Welding Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Welding stocks.

Welding Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Apr 24 WST Conmed (CNMD) Surpasses Q1 Earnings and Revenue Estimates
Apr 24 MEC Mayville Engineering Company Announces First Quarter 2024 Results Conference Call and Webcast Date
Apr 24 WST West Pharmaceutical Q1 2024 Earnings Preview
Apr 24 EME EMCOR Q1 2024 Earnings Preview
Apr 24 WST Will West Pharmaceutical (WST) Beat Estimates Again in Its Next Earnings Report?
Apr 23 WS Cleveland-Cliffs, Freeport-McMoRan Report Q1 Results; Worthington Steel Gets GM Supplier Of The Year And More: Tuesday's Top Mining Stories
Apr 23 ASPN 10 Stocks You Should Not Buy According to Jim Cramer
Apr 23 ITW Estimating The Intrinsic Value Of Illinois Tool Works Inc. (NYSE:ITW)
Apr 23 WS Worthington Steel Named a 2023 Supplier of the Year by General Motors
Apr 22 EME Should Investors Buy EMCOR (EME) Ahead of Q1 Earnings?
Apr 22 WS Can Worthington Steel, Inc. (NYSE:WS) Maintain Its Strong Returns?
Apr 22 WST Is a Beat Likely for West Pharmaceutical (WST) in Q1 Earnings?
Apr 22 EME Has EMCOR Group (EME) Outpaced Other Construction Stocks This Year?
Apr 21 ZEUS Do Fundamentals Have Any Role To Play In Driving Olympic Steel, Inc.'s (NASDAQ:ZEUS) Stock Up Recently?
Apr 18 EME Emcor Group (EME) Dips More Than Broader Market: What You Should Know
Apr 18 ITW Here's Why Hold Strategy is Apt for Stanley Black (SWK) Stock
Apr 18 WST West Pharmaceutical Services (WST) Expected to Beat Earnings Estimates: Should You Buy?
Apr 18 ITW 5 Industrial Product Stocks to Buy on Stable Demand in March
Apr 18 MEC This Mayville Engineering Company Insider Increased Their Holding By 36% Last Year
Welding

Welding is a fabrication or sculptural process that joins materials, usually metals or thermoplastics, by using high heat to melt the parts together and allowing them to cool causing fusion. Welding is distinct from lower temperature metal-joining techniques such as brazing and soldering, which do not melt the base metal.
In addition to melting the base metal, a filler material is typically added to the joint to form a pool of molten material (the weld pool) that cools to form a joint that, based on weld configuration (butt, full penetration, fillet, etc.), can be stronger than the base material (parent metal). Pressure may also be used in conjunction with heat, or by itself, to produce a weld. Welding also requires a form of shield to protect the filler metals or melted metals from being contaminated or oxidized.
Many different energy sources can be used for welding, including a gas flame (chemical), an electric arc (electrical), a laser, an electron beam, friction, and ultrasound. While often an industrial process, welding may be performed in many different environments, including in open air, under water, and in outer space. Welding is a hazardous undertaking and precautions are required to avoid burns, electric shock, vision damage, inhalation of poisonous gases and fumes, and exposure to intense ultraviolet radiation.
Until the end of the 19th century, the only welding process was forge welding, which blacksmiths had used for millennia to join iron and steel by heating and hammering. Arc welding and oxy-fuel welding were among the first processes to develop late in the century, and electric resistance welding followed soon after. Welding technology advanced quickly during the early 20th century as the world wars drove the demand for reliable and inexpensive joining methods. Following the wars, several modern welding techniques were developed, including manual methods like shielded metal arc welding, now one of the most popular welding methods, as well as semi-automatic and automatic processes such as gas metal arc welding, submerged arc welding, flux-cored arc welding and electroslag welding. Developments continued with the invention of laser beam welding, electron beam welding, magnetic pulse welding, and friction stir welding in the latter half of the century. Today, the science continues to advance. Robot welding is commonplace in industrial settings, and researchers continue to develop new welding methods and gain greater understanding of weld quality.

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