Posts Tagged ‘Computer Aided Design’

Learning CAD is taking Place at CNCInformation Website

 

Learn CAD may have just gotten easier for the avid CNCer who is trying to understand Computer Aided Design. How you ask? Ivan Irons of CNCInformation.com has just released a new Computer Aided Design webpage that is all about Learning Computer Aided Design. The CNCer who is interested in seeing if this webpage has something for him or her can visit the Learn Computer Aided Design webpage at: Learn CAD
 
On this Learn CAD webpage, Ivan talks about the differences between hand designing various objects or using Computer Aided Design Software. He discusses the advantages and drawback of doing each and stresses that unless you are familiar with Computer Aided Design software, investing in the purchase of the software combined with the time investment of learning the in’s and out’s of the software may not be worth it if its just for a one-time part. See the rest of Ivan’s discussion on learning cad at the new webpage at: Learn CAD
 

Ivan also houses a variety of articles on this learn Computer Aided Design webpage that help the newbie learn further about Computer Aided Design. One particular articles that Ivan has put on his new Learn CAD website is about three dimensional computer aided design. This article tells about the importance of 3D CAD software and its uses in the world today. You can find this article at the bottom of the Computer Aided Design webpage at: Learn CAD.

Time to Learn CAM on Ivan’s Website

Learn CAM or Learn Computer Aided Manufacturing has just gotten easier with the release of Ivan Irons’ new webpage that is dedicated to CAM Tutorials to help aid Computer Aided Manufacturing Learning. The webpage of Computer Aided Manufacturing Training is located at: Learn CAM

On this Learn Computer Aided Manufacturing Ivan goes through the basic steps of Computer Aided Manufacturing. Ivan describes Computer Aided Manufacturing as one of the most misunderstood parts of the Computer Numerical Control Process.  This is so because, as Ivan states, many more people use and understand Computer Aided Design, which is the design part of the process.  When it comes to manufacturing, where Computer Aided Manufacturing comes it to play, and actually making the product, there are far fewer people involved. Ivan describes that this is why Computer Aided Manufacturing Software is not as prevalent as Computer Aided Design Software. Visit his Computer Aided Manufacturing Tutorial website at: Learn CAM for more information.

 

Learn CNC Basics and CNC Learning Can Now be Found

Learn CNC and Learn CNC Basics has just gotten easier with Ivan’s new Learn Computer Numerical Control webpage that was added to his website recently. Get everything you need to know about learning computer numerical control when you visit this page on Ivan’s Computer Numerical Control website.

Computer Numerical Control basics can be very intimidating when you start the learning process. Ivan discusses in his CNC Tutorial, that steep learning curve that he found when he first started investigating Computer Numerical Control. In order to learn Computer Numerical Control Ivan describes all of the various facets of CNC that he had to begin learning. To see the details on what these Computer Numerical Control facets are, visit his specific CNC Learning page at.
 
Ivan takes the new CNCer through his CNC Learning process and walks the user through learning Computer Aided Design Software, Designing Parts, Computer Aided Manufacturing Software, Preparing Parts for Machining, Simulating Machining, Cleaning Parts, and much much more. See all of these steps at his Computer Numerical Control Webpage at.

 

CAD Information Webpage Just Released

CAD, which stands for Computer Aided Design is an important component in Computer Numerical Control. Ivan Irons has started a new page on his Computer Numerical Control website that is all about CAD Information and CAD Basics for those who are either new to Computer Aided Design, new to Computer Numerical Control CAD, or just want a little bit of a refresher on the basics of Computer Aided Design. You can visit this specific page at:

 
On his new CAD Information page, Ivan takes users through the basics of CAD and discusses when Computer Aided Design was invented and how it came about that we started using Computer Aided Design in our everyday lives. Computer Aided Design is used in plenty of other industries besides Computer Numerical Control, such as air equipment, machine equipment, house design, landscaping, and the list goes on and on. See some other places CAD is used at Ivan’s CAD Info webpage at:
 
Ivan also goes briefly into Computer Aided Design that is two dimensional or 2-D versus Computer Aided Design that is three dimensional or 3-D. Ivan talks about the uses for 2D versus 3D and the trends in the Computer Aided Design world to becoming all three dimensional in the next few years. You can see Ivan’s discussion on CAD 2D versus 3D at:
 

 

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.

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.

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’.