Machinery, plastics and methods
Transcription
Machinery, plastics and methods
mar11 AUSTRALIAN MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY Machinery, plastics and methods Ausplas 2011 to line up with Austech and NMW. The three trade exhibitions will occupy the entire 30,000 square meters of space at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre presenting what will be Australia’s largest ever dedicated manufacturing industry trade exhibition. Story p36 Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 1 > Cutting Tools > Mould & Die > Prismatic Machining > Safety > Lean Manufacturing 200% More g Deliver iinlity Prof it ab Guara ISCAR Cost Saving Milling with High Productivity Superior Fine Pitch Endmills ntees Resul ts 3Pr oductivity Performance Profitability 200% More g Deliver iinlity Prof it ab Guara ISCAR Drilling Down Production Costs with High Productivity Indexable Carbide Heads 2 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology ntees Resul ts 3Pr oductivity Performance Profitability 60% More g Deliver iinlity Prof it ab Guara ISCAR Cutting Down Production Costs with the High Productivity Tangential Parting System ntees Resul ts 3Pr oductivity Performance Profitability 30% More g Deliver iinlity Prof it ab Guara ISCAR Turning into Lower Costs with High Productivity SUMOTURN Coated Grades ntees Resul ts 3Pr oductivity Performance Profitability Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 www.iscar.com.au 3 More than just the right tool — the ultimate solution. That’s Beyond Blast. TM 4 ©2010 Kennametal Inc. l All rights reserved. l A-10-02451 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology TM Beyond Blast technology uses low-pressure conditions to offer high-pressure performance Through-channel coolant, delivered at the cutting edge, results in twice the tool life of standard inserts Delivers superior performance on Titanium and high-temperature alloys, using either high- or low-pressure coolant systems Effective thermal management results in reduced cutting temperatures, improved lubricity, superior chip control, and longer tool life That’s Different Thinking. At Kennametal, innovation follows vision. Our revolutionary products are inspired by asking “what if?” The solutions that follow — like our Beyond Blast through-coolant inserts — deliver remarkable results in the world’s most demanding machining environments. TM A cutting-edge insert that delivers coolant precisely at the cutting edge. Now that’s Different Thinking. That’s Kennametal. To learn more about your productivity gains using Beyond Blast technology, call 1800.666.667 or visit www.kennametal.com. TM Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 5 CONTENTS EDITORIAL ISSN 1832-6080 11 Insurance claims: ask for help 14 National flood crisis assistance 16 Australian elected as SME President 19 Austech 2011 promotes maufacturers’ capabilities 23 Delcam Asian technical summit 24 PRODUCT NEWS Our selection of new and interesting products 26 36 Cutting Tools 52 Machinery, materials and methods – Ausplas 2011 In 2011 Ausplas, Australia’s national trade show for the plastics processing industry will break with tradition. Ausplas has been held in October every three years since 1987, but this year moves into a May time frame to line up with the Austech and National Manufacturing Week events. ONE ON ONE Gerardine Kearney – President, Austn. Union of Trade Councils Lead Story 8 INDUSTRY NEWS Energy prices a looming challenge Volume 11 Number 2 March 2011 34 40 years in the business in Australia AMT talks to John Chang, Vice President of Sales, and MD of Kennametal Inc. for the Asia region. Read about Kennametal’s plans for the region (developing a strategy for moving the centre of gravity outside North America to the fastest growing region which is right here in Australasia) and Kennametal’s latest developments including a new technology for underground mining. PLASTICS Aussie-made Flecknoe machines 40 Can plastics generate electricity? 43 Impregnating plastics with CO2 44 CUTTING TOOLS Innovations for turning exotic materials 48 Enormous savings parting-off 50 Improved portable hole-making in composites 58 MOULD & DIE Water tables Mould making – benefits of HSC milling of hardened steel 60 Another angle on HSM 66 PRISMATIC MACHINING Water Tables 68 Getting more for your axes 70 Next generation prismatic machining 72 SAFETY Building a safety culture 74 Galvanising weld fumes contained 76 Hand protection standards - what do they mean? 78 Keeping cool 79 LEAN MANUFACTURING Prismatic Machining US-based Incom Inc. is the world’s leading manufacturer of commercial rigid, fused fibreoptic faceplates, tapers, and microwell. Incom manufactures tapers from billets produced using its own hot-drawing process. It was in the manufacture of larger tapers that first led them to investigate automation and CNC machine tools COVER DETAILS AMTIL FORUM Strategies – What is your view on innovation? 86 OHS – Harmonisation : the ticking clock 87 88 Linking the Lean enterprise 80 Law – Additive Manufacturing & intellectual property How and why SMEs should do Lean 82 Training – Lean manufacturing & fat training 89 Lean accounting’s quest for acceptance 84 6 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology 68 Photos courtesy Messe DüsseldorfK 2010/Tillmann. K 2010 is an international plastics and rubber exhibition held every second year in Germany. (www.k-online.de) Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 7 EDITOR in Chief Martin Oakham moakham@amtil.com.au Ph: +61 3 9800 3666 Fax: +61 3 9800 3436 CONTRIBUTING Nina Hendy EDITORS nina@ninasword.com.au Ph: +61 3 5333 4939 ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER Anne Samuelsson asamuelsson@amtil.com.au Ph: +61 3 9800 3666 Fax: +61 3 9800 3436 PUBLICATIONS co-ordinator Gabriele Richter grichter@amtil.com.au Ph: +61 3 9800 3666 Fax: +61 3 9800 3436 PUBLISHER Shane Infanti sinfanti@amtil.com.au Ph: +61 3 9800 3666 Fax: +61 3 9800 3436 DESIGN: Graphic Heart Pty Ltd COVER DESIGN: Typographics PRINTER: Printgraphics - Australia Post all correspondence to: Australian Manufacturing Technology Suite 1, 673 Boronia Road, Wantirna, Victoria 3152, Australia Copyright Australian Manufacturing Technology (AMT). All rights reserved. Magazine or part thereof may not be copied or reproduced without written permission by the publisher. Contained specifications and claims are those of the manufacturer. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed by AMT contributors or editorial staff are not necessarily those of AMTIL. AMT is dedicated to Australia’s machining, tooling and sheetmetalworking industries and is published monthly (10 issues). Subscription to AMT (and other benefits) is available through AMTIL associate membership at $120pa. Suite 1, 673 Boronia Road, Wantirna, Victoria 3152. Ph: 61 3 9800 3666 Fax: 61 3 9800 3436 www.amtil.com.au Martin Oakham Editor in Chief Editorial Making way for technology hilst I’m sure that everybody understands the need for additional capital to help redevelop Queensland following the recent disasters, I can’t imagine there is much support for the Federal Governments recent decision to abolish the Green Car Innovation Fund. Surely this sends an adverse signal to international investors responsible for future investment in the Australian automotive industry amongst others. It’s been said that the Australian treasury advises the government to suppress manufacturing in order to balance the growth of the mining sector, further it’s the belief of some that the government sees the move of manufacturing to low wage countries as inevitable. Perhaps I’m ‘old school’, I believe that if you don’t make anything, you don’t have anything solid on which to build a strong economy. It’s advanced; high-value manufacturing that is to going bring the best return to Australia in the long term, promoting expert knowledge as the learning institutes respond to the demand for new skills and technologies etc. The Green Car Innovation Fund has delivered significant dividends, helping to secure key investment decisions for new models and investment in more environmentally friendly vehicles and technology. It has also been ‘key’ in introducing new hybrid technologies, batteries, fuel systems and lighter vehicles. Surely, by scrapping the fund the Government is risking further investment from Holden, Ford, and Toyota. This in turn will mean that the many SME’s making up the supply chains supporting production will have no reason to invest. The automotive sector also occupies a strategic position in the Australian economy, and according to the ABS employs 50,000 people in motor vehicle and motor vehicle part manufacturing alone. Therefore, the importance of the car industry to the manufacturing sector as a whole cannot be underestimated. It drives much of the innovation in materials like plastics, composites, and the innovation in casting, tooling and machining. According to Senator Kim Carr, the government had spent about $500m on GCIF grants and generated about $2bn in investment in the Australian motor industry “at the worst of all possible times in the industry given the economic circumstances globally”. He said research projects such as the EV Engineering electric Commodore proof-of- concept program were needed to verify the commercial potential of advanced technologies. There is also the Ford Falcon liquid injection system developed with Orbital. “We then want to make sure those R&D breakthroughs are commercialised, put into our general production arrangements through the Automotive Transformation Scheme, so they can actually have further support from the Australian government.” I look at it this way, Australia has to produce manufactured goods, to add value to its raw materials, if it is to make a living in the modern world. The car industry is still a great way to multiply the value of material and labour inputs to create wealth for a country. Australia exports iron ore at about $180 a dry metric ton to China, Japan and other countries, and then imports it back in the shape of cars at around a hundred times the price. That does not make for a good business model. Cost Effective. Strip ads are back! Prime Position. Call Anne Samuelsson at AMTIL Greater Frequency. on 03 9800 3666 for more info. RN8589 8 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology TaeguTec Australia Pty Ltd. Unit 53/9 Hoyle Avenue Castle Hill NSW 2154, Australia Tel: + 61 2 98948077 Fax: + 61 2 98949077 E-m ail: sales@taegutec.com.au http://www.taegutec.com Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 9 Securing the future for Australia’s researchers From the Minister Senator Kim Carr, Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research ustralian researchers can look to the future with renewed confidence, thanks to a new Industry Doctoral Training Centre and the Australian Government’s Research Workforce Strategy. The new centre will foster professional skills among researchers and help them launch their careers in industry. It is being funded by the Australian Technology Network (ATN) of Universities: the RMIT; Queensland University of Technology; the University of Technology, Sydney; Curtin University; and the University of South Australia. Launching the pilot centre in mathematics at the 13th annual ATN Symposium at the University of South Australia, From the CEO Shane Infanti CEO AMTIL hy does it seem that the Federal Government’s commitment to our manufacturing sector is always under scrutiny? Most manufacturers I talk to have an opinion that Governments don’t seem to care about manufacturing and don’t do enough to support an industry that employs more full time employees than any other in our country. Explaining to these manufacturers that the processes and plans being facilitated by Government do have some long term strategic thinking behind them is something I do on a regular basis. This is where I currently have a conundrum. The recent decision by the Federal Government to abolish the Green Car Innovation Fund appears short sighted and unnecessary. The fact that these funds will be redirected to the building of infrastructure as a result of the floods earlier this year does not represent a positive strategic decision. 10 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Innovation Minister Senator Kim Carr congratulated the ATN on its efforts to bridge the gap between the academy and the factory floor. “This centre recognises that collaboration between universities, businesses and students is vital,” Carr said. “It is the only way we can meet the growing demand for skills while opening secure career paths for researchers”. “The discipline of mathematics is an area of critical industry and research need, and I applaud the ATN for its efforts to build Australia’s capabilities in this area.” Speaking at the symposium, Carr said the ATN’s theme was timely. “The Government has worked closely with the higher education sector to develop a comprehensive strategy for the Australian research workforce in the decade to 2020. “We must invest in our researchers today if we are to meet the demand for university places, skilled workers, and innovative ideas tomorrow. The global competition for research talent and capital will be fierce, but the Australian Government is determined to help universities meet the challenge.” There are plenty of other cost saving measures the Government could have made to help fund this rebuilding activity without directly impacting on one of our most significant and important drivers of industry. Redirecting funds from foreign aid expenditure over the coming 12 months is one that immediately comes to mind. The recent announcement by Senator Carr that a consortium of five companies received $3.5m under the fund to build prototypes of Australia’s first modern large electric vehicle was a positive one. In making this announcement Senator Carr used words such as “the Government understands that Australia’s future relies on our ability to green our industries” and “innovative projects such as producing a family size electric car could revolution the Australian automotive industry.” The same press release also highlighted that the Green Car Innovation Fund is now closed to new applicants, painting a very confusing message to an industry already sceptical about the long term commitment to our manufacturing sector. Our automotive industry needs support. As Senator Carr has said on many occasions, the need for continued investment in research and development, more efficient vehicles, lighter components, hybrid engines, new battery technology and hi tech solutions resulting in more environmentally friendly vehicles is critical to our future. Abolishing the Green Car Innovation Fund has the potential to shatter the confidence of global parent companies and tier one suppliers looking at making investment decisions in these areas. I only hope that the Prime Minister recognises the negative impact this will have and re-evaluates this decision in the coming months. Energy prices a looming challenge for manufacturers From the Industry Heather Ridout – Chief Executive Australian Industry Group ustralian manufacturers grappling with the challenges of a strong dollar and an economy nearing capacity are facing yet another issue which is impacting on their businesses: rising energy prices and how to adapt to them. A recent survey and report by the Australian Industry Group, Energy shock: confronting higher prices, delivers the sobering news that energy costs have already risen substantially for most businesses over the past five years – and there is no end in sight. After surveying more than 150 companies and sifting the most up-to-date research, we concluded that a range of factors point relentlessly upward for electricity and gas prices, from massive network investment to movements in international markets to the increasing role mandated for higher-cost renewable energy, and more. By 2015 household electricity prices are projected to have doubled from 2008 levels – and business won’t be far behind. While much concern has focussed on carbon pricing, energy prices are going up significantly with or without it. Some of those cost drivers could be reduced by a welldesigned carbon price that eliminated the policy uncertainty that is damaging investment in new electricity generation, and that reduced reliance on the high-cost Renewable Energy Target. This would soften the blow of a carbon price, but it would remain a big hit. Ai Group is working hard to ensure that any national climate policy does not erode manufacturing’s competitiveness or risk our energy security. Other green policies have a cost, too, from renewable energy subsidies to efficiency programs. These measures are a very mixed bunch. Some, like the Commonwealth’s Small-scale Renewable Energy Scheme, splurge on the most expensive renewables instead of the cheapest, and pass the costs on to electricity consumers. Yet such green policies play only a small role in the current price rises, and in those to come. The bigger factors so far have been massive investment in transmission and distribution networks – driven by general demand growth, surging peak demand, higher reliability standards and ageing legacy networks – and movements in the wholesale markets driven by drought and boom. Over the next few years the continuing high price for exportable thermal coal will also push up costs for some generators. And the coming boom in Queensland’s Liquefied Natural Gas industry will eventually push gas prices towards convergence with rather higher world prices – with consequences both for industrial gas consumers and gas-fired generators. Australia is far from alone in confronting rising energy costs, but the challenge is serious given our historic reliance on cheap energy as a competitive advantage. With the right policies, research and investment we may continue to benefit from less expensive energy than that in other countries. But Australian industry will need to learn to live with energy prices higher than we are used to. That means much greater efforts on energy efficiency than we have seen so far. Large energy-intensive firms already focus on efficiency as core business, but in our survey – a sample dominated by small and medium-sized companies – nearly two thirds had not improved their energy efficiency over the past five years, and almost as many did not anticipate improvements in the next two years. This is a worrying result. Efficiency may seem optional where energy is currently only a small part of a business’ cost structure. But as higher prices bite, smaller and lessenergy intensive firms will feel the efficiency imperative too. Ai Group will be working with members and governments to ensure that industry has the support it needs to get on the front foot. Nominations sought for excellence in manufacturing Visiting one of the global leaders in rail manufacturing last month, Minister for Manufacturing, Exports and Trade Richard Dalla-Riva encouraged industry associations and companies to nominate locally-based manufacturers for the Victorian Manufacturing Hall of Fame 2011. At Bombardier Transportation Australia in Dandenong, Australia’s only Manufacturing Minister Richard Dalla-Riva said that nominations were now being sought for Victorian manufacturers whose in- novative and sophisticated solutions to manufacturing are world-class. “Victoria’s manufacturers are innovative, qualitydriven and committed to their industries, and these awards highlight true excellence,” Dalla-Riva said. The 2011 awards include two new categories, one for entrepreneurial excellence by a company and the second for a young manufacturer working with enabling technologies for manufacturing such as information and communication technology, nano and microtechnology, and biotechnology. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 11 Industry News AMTIL – The Source 2011 edition is about to be released The highly anticipated third edition of AMTIL – The Source incorporating Australia’s only published advanced manufacturing capability directory is about to be released, following the sell-out of the previous edition. Once again the publication covers a broad range of relevant and interesting topics including: l The Australian economy. l Manufacturing performance and sentiment. l Australian machine tool and technology market. l Detailed Australian sector analysis covering Automotive and other motorised transport, Aerospace, Defence, Mining and Resources, Medical and Construction as well as where opportunities exist and how to get involved. l Government programs and initiatives. l Global economic outlook for key industrialised economies. l Global sector analysis for key industrialised economies. l Global machine tool and technology markets. l Industry guidelines incorporating industry pay rates and awards, recruitment market conditions, risk assessment, career paths for your staff and for students. l The Industry Capability Directory which showcases manufacturing technologies, manufacturing capabilities and the services provided by businesses that support manufacturing. The directory enables you to find the right suppliers or manufacturers. AMTIL – The Source is the most economical and quickest way for you to source up to date and important industry information and follows AMTIL’s dictum which is to Connect, Inform and Grow. A survey of the readers of the last edition rated the information and Industry Capability Directory very highly and 100% of the respondents were eagerly anticipating the 2011 edition. As the previous edition sold out quickly you will need to act fast and either complete the order form below and fax to AMTIL on (03) 9800-3436 or visit www.amtil.com.au for the complete brochure and order form. Pre-orders for the publications April release, are being taken now. Producing this highly regarded and anticipated publication is only possible with the support of our sponsors: AMTIL – The Source 2011 Australia’s Advanced Manufacturing Year Book and Capability Directory Order Form Fax to: (03) 9800-3436 or email to plambe@amtil.com.au Payment For those ordering in advance your credit card will not be debited until dispatch Your Contact Name Your Organisation We accept: Postal Address Post Code Contact Phone Number ( Card Number ) Expiry Date Email Order Options AMTIL Member Qty Non Member Published and CD $95 $125 CD Version only $60 $ 95 Educational Institutions & Libraries $40 Qty Amount ____ _ __ _ / ________ $______________ Total in full including GST $______________ Cardholder Name______________________________________________________ Signature_____________________________________________________________ Sub Total $ $ GST @10% $ $ Total $ $ 12 o Mastercard o Visa o Diners Club o American Express March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology o If you are paying by cheque please make your cheques payable to: Australian Manufacturing Technology Institute Limited. o For those direct depositing our Bank details are: Westpac Boronia BSB: 033-372 Account: 330589 Need finance to keep your exports moving? If financial barriers are holding back your export business, talk to EFIC. Our finance solutions, including performance bonds and advance payment bonds, can help free up your working capital for your export activities.