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Gaining Outsourcing Work Through Investment In High-Performance Technology
Market forces on the U.S. forging die industry from Far Eastern competition
do not appear to be as severe as other job shop or die/mold segments. So far,
most of that complex work has stayed in the western hemisphere. The challenge
for job shops has instead been to provide high-end quality and service in order
to compete with the many customer-operated, internal OEM milling and EDM
operations.
This type of competition requires an investment in technology by job shops
of all sizes for high-speed, high-performance machining. It also requires
developing and utilizing new techniques for the cutting of hard steel, which is
needed to get the results required for forging die production.
"Technology like the S-Series vertical milling machines from Makino help us
save a great deal of money, reducing our costs by upward of 200 percent," says
Doug Mason, president of 3D CNC Technologies and a partner in EWT, Inc. "With
the value-added Makino S56, delivery time savings are not simply measured in
percentage improvements, but rather in days of production saved.
"A part that used to take two weeks to produce can now be designed and have a
die built for it in two or three days. That is what we try to achieve, and
Makino makes a difference in us staying competitive enough to keep this
outsourced work."
Full Service Solutions
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3D CNC Technologies, which provides advanced software solutions for the forging
die industry, is merging with EWT, Inc., which provides the market with
high-speed machining and EDM solutions. The two Rockford, Illinois, companies
will still maintain their separate brands, but will merge under EWT in an
attempt to offer full-service, turnkey solutions. And the company will serve as
a software reseller and contract machining operation as well as offering
high-performance machining consultation.
The company primarily manufactures molds, forging dies, patterns, stamping
dies, electrodes and anything else that requires 3D contour milling. It also
uses conventional EDM and burns areas of molds that cannot be machined.
"We can manage and manufacture the whole mold for a customer," says Mason.
"This often includes a combined process of rough milling a block of steel and
then EDMing it for detail. But, with the Makino S-Series machinery, we often
find we can run the entire process from design to finish while eliminating all
polishing.
"One customer's part was roughed in one of our two Makino S-Series machines,
and then we used electrodes to EDM in the detail per the customer's existing
process. It took about eight hours to rough the steel on the S56, then EDM the
part with three electrodes provided by the end customer, which took an
additional six hours each to burn in order to finish the cavity. The total cycle
time was 26 hours.
"We then machined the same job complete on the Makino S56 in 16 hours,
eliminating the EDM operation," says Mason. "This eliminated another two full
days of work from the process, as the part required no bench time and was
virtually polish free.
"This does not include the time eliminated from process improvements, such as
the various setups, machine programming, transfers between internal operations
and the time the customer had in manufacturing the electrodes. We realistically
saved a total of three days out of the process with the S56, a reduction of 60
percent, while maintaining accuracy tolerances of 0.001 inches," says Mason.
Technology Makes The Difference
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The Super GI control on Makino allows EWT/3D CNC to run at a higher rate of
speed and maintain stability for continuous, quality cuts. "The machine
acceleration and deceleration holds complex contours and still maintains a fast
chip load and good tool life, despite abrupt directional changes," says Mason.
"You get good tool life and you get good finishes. That is what people want in
the forging die marketplace.
"During our field tests, which we used in determining which machine to buy,
we took a part that was an electrode and machined it out of aluminum, as we
needed 0.032 inch diameter tool with flute length exceeding 0.350 inches. We
also did steel cutting tests. The Makino S56 performed better than any of the
other machines."
Mason says one stamping die run on the Makino S56 is a rail die for an auto
manufacturer, with a large radius part that fits inside a door. The top contour
would have been probably a four-axis wire cut, because it is hardened D2 steel,
and it has inserts which typically would have required wire EDM.
"Since we were able to cut them with the S-Series, after being heat treated,
the hardened steel part fit together perfectly and required no grinding or wire
cutting," says Mason. "We eliminated two whole processes and it came together
directly from a 3D surface model.
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"It took about eight hours to rough on the S56, which also milled three
electrodes that then burned six hours each to finish the cavity. The total cycle
time was 26 hours."
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"EWT and 3D CNC have also seen a large increase in business activity because
we have the added capabilities of the Makino S-Series machines. These vertical
machining centers have not only brought in a great deal of milling work, but
also have brought in ram and wire work because customers are looking for a
one-stop shop. And, we have taken away a lot of jig grinding work and some
conventional EDMing because we are now able to do more of those processes using
high-speed machining techniques."
One particular job that the company would not have been able to perform with
previous equipment technology was the milling of eight bronze automobile part
cores. The top detail ribs of 0.360 inches in depth, and 0.039 inches in width
with a one-half degree draft, were all precision milled in 32 hours with only
one tool on the Makino S56. This would have previously required multiple
electrodes.
Value-Added Production
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Mason says when the companies first started looking at acquiring an affordable,
high-performance machine, the main reason it opted to go with the Makino
S-Series was the availability of a 20,000-rpm spindle. "We got a high-end
spindle in a fast machine with linear guide ways.
"We were making parts within 30 hours of a great installation. And, Makino
really applied every bit of knowledge they had to our business. Their
technicians stayed that day and the next working with our operators, just
running parts and molds and dies. They not only showed us where we can drive out
costs with this technology, but they showed us how.
"We are a contract shop, and we are getting a lot of work because we are able
to save up to 50 percent of costs for our customers," says Mason. "We are able
to quote work and show a financial benefit for the customer, which they are not
used to seeing. They cannot do it themselves because they have not made the
investment into machinery like the Makino S-Series.
"Makino is at the forefront
of technology in our marketplace. They embraced what we were trying to do and
helped us get there."
Please also read the story
"S-Series Cuts Both Ways" for additional
information on Makino S-Series machine performance.
For additional information about the capabilities of EWT/3D CNC, or how they
use the Makino S-Series machinery, contact Doug Mason at 3019 Eastrock Court,
Rockford, Illinois 61109-1761. You can also contact EWT/3D CNC at 815-397-9707,
or send an e-mail to doug@3dcnctech.com.
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