MicroStrain Sensing Systems joins HBK family

HBK is welcoming MicroStrain Sensing Systems to the family following the successful completion of the acquisition by Spectris Plc. The purchase, valued at $37.6m, has gained approval through a comprehensive regulatory process in the US. With the integration into HBK, MicroStrain will operate under the name ‘MicroStrain by HBK’. Located in Vermont, MicroStrain has expertise in designing and manufacturing high-precision inertial and wireless sensing systems. Its products cater to the industrial and tactical-grade sector within the inertial sensing systems market.
For further information www.microstrain.com

£30m AMIC contract

A construction contractor has been appointed to the Queen’s University Belfast-led Advanced Manufacturing Innovation Centre (AMIC), a £100m Belfast Region City Deal project, with almost £80m coming from the UK Government. Henry Brothers has won the £30m contract to construct the 10,500 sq m ‘Factory of the Future’ building at Global Point Business Park in Newtownabbey. By 2050, estimates predict that AMIC will have contributed more than £1bn to the local economy, directly and indirectly created over 1500 permanent jobs, and supported the training of 300 apprentices.
For further information www.bit.ly/3JmSICZ

ModuleWorks names early MDES adopters

ModuleWorks reports that CADCAM vendor Autodesk and machine tool builder DN Solutions (formally Doosan Machine Tools) are adopting the recently released Manufacturing Data Exchange Specification (MDES). ModuleWorks introduced MDES as an open specification for exchanging digital representations of manufacturing equipment between various hardware and software systems across multiple process steps. This covers tool components, assemblies, fixtures, stocks, set-ups and their mounting in machine tools.
Autodesk and DN Solutions are among the first companies to adopt MDES.
For further information www.mdes.info/en

Robot-loaded Nakamura just keeps running

UK subcontract machining companies do not get much bigger than Metaltech Precision in Somerset. As part of the Expromet Technologies Group, Metaltech’s 50,000 sq ft facility is home to more than 40 CNC turning centres, over 15 machining centres and a wide variety of conventional machines, fabrication equipment and metrology technology. The latest machine to arrive is a Nakamura-Tome WT-300 with an automated robot loading facility from the Engineering Technology Group (ETG).

Operations manager Steven Ward says: “A customer approached us with a substantial contract that required machining a significant number of different parts in volume. Although we have existing fixed-head and sliding-head turning centres, we’re conscious of how we utilise our personnel and the hours available to us in a normal working week. Our Nakamura solution allows us to operate well outside of the normal operating window. The cell works on the basis that the Nakamura, with its performance monitoring and Hydrafeed Robojob system, allows us to palletise either billets or we can bar-feed the machine.”

With through-spindle bar capacity options for bar feeding of 65, 71, 80 or 102 mm diameter material and a maximum turning diameter of 270 mm, the twin-spindle, twin-turret Nakamura-Tome WT-300 accommodates the bar-turning and billet-loading demands of Metaltech. Available with an option of the 15/11 kW or 18.5/15 kW spindle motor on the main and sub-spindle, and a maximum turning length of up to 780 mm, the heavy-duty Nakamura-Tome WT-300 is an all-round performer.

Discussing if the automation route is the only way to remain competitive, Ward says: “You have two expensive assets in your business, one is machinery and the other is personnel. You have to consider how you best utilise both of those assets.”
For further information www.engtechgroup.com

World premiere from DMG Mori at EMO

With the new CTX 450 and CTX 550, DMG Mori presented at EMO last month the two larger sister models of the CTX 350 introduced previously at Open House Pfronten 2023. The CTX 450 and CTX 550 feature a main and counter spindle, as well as a Y axis with 130 mm of travel, to facilitate the complete six-sided machining of complex workpieces. A turning diameter of 480 mm and a turning length of 800 mm, or 1225 mm for the CTX 550, offer maximum flexibility for customers.

The CTX 450 and CTX 550 reflect DMG Mori’s four pillars of process integration, automation, digital transformation and green transformation. It is possible to automate this six-sided complete machining in various ways – for example with the Robo2Go or the Matris systems. App-based control with a 24″ multi-touch screen simplifies digitisation on the shop floor, while modern drives such as the synchronous spindle motors ensure energy-efficient operation.

The CTX 450 has a main spindle offering 4000 rpm and 360 Nm. The main spindle of the larger model achieves 770 Nm at 3250 rpm. In addition, the counter spindle has a speed of 5500 rpm and a torque of 192 Nm (CTX 550: 4000 rpm and 360 Nm). The turnMASTER spindle concept with three (ISM80) or four bearings (ISM102) ensures precision, supported by a large bar capacity (80 or 102 mm).

Positioning accuracy in the C axis is 0.001°. Among the options is a direct-drive turret with speed of up to 10,000 rpm and torque of 42 Nm.
For further information www.dmgmori.com