* We work with you or your bank to keep your exports rolling. *Conditions apply For more information, visit www.efic.gov.au/bonds Overcoming financial barriers for exporters Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 13 Industry News Insurance claims: who to ask for help The recent natural disasters seen throughout Australia have left many businesses with difficult decisions to make and a lot of hard work ahead to rebuild. While the initial practical steps include cleaning up premises, making insurance claims and replacing damaged equipment, help is available to mitigate some of the financial pain – you just have to know who ask. Where records have been destroyed following a disaster, all is not lost. The first step is to seek evidence of past financial transactions. Visit www.business.qld.gov.au/documents/ Steps-to-business-recovery.pdf for a comprehensive checklist of potential sources of information. Also talk to: l Your accountant – ask for copies of your past financial statements, income tax returns, business activity statements and depreciation schedules listing assets held l Your bank – ask for replacement bank statements l Your lawyers and finance companies – ask for copies of contracts. Where it is not possible to reconstruct records following a natural disaster, the ATO will allow for reasonable estimates to be made. The ATO has agreed to automatic lodgment deferrals for December monthly business activity statements only. However, the ATO recognises that many businesses will struggle to meet other lodgment deadlines in the months to come. Your accountant will be able to apply for lodgment extensions, but only where an application is made before the due date. If your plant and equipment has been damaged or destroyed, it can be written off where it is beyond repair, or written down if it is damaged but still usable. Your accountant will be able to assist you with this process. A write-off or write-down will effectively be a tax deduction that will reduce your taxable profit. Where you find yourself having to buy new equipment, try to negotiate favourable terms with your finance company by explaining your situation. They may be able to offer interestfree terms or deferred payments for the first few months. Where your customers have been adversely affected, it is worth considering whether any outstanding debts are recoverable. In cases where recovery is unlikely, steps to write off the debts should be taken as soon as possible, and remember to make GST adjustments where appropriate. A debt written off will also reduce your taxable profit. If your circumstances have led to a reduction in your business income, you may find your business has already paid too much PAYG instalment tax. In this case you will be able to claim a credit in your next activity statement. This is also something that your accountant can assist you with. Natural disasters may only affect your local community. This means suppliers outside your region may still be chasing you for payment of your debts. In these circumstances, it is advisable to ring the relevant suppliers and explain your situation. There may be room to negotiate temporarily extended payment terms. If your business is one of the lucky ones to come through a natural disaster relatively unscathed, you might be able to use the opportunity to increase your level of goodwill. For example, if you have spare office space in your building you might invite other local businesses to use this space until they get back on their feet. This helps show your community spirit, and who knows, you may end up getting some additional business out of the arrangement. Remember, in times of natural disaster, help is available to businesses during recovery – all you have to do is ask. KMW Accountants - 1300 855 259 www.kmwaccountants.com Distribution deal for PS Ball blasting media Sodablast Australia has signed an agreement with Ecomaister of Korea to distribute PS Ball blasting media in Australia. Precious Slag Ball (PS Ball) is an entirely new material. It is a by-product of steel manufacturing, produced by a patented process known as Slag Atomising Technology (SAT). Prior to the development of SAT most slag was left in leaching pits for weeks or months before processing, resulting in considerable environmental damage. “PS Ball is an environmentally friendly material. The manufacture of PS Balls uses no virgin resources, less water than production of other media and turns harmful chemicals inherent in slag into an inert compound,” said Sodablast Australia’s Kevin Berridge. “PS Balls can be used as an economical replacement for black beauty, garnet, coal and copper slag. It is up to 50% less cost than garnet, subject to the volume purchased.” “This medium generates very little dust, can be reused several times (up to nine times has been recorded, although the recommended number is three) and provides 14 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Slag Atomising Technology is a new process that makes PS Ball blasting media Left: PS Ball (enlarged view) – Environmentally friendly blasting media for heavy duty blasting. a more comfortable working environment for the operator, thereby reducing time taken to do the job,” he said. PS Balls are currently being used in shipyards for repair work, as reinforcement of concrete mixes, compaction base, road pavement and in balance weights and anchoring. SIX NEW ANGLES ON SQUARE SHOULDER MILLING. c-#2/..#(!!-*,#(-,. The insert can be indexed 2x3 times. Lower cost per cutting edge. c).(*,",(/..,)3 Gives longer tool life. Diameter range: 40-160 mm. Available in three different pitches, coarse, normal and close pitch. c.,/°-..#(!(!& Saves time and money. No mismatch when machining walls in different steps. Achieve a true 90° square in one operation. Fewer tools and tool changes needed. c-.,)(!(.,&)%-,1 Enables insert to be locked securely. The locking screw is placed in the same direction as the cutting forces. c1#*, Wiper flats on the insert for better surface finish. c.",# ,(.#(-,.!)'.,#ME09 for stainless steel; M13 for steel and cast iron; MD15 for harder materials and higher cutting speeds. SQUARE 6 .' ',,#!) )()'3(*, ),'( www.secotools.com Ph 1300 55 7326 Fax 1300 65 7326 Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 E-Mail secotool@secotools.com 15 Industry News National flood crisis The Clean-up and Restoration Grant provides a one-off grant to primary producers, small businesses and notfor-prof it organisations who have suffered direct damage as a result of the f loods between August 2010 and January 2011 in Victoria, for clean-up, removal of debris, animal welfare and business restoration. The Clean-up and Restoration Grant has now been increased from $15,000 to $25,000. Increase in flood clean-up grants A broad range of funding and assistance programs, including the above, is available via Government Funding Programs. Along with the rest of Australia, the Ai Group is keen to assist its members with disaster recovery and is preparing a range of information and services for members affected by the floods. These include: l Business assistance and advice. lOHS Implications. l Employment and workplace relations issues. l Replacement of damaged Ai Group publications. lOffer help to flood affected businesses through new online directory. Please call the Ai Group Flood Recovery Line on 1300 102 167 Any members needing further information on appeals can contact Ai Group Canberra on 02 6233 0700. Government funding and assistance programs If you need immediate recovery assistance, grants of up to $5000 are available. Grants of up to $25,000 are available to help eligible small businesses to recover costs paid to repair direct flood damage. Low-interest loans of up to $250,000 are available to fund the repair and/or replacement of damaged plant and equipment, buildings or stock. The funding available varies across jurisdictions. To apply for financial assistance for direct damage caused by flooding, you must be located in a declared local government area. Grants and loans for small businesses and primary producers New South Wales Natural Disaster Relief Scheme (NSW). Queensland Natural Disaster Assistance for Small Business. Special Disaster Flood Assistance. Victoria Victorian Flood / Hail Damage Grants and Loans. 16 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Income support National Disaster Income Recovery Subsidy for flooding events commencing 29 November 2010 Communications Satellite Phone Subsidy Scheme Insurance The Australian Government has released some tips on dealing with insurance after a disaster. The Australian Insurance Council has also released a booklet on Consumer Tips for Disaster Recovery. If you have questions about your insurance policy or need to find out who your insurer is, ring the Insurance Council of Australia's (ICA) 24-hour Emergency Hotline on 1300 728 228. Bank emergency relief packages Individual banks have announced assistance packages to help business people, farmers, families and individuals in the communities adversely affected by flood waters. The assistance provided will vary according to individual circumstances, but can include: l Deferring home loan repayments for up to three months lRestructuring business loans without incurring fees lGiving credit card holders an emergency credit limit increase l Refinancing personal loans at a discounted fixed rate l Waiving interest rate penalties if term deposits are drawn early lDeferring monthly repayments on equipment finance facilities for three months. lAccess to the Australian Bankers' Association’s list of dedicated bank phone numbers. Tax assistance The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) can help individuals and businesses who have been affected by natural disasters. Industry News Assistance may include: lFast-tracking of refunds lExtra time to pay debts lMore time to meet activity statement, income tax and other lodgement obligations lSupport if you are suffering financial hardship as a result of the disaster lReconstructing tax records where documents have been destroyed lMaking reasonable estimates where necessary Phone the ATO on 1800 806 218 to discuss your individual circumstances. Insolvency support for Queensland business The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) is offering free advice and guidance to assist and support Queensland businesses who have suffered from significant business interruption as a result of the devastating floods. Local insolvency practitioners, facilitated by ASIC, will be made available on a pro bono basis to assist Queensland business owners and directors with: lGuidance about business interruption and alternatives to corporate insolvency. lAppropriate liaison with financial providers. lAccess to employee entitlement schemes. Members wanting to access this advice can call ASIC's Infoline on 1300 300 630. Emotional and crisis support Lifeline offers confidential emotional and crisis support 24 hours a day. Phone 13 11 14. ‘Beyondblue’ can support those experiencing depression and anxiety. Tools and resources Business Flooding Checklist Cleaning up after Flooding CPA disaster recovery toolkit Post Flood - Food Premises Information Fact Sheet NSW SES Floodsafe Toolkit Other Useful Websites Australian Government Disaster Assist Emergency Management in Australia New South Wales Flood Information Queensland Government Disaster relief and recovery website Queensland Government Flood website Victoria Online - Floods Victorian Department of Human Services Donations While many people have already donated generously, if you still wish to contribute to the relief fund there are a number of appeals including: lPremier's Disaster Relief Appeal lRed Cross Victorian Floods Appeal lSalvation Army's Flood Appeal lOr call Nine Network's telethon on 1800 219 028. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 17 Tech News Germany: Getting cars on road faster Auto manufacturers are looking for shorter production times, faster logistics processes, new materials and technologies. A novel software platform will help companies to achieve these goals by reducing not only the development times but also the development costs. 23 business and research organisations are participating in the EU’s Pegasus project (www.pegasus-eu.net). The Integrated Design and Engineering Environment (IDEE) is a CAD/CAE/CAM software system which is connected to an intelligent database. It analyses the functional requirements of a product and identifies appropriate materials at an early stage of the development process. If, for example, a car roof is to be made in a different material than before, it is not necessary to conduct a new development process. Instead, the design engineers enter the component data into the software system, which assesses the information and then selects suitable materials and manufacturing processes. It also provides engineering guidelines for designing the tools. Fraunhofer Austria: Ice dome made using novel construction method An ice dome 10 m in diameter (free span) has been built using an ingenious construction method in Obergurgl (Austrian Alps) - a world first. Using ice as a building material has been done before, however, in most cases the spans of the structures are small or the ice is not a load-bearing component and merely acts as cladding for the construction. The team at Vienna University of Technology has developed an ice dome which presents a stable and free-standing safe structure, and does not require additional support using other building materials. First, a 20 cm-thick plate of ice is cut into 16 segments. These 2D segments must then to be transformed into a 3D structure. Advantage is taken of one property of ice, known as "creep behaviour". If pressure is applied to the ice, it can slowly change its shape without breaking. The segments of ice are placed on stacks of wood. Then, under the load of its own weight, the ice begins to change shape by itself, resulting in a curved dome segment. The greatest challenge was the prevention of any breakage of the individually curved segments when assembling the dome. To solve this, a wooden tower was erected and the dome segments were held together by means of steel chains. The wooden tower could only be removed once all the segments had been positioned correctly and the ice dome stood on its own. Vienna University of Technology USA: Hydrogels used to make precise new sensor Researchers are developing a new type of biological and chemical sensor that has few moving parts, is low-cost, highly sensitive and long-lasting. The "diffraction-based" 18 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology sensors are made of thin stripes of a gelatinous material called a hydrogel, which expands and contracts depending on the acidity of its environment, precisely determining pH. The sensor's simple design could make it more practical than other sensors in development. Many sensors are too expensive to produce, require highly skilled operators and are not robust enough to be practical. This flexible, water-insoluble hydrogel is formed into a series of raised stripes called a "diffraction grating," which is coated with gold on both the stripe surfaces and the spaces in between. The stripes expand and contract depending on the pH level of the environment. This technology detects very small changes in the swelling of the diffraction grating, which makes them very sensitive. Purdue University USA: Secrets of mysterious metal hotspots The secrets behind the mysterious nano-sized electromagnetic “hotspots” that appear on metal surfaces under a light are finally being revealed with the help of a BEAST (Brownian Emitter Adsorption Super-resolution Technique) - a single molecule imaging technology, that has made it possible for the first time to directly measure the electromagnetic field inside a hotspot. The results hold promise for a number of technologies, including solar energy and chemical sensing. The field is highly localized and, unlike a typical electromagnetic field, does not propagate through space. The field also has an exponential shape that rises steeply to a peak and then decays very fast. During the past 30 years, little has been learned about the origins of these nano-sized hotspots until now. Because the size is far smaller than the wavelength of incident light, a new technique was needed to map the electromagnetic field within a hotspot. www.lbl.gov DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Sweden: Normal air could halve fuel consumption Every time a car brakes, energy is generated. At present this energy is not used, but new research shows that it is perfectly possible to save it for later use in the form of compressed air. It can then provide extra power to the engine when the car is started and save fuel by avoiding idle operation when the car is at a standstill, according to a researcher at Lund University. Air hybrids would be much cheaper to manufacture. Simulations show that buses in cities could reduce their fuel consumption by 60%. And 48 per cent of the brake energy, which is compressed and saved in a small air tank connected to the engine, could be reused later. The is cheap to manufacture and occupies less space than an electric hybrid engine. The method works with petrol, natural gas and diesel. Lund University Industry News Australian elected as SME President Reaching beyond the North American borders for the first time, the Society of Manufacturing Engineers (SME)has elected Paul D. Bradley, the Managing Director, Peterson Industries, Adelaide, South Australia, as its 2011 president. Bradley was sworn in — along with the rest of the 2011 SME Executive Committee and Board of Directors — at the Society’s Awards and Installation Banquet on 14 November, in Michigan. As president, Bradley will lead the board in developing the SME Strategic Plan 2015 and plans to strengthen the Society’s brand as “the premier source for manufacturing knowledge, education and networking.” “SME has been an essential part of my professional growth,” said Bradley. “I would like other manufacturing professionals to recognize the need to be part of SME if they want to advance their careers.” Bradley credits the support of his boss Gwen Peterson and his mentor, the late Max Peterson, for encouraging his interest in the engineering profession by inviting him to join the former SME Adelaide No. 169 chapter back in 1989. “I had a thirst for knowledge, and I still have a thirst for knowledge,” Bradley said. “And SME offers more manufacturing knowledge than anyone could absorb.” “I also have a strong believe in nurturing the brand. It’s all about the brand. Brand is gold, sell the brand, you sell your products and services, and people will want to belong and be engaged. I have recently established a SME brand task force consisting of high calibre members to address high level charges relating to our goal brand. SME’s global membership and customers will be addressed as part of this process.” said Bradley. “I would like to be satisfied at the end of 2011 to know that when someone thinks of SME, their thoughts immediately go to manufacturing knowledge, education, and networking, with a clear understanding that SME is: Everyone you need to MEET; Everything you need to KNOW; and Everything you need to GROW. “What I hope to accomplish in this role as the 2011 SME President is to provide leadership and direction to our Executive Committee, Board of Directors, our valued membership and staff. Without the dedication and passion by these wonderful individuals SME would struggle to exist as we approach our 80th anniversary in 2012.” Bradley’s career path gives him a broad view of manufacturing — apprenticing with Peterson’s in 1980 to his current role of professional engineer and managing director. Throughout Bradley’s more than two decades with the Society, he’s held a number of leadership roles, including terms on the SME Executive Committee and Board of Directors, the Ad Hoc International Strategies Committee, nominated as an international representative on the SME Region Chairs Committee and twice as chair of the Adelaide No. 169. He is also a recipient of the 1997 SME Ralph E. Cross Outstanding Young Manufacturing Engineer Award. Skills shortages and fierce competition for talent to come Organisations in the mining and engineering sectors will face a significant skills shortage and fierce competition for top talent in 2011, according to a Global Salary Survey recently compiled by international recruitment consultancy Robert Walters. According to Robert Walters’ Managing Director – Australia, James Nicholson, this demand is expected to result in significant salary increases, and will be experienced across a number of industries and regions. “We expect to see strong demand in the Western Australian and Queensland oil and gas market, and most of the Australian mining and rail industries. We will also see increased recruitment activity within power, water infrastructure and port development companies due to continued investment in these sectors, such as BG Group’s $15bn investment in coal seam gas in Queensland. “With such strong competition for top talent, companies will need to avoid lengthy recruitment processes in order to secure their preferred candidates. We also expect that many organisations that have previously resisted sourcing candidates from overseas will be forced to do so.” Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 19 Government News $3.5m Green car grant for cleaner LPG fuel system New technologies under the microscope An innovative Melbourne company Alternative Fuel Innovations (AFI) Pty Ltd, is developing a hi-tech new LPG liquid injection system for vehicles, thanks to a $3.54m grant from the Australian Government. The LPG Liquajet system will boost LPG power performance to match that of petrol-powered engines, whilst cutting average fuel costs by up to 50%. It will lower the greenhouse gas emissions of individual vehicles by a minimum 10%. I n novat ion M i n ister Senator Kim Carr said the Fund was equipping the Australian auto industry to compete in the carbon-constrained economy of the 21st century. “Consumers in Australia and overseas are clearly looking for vehicles that are easier on the hip pocket and the environment. The Australian Government is enabling firms like AFI to capitalise on that demand,’’ Carr said. “We are building high-wage, high-skill jobs in Australia, and making our manufacturers leading players in the global response to climate change.” “The Green Car Innovation Fund has already supported projects involving light-weight mirrors, more efficient batteries and better engine systems. Liquajet is another example of the incredible potential in our automotive sector.” www.ausindustry.gov.au New technologies such as biotechnology and nanotechnology will help Australia fight climate change, stop hunger and disease, and create thousands of jobs. To fully understand the benefits and risks, 21 Australian experts will put new technologies under the microscope and present their findings to the Gillard Labor Government. Their advice will inform the implementation of the $38.2m National Enabling Technologies Strategy. Announcing the eight-member Expert Forum and 13-member Stakeholder Advisory Council, Innovation Minister, Senator Kim Carr said it is important that the Australian community understands new technologies and are confident in their use. “New technologies will bring us new industries, export opportunities and jobs. They also have the potential to provide breakthrough medicines, faster computers and purer water,” Carr said. “We must not forget that with all new technologies, there may be unknown risks. These experts will help us understand any risks and ensure they are managed appropriately. “The Stakeholder Advisory Council brings together key Australian business, union, non-government, industry, science and research representatives who will use their expertise to advise the Government on the full range of enabling technologies. “The Expert Forum includes technology specialists, researchers and industry representatives who will identify new and converging technologies and highlight any potential implications for Australia. “I am confident that with the support of the experts, the Government can effectively implement the National Enabling Technologies Strategy and ensure the benefits of new technologies can flow to the community.“ www.innovation.gov.au. New appointments to CSIRO board Innovation Minister Senator Kim Carr announced the appointment of Mr Mark Paterson AO and Mr Hutch Ranck to the CSIRO Board. They replace outgoing board members Mr Douglas Rathbone AM and Ms Deborah O’Toole. “It is one of the largest research agencies in the world and a vital part of Australia’s innovation system. With such an important task, it is vital that the CSIRO is led by a dedicated team of world-class research, government and business leaders. “As board members, Paterson and Ranck will build on the valuable contributions of Rathbone and O’Toole and help set the CSIRO’s agenda to address national and global research challenges.” 