Posts Tagged ‘cnc turning’
CNC Lathe Basics and CNC Turning Information now Release on Ivan Iron’s Website
What do Computer Numerically Controlled Lathe machines do? Ivan addresses this on his webpage by talking about the uses for CNC Lathes. Computer Numerically Controlled Lathes turn stock to remove the material. Most parts coming off a CNC Lathe will be cylindrical and symmetrical. Visit the website for more info on this: CNC Lathe Turning
Vertical machining centres cut patterns
Producer of low volume reaction injection moulded parts and polyurethane castings uses five vertical machining centres to cut master pattern equipment from polyurethane tooling board
The Midas Pattern Company specialises in the production of low volume, high quality reaction injection moulded (RIM) parts and polyurethane castings (PuR). The company intends to dramatically shorten the time and cost for a designer to move from a CAD model to a fully functioning prototype/finished usable component.
This article was originally published on Manufacturingtalk on 29 January 2008 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Compact CNC millers pass office doorways
Very compact CNC milling machines re small enough to fit through a 914 mm doorway, and can easily be moved with a pallet jack or equipment dolly
Heavy duty vertical machining centre is compact
Vertical machining centre with extended Y-axis, a 1015 x 660 x 635mm work envelope, 50-taper spindle and small footprint, provides heavy-duty metal cutting capability
The production material has to validate design and produce a saleable product.
Midas uses five Haas CNC vertical machining centres (VMC) – typically to cut the master pattern equipment from polyurethane tooling board.
Midas said that one of the main reasons for choosing Haas CNC machine tools was reliability and user-friendliness.
Based in Bedfordshire, UK, the Midas Pattern Company was established in 1989 as a precision foundry toolmaking company.
The company has developed into a substantial business integrating CADCAM and CNC toolmaking techniques with traditional pattern and mould making skills.
Further reading
Turning centres have longer machine beds
To satisfy a growing demand to provide CNC turning centres with longer beds, two long bed versions of existing machines were introduced at EMO 2007
CNC lathe with sub-spindle and VMC for car maker
Buggy manufacturer Rage invested in a Haas TL-25 CNC lathe with sub-spindle and a Haas VF-2 CNC vertical machining centre, partly because of after-sales service
Changing production standardised on CNC machines
Changing production over from single customised to volume-customised bikes introduced CNC machin tools but using similar programs and standardising on tool libraries from machine to machine
Managing director of Midas, Alan Rance, said: ‘We aim to dramatically shorten the time and cost for a designer to move from a CAD model to a fully functioning example of a new product – not just a prototype, but a finished part, made from production material that not only validates design but is truly saleable in the market place’.
Midas uses a novel composite tooling system, MRIM, which offers a production moulding technique that can produce quantities from 1 to 5000-off.
Midas said it is ideally suited for making large parts or components with multiple assemblies and complex features.
Rance said: ‘We make parts in the production intent polymers that enable our customers to produce low volume examples of new and prototype products without incurring the very high cost of metal tooling or the compromises in functionality and mechanical properties you expect with traditional RP techniques’.
Based on RIM and PuR, the company’s FASTrim service offers a competitive alternative to SLLS/Silicon and VAC casting.
FASTrim can provide finished parts in as little as 10-15 working days, using cast PuR and soft tooling CNC machined directly from 3D CAD data.
Typical customers include medical technology companies building low-volume, high value instrumentation – machines that can cost hundreds of thousands of Pounds each but are usually built in low numbers.
* About RIM – Rachel Collier, Midas’ technical sales manager, said that reaction injection moulding, utilising MRIM tooling is ideal for the instrumentation industry.
She said: ‘Customers may only want to produce between, say, 10 and 20 finished products a year.
For example, if a customer designs and builds a new mass spectrometry machine costing many thousands of Pounds, it wouldn’t make sense to lay down metal tooling suitable for thousands of parts when you only need a few’.
Many of today’s medical equipment manufacturing companies are relatively small – often founded by individuals departing larger organisations – and perhaps only aiming at niche markets.
As recently as 20 years ago, such companies probably wouldn’t have existed without the patronage of a corporate benefactor – a large, well-financed parent organisation, for example – or some other significant investor.
