Educational webinar from Komatsu

Stamping press specialist Komatsu is staging an educational webinar that involves two sessions this week. On Tuesday 10 August, the company will set out how users can best determine their press parameter selections. A day later on Wednesday 11 August, the webinar will focus on die set-up procedures and keeping the press in good working order. Both sessions run from 09:00 to 11:00 CST.

Komatsu wants to provide its users with the tools, as well as the knowledge, needed to stamp today’s increasingly difficult materials. The purpose of this webinar is to do exactly that. The webinar will go over the spectrum of aforementioned topics and will include live demonstrations. By the end of the webinar, press shops will be able to gain a further understanding of today’s stamping materials in order to not only maximise efficiency, but increase the life of the tool and the press. The sessions in this webinar are meant to be attended in order, although if there is one session that particularly appeals, please register.

The speaker is Art Hedrick, the owner of training and consulting firm Dieology, located in Greenville, Michigan, USA. He is journeyman tool and die maker with over 40 years of metalworking experience. In addition, Hedrick is a past instructor at General Motors University and has been the recipient of many training and education awards. He has held the position of chairman on a number of stamping councils with the Society of Manufacturing Engineers and the Fabricators and Manufactures Association.

Register at https://is.gd/nc1huL

HV Wooding targets £1m electrification boost

The development of a new powder coating process for parts destined for electric vehicles is set to deliver a £1m boost for a Kent-based manufacturer. HV Wooding, which specialises in providing precision engineered metal components for the automotive and aerospace sectors, is working with materials and engineering researchers from the Nuclear AMRC and the University of Sheffield to improve the quality of its busbars. Supported by Innovate UK through the Faraday Battery Challenge, the project focuses on investigating and developing alternative coating methods that will improve busbar performance and integrity.

For further information
www.hvwooding.co.uk

Technology puts wind in Eurotubes’ sails

Mills CNC, the exclusive distributor of Doosan machine tools in the UK and Ireland, has supplied Eurotubes UK, a global wire guide and stator/rotor winding needle design and manufacturing specialist, with four new high-performance machines. The machines – three Doosan DNM 4500 machining centres and a Doosan Lynx 2100LSY – are now operational at the company’s modern 18,000 sq ft facility in Portland, Dorset.

All four Doosan machines are machining high-precision wire guide tubes/nozzles used in the coil winding industry. The tubes/nozzles form part of automatic CNC-controlled machines that wind enamelled copper wire around a core to create electromagnetic coils.
In addition to machining its range of standard wire guide tubes/nozzles, Eurotubes also uses its new Doosan lathe and machining centres to produce customised work holding for the accurate and secure machining of its high precision tubes, nozzles and needles, as well as prototypes for OEMs and end-user customers seeking new and/or optimised tube or needle designs.

Says Greg Bedford, Eurotubes’ managing director: “The recent acquisition of four Doosan machines has helped strengthen our position in key markets and with specific customers.
“By improving our machining capacity and capabilities we’ve been able to achieve higher part accuracy and repeatability, reduce part cycle times and win contracts to machine ‘other’ complementary components used in the manufacture of electric motors and copper wound coils generally.”

The new Doosan machines have replaced several older machines at Eurotubes. These machines, although still performing adequately, could not be relied upon to deliver the consistently high and repeatable accuracies – or the superior surface finishes – required by Eurotubes and expected by its domestic and international customers.

“Consistency and repeatability are critical,” says Bedford. “When a customer purchases our wire guide tubes, nozzles and needles they have to be identical, not just in terms of their physical dimensions, but of the performance they deliver.”

The tubes and nozzles machined by Eurotubes on its Doosan machines are made from BS1407 British ‘silver’ steel, a versatile high-carbon, low-alloy tool steel that is generally supplied in 1 m bar lengths in a range of different diameters which are then cut to down to size by Eurotubes using its in-house bandsaws. Small batches are the norm (50-off maximum).

Once cut to size, blank machining takes place on the multi-tasking Lynx 2100LSY, making full use of the lathe’s integrated Y axis (±52.5 mm), 6000 rpm driven tooling capabilities and its 5” chuck sub-spindle, which enables front and back-end machining operations on the tip, neck and holder elements of the tubes in a single set up.

Tubes and nozzles designed, manufactured and supplied by Eurotubes are available in a range of sizes: the largest tubes can range from 20 up to 200 mm in length, while tube diameters/geometries vary enormously. For this reason, Eurotubes has over 7000 different designs of wire guides.

“We are involved in micro-machining and, as such, need access to technologies that can deliver tolerances to within 5 µm,” says Bedford.

A critical element of every wire guide tube is its centre hole. These can be incredibly small – down to 0.2 mm in diameter – and, as such, involve the use of small diameter drills and reamers, in conjunction with tube drawing and wire EDM technologies.