20 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology “I also welcome the continued service of Dr Eileen Doyle, who is a tremendous advocate of science and contributes strong commercial acumen to the CSIRO Board. CSIRO Chairman Mr Simon McKeon also welcomed the appointments. Paterson is Secretary of the Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research and was previously Head of the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry. He has held a number of board positions. Ranck was most recently the Group Managing Director, ASEAN for DuPont Limited. He has held leadership positions in the finance, chemicals and pharmaceuticals sectors. He has been a member of the Prime Minister’s Science, Engineering and Innovation Council and the Business Roundtable on Sustainable Development Take in Alfex Flap ad Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 21 Take in Alfex flap ad 22 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Industry News Austech 2011 promotes manufacturers’ capabilities Manufacturers can no longer solely rely on traditional advertising to generate business; they must aggressively seek new ways in which to promote themselves and their business. Austech organiser AMTIL provides assistance to its members and all interested advanced manufacturers through the Manufacturers’ Showcase Pavilion during this year’s Austech exhibition at the Melbourne Exhibition Centre from 24 to 27 May 2011. As part of Australia’s premier advanced precision manufacturing and machine tool exhibition, the Manufacturers’ Showcase pavilion highlights the capabilities of Australia’s precision engineering and advanced manufacturing industry and provides Australian component manufacturers, precision engineering firms, toolmakers, advanced manufacturers and general engineering companies the opportunity to exhibit their unique capabilities to an expected audience of more than 10,000 visitors. “The importance of our precision engineering and advanced manufacturers in this country having the opportunity to promote the capabilities and capacity they have to offer is critical in view of international competition,” explains AMTIL’s CEO and Exhibition Director Shane Infanti. “The Manufacturers’ Showcase provides the perfect forum for these companies to put themselves in front of Austech visitors, many of whom outsource and contract out their work.” The Manufacturers’ Showcase initiative is proudly supported by ManufactureLink (www.manufacturelink.com. au), Australia’s largest industrial manufacturing network. ManufactureLink will exhibit the capabilities of its network of more than 400 advanced manufacturers in the centre of the Showcase Pavilion. Managing Director George Pofandt will be on hand to assist Austech attendees to locate the manufacturing capability they need and provide advice on how best to manufacture their products. “The past Manufacturers’ Showcase Pavilions were a great success with many participants now coming back every year,” says Austech organiser and AMTIL Event Manager Kim Warren. “Many exhibitors from this pavilion have indicated that they generated a lot of leads over the four days of the show in 2009 and 2010, many from interstate prospects whom they otherwise would not have encountered.” The participating manufacturers agree. “The Manufacturers’ Showcase is a great idea, it gave my company an opportunity to exhibit with other companies in our industry at the highest level; an opportunity I would normally not have, it gave my little company great exposure, not only in Victoria, I had a lot of interest from interstate,” comments Mark Scarpella from Engineered Tooling, Seaford, VIC, who participated in the inaugural Showcase in 2009. While many manufacturing companies who have already signed up for the available packages have participated at previous shows, Austech and its Manufacturers’ Showcase initiative attracts a lot of interest from prospective new exhibitors, keen to take the next step to promote their business. “Austech is Australia’s premier manufacturing exhibition, and I felt that we were going to get great exposure by participating in the Manufacturers’ Showcase Pavilion this year,” says Darren Hoggan, Hounslow Engineering, Bayswater, VIC. The company specialises in twin spindle, twin turret “ “Austech is Australia’s premier manufacturing exhibition, and I felt that we were going to get great exposure by participating in the Manufacturers’ Showcase Pavilion this year,” Darren Hoggan, Hounslow Engineering live tooling CNC turning, as well as centreless grinding. “We want to educate our potential customers about centreless grinding because there are a lot of people out there who don’t know about this technology. Austech provides us with the opportunity of human-to-human exposure to potential customers and to increase our customer base.” For more information and opportunities to be part of the Austech’s Manufacturers’ Showcase initiative, please contact Kim Warren at 03 9800 3666, kwarren@amtil.com. au or visit the Austech website www.austechexpo.com.au. ABB donates $180,000 to help victims Employees and company assist families with contribution to Premier’s Disaster Relief Appeal ABB Australia announced that its 1,500 employees have rallied behind Queenslanders to raise $180,000 for the Premier’s Disaster Relief Appeal, with the company contributing more than two dollars for every dollar from employees. “It is important that we unite and provide support for each other in times of crisis, and the immediate response from our employees across the country has been truly inspirational,” said Axel Kuhr, country manager of ABB in Australia. “We are proud to support the generous spirit of our employees by adding $133,704 to their contributions to bring our total donation to $180,000. “Our thoughts and hearts go out to the families and local communities affected, particularly those who have lost everything. Our employees will continue to work closely with local businesses to do whatever we can to provide additional assistance for the recovery effort,” Kuhr added. ABB’s three facilities located in Brisbane escaped major operational disruption or property damage. The company has had technical product specialists available to assist the local utilities in their challenging task of safely restoring power to residences and businesses in the affected areas. ABB expresses its gratitude to the police, emergency services and military personnel for their tremendous efforts during the flood crisis and to the many thousands of volunteers who have freely donated their time during the initial clean-up effort. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 23 Industry News Delcam Asian technical summit Delcam recently held their 10th Annual Technical Summit in Pune, India at which major initiatives and strategies for the future were announced together with a number of new product launches and updates right across their already impressive range. Delcam’s strategy includes an increased investment in R &D. “This year we will be looking at investing $16m in research and development” said Clive Martell, Managing Director.” In his welcome to delegates Vineet Seth, Managing Director, Delcam, India, said “We started in Pune in 2000 as a liaison office for Delcam with three employees. We are now fully owned by Delcam with 130 staff and 14 offices around the country. We are also responsible for the Middle East. Our annual growth has been a highlight for years and stands at 20% year on year. Delcam is now recognised as the largest CAM vendor in India and we are very proud of that.” Product updates & innovations PowerMILL 2010 Mark Gadsden, Business Development Manager, Delcam stated that the latest PowerMILL 2010 is two and a half times faster than before and now allows for multi-threading. Automation makes it easier for programmers to pick up PowerMILL and use it. General Improvements for FeatureCAM (feature based programming) “FeatureCAM is more of a production engineering tool” says Delcam’s Sandy Moffatt. “It’s an easy to use tool and it has feature recognition. It allows faster programming, users have complete control, it is data base driven and the automated approach helps reduce errors.” Healthcare division Launched just one year ago Delcam’s Healthcare Division has enjoyed great success. Chris Lawrie, Business Development Manager, Healthcare Division, explained that as people now tend to live longer there is a need for mass customisation of healthcare solutions covering dental, maxillofacial reconstructions, orthotics, orthopaedic, podiatry etc. He said “the key aspect is replacing the traditional casting process with a digital process from start to finish. Unique products are now being made using methods which are efficient and cost effective.” Dental restorations In keeping with the healthcare theme of the sessions Peter Dickin, Marketing Manager, Delcam, emphasised the breadth of the solutions they provide including rapid prototyping, 24 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology The Delcam Team — Left to Right Vineet Seth, Clive Lawrie, Joe Zhou, Sandy Moffatt, Clive Martell, Peter Dickin, Mark Gadsden, Robed Walker precision scanning, precision CAD, market leading CAM and on machine set up and verification. He said “the key to dental restorations is the scanning. With a good quality scan you have a much better chance of a good quality restoration.” Dickin highlighted the new scanner and the dental CAD CAM suite of products. The new iMetric Scan (Swiss 3D Scanning System) is an extremely accurate, fully automated white light, non-contact, 3D scanning unit for dental applications and all types of restorations. DentCAD is the design suite for creating the dental restorations in CAD. Delcam for SolidWorks 2011 – new release Delcam for SolidWorks (DFS) is one of Delcam’s newer products. It is Delcam CAM completely integrated inside SolidWorks. Delcam has developed DFS to complement their CAM product range of PowerMILL, FeatureCAM, PartMaker and ArtCAM. Presenter, Mark Gadsden felt that there is a clear market opportunity as 405,000 SolidWorks commercial licenses have already been issued. “It is an ideal fit with Delcam’s traditional markets and we can now compete for new accounts requiring an integrated solution with SolidWorks” he said. “DFS will have great appeal to organisations who design and manufacture parts and who have a combination of machining centres, turning and turn/mill facilities. Strategy for the future “We will continue to look for new opportunities and new channels” said Martell in his conclusion to the conference. “This year we reached 35,000 customers and we expect to reach 40,000 in 2011. Our sales network and sales staff for the HealthCare Division is growing and we will continue to employ the largest development team in the CAM industry.” “Our customers face constant pressure to reduce costs, increase productivity, improve quality and reduce lead times and Delcam will help meet these demands.” Camplex Pty. Ltd. - www.camplex.com.au www.kaeser.com.au THE NEW SK COMPRESSOR RANGE HAS ARRIVED... Producing More Air with Less Energy and a Smaller Footprint. DELIVERING: KAES11003 · A new Sigma airend and premium efficiency IE3 motor · Stronger & quieter operation · New efficient fans · Improved serviceability For more information on the new SK Range, please contact us today: 1800 640 611 or info.australia@kaeser.com Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 25 Product News Xtra·tec F4338 porcupine for heavy-duty machining The Xtra·tec® F4338 is a new addition to the Walter family of porcupine cutters with an extremely strong constitution. It’s clear simply from the diameter range of 63 to 125mm that the Xtra·tec® F4338 is aimed at heavy-duty machining. This is further underlined by large insert seats for Type AD.T 1807 indexable inserts, which can be either fully circumference sintered or circumference ground. So the new member has the largest “spines” in the Xtra·tec® porcupine cutter family. Thanks to the soft cutting, helically arranged cutting edges, plunge depths of as much as 95mm when shoulder-milling and trimming are no problem. Walter claims that even lower-performance machines will return above-average cutting rates with this tool. Equipped with the Tiger·tec Silver cutting material, this cutter is suitable for all steel and cast materials and, with PVD-Alox coated inserts, even hard-to-cut materials. As well as in general engineering, typical applications are to be found primarily in the energy sector and the aerospace industry. In addition to the super-strength inserts for large cutting capacities, the tool has another convincing special design With extra-large, spirally arranged indexable inserts and axial stops for the first row of inserts, the Xtra∙tec® F4338 is the new heavyweight in the Walter family of porcupine cutters. feature. The first row of indexable inserts is held by an additional axial fixed stop. It is a detail that adds to process reliability in heavy-duty machining in particular. For ‘tough cases’, there are also one-piece HSK or SK tool bodies available. The F4338 can also be supplied as a shell-end milling cutter and as a modular tool with NCT adaptor. Walter AG www.walter-tools.com acting operation allows the splitter to be used with a variety of hydraulic power sources, including the comprehensive range of innovative pumping technologies available. Tri-blade technology provides three cutting surfaces on a single blade – facilitating easy changes in the field. Grip tape and handle are included for more secure maneuverability. A pre-set blade cutting depth scale in each tool is a standard feature and allows controlled blade extension to avoid damage to bolts and threads. The scale indicates the bolt range in metric and imperial values on each cutting head. These nut splitters cut hexagon nut sizes from 70 - 130 mm [2¾ - 5⅜ inch] in a bolt range from M45 - M90 (1¾ - 3½ inch). 700 bar nut splitter cracks all The NS-Series of nut splitters from Enerpac are powerful and precise industrial strength hydraulic tools which have been designed and manufactured for serious applications. These compact, powerful and maneuverable 700 bar high-pressure hydraulic tools are often used on flanged joints, such as those common in the oil, gas, energy, mineral processing and water and infrastructure industries and all industries where bolting and pipelines are used extensively. Enerpac nut splitters are specially designed to suit standard ANSI B16.5/BS1560 flanges. The nickel-plated cylinder bodies have excellent corrosion protection and improved durability in harsh environments, says Enerpac. Heavily corroded and weathered nuts can be quickly split and removed. Several interchangeable heads are available to provide maximum nut range flexibility and the single-acting, spring return or double- 26 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Enerpac - 02 9743 8988 info@enerpac.com.au www.enerpac.com.au Product News Laser scanner for safeguarding irregularly-shaped areas Micromax sensors & automation announces the AG4 safety laser scanner from Banner Engineering, designed to deliver safety, simplicity and versatility in a single, compact optical device. The AG4 Safety Laser Scanner uses pulses of Class 1 infrared laser light to locate the position of objects in its field of view, effectively protecting personnel by safeguarding both stationary and mobile hazards within a user-designated area. The AG4 effectively safeguards irregularly-shaped areas not suitable for a standard two-or three-piece safety light screen. It is also an excellent replacement solution for high-maintenance safety mats that are routinely damaged by repetitive operation or adverse environments. By meeting all requirements for Type 3 per IEC 61496-1/-2, Category 3 PLd per EN ISO 13849-1, and Safety Integrity Level (SIL) 2 per IEC 61508, the AG4 delivers superior performance in applications including area guarding, access/perimeter guarding, and automated guided vehicle (AGV) collision avoidance. "We saw a need for a solution that could be used as a standalone safeguard that would stop hazards when an individual enters an area, as well as to prevent the reinitiating of a machine cycle while that individual is within the guarded area," said Mike Carlson, Safety Products Marketing Manager at Banner Engineering. "The AG4 will provide a solution in any number of stationary applications, but also is an excellent solution for collision avoidance on mobile vehicles such as AGVs, overhead cranes, and transfer carts and trolleys," Carlson added. The AG4 Safety Laser Scanner operates through the principle of diffuse reflectance (reflected light) to determine an object’s position via range (measured distance) and rotational angle. Once the AG4 protective and warning fields are configured the position of the objects within the field of view are evaluated. If any are within a protective field, a safety stop signal is generated from the scanner. The AG4 can additionally be configured so that an intrusion in the warning field triggers an auxiliary output. This may be used to slow a mobile vehicle, flash a light, or initiate March_2011_final_PROOF.pdf 1 11/02/2011 PM this field. other actions to warn an individual who1:28:19 enters Losma air filters C M Y CM MY CY The machine tool releases polluted air with oil mist. Clean air is released into the atmosphere. Featuring a 0.36 degree lateral resolution, the AG4 reliably detects objects in a zone up to 190 degrees from its fixed position. The AG4 provides selectable protection field resolution of 30, 40, 50, 70, and 150mm with ranges up to 6.25m, while its warning field provides coverage of up to 15m. Advanced configuration capabilities allow operators to configure the AG4 with eight individual protective and warning fields. Users can quickly switch between configured field pairs, providing the flexibility to effectively protect personnel and equipment in diverse applications. Micromax Sensors & Automation - 1300 36 26 26 info@micromaxsa.com.au. www.micromaxsa.com.au Breathe Easy with Losma CMY K Your Machine Tool Oil removed from the air is returned to the machine tool. www.accmfg.com.au info@accmfg.com.au | 03 9546 3733 Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 27 Product News AMO introduces IP67-rated LMB-410 spar linear encoder The LMB-410 inductive scanning measuring scale comes with a stainless steel carrier, offering robust measuring/position feedback with IP-67 rating and performance similar to a linear optical encoder. Available through Melbournebased automation and control specialist, CNC Design, the LMB-410, is best suited to general purpose applications such as positional feedback systems machine tools, medical and printing equipment and military/aerospace applications. Its IP67 rating makes the scale ideal for dirty, contaminated and submerged conditions. Its adhesive-free mounting spar with a snap cover eliminates concerns related to adhesive-backed spars becoming loose in oily environments. A slim stainless steel carrier is attached to the machine with screws, with an interlocking “snap cover” securing the scale, tape in position. Its encoder head can be optionally equipped with wipers to automatically clean the scale during operation. The encoder head’s gain compensation and AMTIL BLACKFAST 10:40 AM Page 1 auto offset eliminate 03_07 the need16/2/07 to use a test box during setup. BLACKFAST Room Temperature Blacking Of Iron and Steel Fast and simple blacking protects and enhances all iron and steel components with a safe in-house operation, either two pieces or two tonnes. It’s so easy with BLACKFAST – you can DO IT YOURSELF. Tel: 07 5554 5411 Fax: 07 5554 5766 BLACKFAST AUSTRALIA 28 Mobile: 0419 507 713 Email: blackfastaustralia@bigpond.com.au www.blackfast.com March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology The LMB-410 is rated for operation that ranges from -10 to +100°C for up to 30m measuring length and ± 3μm/m accuracy. The new encoder also meets high-shock, high-speed and vibration specifications. Any non-guided AMOSIN encoder head can be used with any of the LMB-400 or LMB-100 scale mounting version. The AMOSIN inductive measuring systems are supplied in two principal versions: an open, non-contacting system, or as a guided, encapsulated system. Operating entirely on an inductive basis, all AMOSIN systems achieve high precisions of up to +/- 3μm/m and are highly resistant to shock and vibration. CNC Design Pty Ltd - 03 9411 1511 Bruce_Rowley@cncdesign.com.au www.cncdesign.com Dodge ISAF bearings Dodge developed a new range of large-bore pillow block bearings, initially with SAF dimensions, that feature integral hydraulicallyassisted, adapter-mounted installation and removal systems. These bearings are designed to reduce the total cost of ownership and are factory assembled, sealed and lubricated. The entire inner units are replaceable. This new range of hydraulically mounted bearings covers the size range from 150 to 400mm. This now means that the Baldor range of easy mount/dismount bearings span from 17mm to 400mm across three ranges of bearings; the Grip Tight, the ISN and now the Hydraulic ISAF range. A major cause of bearing failure is due to contamination, either during installation or in service (especially when under misalignment conditions). The hydraulic ISAF solution has a double seal that is effective even under misalignment conditions. The inner unit has a triple lip seal and the housing has a grease purged labyrinth design or optional closed end cover. This multiple seal design keeps out the contamination, allowing the bearing to achieve its maximum life. “At Baldor, we would like the market to stop considering bearings as a commodity and start to think of mounted bearings as an asset”, said Daniel Vera, Managing Director of Baldor Australia. “For too long, the customer has been forced to expend considerable time in the installation, maintenance and removal of mounted bearings. This generally happens in dirty environments and this creates further problems leading to shorter than expected life. Our new Hydraulic ISAF bearing overcomes these issues in a unitised, compact package”. Baldor Australia - 02 9674 5455 sales.au@baldor.com www.baldor.com.au Product News Mitsui Seiki introduces large HMC for machining hard metals Mitsui Seiki’s new 2500 mm HU100A-5XLL Horizontal Machining Centre is now available and designed for machining large, complex, and heavy (up to 6600 lbs.) hard metal parts. “We built several custom engineered machines with similar configurations and attributes; it made sense for us to add the HU100XLL to our standard product line,” says Mr. Thomas Dolan, Mitsui’s Vice President of Marketing and Sales. “The custom engineered machines were supplied to primarily aerospace, power generation, refrigeration, and mould and die parts manufacturers as all of these industries have fundamental common requirements for machine rigidity and stiffness for low frequency machining and high accuracy,” adds Dolan. “We expect demand for this type of rugged, 5-axis equipment to accelerate over the next five years.” As with all Mitsui Seiki’s machine tools, the high The HU100A-5XLL offers an X, Y, Z working envelope of accuracy and ultra rigidity of the new HU100A-5XLL come 2500mm x 1750mm x 1400mm (98.4 in. x 68.9 in. x 55.1 in.). from the builder’s close monitoring and analysis of its 3D The A and B tilting and rotating trunnion table axes represent Finite Element Designed structure, its craftsmanship and the 4th and 5th axes of motion. The standard spindle offering methodology of hand scraping all castings for geometry is a 50 taper, although many manufacturers taking extra heavy and frequency tuning, and its use of hardened and ground roughing cuts in titanium and tough steels could opt for the HSK steel box ways. Further, all critical components for the new 100 or HSK 125 spindle with extra high torque – 3332Nm (2457 machine are designed, manufactured, and quality-controlled lb.-ft.). The FMS-ready machine has a pallet size of 1700mm x in-house at one of the world’s most advanced machine tool 1000mm (66.9 in. x 39.4 in.) and accommodates weight up to 3000kg (6600 lbs.). factories. The automatic toolchanger accommodates 360 tools with lengths up to 500mm (19.6 in.), diameters to 305mm (12 in.), AES Machine Tools Pty Ltd - 02 9624 7022 110335 WYSIWYG Mar11:Layout 1 18/2/11 9:12 AM Page 1 www.mitsuiseiki.com. and weights of 30kg (66 lbs.). 