Identifying Impure Fuel

A premium motor spirit that does not combust as efficiently as it ought to is often termed ‘bad or dirty fuel’. Such adulterated or impure PMS are produced when crude oil does not go through a proper fractional distillation.
Such fuel is often acquired mostly through oil bunkering and sold through the ‘black market’ or through some filling stations at cheaper rates. Impure PMS are notorious for several reasons: they cause engine hesitation, affect the fuel filter, cause hard-starting, and affect the carburettors negatively.
All these negative consequences of impure PMS are enough to cause downtime for a company, leave one distressed on a motorway, and could damage some vital parts of a vehicle such as the engine.
To avoid purchasing impure PMS, you need to know that impure PMS has a darker or muddier appearance while pure PMS has a somewhat bright yellow appearance.
Impure PMS is usually oily and does not evaporate as easily as pure PMS. Finally, it does have a bad smell. With this information, you can better protect your vehicles and also your generators from being broken down by impure PMS.

Security Tips for the Election Period

In this election period, we would like you to stay safe as you exercise your civil right.
In order to stay safe, please endeavour to do all of the things mentioned below
1. Do not argue about politics as this might lead to you getting hurt by the opposition supporters
2. Always get back on time and don’t stay out late at night.
3. Avoid criticizing any politicians as their supporters might be out to harm you or anyone close to you.
4. Do not support or wear political campaign uniforms in public so you don’t become the prime target when violence ensues.
5. Always listen to the news to stay informed.
6. After casting your vote, go home immediately to avoid violence, peradventure they occur.
7. Steer clear of an undefined crowd or group of people
8. Don’t move about with expensive gadgets so that they don’t steal them
10. Stock up your home with food items and all necessary items
11. Do not talk recklessly at the polls
12. Celebrate in a civil manner when your candidate wins
13. Have your doctor’s number and emergency services handy
We at Kenyon understand the importance of you exercising your civil right, and we want you to be safe as you do so. Safety first and always.

5S of Good Housekeeping

Good housekeeping entails that everything must be kept in an orderly manner and in a clean condition ready for use. To be able to imbibe good housekeeping and maintain it, you need to be conversant with the 5S as developed by Tahichi Ohno during the 60s in Japan.
1. Sort – Remove materials that are not necessary, store the ones that are important and are needed on a daily and weekly basis, and archive old but vital ones for future retrieval.
2. Set in Order – The important materials you need should be set aside, labelled, colour coded and put in easily tracked locations. Ensure everyone knows the location of all materials
3. Shine & Clean – when setting materials into different locations, ensure they are cleaned and in good working condition. Repair broken items, and ensure your working area is constantly clean
4. Standardisation – Ensure that the new pattern of arrangement and level of cleanliness you have achieved are now standard. Put it down on paper so that anyone taking over will adhere to all housekeeping standards as prescribed. This will help to build consistency in the system.
5. Sustain – ensure that the standards are passed on to everyone to maintain cleanliness and locations of the equipment. Then, simple routine audits can be done to check if the standards are maintained, and equally ascertain areas that need improvement
These 5S are very vital when one wants to maintain good housekeeping. You also need to bear in mind that housekeeping you skip may cause a fall, trip or slip.

My Neighbour’s Negligence: An Esther and Ubong’s Story (Self-medication)

During the harmattan, due to the dustiness and coldness of the season, most people often come down with a cold. It was during this season that Esther’s neighbour’s four-year-old child, Tunde, had a terrible cold.
The little boy, Tunde, had a hacking cough that kept him awake through the nights, and the parents were too busy to take him to the hospital.
Esther had visited the family on a Sunday evening, and while conversing, she advised her neighbour, Tunde’s mother to take Tunde to the hospital for proper diagnosis and drug administration, but she said it was not necessary and that she had sent her younger sister to purchase a cough syrup from the pharmacy store.
Esther came back that evening, and she expressed her concern to her husband, Ubong. She feared that something might happen to the child. Esther opposes self-medication and despises it for children. Ubong calmed her down and reminded her it was just cough syrup, and nothing would happen. The next morning, around 4 AM, Tunde’s mother had begun to scream, calling for help and knocking on the neighbours’ doors.
Esther and her husband, Ubong, rushed to her apartment and saw her trying to resuscitate Tunde.
Immediately, Ubong instructed the wife to help Tunde’s mother to get Tunde outside. Then he dashed into his house, picked up his key, ran out and drove them straight to the nearest hospital.
When they got to the hospital that morning, the doctors tried to resuscitate him, but it was fruitless. Finally, they broke the news to Tunde’s mother, Esther, and her husband, Ubong.
Esther and Ubong were disheartened by the event, but Tunde’s mother was devastated. After some investigation, it was discovered that the syrup given to the boy had diethylene glycol (DEG) and ethylene glycol (EG). Esther could not stomach her pain, as she had a premonition that something bad would happen to Tunde. Mama Tunde went home that day with ‘had I known’ powdered all over her face in grief.
Vital Info: The World Health Organisation, on the 23rd of January 2023, released a report detailing cases from at least seven countries with 300 fatalities of children mostly under the age of five which resulted from the consumption of over-the-counter cough syrups contaminated with high levels of diethylene glycol and ethylene glycol. These contaminants are toxic chemicals used as industrial solvents and antifreeze agents that can be fatal even in small amounts and should never be found in medicines.
Note: When you want to purchase over-the-counter cough syrup, please check the content to see if it contains Diethylene Glycol and Ethylene glycol
Your health is your greatest wealth!

Maintenance of the Cold-cutting Machine

Cold-cutting operations are critical operations that require the readiness of the cold-cutting machine. The cold-cutting machine helps to cut pipes into desired sizes that meet the specific needs of any operation.
To ensure that the cold-cutting machine is in good shape and ready for use, it must be routinely maintained. During the maintenance, the cold cutting machine is disassembled to remove trapped particles from the machine before it’s coupled, and also to check the functionality of the different components such as the bearings, etc.
After it has been reassembled, the cold-cutting machine is function-tested to ensure that it is fit for use. Once it has been certified okay, it is carefully stored in the warehouse in anticipation of any cold-cutting operation.
Cold-cutting machine maintenance should be carried out once every two months. In a situation where such maintenances are not routinely conducted, it could lead to the failure of the machine, resulting in downtime and loss of revenue. At Kenyon, we take precautionary measures to ensure that we respond proactively to cold-cutting operations.
performance-driven; we are Kenyon.

Victor Ekpenyong Awards Scholarship to Six Ibibio Students in Akwai Ibom State

Victor Ekpenyong, the CEO of Kenyon International West Africa Company Limited, has through its foundation, the Victor and Helen Foundation, awarded scholarships to 6 Ibibio teenagers for performing excellently at the Ibibio bible quiz held last Saturday, 28th of January 2022.
His aim is to encourage more young people to embrace their mother language to erase the stereotype of Ibibio as the language of the poor. Congratulations to the beneficiaries of the VHF initiatives. For more information, you can read the news articles and watch the video clip.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-mekyFRYIM&t=11s