Toolmaker puts trust in Vollmer

The name of US company Great Lakes Custom Tool Manufacturing (GLCT) says it all: GLCT produces special tools from its base on the shores of Lake Michigan, one of North America’s five Great Lakes. In order to machine tools and circular saws tipped with carbide or PCD, the toolmaker relies on 19 Vollmer machines. Recently, Vollmer supplied GLCT with a VPulse 500 wire erosion machine and a QR 270 disc erosion machine, among others.

“We have developed from a local sharpening service into an international manufacturer of special tools for woodworking and metalworking,” says GLCT CEO Ray Martin. “Our combination of products, services and support, along with a company culture of investment and innovation, is the reason behind our success both on the American market and globally.”

When GLCT expanded its business premises to almost 10,000 sq m in 2018, five new Vollmer machines arrived at the factory, including a VPulse 500 wire erosion machine with an external loading system for up to 16 tools. This successor to the QWD range can sharpen significantly faster than its predecessor thanks to a new type of generator technology for PCD cutting edges.

“With the VPulse generator, the new machine is at least 20% more productive than our previous QWD machines,” says Martin. “What’s more, the surface quality of the cutting tools is better than ever, and the VPulse 500 has the latest Vollmer programming system, which offers an intuitive user interface. This means that we not only save production time, but avoid machining errors.”

Even in 2020, a year when Covid-19 was wreaking havoc across the world, a new Vollmer machine reached Lake Michigan: a QR 270 disc erosion machine that can sharpen the tooth tops of PCD-tipped circular saw blades.

For further information
www.vollmer-group.com

EDM reduces electrode use by 40%

NCMT has supplied a Japanese-built Makino spark erosion machine to the tool-room facility of cable management products solutions provider HellermannTyton, where it is now busy producing plastic injection moulds. The company’s tool-room engineer, Rob Pickup, who has 20 years’ EDM experience, says that the super-low wear rate of the copper electrodes using the Makino has cut their usage by around two-fifths, lowering production costs and speeding mould manufacture through the need for fewer electrode changes.

HellermannTyton’s tool room in Manchester supplies multi-cavitation injection moulds produced mainly from 52 HRc Stavax to meet the demands of the local production operation. The cable ties, fir trees, clips and other cable management solutions produced in the UK factory serve most end-user markets.

Spark erosion is inherently a slow manufacturing process and the tool room is keen to avoid a bottleneck developing as demand for the company’s cable management products continues to rise.

“We wanted to increase sinking capacity, not so much for our higher speed applications, but more for producing very high accuracy moulds,” says Pickup. “The radius on the peak of the tooth form is less than 50 µm, so we needed a die-sink EDM on which electrode wear rate is super-low. We found that performance in the Makino EDNC6, which probably has the best generator on the market.

“An average job here uses up to 15 electrodes on one of our other die-sinking machines, but on the Makino we can rely on that number being reduced to nine,” he continues. “It represents a big saving in their manufacture, as well as in the copper used and the number of tool changes. Moreover the result is more repeatable, so there is never any rework.”

For further information
www.ncmt.co.uk

Growth prompts new investment

Oldham-based Hopwood Gears, which derives half of its turnover from the manufacture of steel, aluminium and plastic gears – and the remainder from high precision subcontract work (particularly for the robotics and defence sectors) – has invested in a new Makino U6 H.E.A.T wire EDM machine from NCMT. The machine, which is capable of long periods of unattended operations, will help the company boost production capacity.

Behind the latest investment by the family-run firm was a doubling of turnover to £4m over the past two years, despite the pandemic.

Operations director Calum Baines says: “We first became aware of NCMT when we attended a gear seminar at their Coventry technical centre and were impressed with the level of technology, as well as the build quality of the machines.”

The new Makino at Hopwood spends 90% of its time in gear production activities, mainly for the wire-cutting of keyways in hardened steel.

Hopwood Gears’ managing director Cory Hopwood says: “As a result of our rapid growth, there was a shortfall of EDM capacity and we were constantly running behind with orders, but that situation has changed dramatically.”

He says that the Makino U6 H.E.A.T. is 30% quicker at cutting than the other EDM machine on-site and uses 30% less wire. The higher speed is due to a combination of machine rigidity and two large, high-pressure flushing pumps that are able to evacuate chips efficiently, allowing the wire to be pushed harder. Unusually, it is possible to mount a 16 kg wire spool that lasts for the whole of a ghost shift, without need for a space-hungry side loader.

For further information
www.ncmt.co.uk

Winbro strikes partnership deal

Machine tool manufacturer Winbro Group Technologies has signed a partnership deal with the Engineering Technology Group. The new agreement will streamline and enhance the route to market for Winbro solutions and provide greater accessibility for customers.

Winbro Group Technologies is a specialist in the design and manufacture of advanced machines and technologies based on non-conventional processes that include high-speed EDM drilling and ECM (electro-chemical machining). The company offers a range of high-technology machining systems for the production of cooling holes and other forms and features in turbine components, thus earning a strong reputation in the aerospace, industrial gas turbine and power generation sectors, as well as electronics, medical, electric vehicles and battery technology.

Further solutions offered by Winbro include laser drilling, cutting and ablation, and creep-feed grinding. The company has a manufacturing and assembly facility in Coalville, with another facility in Rock Hill, SC, USA where Winbro can configure machine systems either as a single process or dual complementary process machines.

Winbro Group’s chief commercial officer Andy Lawson says: “The partnership with ETG is an ideal marriage of Winbro’s technology innovations in non-conventional machining and ETG’s broad base across many sectors. Wherever ETG’s customers have a problem that cannot be addressed with conventional machines, Winbro can potentially offer a solution.”

ETG’s group managing director Martin Doyle adds: “By forming this partnership, ETG will identify opportunities whereby manufacturers across the entire spectrum can benefit from investing in Winbro machine tools. The ETG team is excited for the opportunity to work with this key producer of machine tools, and once again promote and support the UK manufactured brand.”

For further information
www.winbrogroup.com
www.engtechgroup.com

Micro-hole EDM gives boost

Dynomite Diesel Products, a US-based company with a 20-year history in the manufacture of high-performance diesel fuel injectors, has recently acquired an ONA MF5 micro-hole EDM machine (ONA machines are available in the UK from CNC International).

Until now, producing the high-flow injectors was very expensive and took about 2 hours using a process based on an extrusion machine. The company needed a solution to optimise costs by reducing the manufacturing time, while bringing precision and consistency to the product. By adding the ONA MF5 EDM model to its operations, Dynomite has reduced the cycle time to less than 5 minutes, increased process cost-effectiveness and extended the useful life of its extrusion machine. Furthermore, this new procedure, which combines the company’s extrusion machine and new MF5, makes the final calibration much faster and more consistent, injector-to-injector.

For Lenny Reed, owner of Dynomite, the addition has countless benefits: “The machine offers us to stay abreast of the ever-changing requirements of this sector. We now have the latest technology to manufacture even more precise injectors, which will enable us to create more innovative products in the future.”

Regarding cost and time optimisation, he adds: “We can predict more accurately the time spent on each product, and the costs are very good, which is great for the future as we anticipate the useful life of the machine to be around 20 years.”

Ultimately, the owner is thrilled with his investment as “this machine provides our business with possibilities we never dreamed of.”

For further information
www.onaedm.com