3D Scanning Services xInspection to 3D CAD xReverse Engineering (Teeth to Stadiums) xSmall Part Inspection (Single tooth Size) xComposite mould inspection and FAI xInjection moulded part Inspection, FAI xFibreglass FAI and Mould inspection xFabrication Inspection xSheet Metal and Machined part Inspection x10 Years not 10 Minutes Experience Wysiwyg 3D Pty Ltd Unit 1, 22-24 Norman St Peakhurst, NSW 2210. P: 02 9153 9974 02 9153 (WYSI) F: 02 9153 9973 info@wysiwyg3d.com.au www.wysiwyg3d.com.au Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 29 Product News Fibre laser cutting from Hypertherm Hypertherm announced the release of a new fibre laser cutting system that includes all components in one complete package. Hypertherm’s HyIntensity Fiber Laser HFL015 system includes the power source, cutting head, gas supply, operator interface consoles, motion controls, and software. Hypertherm believes this solutions-based approach will make it much easier for partners and their customers to use laser cutting for their fine feature cutting requirements. The system operates on familiar Hypertherm control platforms, with pre-developed cutting processes, for significantly simplified table integration and operation as well as higher levels of efficiency, when compared to other laser cutting solutions. A single-emitter diode based design enables extremely reliable performance. “Our fibre laser system is unique in that all of the components are engineered and designed to work together. Cutting application specialists defined and validated all of the cutting parameters so our partners and their customers can easily use laser for a broad range of applications including marking, efficient processing of gauge and fractional materials, and fine feature cutting,” said Doug Shuda, Hypertherm’s fibre laser product manager. “Hypertherm partners and their customers no longer have to choose between plasma and laser. They can choose both, applying the best cutting technology for each particular job.” Fibre laser offers several advantages over CO2 laser systems. It requires virtually no maintenance, is more energy efficient, and takes up less space. The power supply is much smaller than CO2, yet fibre delivery enables the beam to travel greater distances allowing for installation on larger tables. Hypertherm’s introduction of a fibre laser system follows several years of intense research and development. The company applied more than four decades of metal cutting expertise to develop a powerful system that builds upon Hypertherm’s existing plasma cutting system offerings. Hypertherm yvette.leeflang@hypertherm.com www.hypertherm.com Focused blast Exair’s new precision safety air gun is claimed to be extremely lightweight and comfortable to use over extended periods. The highly focused, forceful blast of airflow provides excellent cleaning ability and is suited to a wide range of industrial applications. This safety air gun has a small diameter nozzle and extension that will fit into tight spaces while packing a strong punch. The air gun uses Exair’s ‘Nano Super’ air nozzle which has been engineered to maximise entrainment of room air while minimising compressed air consumption. The Nano Super Air Nozzle is available in a rugged Type 316 Stainless Steel or PEEK plastic to provide non-marring protection should the nozzle come in contact with other surfaces. The Peek nozzle, a Plant Engineering 2010 Product of the Year finalist, provides excellent resistance to chemicals, fatigue and temperatures up to 160°C. The air gun has an ergonomic design to keep the hand in a comfortable position. A hanger is provided for convenient storage or mounting to a tool balancer. Compressed Air Australia Pty Ltd - 1300 787 688 info@caasafety.com.au http://caa.exair.com 30 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Product News New Mate Rollerball deburr Designed to deburr mild steel, stainless steel, and aluminium sheet material in any thickness, the Rollerball deburr tool does the burr removal automatically and quickly as part of the punching process. No off-line, manual burr removal needed. No special off-line tools. The deburr is designed for Thick Turret and Trumpf Style applications. The new tool incorporates Mate’s proprietary Rollerball technology that uses the extended programming capabilities of punch presses operating in the x and y axis with the ram down. Using a special ball in both the upper and lower part of the tool, the Rollerball deburr pushes the burr away creating a slight radius on the punched edge. Smooth to the touch, the deburred edge is consistent and has a finished, aesthetically pleasing appearance. All part contours can be processed with the Rollerball deburr tool, including small, tight corners. Available for thick turret or Trumpf Style press applications, RollerBall deburr comes as a complete set, including springs for adjusting tension appropriate for the material being punched. “The tool delivers exceptional value to the punching process,” reports John Galich, Mate Marketing Manager. “It’s fast and eliminates manual operations by allowing the punch press to do the work. Mate marketing@mate.com www.mate.com/rollerball. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 31 Product News The 6-axis Python Structural steel fabrication and beam cutting now has a new productivity champion in the form of the 6-axis robotic PythonX CNC plasma cutting fabrication system - a revolutionary new technology that brings automated 3D fabrication to processing beams, channels, HSS, angle, plate and bar. According to Power Machinery Managing Director, Ken Christensen, PythonX has, “unprecedented flexibility like an entire fabrication shop in a single machine”. Even a modern, fully automated metal fabrication shop typically requires transfers and conveyors to feed and offload multiple pieces of equipment. This takes up a lot of space and time. The PythonX offers the functions of a beam drill line, band saw, angle and plate/bar line, copying machine, marking machine and small burning machine. “That”, says Christensen, “offers huge savings in floorspace, labour and material handling.” The PythonX torch head will actually probe and measure the piece to be cut, so it places each feature exactly where it needs to be. This compensates for out-of-spec beam geometry to give you finished beams that are in spec and good for the job with AISC-approved bolt holes. The PythonX accepts files via direct download from structural design software like Tekla XSTEEL, SDS/2, AutoCAD and more. The machine control reads the file, probes and measures the piece, then goes to work. According to Christensen, the PythonX can replace so much machinery that for under $700,000, users can get the same amount of functionality that would normally cost nearly $2m in terms of machinery. “The PythonX is basically anything up to 10 machines in one and that doesn’t count how much manual labour and double-handling a fabrication shop can save on with one of these units. The normal way to drill a beam is to mark the holes, drill them out with a magnetic drill undertake cutting with a hand-held plasma or oxy cutter.” says Christensen. “This whole process can work out to be out 20 hours of labour per tonne of steel. By using the PythonX, this can be cut down to about five hours per tonne—in other words you can cut down this whole process by three-quarters, saving you both time and money. It will cut steel up to 32mm thick in shapes up to 1200mm wide and 400mm high and with conveyor options, it can handle beams up to 26m long. You cannot compare this machine to beam lines. That would be comparing apples and oranges. The PythonX can do so much more than any beam line", he concludes. Power Machinery - 02 9971 1755 ken@powermachinery.com.au www.powermachinery.com.au Polarisation microscopy with high flexibility The exceptionally flexible Axio Scope.A1 microscope system from Carl Zeiss is now being offered in a version for polarisation microscopy for materials and metal analysis. With minimum effort, six different versions of the microscope can be specially and economically configured for polarization techniques. With the Axio Scope.A1, Carl Zeiss provides a flexible, highperformance modular microscope platform specially designed for routine applications in materials microscopy. The microscope is specifically designed for use in the fields of the geosciences, mineralogy and in the oil exploration industry. Axio Scope.A1 for polarisation can also be used in state-of-the art materialography applications in, for example, the building materials, glass, plastics, mining, textile and fiber industries. A version of the microscope system is also available as a training microscope for use in education. Further capabilities include conoscopy for crystal diagnosis, the use of numerous other measuring techniques and documentation. The modular design of the Axio Scope.A1 offers an interface between the upper and lower parts of the stand to allow the use of spacers for adapting microscope slides to the sample size. The flexible configuration of the components available provides versions for transmitted light, reflected light or both with up to 100W light intensity. This high light intensity also makes the system suitable for weakly reflecting samples. In addition to traditional contrasting techniques in reflected and transmitted light such as brightfield, darkfield, DIC and polarisation, Axio 32 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology The Axio Scope. A1 microscope system from Carl Zeiss is now being offered in a version for polarization microscopy for materials and metal analysis. Scope.A1 now also enables innovative techniques such as C-DIC and PlasDIC. It is possible to quickly and easily switch between the different contrasting techniques. The line of high-contrast EC Epiplan objectives was specially developed for routine applications. They produce a flat image for a 23mm field and are available in brightfield and brightfield/ darkfield versions. Produced with low strain, they are ideal for high-quality DIC microscopy. This line of objectives enables the innovative C-DIC technique (Differential Interference Contrast in circularly polarised light) with only a single prism. Furthermore, the entire spectrum of objectives from Carl Zeiss is available. The microscope system can be used with traditional cameras, with all cameras in the AxioCam line and with AxioVision image processing software. Thanks to the modular design of the Axio Scope.A1, many components can be easily retrofitted by the customer, if required. Carl Zeiss Pty Ltd - 1300 365 470 www.zeiss.com.au www.kraas-lachmann.com Tiger·tec® Silver is the new highperformance miracle tool for steel and cast-iron milling from Walter. Extremely tough, extremely hard and extremely long-wearing, it improves performance by up to 100%. The machining age is over. It’s time to Tiger. Competitor Tiger·tec® New Tiger, new benchmark: up to 100% performance increase Tiger·tec®Silver Walter Australia Pty. Ltd. Hallam, Victoria +61-3-8793 1000 service.au@walter-tools.com www.walter-tools.com Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 33 Q A OneonOne The Australian Union of Trade Councils president Gerardine (Ged) Kearney was bought up in a household where the importance of the collective, both in politics and society, was emphasised from an early age. The mother of four, from Melbourne, spoke to Nina Hendy about her role, what she achieved in 2010 and why manufacturers should work with, not against, unions. AMT: Tell us a bit about yourself. What is your professional background and how did you come to be in your current role? GK: I started my adult working life as a nurse working in both the public and private health sector. My father had instilled the importance of union values in our family so from a very young age I’ve always appreciated the need for workers to have a voice in their workplace and the right to collectively bargain. As a nurse I was always an active union member, at first becoming a workplace delegate until 1997 when I was elected as an official with the Australian Nursing Federation. In July 2010 I became ACTU president, where I advocate the interests of working Australians and their families. AMT: What is the number one concern that Australian workers have about their workplace and why? GK: 34 As a movement we’re listening to workers’ concerns to ensure that their rights are represented and advocated. Travelling the country and meeting workers from an array of different industries, similar concerns emerge. They include job security, improving rights and conditions at work as well as concerns around a work life balance. March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Considering a full time worker spends 38 hours a week at work, it is a significant amount of time away from our family and friends. Many workers report having to work longer hours than the standard 38 hours so it’s vital that workers are treated fairly, remunerated accordingly, have decent and fulfilling jobs and that they are working in a safe and hazardfree environment. There is no doubt that the various forms of precarious work – casual, labour hire, short-term contracts and more – have increased over the past few decades, and this is an issue where unions will be particularly active over the coming years to provide workers with the job and income security they need for a better life. AMT: What did you achieve for 2010 for Australian workers? GK: My first six months at the ACTU were indeed action packed. Within a month of my transition a federal election was called. We were committed to ensuring that the improvements for workers made through the establishment of the Fair Work Act were locked in, regardless of which party was in power. The Fair Work Act is important to Australian workers in every industry because it makes explicit reference to key rights such as the right to collectively bargain. OneonOne It gives all workers protection from unfair dismissal as well as the introduction of a robust safety net of minimum conditions. It also has established the Minimum Wage Panel within Fair Work Australia, which will review the minimum wage rate annually in an independent and transparent manner. 30% of the manufacturing industry relies on this review for any pay increases. Another fundamental achievement was the introduction of the Paid Parental Leave scheme. After 30 long years of union campaigning, women now have the financial and employment security to have some time off to bond with their newborn. However, there remains unfinished business to further improve the Fair Work Act so that more workers benefit from collective bargaining and can bargain freely, and that workers have stronger rights to union representation. The successful defence of Adelaide building worker Ark Tribe notwithstanding, we are determined to see the abolition of the Australian Building and Construction Commission and of laws that discriminate against workers in that industry. AMT: What sorts of things can the manufacturing sector do to work more productively with unions? GK: Unions already have a good relationship with the majority of manufacturers, so we’d like to see the continuation of this trend. Unions are there to represent and advocate the interest of their workers so employers should embrace them as a part of a productive working relationship. Often, the worker’s perspective can drive improvements to productivity and efficiency, and collective bargaining encourages this. AMT: What are the advantages to manufacturing firms in working more closely with unions to achieve harmony in the workplace? GK: Unions are there to ensure that workers have a voice in their workplace. They’re there to ensure that workers’ concerns are heard by the employers. By working with unions, employers have an opportunity to address workers’ concerns before the issues are elevated. AMT: What do you wish that Australian manufacturing firms understood about the ACTU that they currently don’t understand? GK: There will always be a tension that exists between unions and employers, and unions will always defend and seek to advance workers’ rights and conditions in the workplace. But we also recognise that the manufacturing industry employs approximately one million workers, and will continue to play an important role in the future, so the prosperity of this industry is in everyone’s interest. Government support for the automotive industry is just example of how unions and industry can work together to ensure the continuing success in manufacturing. AMT: You do hear, from time to time, about workers in Australian manufacturing firms going out on strike in a bid to achieve changes in the workplace. What is your stance on taking strike action? Is this advantageous to workers in the long run, and if so, why? GK: AMT: What are your current goals for 2011 and how long will it take to achieve them? GK: 2011 is an exciting year, with many union initiatives planned. One of our key priorities includes supporting the equal pay test case in Fair Work Australia, which if successful, will see community and social workers’ pay increase by between 10 and 50%. This case is about valuing women’s work and will continue to decrease the gender pay gap. We will also be campaigning hard to ensure mandatory superannuation is increased to 12 per cent. This will ensure that retired Australians have sufficient income to live comfortably and with dignity. The Federal Government has committed to raising the Superannuation Guarantee to 12% by 2019, but in bargaining rounds, unions will be seeking to achieve that goal at an earlier date. Another ACTU priority is to ensure income and job security for all workers. Initiatives include addressing issues such as precarious employment, protection of employee entitlements and fair wages. Strikes are the last resort for workers in any industry because it obviously means a loss of pay. But sometimes, when all negotiations have been exhausted, the withdrawal of labour is the only alternative. Any decision to take industrial action will be handled responsibly, and there would have been many attempts from the workers’ perspective to reach a resolution on the issue before there is a strike. Rights to protect industrial action are in fact extremely limited in Australia to period of bargaining, and most negotiations are usually settled before industrial action is necessary. Under the Fair Work Act, all parties are required to bargain in good faith, and the responsibility to prevent industrial action also rests with employers, who are sometimes too keen to lock out workers. It’s worth nothing that under the Fair Work Act, industrial action has been historically low. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 35 Plastics Machinery, materials and In 2011 Ausplas, Australia’s national trade show for the plastics processing industry will break with tradition. Ausplas has been held in October every three years since 1987, but this year moves into a May time frame to line up with the Austech and National Manufacturing Week events. he three trade exhibitions will occupy the entire 30,000 square meters of space at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre presenting what will be Australia’s largest ever dedicated manufacturing industry trade exhibition. This will provide the opportunity for visitors to take advantage of unprecedented opportunities to meet with experts from all over the world across a huge range of equipment, products and services. Equipment in operation A feature of Ausplas has always been the display of plastics processing equipment, in operation under factory conditions. For 2011 the range of processing and ancillary equipment, robotics and automation will be double the number and variety shown in 2008. The number of injection moulding machines alone will be the largest showing since 2002. This year the emphasis is on energy efficiency with energy now being a primary cost and innovations such as ‘in mould labelling’ which will be shown by several exhibitors representing European and Asian suppliers. There will also be many large exhibits of other forms of plastics processing such as extrusion and blow moulding and thermo forming. Recycling The all-important sector of plastics recycling will again feature heavily, bringing the latest advances in sorting, separation, washing, re-granulation and re-use of consumer and industrial waste. Fabrication 2011 brings a large increase in the number of exhibits featuring the supply of equipment and know-how for the use of plastics in the fabrication sector. These include plastics sheet, rod -shapes and profiles for precision engineering ,semi finished plastics products, 3D ink jet prototyping, ultrasonic welding and hot air tools and butt welding for sheet and pipe and related new technologies for build and repair. General information Ausplas will be held in Bays 19 and 20 alongside Austech. There will be no dividing walls with the visitor ID badge for either exhibition allowing admission to all three shows. Visiting hours will also be common for all three events. Visitors can organise their trade ID in advance on line by visiting www.ausplas.com Equipment that will be on display includes: Haitian Direct Will exhibit four C injection moulding machines including the popular servo motor model. Also on display will be a Haitian fully electric packaging version with a GH Automation side entry in-mould labelling system. Plus ancillary equipment from Shini Plastics Group and extrusion and welding equipment from Fangli/Graewe. Ancillary equipment and materials The range and variety of ancillary equipment has also expanded for 2011 and covers the whole range: blenders, chillers, materials handling systems, silos, granulators, screws, barrels, mixers, controls and monitoring, testing and measuring, labelling and printing, automation and robotics. There will also be a wide showing of new materials ranging from pigments and master batches through to specialty additives and colorants and the new exotics in space age materials and composites. 36 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology methods – Ausplas 2011 Tasman Machinery Will exhibit “the world’s best selling all-electric injection moulding machine” from Sumitomo Japan. The SE 350 HSZ is a high speed all-electric machine with the most energy efficient drive system available today. It will be shown operating with a 3 axis servo driven takeout robot supplied by Yushin, Japan’s largest manufacturer of takeout robots. Tasman will also show Dimension 3D printers which print prototypes from ABS plastic, allowing customers to dramatically reduce ‘time to market’ for new products. for the Middle East, one to Malaysia, three to a Victorian client and a complete turn key profile coating line. Other large projects are in progress. Flecknoe Is exhibiting the latest in thermo forming equipment. Featuring the Thermwood Model 90 5 axis CNC router in operation, trimming vacuum formed parts. Also the Australian made Flecknoe Thermoforming/Vacuum forming machine with programmable platens for ease of operation and quick set up. More than 50 Flecknoe machines are in use in Australia for the production of caravan and bus panels, paving moulds, displays and signage and industrial applications. Telford Smith Engineering’s Zerma shredder Becker Pumps Rear panel of a Winnebago motor home machined from a vacuum formed sheet on a Flecknoe machine. Is the distributor for Gebr.Becker GmbH Germany whose oil free pumps are used in facets of plastics processing, for example in vacuum forming where a deeper vacuum is required. Becker will display a Flecknoe HS-43 single station thermo former controlled by their oil free vacuum pump. Pumps and compressors for all types of moulding processes and materials handling applications. Unique Hydra Mech Will show a Grantway 200 ton servo drive injection moulding machine operating with a Tenso robot time. The Tenso robot can be used for applications including pick and place, stacking, insert moulding and in mould labelling. Injection moulding machinery and technology will also be featured by Wittman- Battenfeld, Applied Machinery, Sound Machinery, Macosys LG and others from Europe, Japan and China. Telford Smith Engineering TSE has sold over 20 Zerma shredders in the last 18 months used for consumer waste, in house scrap, pipe shredding, foam and bedding, film, timber and car tyres. They will display a Zerma Model ZSS 1500 heavy duty shredder, Zerma granulators, Gala under water pelletising systems and Shini ancillary equipment. TSE has established a wholly owned manufacturing facility in China where it produces extruders for the world market. Orders for their extruders have kept their production near capacity for the last 18 months. These include two Becker's range of oil free pumps. Kaesar Compressors Will showcase their new SK25 AirCenter and special booster specific applications for the plastics industry. The SK25 is an ideal choice for smaller businesses and workshops where space is at a premium. They have a small footprint and wide opening cabinet doors to allow easy maintenance. Kaesar is a world leader in the supply of compressed air and are able to deliver more energy with less cost. