Peninsula Iron Works

Peninsula Iron Works

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06/23/2022

Peninsula Iron Works is currently growing, and we are seeking Manual and CNC machinists (all must have Manual experience). CNC Lathes, CNC Vertical MILLS, CNC HBMs, CNC VBM 101 & 244 ODs, and misc. shop equipment. Ability to read technical drawings required.

Peninsula Iron Works is a Portland, Oregon Large Capacity Machine and Fabrication shop located in St. Johns. Our engineered solutions provide a stable work environment with challenging projects. Our work includes machine tool rebuilds, tool and die, hydro, machinery components, Rock Crushing Parts, & general machining.

Pay ranges from $28/hr.-$37/hr., depending on experience. We offer excellent pay, 401k, insurance package, vacations, holiday pay, sick days, and coveralls.

Please email resumes to [Email hidden], and visit our web site www.peniron.com, to view the industries we work in, and the size of our projects and equipment.
Schedule

05/18/2022

Peninsula Iron Works is currently growing, and we are seeking Manual and CNC machinists (all must have Manual experience). CNC Lathes, CNC Vertical MILLS, CNC HBMs, CNC VBM 101 & 244 ODs, and misc. shop equipment. Ability to read technical drawings required.

Peninsula Iron Works is a Portland, Oregon Large Capacity Machine and Fabrication shop located in St. Johns. Our engineered solutions provide a stable work environment with challenging projects. Our work includes machine tool rebuilds, tool and die, hydro, machinery components, Rock Crushing Parts, & general machining.

Pay ranges from $28/hr.-$37/hr., depending on experience. We offer excellent pay, 401k, insurance package, vacations, holiday pay, sick days, and coveralls.

Please email resumes to [email protected], and visit our web site www.peniron.com, to view the industries we work in, and the size of our projects and equipment.

05/06/2022

Peninsula Iron Works is currently growing and we are seeking Fabricators/Welders. Experience can vary, with priority to proficiencies in flux core, multiple alloys, and fitting. Ability to read technical drawings is required.

Peninsula Iron Works is a Portland, Oregon Large Capacity Machine and Fabrication shop located in St. Johns. Our engineered solutions provide a stable work environment with challenging projects. Our work includes machine tool rebuilds, tool and die, hydro, machinery components, Rock Crushing Parts, & general machining.

Journeyman pay ranges from $26/hr.-$32/hr., depending on experience. We offer excellent pay, 401k, insurance package, vacations, holiday pay, sick days, and coveralls.

Please email resumes to [email protected], and visit our web site www.peniron.com, to view the industries we work in, and the size of our projects and equipment.

03/18/2022

We our looking to bring on Manual and CNC machinists (all must have Manual experience). CNC Lathes, CNC Vertical MILLS, CNC HBMs, CNC VBM 101 & 244 ODs, and misc. shop equipment.

We are also seeking Fabricators/Welders. 5 years experience required, with preference to proficiencies in flux core, multiple alloys, and fitting.

For all positions print reading ability required.

Peninsula Iron Works is a Portland Oregon Large Capacity Machine and Fabrication shop located in St. Johns. Our engineered solutions provide a stable work environment with challenging projects. Our work includes machine tool rebuilds, tool and die, hydro, machinery components, Rock Crushing Parts, & general machining. Journeyman pay depends on experience. We offer excellent pay, 401k, insurance package, vacations, holiday pay, sick days, and coveralls.

Please email resumes to [email protected] visit our web site www.peniron.com, to view the size of our equipment prior.

02/04/2022

Peninsula Iron Works a Portland Oregon Large Capacity Machine and Fabrication shop located in St. Johns. Our Family of Companies includes an authorized Fanuc Integrator/retro fitter of machine tools and manufacturing & electrical products. Our engineered solutions provide a stable work environment with challenging projects. Our work included machine tool rebuilds, tool and die, hydro, machinery components, Rock Crushing Parts, & general machining.
We need manual and CNC machinists (all must have manual experience). CNC Lathes, CNC Vertical MILLS, CNC HBMs, CNC VBM 101 & 244 ODs, and misc shop equipment. Journeyman pay depends on experience. We offer excellent pay, 401k, insurance package, vacations, holiday pay, sick days, and coveralls.
Please visit our web site www.peniron.com you should view the size of our equipment prior.