Drilling and reaming operations take place on the DNM 4500 vertical machining centres which, in addition to their rigid design and directly coupled 15,000 rpm spindles with integrated thermal compensation, feature large worktables (1000 x 450 mm) and through-spindle coolant.

The dimensions of the tables, combined with the small size of the components that require machining, enable multiple-part set up and machining in one hit using Eurotubes’ bespoke multi-vice work-holding solutions, thereby improving the company’s productivity and operational efficiencies.

Says Bedford: “Owing to the small and delicate nature of the components being machined, we design our own work holding and clamping solutions to protect the parts and ensure their integrity during machining.”

A critical feature of Eurotubes’ nozzles and tubes are the small diameter holes that run in perfect alignment from one end of each tube to the other. These holes require machining to high accuracy.

“The cylindricity, concentricity and surface finish of the internal holes are important, and affect wire feed rates and wire tension,” explains Bedford. “They also ensure protection of the enamelled copper wire and help reduce friction. Our DNM machines, combined with the skill and expertise of our staff, ensure that the wire guide tubes we manufacture are up to the job.”

Eurotubes’ three DNM 4500 vertical machining centres and the Lynx 2100LSY multi-tasking lathe are the first Doosan machine tools on site and, according to Greg Bedford, “they won’t be the last”.

He continues: “We’re committed to continuous improvement and are always ready to invest in our people, plant, equipment and processes when the time is right. When we entered the market for new vertical machining centres, we did our homework, drew up a list containing our needs and wants, and approached a number of suppliers. We needed vertical machining centres equipped with good-sized work envelopes, powerful and high-speed spindles, and the latest Siemens control.”

Eurotubes visited Mills CNC’s Campus facility in Leamington.
“We liked what we saw and recognised that the performance and reliability of Doosan machines – combined with Mills CNC’s best-in-class aftersales service and support – were difficult to beat,” says Bedford. “These strengths, plus the fact that Mills can deliver and install Siemens-controlled machines quickly from stock, all impacted on our decision-making.”

He adds: “The part accuracies, process reliability and machining flexibility we experienced from investing in the DNM 4500 machines meant that when, some months later, we were looking at acquiring a Siemens-controlled compact, multi-tasking lathe – we again approached Mills with our requirements.”

Eurotubes was created in 1987 by Rob Bedford (Greg’s father) who built the company from scratch and pioneered the use of wire guide tubes in the coil winding and motor winding industries. Fast forward to 2021 and the company now employs 21 members of staff and, in its 34-year history, has manufactured over 4.5 million tubes.

Concludes Bedford: “I am incredibly proud of what my dad achieved. His commitment to innovation and quality, and his entrepreneurial spirit are at the heart of the company.
“Through investing in the latest technologies and employing expert staff with a ‘can do’ attitude, Eurotubes is now the undisputed market leader in the design and manufacture of wire guide tubes and needles.”

For further information
www.millscnc.co.uk

Subcontract market up 57%

The latest Contract Manufacturing Index (CMI) for the second quarter of 2021 showed a 57% increase on the same quarter last year. Although slightly down (-8%) on Q1 2021, the month of June recorded the highest market figures since August last year. Indeed, at the end of June, the market was some 10% higher than in the quarter preceding the pandemic. This strong growth has continued into July but the market is still very sensitive to uncertainty in material supplies, transport shortages and the number of people having to self-isolate due to the Covid-19 ‘pingdemic’.

Sourcing specialist Qimtek produces the CMI, which reflects the total purchasing budget for outsourced manufacturing of companies looking to place business in any given month. This represents a sample of over 4000 companies that could be placing business. Together, these companies have a purchasing budget of more than £3.4bn and a base of over 7000 suppliers.

For further information www.qimtek.co.uk

Connected press shop at Porsche

At the beginning of June, Porsche and Schuler started the operation of a fully-connected press shop in Halle (Saale), Germany. Apart from a servo press line with an output of up to 20 strokes per minute, the smart press shop features a state-of-the-art blanking line: a Schuler Laser Blanking Line 2.18 equipped with two cutting heads for processing strip material with a width of up to 1880 mm.

Blanking lines with lasers do not require expensive and heavy blanking dies, which is why they are particularly suitable for the production of new parts or small batch sizes with frequent product changes. The continuously moving coil material is processed into blanks at high cutting speeds. Thanks to tooling-free scrap separation, the result is high output rates. Furthermore, the system ensures gentle transportation of sensitive materials such as aluminium.

According to Schuler, the Laser Blanking Line 2.18 is the ideal solution for the smart press shop in Halle, which focuses on the production of aluminium outer skin parts in small batch sizes. By recording various measured values of the system, as well as the coil material (by smart marking of the blank), the line that supplies the blanks for the servo press line forms the point of departure for a track and trace system.

For further information
www.schulergroup.com