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 37 Plastics Fabrication There are a number of companies exhibiting equipment and know how in the field of plastics fabrication. Some examples are: Fusion Hire Services (FHS) is an agent for Munsch extrusion welders, Forsthoff Hot Air Welders, OMISA butt welders and Ritmo butt welding equipment. FHS Poly Pipe Engineering, one of the largest customer fabrication workshops in Australia, stocks a huge range of pipe and fittings. They also produce fabricated bends, elbows, tees junctions and crosses and have a comprehensive range of plastics welding equipment for hire. Fusion Hire Services Munsch extrusion welder. Cut To Size Plastics will display its full range of engineering plastics in sheet, rod and tube sourced from European suppliers and will exhibit examples of their CNC machining capabilities on CNC routers and machine centres, all machined in-house in Sydney. It has added a new supplier from Canada, Thordon Plastics well known for heavy duty bearings and marine applications. Plastral Pty Ltd is the agent for Leister Process Technologies and Ritmo Welding Technologies. it will exhibit plastics welding equipment and hot air tools, including hot air welders and extrusion welders used in the fabrication of thermoplastic sheeting and pipe systems as well as heat sources. Also the full range of Simona and the new Ensinger engineering plastics. Trimfix Supplies / Complete Plastic Welding Supplies specialise in plastics welding equipment, tools and technology. It is an Australian agent for Wegener Sheet butt welding and bending equipment, as well as hot air and extrusion welders. At Ausplas, Wegener will operate a three meter sheet welder demonstrating sheet welding for the first time. This equipment is on loan from Partec in Brisbane, the expert training centre for the plastics fabrication sector and which will be providing expert staff over the course of the show. Westaflex / Uniflex (Aust) offers a complete manufacturing service of either injection moulding or blow moulding using one of the most modern facilities in Australia. Their large blow moulder is one of the largest (if not the largest) of its type in the Southern Hemisphere, being able to mould a part up to 1400ltrs, size-dependent. The injection moulders fully robotic and feed materials via a Piovan material handling and drying system. In addition to the moulding, Westaflex Plastics can also provide a complete tool and die making service Cut to Size Plastics will show full range of engineering plastics. 38 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology For further details and to organise your free trade ID entry badge, visit www.ausplas.com 03 9699 4699. ELDAN SUPER CHOPPER SC 1412T HEAVY DUTY SHREDDER Mazak HTC400 CNC Horizontal Machining Centre 100HP (2 x 50), Hagglunds hydraulic drive, 1400 x 900mm throat, pneumatic crammer, perfect for 40gal drums. Twin pallet, Mazatrol M-Plus CNC control, 30ATC, BT40INT, coolant through spindle, 400 x 400 x 600mm, 10000rpm, conveyor SAVE OVER 20% WAS $200,000 + GST NOW $170,000 + GST WAS $88,000 + GST NOW $68,000 + GST NAKAMURA TMC-20 CNC LATHE Kawaguchi KM360B2 Plastic Injection Moulding Machine 70mm screw, 928g shot (PS), 360 ton clamp, 710 x 710mm between tie bars, core pull, air blast, very good condition ACT NOW SAVE $20000 Save 15% Demo Videos Online WAS $85,000 + GST NOW $65,000 + GST • We will not be beaten on price • Easy terms available on most items • Hire purchase, lease and rental plans are available • Specialists in turn-key packages • Value-added after sales service and consulting • Australia’s largest range of New & Used equipment • Trade-ins are always considered • 100% Australian owned business 400mm swing over bed, 300mm max turning length, Fanuc OT control, bar feeder, Very good condition WAS $38,000 + GST NOW $26,000 + GST SAVE OVER 30% NEW METALMAX SB-4-2500 GUILLOTINE 4mm x 2500mm capacity, contoured finger guards, front sheet supports, 800mm backgauge, SIKO DRO, rapid blade gap adjustment WAS $15,950 + GST NOW $10,900 + GST Save Ove r1 Limited S 5% tock Available 55-61 Nissan Drive Dandenong, Victoria 3175 Tel: (03) 9706 8066 Fax: (03) 9706 8067 Email: sales@appliedmachinery.com.au www.appliedmachinery.com.au Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 39 Plastics Aussie made Flecknoe machines 600 little red races later and the industry are racing to Flecknoe for their equipment and expertise. It’s little wonder as Flecknoe makes the majority of their machines in Australia ensuring that local parts and service are readily available. uring Ausplas 2008, plastics industry exhibition, the Flecknoe stand was one of the most visited, during which they moulded and gave away upwards of 600 toy red car mouldings. Everyone at the show seemed to be carrying them. These models demonstrated the moulding capability of the fast, effective and reliable Flecknoe thermoforming machines. Flecknoe was awarded best stand at Ausplas in Melbourne during October 2008. Phil Kitney says that business since the show has been brisk. “Our thermoformers are installed across the country for the moulding of small to large parts,” he said. Flecknoe manufactures and distributes a large range of machinery and tools for all aspects of thermoforming and plastic fabrication. Flecknoe makes and sells thermoformers and vacuum fomers to form all types of materials and products. They also supply Thermwood 5-Axis CNC Routers for mould construction and part trimming. Onsrud cutters are used for all types of material machined on the CNC Routers. Warringah Plastics recently installed new Flecknoe equipment. “The equipment we chose was a 2009 Australian design and built Flecknoe thermoforming machine. As Australian manufacturers, we like dealing with fellow Australian manufacturers and Phil Kitney from Flecknoe understands thermoforming and can relate to what we need from our thermoforming equipment,” said Sam Santana, general manager, Warringah Plastics. However as a result of Ausplas a number of overseas visitors are showing considerable interest in the Australian made thermoformers culminating in sales to the USA. 40 The 1200 Flecknoe machine “The Australian Made logo is working for us too. Local manufacturers respect our built-in quality machines and are glad to support a local manufacturing supplier,” he added. Flecknoe’s common machine sizes include: l 800 X 600 commonly used for mouldings like the concrete pavers with the mould textured for concrete pavers. l 1500 X 900 typically for internal signage. l 2400 X 1200 ideally for external signage for advertising fast food outlets. March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology l 1200 X 800 and 1200 X 1200 ma- chines are best suited for the moulding of point of purchase signs. l 3000 X 2500 formers are generally selected for the moulding of large transport panels for buses and caravans, as an example. “One of our greatest strengths is that our machines are designed to reduce cycle times, minimise rejects and improve repeatability, leading to increased profits and international competitiveness for our customers,” said Kitney. “Our latest range of vacuum formers and thermformers over the past The Leading ERP Software for Manufacturers Where is my business going? Wherever your business is going, ECi M1 has the software to get you there. M1 has the answer. Get your answer NOW! www.ECiSolutions.com/M1Answer AUS: 1300 130 241 • NZ: 0800 441 186 www.ECiSolutions.com • ECiM1@ECiSolutions.com Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 41 ECi, M1 and the ECi Red Box logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of eCommerce Industries, Inc. All rights reserved. Plastics four years include the incorporation of SMC Pneumatics and inside each machine are quality SMC components precisely controlling and moving parts. This is the strength of Flecknoe,” he added. Manufacturers can quickly and easily change platen position to set up different sized moulds without operators having to crawl inside the machine to make changes. The pneumatic move provides greater speed, higher duty cycle with a secure lock into position and is faster and less dangerous for the operator. The new pneumatic system gives long-term trouble-free operation that adequately meets the demands of the industry. SMC ability to provide cylinders, pressure switches and other devices in suitable sizes without changing basic design elements has been beneficial in meeting customer requirements. Replacing old outdated machines with Flecknoe trouble free units has helped their customers to be more profitable and competitive, particularly important in these challenging economic times. Thermoformers Flecknoe, with technology partner Monark USA, is the first high-end manufacturer of cut-sheet thermoforming equipment, virtually 100% produced in Australia using agile, innovative Australian design concepts. Flecknoe's vast experience and Monark's diversified experience in the USA ensures stateof-the-art technology for Australian and Asian industries. Flecknoe can design and manufacture thermoforming processes and equipment with capacity for basic to advanced forming techniques. They can provide advice on: project viability; material selection and total process management, from a simple single station drape former to high speed twin sheet six station rotary thermoformer, incorporating PLC Control with HMI Interface and the accuracy of full infrared sensing. Vacuum formers The company says they offer the best and most cost-effective option to buying used, unwarranted machinery or rebuilding outdated machinery. 42 A motor vehicle dashboard moulded by Flexnoe They can design and manufacture vacuum forming equipment with capacity for basic to advanced forming techniques. Clamp frames Flecknoe machines are fitted with either aluminium extruded clamp frames or the heavy-duty pin bar design. Aluminium extrusion clamp frames are the standard on all of their small to medium machines ensuring lighter, easy to handle equipment. Pin bar clamp frames are used on larger or more specialised machines. The pin bar design has two major advantages: spring loaded pins and cam-lock mechanism. They are specialists in the design, manufacture and retro-fitting of aluminium extrusion and pin bar pneumatically operated clamp frames. CNC routers Flecknoe has supplied and installed Thermwood 5 Axis CNC Routers throughout Australasia including New Zealand, Singapore, China and Australia and has factory-trained specialists available to support any installation in any market. Five axis CNC Routers have become the accepted method of trimming three-dimensional plastic parts. CNC Routers increase productivity, reduce cost and improve quality. The only drawback has been that a decent machine has been expensive... until now! Thermwood specialises in three axis and five-axis CNC routers. It built the first CNC router in the world and has since spent millions of dollars developing the latest CNC router technology. Thermwood offers over 30 features and capabilities not available elsewhere. The five-axis offers full five-axis simultaneous motion, five-axis tool length compensation, constant tip speed and built-in CAD path generating capability. Thermwood offers two basic types of five-axis CNC March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology routers. The Model 67, a moving table, fixed gantry machine and the Model 70, a fixed table moving gantry machine. Programs developed off line with a CAD/CAM system are only as good as the ability of the router to execute them. The Model 67 is laser calibrated to assure the highest level of position accuracy. Laser alignment and calibration is generally reserved for multimillion dollar aerospace machines. 3D Printers Flecknoe is an Australasian distributor of Z Corporation 3D Printers. 3D Printers help users build speed and efficiency into their design process and the highest quality into their products. The printers are professional, complete physical modelling solutions delivering full-colour communication. What's more, they are fast, convenient and easy to operate, allowing users to accelerate the design process and get their products to market ahead of the competition. Users already know that speed is the most valuable element in the design and manufacturing process. Z Corp.'s 3D Printers deliver parts in 1-2 hours instead of days, fuelling immediate feedback and decision-making. This process acceleration will allow users to design and sell products more competitively. Flecknoe’s full-colour printing systems give engineers a clearer window into the design process. Colour conveys important information about parts, including engineering data, labelling, and highlighting and appearance simulation. This functionality gives designers the data they need to create and collaborate more effectively throughout the design process. Flecknoe Pty Ltd - 08 9354 9393 Email: flecknoeptyltd@bigpond.com SOSAugust_2:Layout 2 20/7/10 10:11 AM Page 1 Plastics Can plastics generate electricity? t's been said that if you build a better mousetrap the world will beat a path to your door. So what happens if you build a better light bulb? Or something that is not strictly speaking a light bulb, but provides illumination nonetheless? Something that can be applied to ceilings and walls to emit light, or even to roofs to generate electricity? Something made from plastic? This is the world of plastics electronics, an advanced field of polymer science that pundits say is on the verge of global commercialisation, based on groundbreaking work, much of which is being done in Australia. At the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Melbourne, theme leader for flexible electronics Dr Gerry Wilson sees applications like lighting and solar power as the stimulus for new manufacturing initiatives locally. "From the CSIRO's point of view, the reason we embarked on this four or five years ago was on the premise of what we could do to transform part of the manufacturing industry in Australia," Dr Wilson said. Plastics electronics applications being developed by the CSIRO are designed to enable existing manufacturers to "ease them into something in the future that will pretty much have no barriers to entry." Dr Wilson said a lot of the work in plastic electronics in recent years had been dominated by the development of so-called OLED screens, or Organic Light Emitting Diodes for use in high definition televisions and screens on mobile phones and E-readers and similar hand held devices. While OLED screens are already popular in mobile phones and in certain automotive applications, he said commercialisation of the supreme OLED application was close. "The Holy Grail of OLED, and it's not that far away, is a fully high definition television screen that you can roll up and put in your pocket," he said. Clearly, market applications like flexible hand held devices and cheap, easily applied solar cells underpin a market that looks set to grow exponentially. A December 2009 report titled "Plastic Electronics Strategy for Success: Realising the UK Potential" estimated that the global market for plastics electronics was valued at almost $2bn and could grow to $120bn by 2020. However the road ahead is not without potholes. Late last month Toshiba ditched plans for a factory that would have spat out 1.5 million Organic Light Emitting Diode (OLED) displays for mobile phones per month in favour of Liquid Crystal Displays (LCD). Choosing the right application is critical and it's a theme that's at the forefront of work being done by Dr David Jones of the University of Melbourne's Molecular Science and Biotechnology Institute. Dr Jones is working with industry through the Victorian Organic Solar Cell Consortium (VICOSC) on plasticised solar panels that can be affixed to roofing materials. "Our major industry partner is BlueScope Steel and they would obviously like the solar cells attached to its Colorbond roofing material when it is sold," he said. Dr Jones and the VICOSC partners are looking to make the process as easy as possible for industry to implement, just like his counterpart at the CSIRO. "They won't have to spend millions to build a new plant," Dr Wilson said. "If they have a high tech printing machine, they can do it." ...provides you with quality precision models using the latest technology in Rapid Prototyping and Colour 3D Printing methods. See your CAD files turned into static or working 3D models. Get your design out of your computer and into your hands in hours in full living colour. Whatever your requirements, have SOS Components provide you with the solution to shorten your time to market and keep you ahead of your competitors. SLA - Stereolithography SLS - Selective Laser Sintering 3D Printing Wax Printing Investment Casting FDM - Fused Deposition Modelling Vacuum Casting/Silicon Tooling Polyurethane Moulding CNC Machining Laser Scanning 3D Cad Design NEW ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY MANUFACTURING FACILITY Expansion enables us to offer the widest variety of In-House Rapid Prototyping solutions in Australia 429 Newman Road, Geebung QLD 4034 Ph: (07) 3363 4600 Fax: (07) 3865 3595 EMAIL: sales@3dprinting.com.au for quotes and enquiries Authorised Resellers for: ZCorporation 3D Printers and Materialise Software Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 43 Plastics Impregnating plastics with CO2 here can’t be many people who don’t believe that carbon dioxide is responsible for global warming. But the gas also has some positive characteristics. Researchers are now impregnating plastics with compressed CO2 in a process that could lead to new applications ranging from coloured contact lenses to bacteria-resistant door handles. CO2 is more than just a waste product. In fact, it has a variety of uses: the chemical industry makes use of this coluorless gas to produce urea, methanol and salicylic acid. Urea is a fertilizer, methanol is a fuel additive, and salicylic acid is an ingredient in aspirin. Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Environmental, Safety and Energy Technology UMSICHT in Oberhausen Germany are pursuing a new idea by testing how carbon dioxide can be used to impregnate plastics. At a temperature of 30.1 degrees Celsius and a pressure of 73.8 bar, CO2 goes into a supercritical state that gives the gas solvent-like properties. In this state, it can be introduced into polymers, or act as a “carrier” in which dyes, additives, medical compounds and other substances can be dissolved. “We pump liquid carbon dioxide into a high-pressure container with the plastic components that are to All-electric injection moulding machines improve efficiencies A continually growing Renewable Energy industry is increasing demand for plastic components necessary in applications ranging from wind power generation to solar cells. However, producing these components with hydraulic injection moulding machines often consumes large amounts of energy. Not only does this counteract the purpose of building renewable energy products, it also presents high costs for the moulder, which are in turn passed along to the customer. Andy Stirn explains. new injection moulding technology offers a much more energy-efficient, cost-saving means of producing plastic parts. All-electric machines can optimise the moulding process for the highest part productivity, quality and operational profitability – all while using significantly less energy. One machine in particular, the PowerPAK from Milacron, is more than 50-60% more energy efficient than competitive hydraulic machines. The machine has the following sustainable benefits for processors: • Energy efficiency • Clean operations. • Low carbon footprint versus many competitive models. • Lower dB levels. • Lower operation costs. • Lower installation costs. • Local service support and extensive parts support through SERVTEK. Flexibility of Options The PowerPAK is an electric-based machine with selectable axis configuration (SAC). The new model is available as an all-electric on all four machine axes (clamp, injection, ejection, extruder), a configuration offering the highest efficiency. However, for certain applications, the machine can be configured to include a combination of the ejector and injection axes as hydraulic. The clamp and extruder remains ‘all electric’ on all model configurations. The final design 44 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology of the machine is based upon the customer application, offering processors huge flexibility with machine design. Initial models are available in sizes of 440 and 550 US tons of clamping force, and Milacron has plans to also offer models up to 1,125 tons. The machine is especially well suited for high-speed/thin-wall applications. It offers optimum reliability from high performance actuators, eliminating expensive servo valves & oil contamination. It can be used with a wide range of shot sizes, extruder sizes, pressures & injection rates. It’s also stack mould capable. PowerPAK has a greaseless tie bar design, using a linear bearing guidance system with an optional greaseless stack mould centre carrier system. Its ‘walk-up’ design allows easy access to high cavitation tooling. Greenmoore Enterprises Pty. Ltd. - 03 973-80200 moorehj@greenmoore.com Plastics be impregnated, then steadily increase the temperature and the pressure until the gas reaches the supercritical state. When that state is reached, we increase the pressure further. At 170 bar, pigment in powder form dissolves completely in the CO2 and then diffuses with the gas into the plastic. The whole process only takes a few minutes. When the container is opened, the gas escapes through the surface of the polymer but the pigment stays behind and cannot subsequently be wiped off,” explains Dipl.-Ing. Manfred Renner, a scientist at Fraunhofer UMSICHT. In tests, the researchers have even managed to impregnate polycarbonate with nanoparticles that give it antibacterial properties. E-coli bacteria, placed on the plastic’s surface in the institute’s own high-pressure laboratory, were killed off completely – a useful function that could be applied to door handles impregnated with the same nanoparticles. Tests conducted with silica and with the anti-inflammatory active pharmaceutical ingredient flurbiprofen were also successful. “Our process is suitable for impregnating partially crystalline and amorphous polymers such as nylon, TPE, TPU, PP and polycarbonate,” states Renner, “but it cannot be applied to crystalline polymers.” The process holds enormous potential, as carbon dioxide is non-flammable, non-toxic and inexpensive. Whilst it shows solvent-like properties, it does not have the same harmful effects on health and on the environment as the solvents that are used in paints, for example. Painted surfaces are also easily damaged and are not scratch-resistant. Conventional processes for impregnating plastics and giving them new functions have numerous drawbacks. Injection moulding, for instance, does not permit the introduction of heat-sensitive substances such as fire retardants or UV stabilisers. Many dyes change colour; purple turns black. “Our method allows us to customise high-value plastic components and lifestyle products such as mobile phone shells. The best thing about it is that the colour, additive or active ingredient is introduced into layers near the surface at temperatures far below the material’s melting point, in an environmentally friendly manner that does away with the need for aggressive solvents ,” says Renner. The process could, for example, be used to dye contact lenses – and lenses could even be enriched with pharmaceutical compounds that would then be slowly released to the eye throughout the day, representing an alternative to repeated applications of eye drops for the treatment of glaucoma. According to Renner, this new impregnation method is suitable for a broad range of new applications. Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft +49 89 1205-0 www.fraunhofer.de Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 45 Be one of the first to see what’s new in Advanced Manufacturing Connect with large numbers of key industry contacts in one place Learn about the latest products and services designed to help grow your business Combining with National Manufacturing Week and ausplas for australia’s largest ever manufacturing industry event Find out more, and register to visit at austechexpo.com.au oNliNe Media paRtNeR Media paRtNeR austRaliaN MaNuFaCtuRiNg teCHNologY 46 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Austech 2011 australia’s premier advanced Manufacturing & Machine tool exhibition 24th – 27th May 2011 Melbourne Convention & exhibition Centre south Wharf, Melbourne RN8919 suppoRtiNg paRtNeRs & spoNsoRs Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 47 Cutting Tools Innovations for turning exotic materials The turning of stainless steels, superalloys and other ‘difficult’ materials grows less difficult all the time, as a result of equipment improvements and refinements in High Pressure Coolant (HPC) machining practices. It can become easier for you as well. In many such applications with flood or low pressure coolant and advanced tooling, throughput gains of 20% or more are reported, together with a doubling of edge life. In addition, when you turn the pressure up to the 70-300 bar range, you increase potential gains by another big step. In fact, with proper HPC practices and tooling, you can routinely expect order-of magnitude gains in edge life and/or hourly output. irst let’s take a brief look at some recent key improvements for turning the exotic superalloys, stainless steels and titanium materials. l A drop-in in retooling of a rough turning operation on 316L stainless steel extended tool life from 4 to nearly 10 parts per edge, despite running the part 20% faster. The insert which provided the advantage was coated with the new ISCAR 6015 grade. The job ran with conventional flood coolant. l Likewise, turning of hard superalloys has been improved with a new ISCAR IW7 whisker-reinforced ceramic insert that performs well even in roughing applications. Indeed, these inserts have enabled eight- to ten-fold improvements in roughing and semi-finishing removal rates compared with carbide inserts. The new ceramic insert has withstood cutting speeds high enough to heat and soften hard materials such as Stellite, and performed reliably enough to permit unattended turning of superalloys. given the innovative SUMO TEC post coating treatment, pioneered by Iscar, which has proven to improve performance more than 30% over all grades and applications. Following soon will be an IC6025 grade, with the same features and geometry suited for M15-25 conditions (roughing/interrupted cuts). See figure 1 Controlling heat, managing chips Such gains stem mainly from better control of heat and chip formation in these gummy, long-chipping nickel- and cobalt-based alloys, made possible through advanced insert design. Even without HPC, the driving strategy in insert design for these materials is to provide a very sharp edge, slippery, heat resistant coatings and aggressive chipbreakers. That combination quickly breaks up the chip and propels it away from the insert and cutting zone before it can adhere to the cutting edge, overheat the insert or clutter up the tool-workpiece interface with chips that create re-cutting conditions. Remember, chips can be much harder and more brittle than the base metal, compounding the damage caused by re-cutting. With HPC in the picture, coolant (boiling point 350o C.) remains in the liquid phase, thereby maintaining its lubricity, cooling power and chip-flushing capacity. Moreover, the flow rate under true HPC conditions is high enough to create a ‘hydraulic wedge’ in the cutting zone, significantly reducing friction and all its consequences. Tools for the times Now let’s look more closely at the new tooling that makes turning difficult materials less difficult. Iscar’s IC 6015 insert features the aggressive M-style chipformers and a SUMO TEC CVD coating that improves flaking and chipping resistance in M 10-20 cutting conditions (continuous cuts/finishing cuts/stable conditions). The entire insert is 48 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Fig 1: The new IC6025 grade, is suitable for M15-25 conditions (roughing/interrupted cuts). HELITURN and HELITURN LD inserts bring the highpositive, helical-edge, high-feed, double-sided benefits to turning of stainless steel, nickel based alloys and titanium. The LD versions feature the sharp edge and aggressive HM and M4MW chipformers that make such a difference in gummy materials. The helical edge creates a more gentle entry and exit and helps reduce breakout at those points in a cut. Throughput and edge life aside, their high rake angle has also proven to reduce power requirements by 10%. Unlike most ceramic inserts, the new Iscar IW7 whiskered ceramic grade handles roughing, semi-finishing cuts on superalloys. The extra-hard basic alumina insert provides extreme wear resistance in hard materials, and the SiC whiskers add the shock resistance. The insert can withstand machining heat well enough to last at speeds that soften the metal in the cutting zone. Turbomachinery manufacturers report substantial improvements with the IW7 over other ceramics in Inconel 718 and Waspalloy. See figure 2 Cutting tools lead to higher productivity HPC tools are indispensable to truly optimal performance; standard through tool coolant systems simply are not adequate. The main differences are twofold: (1) where and how precisely they pinpoint the stream as it leaves the tool and (2) orifice diameter to deliver the correct pressure at the exit point. It is like the difference between true power washing and spraying with a garden hose. See figure 3 Fig 2: Turbomachinery manufacturers report substantial improvements with the IW7 over other ceramics in Inconel 718 and Waspalloy. HPC While we have all heard about the promise of high pressure coolant (HPC) machining, we may have shied away from it because of the added equipment cost and uncertainties of an “untried” technology. Let’s take a look at these issues: Untried? The technique is well proven among the aerospace, powergen and turbomachinery industries. On one hand, experienced practitioners report two- and three-fold gains in machining rate with no loss in edge life. Others mainly concerned about edge life, report up to sevenfold improvements at equal removal rates. These are actual results on ID and OD work on titanium and Inconel turbomachinery parts, titanium airframe parts and a variety of stainless steel components. Added equipment cost and availability? This was true in the early years, but not now. When first introduced in the ‘50s, there were no spindles fast enough or coolant pumps powerful enough to make the process workable on the shop floor. However, today most machine tool providers routinely offer optional high speed spindles and high pressure pumps. High Speed Machining is more the norm than the exception, in industries that must contend with stainless steel and superalloys. HPC-ready tooling Now “HPC-ready” tooling has become more widely available. While providing the geometries and physical properties tailored to particular difficult-to-machine materials, true HPC tooling such as the ISCAR JETHP line also features the means to deliver coolant through the tool and discharges it in a tight, laser-like stream, aimed directly into the cutting and secondary shear zones. This is critical. There it cools, lubricates, creates the hydraulic wedge effect and quenches the chips so they break up into compact, manageable curls. On its passage from reservoir to cutting zone, the coolant also lowers the temperature of tool and insert. True HPC tooling is specifically designed for 70-300 bar pressures. Fig3: HPC tooling such as the ISCAR JETHP line features the means to deliver coolant through the tool and discharge it directly into the cutting and secondary shear zones. Benefiting from experience Experienced HPC practitioners have learned enough about the process to provide tips for newcomers. Here are a few to help you get started on the right foot: l Use carbide tooling. Ceramic and CBN tools do not deliver the same degree of improvement in the HPC realm. l Direct the coolant through the tool. Don’t take a “flood coolant approach” with a HPC coolant stream. You’ll just make a mess, create an employee hazard and miss out on the main benefits of the practice in the first place. l If you need more cooling power (i.e. the coolant is vaporizing or chips aren’t flushing well enough), turn up the flow rate, not the pressure. This way is far more cost effective. l How to estimate coolant requirements? A good rule of thumb is 0.5gpm/horsepower. For example, a cut requiring 10hp will need 5gpm to achieve the high pressure effect. If you are still having difficulty turning those materials, look around. Better answers, including today’s HPC machining, are more readily available for the asking. Your competitor may have found them already. ISCAR’s many solutions for handling difficult-to-machine materials can improve your productivity in a big way. The key can be found by contacting ISCAR’s experts, who will help you to with the right machining strategy for your specific application. Iscar - 02 8848 3500 www.iscar.com.au Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 49 Cutting Tools Enormous savings parting-off At Leser GmbH & Co KG, a component is parted off every 15 seconds, making parting-off one of the most important machining processes. As part of a streamlining project, the production managers were on the look out for new, more efficient parting tools offering a high level of process reliability – Walter Cut made the grade. afety valves are required for any application in which liquids and gases are held under pressure, such as in the chemical and petrochemical industries. Their purpose is to protect mankind, nature and the installation. Among the leading manufacturers of this type of equipment is Leser GmbH & Co. KG. The Hamburg-based company has seen rising demand for a number of years now. Standardisation measures are also fuelling an increase in the quantities of many individual parts. A few years ago, Leser undertook to meet this growth by modernising its machinery pool at its Hohenwestedt production location, an hour's drive to the north of Hansestadt. The inner workings of safety valves consist mostly of rotationally symmetrical parts, such as spindles, inlet bodies, spring plates, seat bushings, vent caps, etc. For this reason, Leser invested mainly in new lathes. This brought with it an important improvement: complete machining. Turned parts that used to be processed on various machines and repeatedly clamped and unclamped are now produced in a single clamping arrangement. This saves an enormous amount of time. The company currently operates twelve high-performance lathe centres with bar feed and automatic parts handling. After the machinery pool had been revamped, the production managers set their sights on other cost drivers. They recognised above all that their tooling inventory was in need of optimising and initiated a project to reduce tool costs. With their projected scale of savings, the valve specialists had set themselves an ambitious target. To meet this target, it would be necessary to improve machining processes and introduce new high-performance and longer-lasting tools where needed. As most components are produced from bar stock, parting-off was also on the list of processes under examination. A component is parted off every 15 50 A component is parted off every 15 seconds at Leser seconds. For maximum cost efficiency, the cutting tool material, geometry, workpiece material and cutting data must all be perfectly matched. In the past, processes would often be interrupted by premature tool wear – a major problem for a modern production plant. “We have a three-shift system in place. Our 12 lathes are operated by only four or five employees. To be able to produce without any loss of time, we have to rely on tools that offer maximum process reliability,” stresses Jochen Lindemann, Manager of the cost-cutting project. Universal solution for the parting-off process At first, a number of trials were conducted using familiar tools. Jochen Lindemann then discovered Walter Cut, the solution from Tübingen-based Walter AG. “The information about the tooling system and the manufacturer's cost-effectiveness calculations made us want to know more,” recalls the Project Manager. “So we decided to put those claims to the test.” March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology At LESER, trials with new tools and possible conversions take place in accordance with a fixed schedule. A viability appraisal is followed by a two-stage trial phase consisting of quick and real-time testing to observe how the theory works in practice. If both stages are passed successfully, a “phase-out strategy” for the legacy tools is “organised”. This procedure prevents different tooling systems for one and the same purpose remaining in service for any significant period of time. Benefit: handling in production is standardised, and handling errors are minimised. The results of the par ting-off tests were unequivocal. Walter Cut emerged as the new benchmark. Due to the substantial cutting depths, the company opted for parting blades for single-edged cutting plates from the FX line having an insert width of 3 mm (see photo). The original two-sided blades were shortened on one side, which enabled them to be clamped in the existing adapters. As almost all parts at Leser are made from stainless Cutting Typical components for safety valves parted off bar stock using Walter Cut. The material is usually stainless steel 1.4404. Photo: Läpple steels 1.4404 and 1.4122, the project managers decided in favour of the particularly tough and reliable WSP43 cutting material grade from the PVDTiger•tec range. “This cutting tool material is suitable for material groups ISO-P, ISO-M and ISO-S,” explains Sven-Ole Berg, technical consultant at Walter. “It can therefore be used in any application.” As a result, the machinist gets by with the one cutting material grade even when materials other than 1.4404 and 1.4122 are being processed. The same applies to the selected geometry. This produces perfectly formed chips in all situations, which is a fundamental prerequisite for high process reliability. Since then, the valve specialists in Hohenwestedt have switched over completely to the Tübingen tool manufacturer's parting-off system, leaving behind those excessively long parting blades. For shallower cutting depths of down to no more than 24mm, produc- tion planning is instead putting its faith in the GX line of double-sided parting inserts with monoblock toolholders. Higher cutting data and increased tool life quantities The high-performance Tiger•tec cutting tool material made it possible to increase cutting speed Vc from 120m/ minute to 150m/minute and feed f from 0.12mm to 0.15mm. This gave programmers quite a bit of work to do. Around 600 NC programs had to be revised. Good news, though, for machine operators: despite the higher cutting data, tool life quantities have increased from around 50 to 70 parts. Indeed, for the machining department, the cost-cutting project has fully paid off, not only in terms of the overall result but also in respect of parting-off as an individual operation. According to LESER, the original savings target was met and significantly exceeded. With approximately 20% of the overall ratio, the parting-off share turned out tools to be surprisingly high. The amount includes savings from shorter production times as well as from increased tool life quantities. Parting-off therefore belongs to the group of individual processes with the most savings potential. The greatest cost reduction was delivered by an improvement in drilling and boring operations.Close behind was the parting-off process together with threading and deburring by milling pin. The result reaffirms the significance of an often overlooked operation. Tools are just one side of the story, practical support of the machinists is another. At Walter, great importance is also placed on the latter. The availability of technical consultants is a key aspect of this philosophy. In addition, Walter's Product Management has devised something quite special: a series of pocket-sized user guides for individual processes, such as parting-off, grooving and recessing. “The handy user guide is always within reach. It's a welcome source of reference if ever we have questions about a particular aspect of the technology,” confirms Carsten Trede, responsible for the issuing and precalibration of tools. The guide is essentially a catalogue and technical manual in one. The technical manual part is designed to answer whatever questions the practicioner may have. It contains a wealth of information on topics such as cutting data, chip formation, wear detection, etc. The data it contains are up-to-date with current engineering practices. Walter www.walter-tools.com www.LESER.com Safety valves made in Germany Walter's FX grooving inserts, made from the WSP43 PVD-Tiger•tec® cutting tool material, produce perfectly wound chips. Leser GmbH & Co. KG was originally founded in 1818 as a brass foundry. The company initially supplied general mechanical components for assembly in final machinery. In 1885, it produced its first safety valves for steam boilers. In the 1970s, it began to specialise in this product area. Industrial demand for safety valves accelerated over time, while the products themselves underwent continuous development. Since then, Leser has become the largest safety valve manufacturer in Europe. With subsidiaries in Brazil, France, Poland, Singapore, Bahrain, India and the USA, Leser is a globally active concern and staffs more than 550 employees. The company has its headquarters in Hamburg, Germany. At the Hohenwestedt location to the north of Hamburg, the firm operates a modern production facility with 230 workers. The product range currently offers 38 models of safety valve in the diameter range DN10 to DN400 or 12mm to 406mm. Annual production has reached 90,000 units. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 51 Cutting Tools 40 years in the business in Australia Companies operating in everything from airframes to coal mining, from engines to oil wells and from turbochargers to construction recognise Kennametal for extraordinary contributions to their value chains. In fiscal year 2009, customers bought approximately $2bn worth of products and services from Kennametal —delivered by nearly 12,000 employees doing business in more than 60 countries—with more than 50% of these revenues coming from outside North America. AMT talks to John Chang, Vice President of Sales, and Managing Director of Kennametal Inc. for the Asia region about Kennametal’s plans for the region and its latest developments. By Martin Oakham ohn, what are your dominant sectors here in Australia? “Kennametal started its business here around 40 years ago serving primarily the mining industry. “We have a fairly balanced portfolio, but it’s basically split up into two businesses, ‘infrastructure business’ comprising ‘earthworks and energy’ segments and our ‘industrial business’ which is primarily metalworking and includes transportation, aerospace and general industrial. The part we don’t hear so much about in Australia is the earthworks and energy business which is actually a big piece of our portfolio – we manufacture a large number of wear protection products for the process industries, and are also very active in the power generation industry – in fact, anywhere where there are highly corrosive environments and productivity is critical. A quarter of our global revenue comes our earthworks business, which is predominantly underground mining and In his role, John Chang leads the sales resources of the Infrastructure and Industrial Groups to maximise the company’s profitable growth through delivering innovative products and solutions to the aerospace, energy, earthworks, transportation and general industrial customers in Asia. He is also responsible for providing strategic leadership and building the in-region infrastructure to support the accelerated growth expectations in Asia’s emerging economies. construction. We serve the vast majority of Australian mines”, answers John Chang. “We deliver productivity to our customers seeking peak performance in demanding environments by providing innovative custom and standard wearresistant solutions.” As an example, John explained that Kennametal manufactures the large A quarter of Kennametal’s global revenue comes from its earthworks business 52 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology tooling drums used to cut coal from the walls of a coal mine. “These drums can be as big as 3.5m in diameter – the largest we have in Australia is 2.5m and that’s determined by the composition of the coal content.” Chang explains, the deeper the coal the more hard and dense it becomes, so you need improved higher quality tooling and also in consideration for safety. Chang explained that the parent rock becomes very difficult to differentiate from the dense coal, and if hit without some form of coolant can spark igniting the inevitable methane gas which exists as a by-product of any organic process. Chang further explained that this was what happened in the recent New Zealand coal accident. “We are bringing in a new technology for underground mining that produces a very fine water spray at the cutting edge – very similar our ‘beyond blast ‘ metal cutting insert technology that we have recently launched. Naturally, this attenuates any sparks and prevents the chance of explosions Storage Systems STORAGE CABINET $250 (T774) T774 • 900 x 450 x 900mm (WxDxH) • 2 x moveable shelf with 150kg load capacity • Key lockable TOOLING CABINET $750 (T775) STORAGE CABINET $350 (T790) INDUSTRIAL STORAGE CABINET $630 (T762) • 886 x 650 x 1405mm(WxDxH) • 1 x square hole panel • 2 x louvered panels • 3 x shelves • Double sided with handle for easy movability • Large base for extra storage • 900 x 450 x 1800mm (LxWxH) • 2 drawers, 4 shelves • 3-point key lock on doors • Drawer 1 - 100mm deep • Drawer 2 - 200mm deep • 100kg drawer load capacity Optional accessories available • 900 x 450 x 900mm (WxDxH) • 75kg per draw capacity • 6 drawers • Includes draw safety interlock T775 HEAVY DUTY WORK BENCH $320 (A420) A426 TOOLING CABINET $750 (T770) • 565 x 653 x 1200mm (WxDxH) • 100kg per draw capacity • 7 drawers • Single key lock design for safe storage • Heavy duty work bench • 1800 x 750 x 900mm table (LxWxH) • 1000kg load capacity • 2mm high density laminate on top surface • 50mm thick chipboard with bullnosed PVC edge • Screw out adjustable feet TOOLING CABINET A420 BACKING PANEL $180 (A426) • 1733 x 205 x 825mm (WxDxH) • Top back panels - square holes suits hooks • Bottom back panels - louvered slots suits plastic buckets • Bottom storage tray shelf - for additional storage • 3 vertical supports - with adjustable clamps Optional accessories available to mount to work bench 540 (T764) $ • 565 x 580 x 750mm (WxDxH) • 100kg per draw capacity • 6 drawers • Single key lock design for safe storage • Top drawer comes with different size plastic boxes, all other drawers include moveable steel dividers T770 T764 TOOLING CABINET $750 (T768) WORK BENCH • 723 x 653 x 954mm (WxDxH) • 100kg per draw capacity • 6 drawers • Single key lock design for safe storage • 2 fixed & 2 swivel ø125mm caster wheels • 2000 x 640 x 870mm (LxWxH) • 3 drawers • Huge shelf compartment • Powder coated quality finish 360 (A380) $ TOOLING CABINET $630 (T766) INDUSTRIAL TOOL CHEST $430 (T720) • 565 x 653 x 954mm (WxDxH) • 6 drawers • Single key lock design for safe storage • 2 fixed & 2 swivel ø125mm caster wheels • 100kg per draw capacity • 1051 x 445 x 552mm (LxWxH) • Includes drawer liners • Key Lockable • Top Lid has 2 x gas struts • Ball bearing slides • 8 Drawers T768 WORK BENCH $320 (A383) INDUSTRIAL ROLLER CABINET $590 (T724) • 1370 x 510 x 890mm (LxWxH) • Heavy duty steel construction • 5 drawers • 2 x shelf compartments • Powder coated quality finish • 1067 x 458 x 1007mm (LxWxH) • Includes drawer liners • Key Lockable • Ball bearing slides • 7 Drawers T720 T724 SIDE LOCKER 270 (T726) T726 $ • 425 x 460 x 1390mm (LxWxH) • 2 drawers • 1 shelf 100% Australian owned Est. 1930 NSW QLD 1/2 Windsor Rd, Northmead 626 Boundary Rd, (02) 9890 9111 Coopers Plains (07) 3274 4222 VIC WA 1 Fowler Rd, 41-43 Abernethy