05/21/2019

12,000,000 lbs of force this cylinder can produce. Rebuild process takes about 9 months.

02/23/2019

PIW VS Honda Fit

https://youtu.be/03kfwu9u7Lc

PIW KO's a Honda

08/31/2017

Wheels in motion
By: Garrett Andrews in Scrolling Box August 29, 2017 5:32 pm

Bobby Parker, a pile buck with Hamilton Construction, examines a weld while working on a project to replace four steel wheels that help raise and lower the Broadway Bridge. (Sam Tenney/DJC)
In the early days of the 20th century, civil engineers were in an arms race to find the best ways to open a bridge.
One novel method was tried out by engineer Ralph Modjeski for Portland’s Broadway Bridge, completed in 1913. A Rall mechanism employs giant, 8-foot-diameter steel wheels that roll along tracks high above the center of the bridge.
To explain the mechanism’s complex movement to the uninitiated, it helps to have visual aids, said Jon Henrichsen, Multnomah County’s division manager for bridges.
“It’s one weird, elliptical motion; it’s much easier to show with pictures, or, better yet, a video,” he said. “This is a very complicated bridge – way more complicated, really, than it needs to be. You can build a simpler bridge that’s easier to maintain and more reliable.”
Like an evolutionary dead end, the Rall-type bascule bridge was en vogue for only about a decade before simpler, more efficient and economical systems took over. The Chicago-type bascule would become the standard of the style, an example being the Burnside Bridge. But in 2017, the Broadway Bridge and its unique design are still vital to Portland and the 32,000 people who cross the span daily. And now, after a century of rolling back and forth, its wheel-based lift mechanism needs a tune-up.
The four massive wheels have turned more conical than round, and cracks are showing up.
“There’s just a lot of issues with these,” Henrichsen said. “It’s time to replace them.”
The county has contracted with Springfield-based Hamilton Construction to replace the Broadway Bridge’s one-of-a-kind Rall wheels and the tracks and bearings, and rehabilitate the trunnion, control struts and associated structures. It’s a complex undertaking that requires a highly specialized skill set, and it presents its own engineering challenges – how to lift the bridge to swap out the wheels? How to make them?
To change the wheels, the Hamilton team is lifting the entire bridge, one 1,000-ton leaf at a time. Bridge engineer Ed Wortman likens the problem to jacking up a truck to change its tires, but in this case, no place on the bridge is hard enough to set the “jack.”
“It wasn’t designed to be lifted up into the air as we’re doing now,” Wortman said.

