Innovation award for DMG Mori

DMG Mori has been honoured with this year’s innovation award from the German Association for Supply Chain Management, Procurement and Logistics (Bundesverband Materialwirtschaft, Einkauf und Logistik – BME).

The award was presented to the company for its successful purchasing and logistics management in front of some 2000 guests in Berlin. DMG Mori’s award-winning concept impressed the judges with its automated order transactions, global matrix organisation with regional purchasing units, and integrated IT solutions. The entire value chain is now networked.
For further information www.dmgmori.com

Ross Brawn opens OAS training centre

Ross Brawn OBE, a legend in the field of motorsport, has officially opened the new Oxfordshire Advanced Skills (OAS) Training Centre, which is run by the Manufacturing Technology Centre, on the UKAEA Culham site in Oxfordshire.

Coventry-based MTC Apprenticeships has been procured by the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) and the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) to provide training to hundreds of apprentices in the new OAS centre. Brawn, who is currently managing director of Formula One’s Motor Sports division, began his career as an apprentice with the UK Atomic Energy Authority.
For further information www.oas.ukaea.uk

Pre-owned press gets the job done

A second-hand 1000-tonne forging press from Schuler has been installed at Schondelmaier GmbH. The press, which had been providing dependable service at a major automotive manufacturer since 1985 still had “plenty of life left in it”.

Over the course of just a few weeks, the machine was dismantled, transported to Schondelmaier’s headquarters in Germany’s Black Forest region, re-assembled and commissioned into service.
“We believe that this press will run for another 20 years,” states managing director Joachim Schondelmaier. “Used presses from Schuler are basically always a safe bet. We purchased a pre-owned 500-tonne hydraulic machine through Schuler subsidiary Vögtle earlier this year, while our press shop also houses a number of other cold-forging machines from Schuler.”
For further information www.schulergroup.com

Soaring ambitions at Birds Precision

Mills CNC, the exclusive distributor of Doosan machine tools in the UK and Ireland, has supplied family-owned precision subcontract specialist Birds Precision Engineering Ltd with a new, large-capacity Fanuc-controlled Doosan DNM 6700XL vertical machining centre.

The machine, which incidentally was one of the first (if not the first) of its type to be sold by Mills in the UK, was installed at Birds Precision’s 3000 sq ft facility in Nuneaton in September 2019. The DNM 6700XL is being used, predominantly at this moment in time, to machine high-precision, complex prismatic parts for one of the company’s many long-established UK customers.
Essentially comprising base castings and guideways for state-of-the-art, special purpose machines, the components being produced on the Doosan are made from cast iron and steel. The castings are large (1.2 m long x 640 mm wide) and often weigh up to 500 kg. Machining typically takes place in small batches (one-off through to five- or six-off) to tight dimensional tolerances (0.01 mm) and exacting surface finishes (Ra 1.6).
Birds Precision supplies the parts direct to its customer and, according to owner and managing director, Chris Bird, “they have to be right first time…every time”.
The quality, lead-time fulfilment and cost demands of this customer, and others like it, were among the main reasons why Birds Precision invested in the Doosan DNM 6700XL.
Says Bird: “To maintain our preferred partner relationship with existing customers and win new business contracts with new and existing customers, we made the strategic decision to upgrade our machine-tool capacity and capabilities.”

As a consequence, the company’s machine tools that were being used to produce the large guideway parts, were soon in the spotlight.
“We had been using Herbert DeVlieg horizontal jig mill borers to machine these types of parts,” explains Bird. “Although these machines, despite their age, were still capable of delivering the accuracies required, it was becoming increasingly difficult to source spare and replacement parts. We realised that this situation would only become more acute over time, and so we decided to search the market for an alternative.”
The machine decision-making process was designed and implemented by consensus, with a number of the company’s younger members of staff playing the lead role in contacting machine-tool suppliers and drawing up a shortlist of potential machines that could meet the company’s immediate and future requirements.
“The future of the company lies, to a large extent, in our ability to recruit and retain top young talent,” states Bird. “Our recently-introduced apprentice programme, which enables our apprentices to gain valuable skills, relevant work experience and nationally recognised qualifications, is helping us meet this objective.
“Another angle to our commitment to investing in young people is involving them, where possible, in the future direction of the company and trusting them with important decisions, such as future machine tool acquisitions,” he adds.
Although not a Doosan machine-tool user at the time, staff members from Birds Precision had visited Mills CNC’s stand at MACH 2018, where they had seen a number of Doosan vertical machining centres being put through their paces.
One of these members of staff was machine shop manager, Tom Bird, who says: “Mills CNC has a good reputation in the market, and we liked the Doosan machines on their stand. So much so in fact that we invited sales staff from Mills to visit us at our facility to discuss our future requirements.”
It was during these discussions that Birds Precision was alerted to the imminent introduction of the new Doosan DNM 6700XL machine, a three-axis vertical machining centre with a 2.1 m X-axis stroke.

Explains Tom Bird: “The technical specifications of the DNM 6700XL, including its size, rigidity and power, ticked all the right boxes for us. We also liked the machine’s competitive price, quick availability and the fact that it was backed by Mills CNC’s aftersales service and support. Furthermore, because the DNM 6700XL is a new machine, we were convinced that it would help differentiate us in the market and provide a distinct competitive advantage.”
Since being installed, the DNM 6700XL has not missed a beat, and employees at Birds Precision have been impressed with the machine’s cutting performance, especially its high stock-removal capabilities and its ability to maintain high volumetric accuracy over long machining runs.
Concludes Chris Bird: “Such is the accuracy and surface finish of the parts being produced on the DNM 6700XL that they no longer need to be ground and hand scraped. The DNM 6700XL represents a significant investment, but armed with this technology we are confident about our future growth and prosperity.”
In addition to its large capacity, the DNM 6700XL is equipped with a 18.5 kW/15,000 rpm spindle with 20 bar through-spindle coolant capability, a large work table (2200 mm x 570 mm) and an integrated thermal compensation system. The latter minimises the effects of heat generation and regulates thermal expansion, ensuring high component accuracies and process optimisation.
For further information www.millscnc.co.uk

Rotor grinding machine on order

The latest company to order a Holroyd TG350E rotor grinder is Jaguar Compressors, a division of the Xiamen East Asia Machinery Industry Company. Currently in build, and costing some £1.3m, the machine will be shipped to Jaguar’s Xiamen, China-based manufacturing facility in mid-2020.

Holroyd reports the TG350E rotor grinding machine is rapidly making a name for itself as the preferred choice among industrial refrigeration specialists. There are currently around 70 TG series machines in use around the world and, each year, Holroyd typically receives orders to build several new TG models.
“The team at Jaguar Compressors continually strives to enhance the performance and energy efficiency of its screw air compressor products,” says Holroyd regional sales director Steven Benn. “With the ability to grind medium-to-large capacity rotors of up to 350 mm in diameter and 1795 mm in length, the TG350E model offers a versatile, high-quality solution to Jaguar’s varied production requirements in producing screw compressors for a variety of applications, including precision filters, gas storage tanks and refrigerated dryers.”
A further benefit for users of Holroyd TG series models is that a significant amount of production time can be saved as each machine’s diamond dressing discs are able to continuously dress during semi-finishing cycles. By contrast, cutting tools typically require periodic regrinding, the frequency of which is determined by the materials and volumes being cut.
Developed primarily for the finish-grinding of helical screw components after they have been milled to a rough or semi-finished state, Holroyd TG series machines are just as suited to prototyping and batch manufacture as they are to volume production. Fully automated on-machine probing provides closed-loop feedback of corrections to the dresser disc.
For further information www.holroyd.com