Rd, (03) 9212 4422 (08) 9373 9999 Dandenong www.machineryhouse.com.au Belmont Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 Prices & specifications are subject to change without notification & are valid until 31-03-11. All prices Exclude GST. 53 1_AMTIL_010311 “Setting the standard in quality & value” Cutting Tools – so our big focus is always on safety.” Chang then explained that the safety philosophy and focus goes right across the entire company. A Global Strategy “Our focus is on our end users and what their needs are. In terms of our operations here, we are primarily a sales and support operation. We don’t have any manufacturing facility in Australia, but we do have a few suppliers that we work with primarily on larger components like mining and construction materials, where it’s too large for us to ship back outside for reconditioning rework.” “In the last two or three years, we have focused on a strategy of moving the centre of gravity outside of North America – we have a large presence in Europe and over 50 manufacturing plants around the world. From a production and manufacturing perspective, around 50% of our business by revenue is in the Americas and around a third is in Europe. North America is our strongest market by volume, but the fastest growing region in the world is right here in Australasia. We have five manufacturing facilities in Asia, three of which are in China, and one huge one in Bangalore. We also have a facility that manufactures surface finishing solutions just outside Tokyo in Japan. So under Kennametal’s leadership in the USA – we are much more global in thinking and are paying a lot more attention to the emerging markets and this part of the world.” “When we look at the market potential in this country, in just surface mining alone, it’s a $2bn market. With that comes a number of other industries that are going to benefit. One of which would be rail. We have a lot of potential customers to add to our existing The ‘Beyond Blast’ platform represents a significant step forward in tooling development. base working in related sectors.” By this John means power generation, renewables, aerospace etc. The Boeing 787 itself will have a third of its production in Asia – we have a lot of customers cutting titanium etc. We are also developing solutions for composites, for example our orbital tool.” Kennametal's approach to hole-making in composite machining is based on a partnership with Novator AB (Spanga, Sweden). Here, after creating a small hole in the stack layer, a "TwinSpin" spindle revolves the orbital milling tool to expand the hole cleanly, without delamination. “You can even drill a wing assembly in place without the risk of swarf contamination into the fuel system for example.” I expressed my appreciation of the ‘Beyond Blast’ range of tooling which was first launched at IMTS 2010 and asked John to tell me a little about it. “The Beyond Blast platform represents By channeling coolant through the insert and spraying it directly under the chip you are getting the maximum cooling effect right where it is needed most 54 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology a significant step forward in tooling development. Like all such developments, it is the result of many dedicated people in many specialties: materials science, mechanical engineering, powerful CAD modelling and sophisticated CNC controls. For example, an insert is basically mounted onto a daisy wheel cutter type, with the coolant coming up through the insert so that it blasts right up under the chip, keeping the cutting edge much cooler than it could by simply spraying coolant at the cutting edge from above the chip. On traditional setups, the chip simply carries most of the coolant away with it. By channeling coolant through the insert and spraying it directly under the chip you are getting the maximum cooling effect right where it is needed most,ensuring better cutting performance through more efficient coolant delivery, heat transfer, lubricity, and chip control.” In addition, coolant only comes out on the edge or quadrant doing the cutting. Inserts remain indexable for maximum use. When future histories of tooling development and manufacturing technology are written, I’m sure this will stand out as a significant milestone. “When we launched it at IMTS it was a big buzz. At Jimtof, distributors were lining up ready to place orders. Of course we are in the trial mode at this point, but so far it’s been very good. We’ve been trialing primarily with titanium because of the growth of its use in the aerospace sector. If too much heat travels back into the Performance Unequalled... with chatter-free milling Performance Unequalled... The Harmony range of endmills represents world’s latest technologies to provide increases in both performance and tool life. The key to successful milling is to minimize or eliminate the harmonic vibration produced in the cutting action. The Harmony Endmill overcomes vibration, through the latest technologies in tool engineering: - Premium Grade Carbide - AlCrN Coating - 35/38º Variable Helix - 45º Corner Chamfering - Gash grind of the endteeth - Post grind treatment of cutting edges The Bottom Line For You: • Longer tool life • Improved surface finish • Increased productivity • Reduced production costs endmills for an on-site demonstration contact Sutton Tools on 1800 335 350 100% Australian Owned www.sutton.com.au Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 55 Cutting Tools component itself it creates an issue with grain structure. The airline industry in particular cannot afford this as it makes the material more brittle leading it to fail under cyclic performance”, adds Chang. “When we do strategic planning we tend to look out for the trends – for example, there has been a heightened interest in clean energy – this includes fuel efficient aircraft engines, clean coal technology, nuclear energy, wind and solar energy, hybrid cars and environmentally friendly aircraft (defined as reduced carbon emissions per passenger) – all leading to opportunities that we need to get in front of because they often require new materials, new technologies, new applications and operating environments. Titanium is a good example of this, so are composites.” says Chang. “When we design new products, we also try to cannibalise them ourselves. We believe that if we don’t continually improve tool life in excess of 25%, someone else will come and eat our lunch – in our industry if it's only 10% better it’s not worth our customers looking at.” I understand that you have a structured distribution network branching out from Singapore which feeds warehouses in strategic locations around Australia, but can you tell me if you are planning to expand your supply chains in the near future? “Part of the challenge we have is that we have over 80,000 customers in the world, so not every customer will have the same requirements - obviously we don’t stock everything in our warehouses all at once. Sometimes, if we have a distribution partner, they will carry strategic inventory so that they can operate effectively – they then back fill to replace the stock. We also have our supply chain tooling management system, ToolBOSS, which is a tooling dispenser, much like a Coca-Cola dispensing machine that resides at the customers’ premises.” The ToolBOSS system integrates with a company’s supply-chain service to cut tooling inventory, decrease spending on tooling, reduce administrative costs, and gain continuous improvements by gathering and analysing tool usage data. 56 Better cutting performance can be achieved through more efficient coolant delivery, heat transfer, lubricity, and chip control. Kennametal manufactures the large tooling drums used to cut coal from the walls of a coal mine. “We have the capability to retrieve the information wirelessly for input into an electronic ordering system. So not only does it provide timely tool availability, it also gives a good measurement of utilisation and shift productivity. You can also match tool usage to the number of components machined to determine where, if any, your issues lie. We can also use that information to come in and optimise your production using our six sigma and lean tools. In fact, we have customers that have outsourced all their tooling management to us. We get paid on a basis of the number of components they produce. We become involved at the design stage, optimising a customer’s tooling as they are developing new products. The more we understand about the customer’s needs - the capability of its machine tools, coolant pressure, fixtures rigidity etc., the more we are able to design great tooling packages and optimise their machining process. “Naturally, this philosophy becomes most effective in large production environments such as automotive, aerospace and wind energy, to name just a few. March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology “We focus on R&D even during downturns -we are constantly bringing new products and new platforms to the ‘Industrial’ market -not only in milling, holemaking and turning portfolios, but also our systems. We are currently reorganising all the brands that we have purchased over the years and are rationalising these so that we have just two brands, Kennametal and Widia - you will see more in the coming months about the complete Widia portfolio.” Just to finish up, can you tell me what you feel Kennametal brings to the table that other tooling companies cannot? “At the heart of it, our world-class team and the customer-centred innovation they drive set us apart. When we look at our technical differentiators, we value ourselves in our core development – we are a material-science company in terms of our proprietary designs, the powders that we produce the processes that we have and the technical expertise that goes with it. We have an innovation group taking care of coatings, insert shape, density etc. We are constantly and systematically pushing the boundaries to advance ourselves and also pride ourselves on our ability to apply the tools in the field. Further, we have a focus around customers, we strategically plan for the future, keeping abreast of industry trends, and how these translate into customer needs. We also have a focus around lean, and productivity. We believe that in order for us to provide the productivity our customers need, we must practice that in our own facilities”, concludes Chang. www.kennametaI.com T1500A – SUMITOMO’S next generation cermet grade for finishing that will make heads turn! Developed with the new technology of “MIXED GRAIN” structure introducing composite materials for optimum wear and fracture resistance, this grade is a performer like no other Cermets. T1500A you will achieve LONGER TOOL LIFE WITH HIGH WEAR AND TOUGHNESS, RESULTING IN REDUCED COSTS. “A FINISH YOU WILL NOT BELIEVE” NSW Toll Free 1300 307 099 www.seicarbide.com VIC 03 9548 8516 SA 0418 826 155 QLD 0418 732 729 Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 57 Cutting Tools Improved portable hole-making in composites With portable drilling using hand-held tools representing about a third of composite holemaking applications in the aerospace industry, it is an area where continuous improvement make interesting pay-backs. Cutting tools play an increasingly decisive role in the strive for better results, performance and economics in this type of machining, which is dominated by variations. Developments over time in engineered drills and recent innovations have led to new possibilities with a standard programme of tools. By Christer Richt p pl ic a t io n s i nvolv i n g drilling in composite and stacked materials are dominated by large numbers of holes needed for bolts and rivets in the components and structures for aircrafts. Being hand-held and operated directly by an operator means that these operations present certain challenges. The very nature of operations with portable tools leave them prone to some instability and even inconsistency. The performance of the equipment and tools being used as well as the operator experience directly affect the quality of holes and productivity. If hole-making with hand-held tools is hampered by grab effect from the drill and a high thrust force is needed to penetrate the hole, then levels of quality, efficiency and operator fatigue will be affected negatively. If un-addressed, hole exits may have unacceptable burrs and separation of the bottom material layer as well as poorly cut fibres through the hole. Poor cutting action and feed variation lead to operators having to concentrate more on countering the effects of the portable tool and be more likely to make mistakes with scrap as a result. Hole quality Hole quality in carbon fibre reinforced plastics (CFRP), the most common form of composites in aerospace, is usually defined according to a number of limits. These are usually some of the following : dimensional and ovality tolerance, surface finish and burr-formation, straightness and centreline perpendicularity, barrelling and bell-mouthing. When stacked with aluminium or titanium, effective chip evacuation by the cutting tool is an important factor as metal chips can damage the hole surface. The challenge of achieving satisfactory quality consistency then also has to be combined with achieving good operator security and last, but not least, with competitive manufacturing cost. The thickness of CFRP-materials is comparatively small requiring short holes in either woven or uni-directional structures. Typical demands include surface requirements within 58 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Ra 4.8 microns, delamination of less than 1mm over the diameter and no splintering. When stacked, Ra of less than 3.2 microns is usually demanded with Ra 1.6 in the metal part of the hole. Hole tolerances vary between plus/minus 0.02mm to 0.04mm and no metal-chip erosion on the CFRP-part is allowed. Hole tolerances smaller than plus/minus 0.025mm usually needs a reaming pass. Broad influence of cutting tools When neither CNC-machinery or power-feed equipment is used, operators need to rely on their skills and the performance of the hand-held tool to stay wihin the limits of hole-quality and the demand for number of holes drilled per day. In these applications, the hand-held tool is greatly affected by how well the cutting tool functions. Cutting action, size and direction of cutting forces, possible cutting data as well as achievable tool-life are cutting tool factors which very much determine the quality and economic outcome. With regard to the manufacturing economics of these operations, there are a number of factors that will affect how competitive the manufacturing will turn out to be : time taken to drill a hole, quality consistency, whether a one-shot or a two-shot operation is needed, drilling and reaming and also tool cost and the option re-grinding So, how does the cutting tool affect or even determine outcome seen from hole-quality results, operator facilitation and manufacturing economics? Recent cutting tool developments by Sandvik Coromant teamed with Precorp have resulted in a new range of standard drills, reamers and countersinks to effectively make the most common bolt and rivet holes in the aerospace industry. These tool developments are solutions for composites based on long-standing experience in the industry. The success with engineered tools, as well as developments to establish the existing programme of standard tools for hole-making, edge and surface machining, have helped to form the new 452-range. The cutting action of the new drills directly determine how clean fibres are cut and consequently that of any occurence of residual fibres in the hole. The shearing action has also been Cutting tools CoroDrill 452.4 drill for composites. CoroDrill 452.1 engineered drill with internal coolant for metal stack drilling CoroDrill 4 52 countersinking tool optimised to eliminate splintering. The thrust force exerted by the drill at the exit of the hole determines how the bottom layer reacts. In the new drills, the thrust effect has been reduced to minimise to the amount of delamination occurring. Portable hand-held drills need more toughness due to the inherent instability of the operation. For this reason, a cemented carbide drill is the best solution. To extend tool-life, drills for CFRPs are usually coated or complemented by veined polychrystalline diamond (PCD). However, for the portable hand-drilling area, the balance of toughness/wear resistance is different as is that of tool-life/regrinding. Drills with high strength can be readily changed after a comparatively shorter tool-life and be re-ground without a coating process. This is part of the manufacturing economic equation for these applications, where tool-costs, cutting data, tool-handling and tool-life are variables. Different values apply for this area and, as such, are the basis for the new standard range of cutting tools for the hand-held hole-making application. The programme of CoroDrill 452 standard drills has been designed to optimise CFRP applications and CFRP metalstacked applications that are performed with hand-tools. For the 452-C version (for CFRPs), various tool-design features have resulted in proven advantages for this area. The patented design-combination of the left-hand helix in combination with a right-hand point on the drill promotes smooth cutting action with minimised or no grab-effect. A long, sharp cutting edge chamfer provides a relatively large shear angle for a clean cut of all fibres. A unique flute and split-point design gives very close hole-roundness as well as minimising thrust effect. Only a low level of feed force is needed and the drill makes a smoother, non-destructive exit from the material. For the metal-stacked version 452-CM, in addition to the lower force and thrust advantage, there is a choice between a drill with or without a pilot incorporated. This, to reduce any difference in thrust effect between the materials and to provide high hole accuracy and finish. The hole-size difference is minimal between the materials in the stack and exit burrs are eliminated. Both metal-stack drills have a double margin edge for stability which further improves performance and results. A split self-centering point simplifies the drilling action and accuracy throughout the stack. the more brittle PCD can be incorporated safely as the cutting edge for CFRP, giving very long tool-life combined with re-sharpening possibilities. Designed for use with a qualified micro-stop, a cemented carbide pilot ensures consistent accuracy for 100 and 130 degree chamfer angles and corect depth. Summary Establishing a standard range of cutting tools for holemaking in composites, for operators using hand-held tools, needs the right compromises. The challenges and demands of this aerospace area are such that the most wear resistant tool material cannot be safely incorporated. Instead the strength of cemented carbide is used to provide safety and advantageous tool-cost. To optimise this area, the development of tool geometry plays a prominent role in achieving satisfactory quality levels, tool performance and productivity. Sandvik Coromant - 03 92387144 Christer.Richt@Sandvik.com RomheldAirNippers:Layout 1 18/2/11 www.sandvik.coromant.com/au 8:57 AM Page 1 Vessel nippers and static eliminators provide the finishing touches to plastics manufacturing processes. Nippers are available in many styles from hand held to machine mount to slide off, with optional HSS, carbide or heated blades with large cutting capacities. Static eliminators are available in hand held, bench top, cabinet and bar styles to remove static enabling high quality finishing, assembly or further processing without contamination, sticking and other handling problems. Reaming and countersinking Finishing some holes may need a second pass with a reamer. When extra close tolerances and surface finishes are required the 452.R, type C or CM reamer, for CFRP and stacked, respectively, can produce holes to within a tolerance of 0.02mm using a guide-bush. These tough, uncoated cemented carbide reamers have a step-pilot which matches 452-drilled holes and reduces thrust to ensure high finishes with absolutely minimised tendency of delamination and burrs at metal-hole exit. In countersinking with hand-held tools,, the cutting tool is not subjected to the stresses of long drills and reamers and thus does not need the same bending strength. This means that Ph: 1800 465 348 Email: sales@romheld.com.au Web: www.romheld.com.au Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 59 Mould & Die Mould making shop managers’ report on the benefits of HSC milling of hardened steel For a number of tasks, HSC milling of hardened steel can be an advantageous alternative to EDM. Depending on the specifics of the given job, moderate to significant advantages with respect to throughput time, costs and quality can be achieved. Three managers of shops with significantly differing job portfolios share their related experience. t is a well-known fact that current machining centres and cutting tools make it possible to cut even hardened steel with a high level of efficiency. But will the related advantages really produce a sufficient return on the additional investment? The standard calculation base for such an investment – the complete replacement of an old plant by a new, more efficient one – will rarely be applicable, mainly due to the technical limitations of the milling process, particularly in the case of deep cavities with steep flanks or deep, narrow slots. The specifics of the plant taken into consideration thus have a major influence on the technical and economic framework defining the advantages and risks of opting for the HSC machining of hardened steel. A complete replacement of EDM operations will rarely be possible. Nevertheless, enriching the available technology bandwidth by fast and Success model: the RXP owes its outstanding accuracy to special features such as an automatic compensation of spindle length deviations resulting from temperature changes and an integrated tool dimension control system equipped with a laser, complemented by a tool cleaner (arrow) 60 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Workhorse: all three tool shops perform HSC machining with a Röders RXP 500 featuring linear direct drives for the highest precision and dynamics. The photo shows the plant installed at Ermet (Photos: Klaus Vollrath) accurate milling as an alternative to EDM operations will give the shop manager vital additional degrees of freedom. A major bonus even superseding the cost advantages are substantial gains with respect to throughput time since a complete process step – the milling of electrodes before EDM machining can start – is made redundant. This article summarises the experience of three tool shop managers whose job portfolios are markedly different. Common ground for all three is that they use the same plant – a Röders RXP 500 triaxial machining centre. Space puzzle: the complex dies consist of a multitude of intertwining components. The accuracy achieved by HSC machining often makes it possible to mill seats and precision fits directly instead of having to grind them in a second leg Mould & Die Job example: a typical mould with the related cutters. Even very thin and deep grooves are now machined into the hardened material with full reliability of the process Ermet: substantial time gains… “Electronic connectors make up a substantial portion of our business pallet”, says Peter Büchler, Production Manager with Ermet GmbH in Bad Windsheim (Germany). This tool manufacturer with a workforce of 38 employees is a subsidiary of a medium-sized plastics technology specialist, the Ermet-Buck Group, which has more than 200 employees and a total of five production sites in Germany and the Czech Republic. The tooling requirements he receives from within the Group make up about 70% of his order income, the rest having to be acquired on the free market. The main customers for the parts produced with these tools are the automotive industry and its suppliers, the electronics industry, as well as medical and laboratory device manufacturers. These customers not only demand the highest quality, they also emphasise aspects such as realisation time and flexibility with respect to specific demands. Many of the tools Ermet has to produce, e.g. for electronic connectors or for the embedding of metal grids, are for highly