An 88,000-pound Rall wheel measuring eight feet in diameter is one of four on the Broadway Bridge that is being replaced as part of a $13.5 million project that will last through December. (Sam Tenney/DJC)
The solution created by OBEC Consulting Engineers of Eugene is a lift system that uses the stone and concrete piers under the bridge for bases, and thick steel plates welded to the bridge. Two 900-ton capacity jacks will work together to push thick posts upward.
This will all go on while bike and vehicle traffic and the Portland Streetcar are moving across the bridge.
“They’ll only lift it just enough to get those wheels out,” Wortman said. “Then it’s just like changing the tire on a car.”
Wortman was a bridge engineer for Multnomah County starting in the 1990s, but he began working on bridges in 1960. He’s worked part-time since his retirement in 2007, and was on site this month checking progress on the project.
“We always thought we were going to have to change these wheels, and we thought the designer probably made some accommodation for it,” he said. “Then we started looking at it, and it turned out, it wasn’t that easy.”
Ultimately, Wortman said, the decision to use the design was a financial one – it was slightly cheaper than the other two alternatives. Despite any trouble, it actually has done its job – creating the widest possible opening for ships – quite well, he said.
“It was a complicated system, but clever – but also, hard to maintain,” he said. “It’s pretty special. There’s not another bridge like it in the world.”
Each wheel supports about two million pounds of weight. But those wheels have been rolling back and forth for more than a century. The wheels are solid hunks of steel that start out about 30 to 40 percent larger before being pounded into shape. In 2017, not much metal is forged west of the Mississippi River, but VEGA contracted with Peninsula Iron Works to make the forgings.
The 88,000-pound wheels were forged – not cast, as were the originals – at Peninsula Iron Works. The original wheels had cored holes in them like spokes in a bicycle wheel, which helped make them considerably lighter. They were pounded out on the shop’s vertical boring mill, which was manufactured in 1968 but features modern automated CNC controls. They were flipped three times, and shipped on trucks with special permits.
“This is probably more accurate than they were done historically,” said James Johnson, president of Peninsula Iron Works. “Your big advantage today would be in how the materials were manufactured, compared to a casting.”
Johnson and his brother are the third generation to operate Peninsula. The fabrication shop performs 3,000 jobs per year. For this one, they were subcontracted under Vigor, which prepared plans and shipped the materials for the forgings. At more than 100 years old and the only shop like it on the West Coast, Peninsula aided the Allied war effort in World War I and mills serving the Pacific Northwest lumber industry. Its handiwork can be found nearly everywhere in the Portland area – including on all five movable bridges.
Once the new wheels are on, much testing will be needed to ensure they’re aligned with each other and the tracks are oriented perfectly. Among the updates incorporated into the project is breaking up the big metal struts that connect to the control room and pull the bridge open. Breaking them into three pieces, instead of one, makes for easier adjustments.
There will be one, final 48-hour closure over a weekend when final testing will be conducted. Once the old wheels are off, they will likely be shipped to a recycler, though the county has been in talks with the Regional Arts and Culture Council about using one in a public art installation, Henrichsen said.
In Modjeski’s day, bridges had much shorter life spans – maybe 20 years for the Broadway, Henrichsen said. The original operators of the bridge didn’t even grease its gears.
“He’d probably think we were crazy to still be operating this bridge,” Henrichsen said of Modjeski.
But a complete bridge replacement project would cost between $300 million and $400 million, and significantly impact commuters.
“After all these years, it still works well,” Wortman said. “So you can’t question the decision to build it in the first place.”

Broadway Bridge Rall wheel replacement
General contractor: Hamilton Construction
Cost: $13.5 million
Construction start: July
Expected completion: December

08/31/2017

Peninsula Iron Works's cover photo

08/02/2017

Peninsula's new 88k positioner.

07/10/2017

Peninsula Iron Works

01/05/2017

We engineer big solutions..

11/16/2016

Go big at PIW. Jude Hoge shown with the Don Pedro dam gate 55 tons and the 1st Broadway Bridge roller wheel 41 tons.

11/02/2016

Photos from Peninsula Iron Works's post

09/24/2015

273 holes...

09/03/2015

This is how you check back lash on a acme thread...

09/03/2015

Renishaw laser inspection on Y axis on frank confirmed .004 tolerance in 155"...that's allot of Y axis...we calibrate all our machine's on a annual basis or project need.

09/03/2015

Gear box repair. New H block, 4 new line bores, chrome repair on shaft journals, disassembly and assembled in 2.5 weeks. Mesta OEM vintage 1955ish...shear shafts and chopper heads rotated by hand when assembled...

07/18/2015

Chopper head. Mfg complete.

03/19/2015

Purchased a 2013 Mighty Viper with two other CNC mills.

01/13/2015

Untitled Album

12/14/2013

Bolster Plate and Chevron projects

07/15/2011

July 15, 2011

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We engineer big solutions..

Telephone

Address


9040 N. Burgard Way
Portland, OR
97203

Opening Hours

Monday 6am - 6am
Tuesday 6am - 6am
Wednesday 6am - 6am
Thursday 6am - 6am
Friday 6am - 4am

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