Machine Tool Indonesia opens this week

Machine Tool Indonesia will open its doors later this week (6-9 December) at the Jakarta International Expo Centre and look to build on the success of last year’s show.The 2022 exhibition edition saw more than 840 exhibiting companies from 33 countries take part. Alongside a variety of onsite activities, including business matchmaking, ‘Tech-Talk’ sessions, live demonstrations and product presentations, last year’s event attracted over 25,300 trade attendees from more than 10 countries. Some 44% were first-time visitors.

Co-located with three other industries events, including Manufacturing Indonesia, Tools & Hardware Indonesia, and Industrial Automation & Logistics Indonesia, the exhibitions have become the largest manufacturing trade show for machinery, supplies and equipment exhibitions in Indonesia – all under one roofspanning 17,800 sq m.Some 78% of visitors at the 2022 show said they would return this year.
For further information www.machinetoolindonesia.com

Turnover more than quadruples in three years

Historically, a majority of subcontractor Reginson Engineering’s turnover came from the aerospace sector, with oil and gas generating most of the remainder. However, when Covid struck in early 2020 the aerospace contracts dried up. While ventilator work took off, the company knew this was only temporary, so the family-run business owned by Steve Hatch set about finding business elsewhere. What transpired altered the company’s fortunes entirely, as a contract from a jewellery manufacturer combined with strong growth in aerospace conspired to increase turnover so dramatically that by 2023 it was 447% higher than before the pandemic.

Even better is to come. The jewellery company is so pleased with the quality of the mainly titanium jewellery pieces already supplied that it has signalled its intention to increase the annual quantity of parts from 100,000 to 1 million per month over the next few years. The machine tools underpinning both the quantity and quality of the jewellery parts produced at the Nuneaton factory are yet more Citizen Cincom sliding-head lathes.

Reginson Engineering is a long-time user of these Japanese-built sliders dating back to the early 1990s. In October 2020, the lathes were joined on the shop floor by the subcontractor’s first Citizen fixed-head model, a 64 mm bar capacity Miyano ABX-64SYY twin-turret, twin-spindle turn-mill centre. The user describes the machine as “fantastic”, as it has allowed the company to slash cycle times compared with using other turning plant on site.

The upturn in throughput generated by the jewellery contract required much more sliding-head capacity, so the subcontractor has bought 14 new Cincoms in the past couple of years. They are now seven 20 mm bar capacity A20-VIIs on site and the same number of 12 mm capacity L12-VIIs.
For further information www.citizenmachinery.co.uk

Tornos and Starrag merger remains on track

As announced by the Tornos Group in May, the executive board and board of directors have been examining a merger with the Starrag Group over the past few months. Based on the positive results of the review and negotiations, the two boards of directors recently signed a merger agreement. The boards of directors of Starrag Group Holding Ltd and Tornos Holding Ltd are now asking their respective shareholders to approve this merger agreement.

The two groups of companies and their offerings complement each other, and a merger to form the StarragTornos Group would further strengthen room for manoeuvre as a manufacturer of precision machine tools. Tornos says it is convinced that if the planned merger gains approval by the two general assemblies, it will be able to offer customers even better technology solutions, products and services.

Bundled resources and combined technical know-how will significantly strengthen the new company’s innovative power, further developing existing technologies and driving forward new solutions. Furthermore, by increasing geographical presence, the merged company will make its performance and expanded range of services available globally on an even more personal, better and faster level.

The Tornos brand of Swiss-type sliding-head lathes and the brands of the Starrag Group have a long tradition. They are rooted in Switzerland and enjoy a high level of customer trustworldwide. That is why the companies want to keep them unchanged, even after the planned merger. The existing production sites of Tornos and Starrag are also to continue, withno job cuts planned as a result of the proposed merger. It goes without saying that familiar contacts at the Tornos Group will also remain the same.
For further information www.tornos.com

Host of new Colchester products on show

Colchester Machine Tool Solutions recently staged its first open house in four years. Taking place at the company’s European Technology Centre in Elland, West Yorkshire, the company showcased a whole host of new products to existing and prospective customers. Across the two-day event, there were also live product demonstrations and talks on the latest product ranges, as well as refreshments and a special prize giveaway.

This year marks the 30th anniversary of Tornado CNC turning centres, so Colchester Machine Tool Solutions has brought them back better than ever in new and modern configurations to give customers high rigidity and accuracy for any machining project.

Also on show was the Colchester Student centre lathe, which the company says is known throughout industry as the ultimate training and apprentice’s machine tool. This year, Colchester Machine Tool Solutions released the Student CNC lathe, a modern variant designed and engineered in the UK. The lathefeatures the latest FANUC controls, giving the user flexibility in programming, including ISO, conversational Manual Guide i or via CADCAM.

Completing the turning line-up, Colchester’s range of manual centre lathes and Alpha CNC/manual combination lathes also took the spotlight.

New from a milling perspective was the Storm vertical machining centre range, offering linear guideways, box ways and compact tool-room machine variants, all capable of heavy-duty and precise machining.

Also on display were new CNC and manual turret mills, providing extensive reliability, accuracy and versatility for small to medium size production runs. The company’s automation partner Olympus Technologies was present to demonstrate its bespoke automation solutions in tandem with Colchester’s Storm VMCs, which are automation and Industry 4.0 ready.
For further information www.colchester.co.uk

In-Comm wins award

A company that supports more than 700 apprentices every year has been recognised as the ‘best’ in its field. In-Comm Training, which operates two Technical Academies in Aldridge and Telford, was named as the ‘Training Provider of the Year’ at the recent Ladder for the Black Country Awards.More than 250 people crammed into Walsall Football Club to celebrate the stars of vocational learning, with the family-run firm impressing the judges with its £10m investment strategy and its recent record-breaking 199 apprentice cohort intake.The launch of the UK’s first ever Precision Tooling Academy also won praise.
For further information www.in-comm.co.uk