Channa prefers bandsaws from Selmach

Channa Engineering is a family-run business based in Aveley, Essex. The company specialises in all metal works, designing and creating custom gates, grills, railings, balustrades and much more. Surinder Channa, the company’s proprietor, is a huge advocate of bandsaw technology, purchasing a number from Selmach Machinery over the years

He says: “I’ve known about Selmach for ages – I knew they had what I needed and I’ve had several machines off them now, including a bandsaw and a small bandsaw, and we’re looking to get another soon. Selmach are very good – the guys are very helpful, in fact they’re brilliant.”

Channa Engineering was replacing an old bandsaw. The machine was very old and the company had to start cutting larger workpieces.

“We cut steel of various sizes so we required a machine that could cope, and Selmach have more than met our expectations,” says Channa. “We’ve had no problems and I’ve no doubts about them at all. That’s why we’re going to get another one. Our cutting requirements are increasing and another bandsaw will ease the pressure on the ones we’ve got. You can never have enough bandsaws.”

Channa adds that work is now much faster and the bandsaws are very easy to use.
“The only time I have to think about it is when I’m changing the blades,” he concludes.

For further information
www.selmach.com

Hurco to hold October open house

Hurco will hold an open house exhibition at its High Wycombe facility on 6-7 October 2021. The company’s managing director David Waghorn says: “Our in-house event will take place during EMO in Milan. Although it is now possible to travel to Italy, we doubt that many people from the UK and Ireland will visit this year. A quick trip to High Wycombe, however, will give everyone an excellent perspective on the latest developments on offer from Hurco.”

Taking centre stage is the BX60i VMC for large X and Y-axis travels, while on show for the first time will be the VM One, a super-compact, entry-level VMC. Two of Hurco’s most popular automation solutions will also be in operation: a Hurco ProCobot Profeeder producing parts on a VM20i VMC, and an Erowa Robot Compact 80 feeding the new VMX30UDi, a direct-drive, 15,000 rpm version of the VMX30Ui five-axis VMC with 200 kg trunnion capacity. In total there will be 12 machines under power and cutting metal.

Pre-register at https://is.gd/cuzoxu

62% report damage due to pandemic

More than half of UK manufacturers polled in July 2021 by Subcon (Birmingham NEC, 14-16 September) – the UK’s leading subcontract manufacturing supply chain show – have been impacted negatively by the pandemic: 43% quite negatively and 10% very negatively. On the flipside, 17% of the 81 respondents claimed no impact at all, and 23% actually profited from Covid-19, with 14% saying their business was impacted ‘quite positively’ and 9% ‘very positively’.

When asked how long they believe it will take for UK manufacturing to recover, 22% put their hands up to experiencing no losses, with 38% saying within 12 months, 26% within 3 years, 4% within 5 years and 3% stating never. A follow up question asked how respondents believe the pandemic has changed UK manufacturing over the last 18 months. Some 62% said it has increased the need to protect supply chains.

For further information
www.subconshow.co.uk

Guyson blast cabinet hits the target

Guyson International has recently installed a Guyson Euroblast 7PF (Pressure Fed) blast system at Merlin Archery, a designer and manufacturer of tournament shooting archery bows. The blast cabinet delivers a uniform bead-blasted cosmetic surface finish on Merlin’s range of machined compound bows and enhances the surface topography of components before anodising.

The Euroblast 7PF blast system is from Guyson’s premier industrial quality range and delivers good component access, with doors opening to the front, top and side. This access facilitates the easy loading of components into the internal blast chamber, which in this instance has a width of 1480 mm to accommodate the longest of the aluminium compound bow parts.

Merlin Archery’s blast system comprises a Guyson Euroblast 7PF blast cabinet, model 75/16 cyclone reclamator, G27 pressure pot and Guyson C400 dust collection unit. The system delivers fast (up to four-times faster than suction-fed systems), effective blast finishing on a vast array of components. Large armhole sleeve/glove assembly allows the operator greater flexibility of movement when blasting, while external roof-mounted LED lighting coupled with light-coloured rubber curtain lining offers additional cabinet protection and good contrast for parts visibility.

The 27-litre capacity pressure pot generates the blast stream within the blast chamber, and when the full-width foot pedal is depressed it pressurises the pot and starts the blast operation. Similarly, releasing the pedal de-pressurises the pot and stops the process. Guyson’s 75/16 cyclone reclamator separates re-usable media from the dust, blast debris and undersize media, while the C400 dust collector filters out and collects the dust-laden air from the blast cabinet using a single-cartridge filter.

For further information
www.guyson.co.uk

Success for Renishaw apprentices

Five degree apprentices from Gloucestershire-based Renishaw secured second place for their entry in the UK’s ‘Engineers without Borders’ competition. As part of the ‘Engineers for People Design Challenge’, the apprentices had to create an engineering brief based on real-world problems that would improve the lives of the people living in two towns in northern Peru. The team – Ella Brisland, Marcus Evans, Charlie Lodge, Ezra Price and Oliver Tutton – are currently in year one of a five-year Level 6 apprenticeship at Renishaw.

Together, the team developed a solution for Lobitos and Piedritas, two towns that experience serious sanitation problems. The apprentices’ solution consisted of a combination of biodigesters and oxidation ponds that plumbs sewage through the system, creating a sanitary sewage facility and turning waste into usable by-products. The system breaks sewage into clear effluent that can be processed and used for drinking water and sludge which can be deployed as fertiliser, providing a healthier area to live.

For further information www.renishaw.com