Why invest in custom press brake tooling?

According to Wilson Tool, deciding whether or not to invest in special tooling for a particular job is likely to give any fabricator food for thought.

While it’s true that custom press-brake tooling can be more expensive and may require a bit more lead-time than standard tooling, there are also significant benefits over standard tool sets. For instance, custom press-brake tooling makes it possible to solve challenging bending and forming applications while reducing material handling, minimising set-up time and improving the quality of parts.
Working with a tooling manufacturer to determine the best way to form a part can result in a positive ROI in terms of increased productivity and fewer reject parts. Whether faced with a unique part design, the need to simplify a complex bend or improve press brake performance, tooling manufacturers have the experience and knowledge to help shops determine the best way to make a part.
Tooling manufacturers also understand there is more to improving press brake performance than simply reducing the amount of time or number of strokes it takes to form a part. For example, consider the process of forming a channel. With a standard punch and die set, forming a channel requires two strokes of the machine. In contrast, using a custom channel tool, it is possible to produce two bends in one stroke. While certainly reducing the amount of time it takes to produce a part, the added benefit of choosing a channel tool set is the consistency gained in the finished component. As the part is now produced in a single stroke, it only needs to be gauged or located once rather than twice. After all, every time a component needs to be repositioned, re-gauged or relocated is an opportunity for something to go wrong, increasing the likelihood of producing a reject part.
For further information www.wilsontool.com

Smart change

Hexagon is offering a rare opportunity to learn more about high performance metrology solutions at a special event hosted by Coventry’s Manufacturing Technology Catapult Centre on 23 May.

Billed as ‘The Power of Smart Change’, the seminar will not only include a series of presentations by guest speakers, but demonstrations of Hexagon equipment and tours of the Advanced Manufacturing Training Centre. Speakers from KW Special Projects, Red Bull Technology and Jaguar Land Rover will deliver presentations. The event, which runs from 09:00-15:30, will also include Q&A and networking sessions.
For further information www.hexagonmi.com

Landmark day

Guhring announced that MACH 2018 was the swansong exhibition for long-standing managing director Mike Dinsdale, who has spent the past 39 years serving the company.

On the penultimate day of the show, the MTA recognised this achievement by presenting Dinsdale with a cake on the Guhring stand that said “with congratulations and thanks from the industry”. Presented by MTA president Geoff Bryant, who has also recently retired from Citizen Machinery, the presentation was an emotional occasion filled with tales of days gone by. Dinsdale will be retiring later in the year.
For further information www.guhring.co.uk

Bystronic set to take over TTM Laser

Swiss sheet-metal equipment manufacturer Bystronic is to take over the Italian manufacturer of laser-based tube- and profile-cutting machines, TTM Laser SpA.

The move follows the strategic partnership jointly agreed by the two companies last November. Bystronic is thereby enhancing its existing range of technologies with the addition of 2D and 3D laser systems for cutting profiles and tubes from 12 to 815 mm in diameter, as well as with equipment for welding large-format metal sheets. Active on the market since 2001 and headquartered in Cazzago San Martino, TTM Laser has 40 employees and achieved a turnover of approximately €14m in 2017.
For further information www.bystronic.com

3D printing specialist appointed

Following the announcement that XYZ Machine Tools has entered the 3D printing sector as an official reseller of the HP Jet Fusion, the company has strengthened its sales team with the appointment of Jim Ashby, who will be co-ordinating sales of the system across the south of England.

Ashby has extensive experience in metal cutting, having served his apprenticeship at Rolls-Royce where he learnt the skill of looking at solid engineering reasons to do things. Most recently, he has spent eight years working across the 3D printing sector with various companies.
For further information www.xyzmachinetools.com