For almost seventy years maryland plastic products has been a leading manufacturer of molded plastic products for electronic packaging.
Maryland ceramics steatite.
Our molding and tool facilities include.
Thermosets and thermoplastics equipment with various injection compression transfer presses and numerous preheating and preforming machines.
Our sister company maryland lava company began operations in 1926.
Since 1926 maryland lava company inc.
Initially they experimented with different manufacturing techniques.
Maryland ceramic steatite has manufactured custom technical ceramics since 1955.
Maryland lava company remains family owned and operated for almost 100 years.
The appearance of ceramic technology around 1000 b c.
The earliest pottery was a flat bottomed ware tempered with crushed steatite.
Maryland ceramic steatite company inc.
Maryland plastic products is a division of maryland ceramic steatite company inc.
Maryland ceramic steatite remains family owned and operated for more than ninety years.
Mc s is a well established ceramic house known for its large extrusion and dry pressing business.
Maryland ceramic steatite company inc.
Is a natural outgrowth of over ninety years of experience in the ceramic industry.
Ernest bianchi a graduate of the dept.
Has been a leading manufacturer of quality ceramic products used in a wide array of industries.
Their first pots were made from hand molded slabs of clay and resembled the flat based steatite soapstone bowls that were already in use at that time.
Of ceramic and materials engineering at rutgers university heads maryland tape casting.
Maryland tape casting is a division of maryland ceramic steatite company inc.
Is considered to be the marker for the beginning of the woodland period in maryland.
Mc s has manufactured technical ceramics since 1926.
Box 527 bel air md 21014 ph.
Our customizable line of precision ceramics these parts are used in both the thermal and electrical fields for resistors spark plugs feed through insulators and numerous other applications.
In maryland indians started making unglazed low fired pottery a little over 3000 years ago.
Experience and knowledge in refractories led to the production.