Weoffer a wide range of specialized automotive services, including automobile works, crankshaft grinding, head and cylinder refacing, cylinder boring and polishing, main line boring, and connecting rod repair. Additionally, we provide brake drum cutting and polishing, as well as brake shoe and clutch disc relining. Our comprehensive activities are designed to meet the diverse needs of our clients, ensuring top-notch quality and precision in every task.
Turning is performed on a lathe and is used to reduce the diameter of a part to a desired dimension with precision. Screw machining is a high-volume turning process designed for the rapid and accurate production of parts from various materials. Swiss machining, also known as Swiss screw machining, is another high-volume turning process that specializes in the close-tolerance production of very small parts, ensuring exceptional accuracy and consistency.
We specialize in providing top-notch services for heavy vehicles, heavy machinery, heavy equipment, and marine works. Our expertise extends to a comprehensive range of services, including high-precision machining jobs, expert lathe operations, skilled welding, custom gear making, and comprehensive metal fabrication. Additionally, we offer specialized services for foam concrete machines. Our focus is on ensuring quality and reliability in every project, catering to the unique needs of our clients in these demanding sectors.
At Al Qari Engineering Turning, we take pride in being an engineering company where quality is a habit, not an act. Our team excels in repairing automobiles, marine equipment, central A/C accessories, die making, fitting, and all kinds of lathe work. We guarantee quick services and exceptional quality, backed by our extensive experience in the industry.
With a long-standing presence in the market, we have a qualified staff and well-experienced technicians committed to delivering top-notch service. We cater to a wide range of customers across the UAE, offering expert suggestions and guidelines tailored to meet your specific needs. Our spacious facility is equipped with advanced machinery and staffed by professionals ready to tackle any project.
We are dedicated to establishing and maintaining long-term, prosperous business relationships. Please don't hesitate to contact us for assistance. Our trained staff is always ready to visit you and provide the support you need.
We transform your ideas into reality with our comprehensive machining and fabrication services. Our skilled machinists utilize precision equipment for milling, turning, drilling, and exact parts you need.
A hydraulic cylinder is an actuator that creates linear movement by converting hydraulic energy back to a mechanical movement. These cylinders are used in equipment to lift, push, pull and press loads that require exceptional force. Bailey designs, manufactures and sources the highest quality hydraulic cylinders available for any mobile application. Check out our wide selection below.
"Al Qari Eng is a lifesaver! They were able to diagnose and fix my car problem quickly and efficiently. The staff is friendly and knowledgeable, and they didn't try to upsell me on anything unnecessary. I highly recommend them!"
"I've been taking my car to Al Qari Eng for years, and they've always done a fantastic job. They're honest, reliable, and their prices are fair. They also do amazing work on all sorts of machinery - they fixed a problem with a lathe at my workshop that no one else could figure out. They're a one-stop shop for all things mechanical!"
There were more reasons to savor the future. Last July, I assumed command of a 240-man squadron. Nothing truly prepares you for the burden of command. It is a crucible that determines the rest of your career. Flourish, and many doors open. Struggle, and the road narrows.
In downtown Washington, D.C., I sit in a dimly lit hotel room with my former interpreter, Hamidullah, working the phones. Hamidullah was recently in Afghanistan but left in the early stages of the Noncombatant Evacuation Operation (NEO). Our former boss, however, is still in Hamid Karzai International Airport (HKIA). He will be our link to get some of our allies out.
General K was a gregarious Afghan who spoke broken English but did it with the complete confidence of a native speaker. His English skills matched my Pashto and Dari abilities, so we were an instant match. I nicknamed him the Big K for his outsized persona.
Hamidullah worked furiously to keep our contacts cool and collected. They texted and called him at all hours of the night. Many pleaded with him to take their children. Some tried to bribe their way further up our list. Hamidullah calmly held their hands throughout the ordeal, a testament to his professionalism.
Some cursed at us. Many cried out in pain. Others recited their entire resums to us: the schools they had visited in the United States and the American soldiers they had saved in combat. Others filled our phones with pictures of their children in a last-ditch effort to save them.
When I returned from the initial sprint in Washington, I kept looking for hope. I latched on to groups of vets. I joined text chains with other desperate veterans trying to save their Afghan friends. Those text groups eventually morphed into the Afghanevac community.
It was like injecting purpose straight into my veins. The rush of meaning flows through your body and swallows time. Also, it prevents you from reconciling with the catastrophe flashing before your eyes.
I also decided not to help my first Pashto instructor, Hamid, even though he was in my wedding. He is very well connected, and it seemed like he would successfully maneuver the maze and get his entire family inside HKIA. However, his wife and mother remain in that dystopian world. I did little to help him during those two weeks. He is my brother. How could I have failed him like that?
A generation of men and women shouldered repeated deployments. They lived and fought alongside strangers, who often became brothers-in-arms. And now they have to shoulder the mourning on their own, too.
I will tell her about my friends who died fighting a vicious enemy while simultaneously trying to rebuild a war-stricken nation from scratch. I will tell her about the Afghans who saved my life, kept fighting after I returned home, and died fighting for the dream of a free Afghanistan.
Will Selber is a lieutenant colonel in the United States Air Force. The views expressed here are his own and do not reflect the official policy or position of the Air Force or the Department of Defense.
Off topic....but a JVL "out of the box" thought/question?? Let's say Liz does decide to run to keep Trump from winning 2024...lots of IFs in this..If Liz runs, If Trump runs, If Trump is the nominee, etc...but if those things happens, I wonder how much Liz may pull away some moderate/conservative Dems which could help a Trump? And rather than Liz run as a presidential candidate the "out of the box" idea could be what about Liz as the VP on a Dem ticket? And if so, who'd be best on the top of that ticket?
Hello friends. Today I\u2019m turning the Triad over to my friend Will Selber, who has written an extraordinary piece about the year since our withdrawal from Afghanistan. About the off-the-books efforts to save as many of our Afghan allies as possible. About the tragedy of those left behind.
I know that Will\u2019s story will hit you as hard as it did me. I hope you\u2019ll share it as widely as possible. Will is raising his voice to speak for America\u2019s allies. He deserves to be heard.
Last June, I flew home from Afghanistan. The dread of Afghanistan\u2019s fate haunted my journey home. I worried that our Afghan allies would struggle without American support. I prayed they would last through the fighting season, giving them time to rearm, refit, and reorganize a long-term defense.
Like many military families, my wife and I had spent years apart. We met back in 2016, during my time at Fort Leavenworth. I proposed during my two-year unaccompanied tour to Korea. After our wedding, we spent a year apart while I trained for my year-long deployment to Afghanistan. Midway through my deployment, our daughter was born. I was lucky to be able to come home for her birth before returning to the \u2019Stan. After four years apart, we were finally going to be a family.
Hamidullah and I work around the clock for the next two weeks. So do thousands of other Americans and Western allies, all of whom leverage their connections to get their allies inside the airport. Your rank doesn\u2019t matter. Your background doesn\u2019t, either. It\u2019s a furious game of connect the dots, mixed with phone tag, crossed with hide-and-seek.
I started by scrubbing our list of contacts. Then I racked and stacked them based on my previous unit\u2019s relationship with them, their commitment to the previous government, and the likelihood of them facing Taliban retribution. Senior Afghan officers, Afghan Air Force officers, and Afghan special forces members shot up the list because they were the Taliban\u2019s top targets for retaliation.
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