EAR SAFETY DEVICES

Brand Owner (click to sort) Address Description
EAR ARMOR V-Moda 5100 S. Eastern Avenue Los Angeles CA 90040 Ear safety devices, namely plugs and inserts for non-medical purposes;EAR;
EARAMMO McKeon Products, Inc. 25460 Guenther Warren MI 48091 Ear safety devices, namely, plugs and inserts for non-medical purposes;Earplugs for medical purposes;
FADERS ROLAND CORPORATION 2036-1 Nakagawa Hosoe-cho, Kita-ku, Hamamatsu Shizuoka 431-1304 Japan Ear safety devices, namely, plugs and inserts for non-medical purposes;In the statement, line 1, V-Moda, LLC California limited liability company should be deleted, and V-Moda, LLC Delaware limited liability company should be inserted.;
HEAR PLUGS McKeon Products, Inc. 25460 Guenther Warren MI 48091 ear safety devices, namely plugs and inserts for non-medical purposes;earplugs for medical purposes;
PILLOW SOFT McKeon Products, Inc. 25460 Guenther Warren MI 48091 ear safety devices, namely, plugs and inserts for non-medical purposes;ear plugs for medical purposes;
ROCKIN' ROLL UPS McKeon Products, Inc. 25460 Guenther Warren MI 48091 ear safety devices, namely, plugs and inserts for non-medical purposes;ROCKING ROLL UPS;ear plugs for medical purposes;
 

Where the owner name is not linked, that owner no longer owns the brand

   
Technical Examples
  1. A process plant includes a safety system that is physically and logically integrated with a process control system such that the safety system and the process control system can use common security, communication and display hardware and software within the process plant while still providing functional isolation between the safety system controllers and the process control system controllers. This integrated process control and safety system uses a common data communication structure for both the safety system and the process control system so that applications can send data to and receive data from devices in either system in the same manner, e.g., using the same communication hardware and software. However, the common data communication structure is set up enable a security application to distinguish process control system devices from safety system devices using tags, addresses or other fields within the messages sent to or received from the devices, which enables data associated with the process control system to be distinguishable from data associated with the safety system, thereby enabling the security application within a user interface to automatically treat this data differently depending on the source (or destination) of the data.