CNC Router Helps Increase Productivity by a Factor of Five
Switching from manual
machine tools
to a CNC router
helps a custom plastic
fabricator produce a
wide range of products
on the average in onefifth
of the time required
in the past. RBC
Enterprises makes safety
guards for machinery,
control panels for electronic
equipment, housings
for medical laboratory
equipment and a
wide range of other
products. In the past, when the company produced all of its
products on manual machine tools or power tools, the company
had to turn away many more complicated parts
because it would have taken too long to make them.
Recently, they
switched to a CNC
router that automatically
machines the most
complex parts to a high
level of accuracy in much
less time. The key difference
is that RBC
Enterprises owner
Robert Couts now
defines the geometry for
the parts in computer
aided design (CAD) software.
Then the CNC
machine automatically
cuts out the parts based
on the CAD geometry. “For example, it used to take 16
hours to manually produce 32 polycarbonate timing windows,”
Couts said. “Now I can make those same parts in
one and a half hours on the CNC router.”
Challenge of producing complex parts using
manual methods
Couts has spent his entire life in the custom fabrication
business and founded RBC Enterprises in 2002. When he
first started the company, he built parts as he had been
doing his entire life, manually cutting out the pieces on
vertical milling machines, table saws, routers and similar
tools. “Producing quality parts by hand is a time-consuming
job that takes a considerable amount of experience,”
Couts said.
“For example, the timing window consists of a 12 inch
disk with a series of holes around the perimeter,” he continued.
“Each hole has to be located very precisely in relation
to the others. I used to lay the part out on
with an indexing head on a milling machine. It
took about 30 minutes to make each part. This
was a very exacting task that required a considerable
amount of skill. Even a very experienced
person could easily make a mistake and spoil a
part.”
Moving to CNC machining
Couts felt that CNC would solve these problems
by ensuring consistent accuracy. He looked at
CNC machining centers of a size that could handle
the company’s largest parts. He discovered
that the least expensive machines in this class
cost in the neighborhood of $100,000, which was
more than he could justify for this operation.
These machines were generally very heavy
machines with a cast iron base that were primarily
designed for cutting metals. Couts looked
around for a less expensive alternative and discovered
the Techno LC CNC router. This router
provides the accuracy, speed and ease of programming
and operation he was looking for. The
machine was designed specifically for the materials
Couts works with such as polymers, wood and
nonferrous metals.
“I spoke to Tim O’Connor at Techno and he was
very helpful,” Couts said. “He had logical answers
to all of my questions so I made the decision to
purchase the LC router. I have been very happy
with that choice. The machine is easy to use and
it has been quite reliable. Any time that I have
had problems I have simply called Techno and
received immediate answers. For example, once a
servo motor went out. The Techno support representative
helped me troubleshoot the problem.
Then the sent a new motor by next day air. He
also walked me through the installation and recalibration
process so in only about 24 hours from
my first call I was back in business.”
Need for accuracy and reliability
Techno’s LC series CNC routing system provides
a number of critical features that allow it to deliver
accuracy and long-term reliability of a level
that has previously only been available from
machines at a much higher cost. The LC Series machine is
constructed on a heavy steel base that includes a t-slot
aluminum table surface, ballscrews on all threes axes,
closed loop servo motor drives, and comes with Techno’s
Window’s based G-code interface that is upgradeable free
for the life of the machine. These premium drive components
on the machine offer smooth play-free motion, a
high level of accuracy and repeatability and require minimal
maintenance. The closed loop servo control system
provides constant position feedback, higher power and
smooth continuous motion that eliminate the possibility of
losing position in the middle of a part.
The machine is available in five sizes, with work
envelopes of 30 by 24 inches, 48 by 48 inches, 48 by96 inches, 59 by 120
inches and 78 by 120
inches. Each of these
models provides a
repeatability of 0.001
inches, a resolution of
0.0002 inches and a
maximum speed of
250 inches per minutes.
A wide range of
optional equipment is
offered including a
laser scanning module,
CNC lathe attachment,
Porter Cable
router, vacuum blower
and fourth axis rotary
table.
Producing complex parts in less time
Couts now produces all of his more complicated products
on the CNC router. He begins by laying out the geometry
using the EnRoute 3 Professional computer aided
design/computer aided manufacturing (CAD/CAM) software
from Scanvec Amiable, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
For example, it took Couts about 20 minutes to design the
timing window. Then he generated the G-code needed to
operate the machine and exported it to the machine controller.
Now, whenever he needs to produce the part,
Couts loads a 4 by 8 foot sheet of polycarbonate, selects
the program and turns on the machine. Then he can
attend to other business while the machine cuts out 32
parts in about 90 minutes. While the part is running,
Couts typically programs the next job or prepares quotes
for customers.
A cam is another
example of a part that
Couts previously produced
manually and now
makes on the router. He
used to make the part
from 3/4 inch thick plastic
sheets using a manual
router. The part was
difficult to make because
it consists of a one-inch
wide arc about three
feet in length. The narrowness
of the part
meant that chatter was
a frequent occurrence.
The person making the
part used their hands to
steady the part but this
was risky since their fingers were near the cutter. It used
to take about two hours to manually route 10 parts but
Couts can now produce 10 parts in 30 minutes on the
CNC router. The CNC router provides major improvements
in accuracy and surface finish. Couts can also provide the
parts with less than half of the material required in the
past since he can program the CNC router to nest the
parts much more efficiently.
Couts said that RBC Enterprises now generates about
half of its revenues with the Techno LC machine. “My sales
have gone up because the CNC router makes it practical
to produce parts that are much more complex than the
parts that I was limited to in the past,” he said. “In particular,
I have obtained many contracts in the military, medical
and industrial machinery markets that I would have
been unable to compete for in the past because the parts
were so complex that I could not
meet the required tolerances with
manual machining or because it
would take too long to make them
by hand. If someone took my CNC
router away from me I would have
to consider closing my business.”
For additional information on
the CNC Machine described in this
article, contact Techno Inc., 2101
Jericho Turnpike, New Hyde Park,
NY 11040, 516-328-3970, Fax:
516-358-2576, E-mail: support@technocnc.com, Web: www.technocnc.com.
For additional information about
RBC Enterprises, Inc., contact Rob
Couts, RBC Enterprises, 6801
Eastern Ave., Baltimore, MD
21224, 443-524-2487, E-mail:
robcouts@verizon.net, Web: www.rbcenterprise.com.
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