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Neil Vojtasek Phones & Addresses

  • 21 Sheep Hill Rd, Fleetwood, PA 19522 (610) 987-9114
  • 41-4 Rock Rd, Reading, PA 19606 (610) 670-0853
  • 41 Rock Rd, Reading, PA 19606
  • 41 Rick Rd, Reading, PA 19607 (610) 779-2794
  • Wyomissing, PA
  • Oley, PA
  • 41-4 Rock Rd, Reading, PA 19606 (610) 823-0475

Work

Position: Construction and Extraction Occupations

Education

Degree: High school graduate or higher

Emails

Resumes

Resumes

Neil Vojtasek Photo 1

Manufacturing Engineer

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Location:
Wyomissing Hills, PA
Industry:
Mechanical Or Industrial Engineering
Work:
Bassett Industries since Dec 2007
Manufacturing Engineer

Arrow International Jan 1999 - Nov 2007
Manufacturing / Process Engineer

Arrow International Jan 1996 - Jan 1998
Engineering Intern
Education:
The Pennsylvania State University, Capital College 1998
Bachelor of Science, Mechanical Engineering Technology; Design engineering concentration
The Pennsylvania State University, Berks Campus 1996
Associate, Mechanical Engineering Technology
Skills:
Manufacturing
Engineering
Injection Molding
Machine Tools
Product Development
Quality Control
Design of Experiments
Process Improvement
Medical Devices
Validation
Welding
Mechanical Engineering
Robotics
Fda
Machining
Automation
Troubleshooting
Solidworks
Iso 9000
Minitab
Machinery
Capa
Mig Welding
Interests:
Science and Technology
Environment
Neil Vojtasek Photo 2

Neil Vojtasek

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Publications

Us Patents

Apparatus For Cleaning And Sanitizing Shoes

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US Patent:
20080256728, Oct 23, 2008
Filed:
Apr 15, 2008
Appl. No.:
12/103704
Inventors:
Mark Feeg - Sinking Spring PA, US
Neil Vojtasek - Reading PA, US
International Classification:
A47L 23/02
B08B 1/00
A47L 23/04
A47L 23/22
US Classification:
15 34, 15 36, 1510492, 15106, 15161
Abstract:
A shoe cleaning apparatus is formed with a series of rotary brushes operable to clean the bottom of a shoe placed thereon and spring-loaded linear side brushes to clean the sides of the shoe. A supply of cleaning or sanitizing fluid is retained in an elevated tank that feeds by gravity into the rotary brushes for application to the bottom of the shoe being cleaned. The flow of fluid is actuated by downward pressure on a hinged sub-frame that opens a valve. Each rotary brush is engaged by a comb that cleans the brushes upon rotation thereof. A removable debris tray is mounted within the frame to collect dirt and debris removed by the combs and to collect the cleaning fluid dispensed from the elevated tank. Resistance to the downward pressure is provided by springs to minimize accidental opening of the flow valve.
Neil S Vojtasek from Fleetwood, PA, age ~48 Get Report