Developing a new product was hugely and prohibitively expensive.
These days, even small firms can use the services of companies like Midas Pattern to get their products to market at a fraction of the traditional cost and to compete head-on with the big, well-funded players.
‘We’re not a typical plastics company so we’re not obsessed with high-volumes,’ said Collier.
‘We’ve taken all of the techniques and the principles we’ve learnt in the very specialised foundry pattern-making sector and applied them to making high quality plastic parts in small numbers’.
The Midas process starts by building tooling models within CAD (Computer Aided Design).
From these CAD models complex CAM (Computer Aided Machining) software is used to generate cutter paths.
The code for these paths can then be downloaded to one of the company’s five Haas CNC VMCs.
The VMCs include a 12,000 rev/min spindle VF-4SS, a VF-6 with a 4th axis Haas rotary table.
There is a a large 2m x 1m VF9.
The machines typically cut master pattern equipment from polyurethane tooling board.
‘Once we have the master pattern equipment we then use it to produce a composite metallised resin injection mould tool – MRIM,’ said Collier.
‘That’s about as much as I can tell you.
The detail of the process is a closely guarded secret’.
She added that the skill – the ‘Midas touch’, one could say – is being able to make a good quality tool from the master pattern.
Each of the company’s CAD engineers is also a machine setter, programmer and operator, so when it came to choosing a CNC machine tool, said Haas to manufacturingtalk.com, top of the list of essential criteria were reliability and user-friendliness.
Thanks in part to the precision of the master pattern equipment, Midas MRIM Tooling is guaranteed to produce up to 5000 parts, which is usually far more than a customer needs but does allow them to be used for intermediate production volumes.
A typical mould is around a 1m3 in size, which in the world of mainstream injection moulding would be considered extremely large.
Collier made the point: ‘If you made a hard tool for a part of that size it would cost around 10 times more than one of our composite moulds.
We can also achieve the complexity but without having expensive mechanical movements’.
* Pattern making – pattern making is a labour intensive process, so Midas still relies on its own knowledge workers – skilled pattern and toolmakers – as well as its state-of-the-art machines.
To keep them all busy, the company supplements its core business with a range of other activities.
The Bedford factory, spread across two adjacent sites, is essentially a tool making facility, which produces foundry patterns, jigs and fixtures, rotational mould tools, inspection fixtures and exhibition models.
It also houses a number of Low Pressure RIM moulding machines producing low-runs of finished parts.
‘What all Midas products have in common,’ concluded Collier, ‘Is that they all start with CNC machining, which means that every time Midas delivers a tool or a finished part odds are it started life on a Haas CNC machine tool’.
* About Haas Automation – Haas said that CNC machine tool companies have led the ‘democratisation’ (or freeing up – Ed) of manufacturing production, perhaps none more so than Haas Automation itself, which claimed to be the original low-cost, high-specification machine tool builder.
Founded just twenty years ago in California, USA, but already with more than 85,000 of its products in operation around the world, Haas said it has certainly played an important part in getting affordable, reliable tools in the hands of the ‘industrious and the ingenious’, helping companies like Midas Pattern Company to ‘turn bright ideas into gold’.
Mill/Turn Center News
Mill/turn centre has a lower turret equipped with a 60mm Y-axis traverse that increases capability for new processing applications and cutting tools
With a lower turret equipped with a 60 mm Y-axis, Yamazaki Mazak UK said that the versatility of its Integrex e-420H-ST II mill/turn centre is considerably expanded. It delivers increased capability for new processing applications and cutting tools. The ability to mount turning tools, tailstock, steady rest attachment or special fixtures on the lower turret opens up numerous machining possibilities for delivering maximum productivity from a single machine tool.
This article was originally published on Manufacturingtalk on 31 January 2008 at 8.00am (UK)
The Integrex e-420H-ST II has upper turret axis travels of 845mm and 420mm (X and Y) complemented by a lower turret with axis travels of 232mm and 60mm (X and Y) and upper and lower Z-axis movements of 2088mm and 1893mm respectively.
Yamazaki Mazak told manufacturingtalk.com that the machine can meet almost any kind of production requirements.
