquarters is the sole manufacturer of Vortex products. Now situated in a 200,000 sq ft facility, Vortex Headquarters houses supporting departments in customer service, inside sales, outside sales, supply chain and logistics, accounting, marketing, information technology, quality control, and engineering. The complex includes a dining annex, as well as Lee Young University, a large conference room intended for company meetings and visitors to the Salina, Kansas facility.
Vortex Global Limited
editVortex opened its first global office, Vortex Global Limited, in Darlington, England, to better accommodate European clientele.
Vortex Latin America
editVortex Latin America was established to better service Spanish-speaking clientele in Central and Latin Americas.
Vortex Asia Pacific
editVortex Asia Pacific was opened to support the Asia Pacific market. Vortex also entered Central Europe to service France, Switzerland, Germany, and Austria. Vortex now has representatives in more than 40 countries around the world.
Industries
editAs of 2017, the Salina Vortex Corporation services the following industries:
Materials Handled
editAcrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) Pellet | Aceylis Polymer Powder | Acrawax | Acrylic | Acrylic Styrene Acrylate | Activated Carbon | Additives | Adipic Acid | Arc Furnace Dust | Aggregate |
Agriculture Products | Air | Aluminum | Aluminum Hydroxide | Aluminum Oxide | Aluminum Powder | Aluminum Sulfate | Ammonium Sulfate | Animal Feed | Antimony Oxides |
Arsenic | Ascordyl Talmitate | Barley | Barium | Bark Chips | Bauxite | Bay Salt | Beads | Beans | Bearings |
Beer Bottles | Bentonite | Bicarbonated Soda | Binding Powders | Blanched Peanuts | Blasting Media | Borax | Boric Acid | Brake Pad Material | Bran |
Bran Flour | Brass Shavings | Bread Crumbs | Broken Glass | Brown Sugar | Bulgur Wheat | Burnt Lime | Buttermilk Powder | Cake Mix | Calamite |
Calcined Calcium Sulfite | Calcined Gypsum | Calcined Kaolin Clay | Calcium | Calcium Carbide | Calcium Carbonate | Calcium Chloride | Calcium Fluoride | Calcium Hydrochloride | Calcium Hypochlorite |
Calcium Silicate | Calcium Sulfate | Calcium Sulfate Dihydrate | Calumite | Canola Cake | Caplets | Carbon | Carbon Ash | Carbon Black | Carbonate |
Carpet Backing Fines | Carpet Regrind | Casting Sand | Catalyst | Cedar Chips | Cellulose | Cement | Cement Coated Cellulose | Ceramic Beads | Cereal |
Cerium Carbonite | Cheese | Chlorinated Dry Bleach | Chlorine | Chopped Fiberglass | Chromate | Chromic Trioxide | Cinnamon | Citric Acid | Citrus Peel |
Clay | Clinker | Coal | Coal Dust | Coal Pearls | Cobalt | Cocoa | Cocoa Beans | Coffee Beans | Coffee Grounds |
Coke | Colorant | Compounds | Concrete | Cookie Meal | Corn | Corn Feed | Corn Flake Pellets | Corn Flour | Corn Germ |
Corn Grits | Corn Mash | Corn Meal | Corn Starch | Corn Sugar | Cotton | Crackers | Creamer | Crisp Rice | Crumb Rubber |
Crushed Glass | Cryogenic Polymers | Crystal Lime | Crystal Polystyrene | Cut Film | Dehydrated Lime | Densified Plastic | Dental Powder | Detergent | Dewatered Sewer Sludge |
Dextrose | Diatomaceous Earth | Dibutyltin Oxide | Dicalcium Phosphate | Distillers Grains | Dog Food | Dolomite Limestone | Dough | Dried Gelatin | Dried Pelletized Sludge |
Dried Vegetables | Drink Mix | Dry Activated Powder | Dry Chicken Meat | Dry Glyphosphate | Durum Wheat | Dust | Electric Arc Furnace Dust | Enzymes | Epoxy Paint Powder |
Epoxy Resin | Fat Powder | Feed | Ferrous Sulfate | Fertilizer | Fiber | Fiberglass | Film | Filter Earth | Finished Rice |
Fire Retardant | Fish Food | Flake | Flaked Soya | Floor Tile Color | Flour | Flour Potatoes | Flue Gas | Fluff | Fluorspar |
Fly Ash | Flux | Food Additives | Food Ingredients | Foundry Sand | Frosting | Frozen Vegetables | Fumed Silica | Fungicide | Furnace Dust |
Garnet | Gelatin | Glass | Glass Beads | Glass Bubble | Glass Cullet | Glass Pellets | Glass Furnace Dust | Gluten | Grain |
Granola | Granulated Sugar | Grapes | Graphite | Grass Seed | Green Coffee Beans | Grout | Guar Gum | Gum Pellets | Gypsum |
High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE) Regrind | Herbicide | Hexane | High Chrome Refractory | Hominy | Hot Air | Hot Adhesive Pellet | Hydrated Lime | Ice | Ice Pellets |
Iced Tea Mix | Ink Ingredients | Iron Oxide | Ivory | Kaolin Clay | Kevlar Powder | Kiln Dust | Kitty Litter | Krayton | Lactose |
Lead | Lead Oxide Dust | Lemon Powder | Lime | Limestone | Lithium Amide | Lithium Carbonate | Lithium Hydride | Lutex | Lutein |
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