Finishing What You Start
Fabricate, fab ri cate, (fab9 r ka–t9) fabricating, fabricated.
To make or fashion, to form by art or labor.
That is how the dictionary defines the word. Most
in our business think of it as taking a pipe, valve, fitting,
tube, rod or sheet and creating a flow system, store fixture,
display or sign. The individual ideas, designs, creativity and
quality are the fabricator’s signature. Some similar, some
clearly unique. Upon close inspection, one can even determine
the type of equipment used in the process.
Acrylic sheet can be cut, shaped, finished and formed.
How well and how efficiently you handle these basics will,
in large part, determine your success. We all know our customers
are more price and quality conscious than ever
before. That’s good. It drives us to become more efficient
producers of better and better products. The customer is
moving us toward mastering the basics.
What are the basics for a sheet fabricator? A saw, a
router, an edge finisher and in most cases a linear heater.
Technology is rapidly increasing efficiencies for plastic fabricators.
Yet with all the technological gains, the basics
remain the same. You can cut more pieces, with tighter tolerances,
faster than ever but you must still finish the
edges, peel masking, bend and package.
Efficiency gains at the finishing and bending operations
will make you more competitive and ultimately add to your
bottom line. Ask yourself the following:
- Does your equipment provide the versatility to handle
both large and small jobs with minimal (under 5 minutes)
setup time?
-
Does your bending equipment provide heat from both
above and below the work to reduce cycle times?
- Does your edge finishing system polish and produce
matte finish bondable edges with the same piece of
equipment?
- If you completed the last job in half the time, how would
that have affected your profit?
Automation
The majority of expenses for any job relate to the time it
takes to complete the job. Another basic, Time = Money.
Through automation, efficiency gains may be realized on
several fronts. Cost reductions, productivity increases and
quality improvements are three that can have an immediate
and positive impact to your bottom line. The following
outline shows several areas for potential profit improvements.
Efficiency Gains
-
One operator can manage multiple units
-
Current operator has time for other tasks
Cost Reductions
-
Delay and/or avoid additional hiring
- Reduce current payroll levels
Productivity Increases
-
Increased production speed
- Operator fatigue no longer a production factor
Reduced Lead Times for Customers
-
May lead to additional business
- Creates customer loyalty
Quality Improvements
- Scrap reduction
- Manufacturing consistency
Capital investments in automation to reduce these costs
and or gain efficiency are usually based upon a 24 month
or less return on investment (ROI). Serious consideration
should be given to the acquisition of equipment and or
process improvements that fall within these criteria.
(Figure 1– Automatic Feed Linear Heater)
Setup/Tool Change Procedures
An often underestimated part of any production atmosphere
and one that, when monitored and controlled, can
produce efficiency gains and add profit to the process is your
setup and tool change procedures. Time spent between job
setups and scheduled or unscheduled tool changes adds up
quickly and associated process costs become a double
edged sword. Not only is your process in an idle state at
these times but you are expending wage resources during
the downtime. This must occur at some point during the
process but the time duration is certainly controllable. How
many times do your operators need to walk across the shop
to some other area to find a tool only to return moments
later for another tool necessary for the changeover? Keep
spare parts, tools and any necessary measuring instruments
as close to their relative machining process as possible. Two
steps, or two hundred steps; the choice is yours.
The savings may not look like much in the short-term but
over time if you reduce set up and production times,
acquire versatile equipment, hire, train and empower good
people you will see a savings.
Consumable Tooling
Saving time and money here is a matter of watchful eyes.
Obviously a tool works best and produces superior quality
parts when the tool is
new or just sharpened.
All consumable tools
have a fairly finite life
expectancy. In most
instances the wear
period is predictable.
Once you have established
the time pattern,
remove the tool
just before the failure
point. Removing the
tool from service while
it is still fairly sharp
will, in the long term,
increase the life of the
tool. Less material
from the tool itself will
require removal to
bring the cutting edge back to optimum quality.
Different materials will cause your tooling, especially the
diamond tooling, to wear at varying time intervals. Harder
materials will result in longer tool life. Softer materials will
tend to roll over in a cutting process and gum up the edge of
a tool resulting in reduced tool life and inferior quality parts.
The manufacture of diamond polishing tools for plastics
is still mainly a human driven process. Much of the work is
completed by hand, so there will be some variation
between tools. The average life expectancy for the diamond
polishing tools is approximately 45-60 hours of use
between sharpenings and 8-10 sharpenings before the
inserts must be replaced.
Tool life for the diamonds is based upon working with
clear acrylic material. You will notice a better result with
cell cast materials over continuous cast or extruded materials.