These large and multiple axis movements are combined with powerful main and second spindles (4000 rev/min, 30kW), both equipped with C-axis, which is capable of the smallest of incremental movements.
For rotary tool applications the upper B-axis spindle is a 12,000 rev/min, rated at 22kW, while the lower rotary tool spindle is a 6000 rev/min, 5.5kW unit.
* Reducing manufacturing costs – this combination of machining capacity and power makes the Integrex e-420H-ST II a complete fusion of machining centre and turning centre to provide a machining platform capable of reducing manufacturing costs through improved productivity.
The Mazak e-machines fully embrace the Information Technology age and bring the idea of the ‘intelligent machine tool’ to reality.
The Mazatrol Matrix control has been developed with a number of intelligent functions that assist the operation of the machine and allow communication between the machine tool, control and the manufacturing/production system in operation within a factory.
These functions also provide both management and operator with a wide range of relevant production information and feedback.
For example, the e-tower, which is integral with the e-machine, provides the operator with, for example, set-up support and access to operating and maintenance manuals and work schedules.
Management, in turn, can download programs, scheduling data and component drawings, while receiving real-time information relating to machine and job status.
** Yamazaki Mazak UK at MACH 2008, NEC, Birmingham, UK, April 21-25, Hall 5, Stand 5360. Request a free brochure from Yamazaki Mazak UK….
Mastercam Software Used Exclusively at WorldSkills 2007
February 7, 2008- Tolland,
CNC software is active at a grassroots level, helping the contestants around the world with software to prepare for the event. This is done in conjunction with the local Mastercam Resellers to get them involved with future engineers and machinists.
From September 1-6, 2009,
New Technology for Efficient CAM Programming for Mill/Turn
Mill/turn complete machining CAM module allows operators to switch between turning and milling strategies at any time whilst they are programming
At the UK’s MACH 2008 machine tool exhibition, Open Mind Technologies UK will present its latest innovations for efficient CAM programming. Highlights will include the mill/turn hyperMILL millTURN module for complete machining on milling and turning machines, the new CAD integration of hyperMILL in SolidWorks and the latest version of hyperMill V10 – all to be shown in the UK for the first time.
The capabilities of Open Mind products will be highlighted with numerous live demonstrations of workpieces programmed using hyperMILL.
These will take place on the Open Mind stand as well as on the stands of the various machine tool partners.
Open Mind’s technology partners include the following.
* Agie Charmilles UK.
* CG-Tech.
* CMS Group.
* DMG UK.
* Hurco Europe.
* Mori-Seiki UK.
* Seco Tools UK.
* YMT.
Some of which will be using hyperMill cam software at MACH to provide live machining demonstrations.
Live demonstrations taking place at MACH, said Open Mind to manufacturingtalk.com, will show that hyperMILL is not only a flexible and user-friendly cam system but also a system that delivers first-class machining results.
Further details on live demonstrations can be found on the Open Mind stand at the show.
* Mill/turn in one program – as well as providing multiple demonstrations at MACH with its technology partners, visitors to Open Mind’s stand will be able to witness the hyperMILL millTURN Version 10 CAM software for milling and mill-turning with just one program.
The ability to accurately manufacture complex parts in a single set-up, reduce set-up times and increase efficiency has brought considerable demand for the mill/turn module that has been integrated into hyperMILL.
Users can switch between turning and milling strategies at any time whilst they are programming.
It also allows users to generate NC programs very easily.
The tool database, automatic stock tracking, stock management and collision control are available for all turning and milling strategies.
A mill/turn postprocessor ensures that a complete NC file is produced.
In addition to the new mill/turn module, hyperMill V10 promises to increase performance considerably thanks to its multi-core processor support.
Alongside this will be version V10 presented for the first time at MACH.
This is destined to be a major highlight for all SolidWorks users as this version includes the new CAD integration of hyperMILL in SolidWorks.
This integration allows users to work with hyperMILL in their familiar SolidWorks environment.
This version will also support Windows Vista.
* Open Mind at MACH 2008, NEC, Birmingham, UK, April 21-25, Hall 5, Stand 5556.