sandylane
	 
	Buckinghamshire
	 
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	1 of 53 
	Sun 3rd Jul 2011  5:33am  
	 
	
	 
	 
On my forum, we have recently been talking briefly about Brett's Stamping Works, that may already have been discussed on here, but it is certainly a memory of old "Cov", I remember the "thump thump" of the stamping works, you could hear it all over Hillfields. Great memories.
Peter. 
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	DBC
	 
	Nottinghamshire
	 
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	2 of 53 
	Sun 3rd Jul 2011  12:58pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
In the 1950's I remember visiting an elderly relation in that area. The factory was literally at the end of her garden. I don't know how on earth she put up with the noise. I suppose she just got used to it.   
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	Slash1
	 
	northampton
	 
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	3 of 53 
	Sat 9th Jul 2011  9:59pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Was that the same factory as Smith's Stamping Works, or was that a different one? 
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	dutchman
	 
	Spon End
	 
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	4 of 53 
	Fri 15th Jul 2011  3:22pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
According to a story in the Telegraph this morning, Smiths Stamping Works was in Ribble Road, Stoke. 
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	Limey1997
	 
	Bridgeport CT USA
	 
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	5 of 53 
	Thu 24th Jul 2014  11:02pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
On 9th Jul 2011  9:59pm, Slash1 said: 
Was that the same factory as Smith's Stamping Works, or was that a different one?
 
My husband Gil Bourne worked at Smiths and the Albion drop AND Bretts he was a Stamper retired now and we live in the USA   
		
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	john bishop
	 
	Leicester
	 
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	6 of 53 
	Mon 4th Aug 2014  7:53am  
	 
	
	 
	 
I worked at Bretts stamping for a few months, the pay was [rubbish] the conditions rough. 
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	wingy
	 
	warwick
	 
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	7 of 53 
	Sun 10th Aug 2014  8:05pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
I remember working at Bretts for 3 weeks as a stand in for my uncle who was off sick, in those days you had a job forever providing you turned upon time and never had any time off, like the co-op dairy most of the workforce were related or knew one another. I remember Bretts as being largely without a roof and cold , miserable and always damp and wet, I recieved 30 minutes training on one of the massive presses and then heating metal bars up, stamping them and cutting of the item which was in my case clutch parts - release bearing housings as I remember for heavy commercial vehicles, we were told to pick a few twigs off bushes on the way into work to flick oldengine oil onto the dies as the press was coming down .  Various  die casts were expected to be inserted into the respective mounts by the operator and after a few trial attempts at pressings and adjustments we eventually got it right. No health and saftey nonsense here. The dirt floor was a testament to that. The money was good though.  
		
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	deanocity3
	 
	keresley
	 
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	8 of 53 
	Thu 11th Sep 2014  9:48am  
	 
	
	 
	 
I'd never heard of it before, so was it where Bretts Close is now? 
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	Roger T
	 
	Torksey
	 
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	9 of 53 
	Thu 11th Sep 2014  8:21pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Have I got this wrong, but I always thought Bretts Steam Hammer Drop forgings was in Holbrooks?
There was a Black Pad footpath that led from near Jubilee Crescent all across waste land to a footbridge over the railway, by W H Jones, plant yard, the path then joined a road which led through to Lockhurst Lane and you passed this terrific noise on your right hand side on the way, which I thought was Bretts. 
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	john bishop
	 
	Leicester
	 
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	10 of 53 
	Fri 12th Sep 2014  4:41am  
	 
	
	 
	 
The Bretts stamping I worked for was in Stony Stanton Rd, unless they had other premises I didn't know about.
65/66 was my little stint. 
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	NormK
	 
	bulkington
	 
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	11 of 53 
	Fri 12th Sep 2014  9:23am  
	 
	
	 
	 
On 11th Sep 2014  8:21pm, Roger Turner said: 
Have I got this wrong, but I always thought Bretts Steam Hammer Drop forgings was in Holbrooks?
There was a Black Pad footpath that led from near Jubilee Crescent all across waste land to a footbridge over the railway, by W H Jones, plant yard, the path then joined a road which led through to Lockhurst Lane and you passed this terrific noise on your right hand side on the way, which I thought was Bretts.
 
Albion Drop Forgings had a factory in Lockhurst Lane Roger, maybe that is what you could hear.      
		
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	Roger T
	 
	Torksey
	 
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	12 of 53 
	Fri 12th Sep 2014  9:23pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Thanks Normk,
Yes you are dead right, I guess it was similar trade though 
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	john bishop
	 
	Leicester
	 
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	13 of 53 
	Sat 13th Sep 2014  3:25am  
	 
	
	 
	 
Roger, your computer would have given you Bretts addresses. 
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	Limey1997
	 
	Bridgeport CT USA
	 
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	14 of 53 
	Mon 14th Dec 2015  5:04pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
On 9th Jul 2011  9:59pm, Slash1 said: 
Was that the same factory as Smith's Stamping Works, or was that a different one?
 
No Smiths, the Albion and Bretts all separate companies, my husband worked at the Albion then when he returned from America in 1970 he worked at Bretts till they closed   
		
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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	Derrickarthur
	 
	Coventry
	 
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	15 of 53 
	Mon 14th Dec 2015  7:27pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
I worked at Dunlop for over 44 years from 1967-1978 and from 1980-2013. During Apprentice Induction week in 1967 we visited lots of local firms including Bretts Stampings in Harnall Lane. The two things I remember most is the deafening noise of the drop hammers and a beautiful wooden clocking-in machine near the entrance. Bretts supplied Dunlop with lots of small batch aluminium drop forgings until their closure forced us elsewhere. Fortunately most of the hammers & presses were bought by Light Metal Forgings (LMF) at Smethwick and High Duty Alloys (HDA) at Redditch. 
These two companies later amalgamated.
Bretts had produced a small (5" diameter) aircraft wheel for a vertical take-off and landing aircraft (can't say which bird of prey this was) and when they closed it caused us lots of problems to avoid hundreds of thousands of pounds in re-qualification test costs. Eventually we convinced the MOD that the parts were still being manufactured by an identical method on the same drop hammers by the same operators as always although 30 miles along the M42.
Happy Days
 
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		Industry, Business and Work - 
		Brett's Stamping Works
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