Tool life will be reduced by one third to one half on
colored materials, especially smoke or black and on any of
the softer materials like impact modified, polycarbonates,
copolymers and PETG. Diamond tools have much the
same reaction as your saw and router tooling.
Another factor to consider in your production versus
quality equation is to stack or not stack material. Obviously
machining multiple pieces of any material simultaneously is
preferable to machining them singly; however, you will sacrifice
some tool life and edge quality in the process. The
loss is due to the many
layers of film and or
paper masking
through which the diamond
must pass. Best
results are obtained
when machining no
more than 5 pieces of
1/8” or 3/16” and no
more than 4 pieces of
1/4” material. Placing
two smaller capacity
machines into service
can improve both efficiency
and quality of
your finishing operations.
The smaller
units will use less valuable
floor space and
the same operator can easily manage both.
Bending Sheet Materials
After all of your efforts from initial design, cut to size
and finishing; you have a great deal of time and money
invested in each part. Now you must bend your creation to
its final form - this is the point in your process where you
clearly want error-free performance.
Enter the variables of ambient temperature fluctuation,
relative humidity, process variation and operator differences
and your bending operations can present quite the
challenge. Of the many options from calrod to quartz,
straight nichrome wire will provide the most heat consistency
over distance for your process.
Setups with nichrome wire range from over simplification
(a length of wire stretched between two ten-penny nails
driven into a two by four) to the extremely complex.
Generally, an 18-gauge wire set into a 15mm-20mm wide
aluminum reflector will provide the best results for materials
up to1/4” in thickness. Support along the underside and
pressure from above the material adjacent to the heating
area will reduce warping and bowing. One of the most
important and sometimes least attended to aspects of the
bending process is the cooling fixturing. Heating materials
in a desired location is ten percent of the battle. The
remaining effort is expended designing, building and
adjusting cooling jigs. Adding insult to injury, time and
money is expended constructing a jig for a particular job
that may never come around again. Consequently, the jig is
either trashed or thrown on a shelf to forever collect dust.
A universal jig that
is designed to accommodate
t-stands,
shoe risers, photo
frames, sign holders
and a litany of items
is ideal for increasing
part quality.
(Figure 2). Each new
part is placed into
the jig, it moves the previous one forward until the
parts exit cooled and formed.
For optimum results and efficient cycle times, heat
both sides of the material simultaneously. If your current
capability allows heating from one side only, it is
best to flip the material over during the cycle to ensure
even heat distribution through the material.
Worth Mentioning
Bubble free polycarbonate bends: Heat from both
sides, lower the wire temperature and be patient!
Always be sure your material is fairly dry to prevent
blistering.
Thin materials - .010 - .062 vinyl etc.: Use a Teflon®-
coated brass insert over the heating wire. You can then
place the material directly on the insert surface, heating
a narrow (1/16”) area of the material to produce
sharp, straight bends.
To reduce and/or eliminate the “dog ear” at the bend
point; block off the edges of your parts while they are
over the heating area. This will keep the edges a bit
cooler than the surface and, when bending the material,
will tend to flow toward the center and not out of the
edge.
Adding Value
We are all on a continuous search for added value.
Moreover, we want added value that costs less than we
gain. The customer wants the greatest value for the
least dollar. Two nearly diametrically opposed desires
creating a conundrum to be solved by the manufacturer
and fabricator. Often times, long term benefits are
ignored in the value equation. For example, a routed
and flame polished edge is quickly and easily manufactured
with relatively low associated costs. What happens
after sixty or ninety days at your customer’s location?
Unless a flame polished part has been through an
annealing process, it will craze and crack. Especially if
someone has made the common error of cleaning the
parts with a type of solvent other than those specifically
recommended for thermoplastics.
Customers need an education. Teach them about the
different processes you can use to ensure a part will
look as good on the hundredth day as it did on the first
day. Yes, it may cost a bit more but why should we feel
the need to apologize for pricing? Products of a superior
quality do cost a bit more and they are well worth
the extra cost. You know it, I know it, but do your customers
know it?
Written by Darrell Bishop, Operations Manager for
Edge Finisher Company, manufacturers and suppliers of
edge finishing, edge polishing and flame polishing equipment
and linear heat tables for plastics fabrication.
For more information, contact Edge Finisher
Company, 16 Stony Hill Road, Bethel, CT 06801, 800-
625-5863, 203-796-7923, Fax: 203-796-7924, E-mail:
info@edgefinisher.com, Web: www.edgefinisher.com.
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