automated production. Their filigree components have to fulfil very high requirements with respect to dimensional accuracy. Even with geometries that are difficult to machine “Even a short glance at the tools we have to make for the electronics sector reveals that shifting from EDM to milling is an all but easy task”, reveals Büchler. These intricate tools are characterised by a multitude of tightly intertwined components with narrow contours, small radii , high aspect ratios and sharp edges. Stringent prescriptions with respect to the dimensional accuracy of the plastic parts they serve to produce imply the highest precision requirements for the tool components – down to ±5μm and occasionally even lower. HSC milling of hardened tool steel with the new Röders RXP started in August 2005. Meanwhile, the plant is used for two shifts a day. Putting it even more precisely, its spindle is engaged for about 3200 hours per year. Most of the machined steels have a hardness of 52-54 HRC. Moment of truth: prior to taking the decision to acquire their new plant, Ermet asked for the machining of this test piece. It includes a number of key difficulties such as filigree lands with rounded end portions (right) as well as abrupt steps at the bottom of narrow grooves (left) Tool diameters usually range between 2-3 mm and sometimes up to 8 mm. The smallest tool diameters are 0.5mm for steel and 0.2mm for copper. During the ramp-up period, copper electrodes accounted for about 80% of the jobs. Machining of hardened steel was stepped up in small, cautious steps. Since then, its share has soared from 20 - 60 %. Even very thin and deep grooves – e.g. 9mm deep with a width of only 1mm – are now reliably machined into the hardened material. The main advantages experienced by the new machining approach are shorter realisation times and lower costs, as well as enhanced accuracy of the parts. Seats and precision fits can often be milled directly instead of having to finish the parts by grinding in a second processing step. Further benefits are increased surface quality and easier de-moulding of plastic parts during production. Implementation of this technology change required a lot of brainstorming e.g. in view of new tool design rules suiting milling instead of EDM operations. One must also provide for sufficient programming capacity for the creation of NC programs. The company entrusts this task to the machine operators. Life-saver: cold forming transforms the steel blank (left) into a precision part for security belt emergency tighteners Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 61 Mould & Die “HSC machining of hardened steel will not completely replace EDM operations, but it gives us an additional degree of freedom we urgently needed”, sums up Peter Büchler. Certain geometries can still only be tackled using EDM machining. On the other hand, in addition to the advantages already described, the transfer of many jobs to the milling centre has contributed to significantly easing the partly critical bottleneck with respect to EDM machining capacity the company had run into before acquiring the new plant. Heckler: dies in large numbers… “The forces exerted during cold forming are so immense that our stamps crack as a result of high cycle fatigue before they stand any chance of being worn off”, explains Peter Heckler, CEO of Heckler AG in NiefernÖschelbronn(Germany). The company has specialised in the production of cold-formed precision parts made of steel or aluminium. The main customers for the machined and finished parts are the automotive as well as the lock and builders’ hardware industries. Many parts are used in lifesaving equipment such as security belt emergency tighteners and hence have to meet the highest requirements with respect to precision and quality. Production processes are markedly large-scale with lot sizes partly reaching a double-digit million order of magnitude. Of course, cost aspects are of prime interest, but additionally the customers require the highest flexibility with respect to production batch sizes and short-term reaction capability. In view of the limited die service lifespan – typically just 20,000 to 60,000 production cycles – as well as of stringent customer expectations with respect to start of production delays for new products, the tool shop has to excel with respect to productivity and short throughput times are produced faster and with better accuracy than before. “Switching from EDM machining to HSC cutting of hardened steel yielded production time gains of up to 70%”, explains Claudio Sandrini, Plant Manager of Heckler AG. Series production: in view of the large number of dies the company needs, productivity and short throughput times of the tool shop become key factors for success Their Röders RXP equipped with a fully automatic 8-fold workpiece pallet exchanger was put to service by mid-2005 and operates in three shifts. Meanwhile, it produces 60-70 % of all tools. A tool magazine with 100 positions provides for a sufficient number of identical replacement tools, a precondition for continuous automatic production even if a given cutter is rejected by the integrated condition monitoring system. The dies leaving the milling centre haven proven to be so accurate that quality control expenditure could be reduced to occasional dimensional control of samples selected at random. Most of the dies are produced from cold-work tool steels with a hardness range of 56-60 HRC. Further advantages the company reports are a better surface quality – a result of the omission of the “white layer” characteristic for EDM machining – as well as a 50-60% reduction in polishing expenditure. In this context, it is of particular interest to note that the hitherto indispensable manual polishing operations can be completely omitted. The remaining polishing passes can largely be performed automatically. Furthermore, de-moulding slopes and the so called outflows – the flow paths for excess material surrounding the shaping contour of the die – can now be produced automatically. And, last but not least, the service life expectancy of the milled dies has proved to exceed that of their EDM counterparts by as much as 1015%. Nevertheless, here too a complete substitution of EDM machining by HSC milling is not on the agenda, although Endurance performer: at Heckler, an RC2 workpiece pallet exchanger and a tool the share of jobs performed by EDM magazine with 100 positions provide for continuous three-shift operation of the Röders RXP 500 machining plant machining has markedly receded. 62 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology 8 Capital Drive Dandenong Vic 3175 Australia T: (03) 8710 8088 F: (03) 8710 8044 www.assetplant.com sales@assetplant.com ...it’s the only business you need to know when planning your next machine purchase. Since our inception in 1996, Asset Plant & Machinery has grown into one of the largest machinery companies in Australia. Our products can be found in all sizes of shops from the large industrial production users to the smaller jobbing shops. We have the widest metalworking product selection under one brand in the Australia and we sell direct to the end user, cutting out the dealer network, and resulting in lower prices to you. With our massive warehouse and showroom packed with inventory most models can be inspected “under power”. With a strong focus on after sales service and support, Asset also is supported by a strong service support team and large parts inventory ready for immediate delivery. Strategically located in Melbourne’s major industrial hub “Dandenong” we can ship your order throughout the country in a very efficient time frame along with direct shipping world wide. � Australian Owned & Operated � Buy direct and SAVE � Shipping Australian Wide Asset Plant & Machinery is focused on meeting your requirements and supplying you with the best, professional services and products – guaranteed. We’re Your Partner In Machinery. Log online to www.assetplant.com for great offers or call: Tel: (03) 8710 8088 Asset Plant & Machinery Pty Ltd 8 Capital Drive Dandenong Vic 3175 Fax: (03) 8710 8044 www.assetplant.com sales@assetplant.com Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 63 Mould & Die Wave form: the intricate parting plane geometry of this mould is a particular challenge for the accuracy of the milling centre ProForm: embedding metal grids calls for extreme precision RN.8925/1 “Dies used for the embedding of metal grids in plastic parts must be extremely precise”, explains Matthias Person, Plant Manager of ProForm Formenbau GmbH in Pforzheim (Germany). In the process, tightly intertwining mould components ensure that the injected plastic melt will coat only predefined One magazine Instill brand awareness Reach the right target audience Expose your business to the right market Reach the decision makers Grow your business Generate leads 64 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology parts of the metal grid while certain areas remain uncovered. Only the utmost precision of all mould components will prevent penetration of the highly pressurised plastic melt in interstices, resulting in flashes that would interfere with subsequent processes. Removal of such flashes requires additional process steps and related costs. Another aspect is that the small, filigree components are prone to damage and then have to be replaced. This too calls for extreme precision of the components in order to minimise readjustment operations after their replacement. In producing the individual components of its moulds, ProForm thus literally fights for every single micron in accuracy. Of course, here too HSC milling of hardened steel is not the only processing method. The company also uses other technologies such as EDM machining or PTW grinding. HSC machining with the highest degree of accuracy “Compared to the system we previously used to perform the same tasks, the new Röders excels by a whole range of advantages”, says Person. Mould & Die The RödersTEC RXP 500 The RXP 500 triaxial machining centre has been designed as an HSC milling workhorse able to process even hardened steel in tool shops. The axles have working ranges of 500 x 500 x 300 mm. Its design emphasises productivity, ruggedness and dimensional accuracy when producing 3D-contours. ‘Classic’ roller guides have been combined with frictionless linear direct drives excelling by their dynamism and precision. Compared to conventional recirculating ball-screw drives, linear direct drives exhibit not only higher path accuracy: at comparable power consumption, they also convince by the fact that they are not subject to wear and tear since they contain no moving parts in direct mechanical contact. The spindle with a power rating of 14 kW reaches 42,000 revs/min. Sophisticated temperature management, highly accurate spindle length compensation as well as an integrated laser tool measuring gauge ensure a precision significantly exceeding the standard offered by comparable plants up to now. Another factor contributing to this is the plant’s additional function as a high-precision coordinate measurement device. Thornhill Machine Tools Australia - 03 9532 1452 thornhillae@thornhill.com.au Röders GmbH, Scheibenstr. - +49-5191-603-43 www.roeders.de RN.8925/2 Particular highlights are the prolonged service life of the milling cutters, which last up to 80% longer, as well as the reduction of workforce requirements by 60%. Additionally, the enhanced accuracy of the parts has resulted in a 50% reduction of refinishing expenditure. Another benefit is the process reliability of the plant, making it possible to load the Röders RC2 workpiece pallet exchanger with up to eight jobs that can be performed overnight without human assistance. Most of the tool steels the plant processes have a hardness of about 54 HRC while some jobs are performed on harder materials (up to 60 HRC). Tool diameters range from 10mm down to 0.3mm. Person particularly highlights the accuracy he is able to achieve with the new plant. With some moulds he produces this has helped him reduce refinishing expenditure by as much as a full working week. In this context, the automatic compensation of spindle length deviations resulting from temperature changes is a key factor, together with the integrated laser tool dimension control system. As a result, the new plant is able to attain workpiece tolerances of between 3μm and 5μm while in Zdirection, height deviations attributable to tool changes are well below 5μm. The high degree of accuracy thus obtained makes it possible to directly proceed to PTW grinding of machined parts without intermediate process steps. Another positive result of the high level of part accuracy is that for moulds with intricate parting plane geometries, levelling press operations can be largely omitted. 53,600 readers 98% of our readership surveyed values advertisements placed in AMT magazine as a source of information for products & services… …so with 6.7 industry people reading each distributed copy, and a CAB audited circulation of 8,000 nationally, AMT magazine provides industry-leading value for our advertisers. For advertising rates call Anne Samuelsson AMTIL on 03 9800 3666 or email asamuelsson@amtil.com.au www.amtil.com.au Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 65 Mould & Die Another angle on HSM The savings in setup time were welcome enough, but this mould maker found that a 3+2 machining centre also accelerated its use of high speed machining. By Peter Zelinski igh speed machining and 3+2 machining might seem like two different concepts, but at Eifel Mould & Engineering, they fit together naturally. For this shop in Fraser, Michigan US, the two machining centre methodologies contribute to the same goal. Eifel is a specialist in, among other things, moulds for automotive steering wheel components. Used to produce what is arguably one of the most noticeable components of a car, a steering wheel mould typically features intricate aesthetic details and demanding surface finish requirements. On a steering wheel, even harmless imperfections stand out like striking flaws. Eifel has used high speed machining for years. Fast spindle speeds let the shop use small-diameter tools efficiently, reaching into detailed areas with these cutting tools, and making small-stepover passes with them to achieve smooth finishes. 3+2 has proven to be the next step. By investing in a machining centre able to freely reorient the part as needed within compound rotary axes, the shop can use high speed machining both more efficiently and more effectively. Setup time savings Weight capacity was one of the important considerations on the shop's new five-axis machining centre from 3+2 machining are considerable, but these savings are just the beginning. Now, Eifel can routinely use shorter tools in high speed machining than it typically used before. Taking advantage of the rigidity of short tools enables the shop to mill its H13 or high-hardness P20 steel even more rapidly. The shop uses high speed machining and 3+2 machining for moulds involving both smooth surfaces and intricate details. 66 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Just as significantly, though, by pivoting the part, Eifel can more easily machine without visible blends. This often lets the shop meet its most exacting finish needs with minimal manual bench work after the machining is done. Time savings Eifel has 12 employees. Buying a sophisticated new machining centre was a considerable investment. The machine the shop chose is a five-axis VMC from Hermle. Weight capacity was one factor that distinguished this machine, says Eifel president Richard Hecker. The table (which provides the rotary-axis motion) accommodates 3,000 pounds. Some other five-axis or 3+2 machines the shop considered could pivot or rotate only much lighter parts. While this machine is capable of full five-axis machining, the shop has used it almost exclusively for 3+2-style cutting. That is, the rotary axes are used to reorient the part, while the cutting still involves only X, Y and Z. The shop soon expects to diversify into full five-axis Mould & Die You live and die by the collision checker Eifel specialises in moulds related to steering wheels. machining work, but so far, the 3+2 machining alone has been powerful. For mould making, Hecker says 3+2 machining accounts for at least 95% of the benefit that a five-axis machining centre delivers. In fact, the ability to rotate the part within the machining cycle in this way can provide time savings that are dramatic. One steering wheel mould in the recent past involved 12 hours to machine all of its necessary undercuts. At least eight setups were required to reach all these features. By contrast, running a similar mould took only two hours on the five-axis machine, thanks to the way the undercuts could all be machined in a single cycle. Shorter tools Yet beyond the setup savings, another welcome payoff from this machine has been the extent to which it accelerates high speed machining. Though it was clear from the beginning that five-axis machining would enable the use of short tools, it was not necessarily clear just how important this would be. Part of the value of high speed machining for the shop from the beginning was the way it made the use of long milling tools practical. These long tools were needed to reach the deep features of moulds that otherwise required EDM. Because deflection limited these long, slender tools to light cuts anyway, the fast, light milling of HSM enabled the shop to use the tools productively. But now, thanks to 3+2 machining (and thanks to the slim shrink-fit toolholders the shop uses Manufacturing manager Gary Schulz does much of the programming of the Hermle five-axis machining centre at Eifel Mould & Engineering. He does this programming on the shop floor, right in front of the machine. The shop uses Delcam’s PowerMill as its CAD/CAM software. With PowerMill, programming in five axes is an intuitively visual process, Schulz says. On screen, he pivots the 3D rendering of the part around to the desired rotary view—the compound angle from which to machine some given set of features. The software then calculates this compound angle and assigns the precise rotary axis moves and tool paths accordingly. The programming is simple enough that Schulz can program and operate both the five-axis machine and another machining centre nearby. He says there are two disciplines he favours when programming the fiveaxis machine. One is to use the rotary-axis movements frugally. There is no requirement to do this—but he says most parts don’t call for all of the rotary-axis swing that their complexity might initially seem to suggest. Even a 10-degree pivot can be powerful, he says. Making sparing use of the rotary-axis capability makes it that much less likely that some extreme rotary-axis move might produce a collision or interference with some aspect of the setup. The other, related discipline is to fully populate the software’s collision checker. “You live and die by the collision checker,” he says, because 3+2 machining entails moves that are simply not possible to mentally visualise before the machine does them. The software’s ability to anticipate interferences has been both valuable and reliable, but Schulz first had to equip the capability by entering all the relevant geometric dimensions of all toolholders used on this machine. with this machine), Eifel can often reach recessed features using very short tools, while the part is held at an angle. That means the “fast, light cuts” of HSM don’t have to be so light anymore. The short tool can even reach features that previously would have been considered unreachable with any tool—features that, in the past, would have been added to the mould with an insert. Thus, 3+2 machining doesn’t just speed the machining process—it simplifies it. Standard tools alone can do a lot more. “It gets to the point where you don’t even want to struggle with a long tool anymore,” Hecker says. Richard Hecker says that although the new machining centre was a major investment, it has been significant for letting the small shop deliver work even more quickly and cost-effectively. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 67 Prismatic M achining Water tables The science of channeling light (the process is called total internal reflection) was first demonstrated in the mid 19th century; however, practical applications came much later. NASA used fibre optics in the cameras it sent to the moon, but it wasn’t until the late 20th century that terrestrial TV adopted the medium. Tapered fibre optics work on the same principle of bouncing photons along a clad, glass conduit, but use clusters of fused fibres to magnify or, more typically, reduce an image for transfer applications. By Matt Bailey ncom Inc. US is the world’s leading manufacturer of commercial rigid, fused fibreoptic faceplates, tapers, and microwell arrays. The company’s advanced technology supports researchers, scientists, and instrument makers in dental, medical, life science, scientific, homeland security, and defence industries. In the beginning, with a just handful of employees, the company’s primary product was fused fibreoptic faceplates for cathode ray tubes (CRTs). Its early years were moderately successful, and its revenue graph was reliably linear. But management knew that CRT technology would eventually be replaced by LCDs, they just didn’t know when. “In 1994, we had the opportunity to purchase a competing line of fused fibreoptics from a local company called Galileo Electro-Optics,” says Anthony (Jay) Detarando, Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. “We didn’t fully realise it then, but it was very good timing; our existing business was about to take a nose dive.” As part of the deal, we also acquired the formula for the fiberoptic glass that we still use today.” Galileo was one of two nearby companies that specialised in manufacturing fused fibre optics for military applications. The two companies were competing with each other for contracts the government warned would soon disappear. They did not disappear, and today continue to generate a large part of Incom’s revenue. “We also acquired the technical expertise to make 50 mm tapered fibre optics in high volume,” says Detarando. “Many of Galileo’s employees came to work here. All of a sudden, we were twice our previous size, and one of the two main government suppliers for night vision systems.” Incom manufactures tapers from billets produced using its own hot-drawing process. Individual fibres are bunched 68 coherently together, heated, and stretched like warm toffee to create the desired magnification. The more fibres in a bunch (as many as 16 million per square inch) – the higher the resolution. “Six or seven years ago, we looked at how we wanted to grow,” says Scott Farland, Director of Business Development. “We decided to get much better in military applications, and to find new opportunities in the life science, scientific, and medical sectors, such as X-ray.” Photographers have long since embraced the flexibility and speed of digital imaging. Now, radiographers are swapping X-ray cassettes for oversized CMOS sensors with thin, fibreoptic plates (instead of lenses) providing the image transfer function. “It was making these types of larger tapers that first led us to investigate automation and CNC machine tools,” Farland explains. The company divided its manufacturing into business units, each of which was allocated its own equipment, configured, and arranged to maximise efficiency. “We are very focused on yield,” continues Farland. “Glass is expensive, and it’s easy March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology to make mistakes during hot-drawing and end up with damaged and useless fibres or clusters. We’ve developed our process to reduce this possibility. So when it came to automating the mechanical and machining operations, we had to make sure we kept scrap to an absolute minimum. By the time the taper gets to the machining stage, most of the cost has been incurred.” Incom bought its first Haas CNC machine tool – a used VF-2 vertical machining center – in late 2003. Since 2005, Incom has bought an average of two additional Haas machines per year, for a current total of 11, including five Mini Mills. During a walking-tour of the factory, Facilities and Compliance Manager Michael LeBlanc guided us away from several of the latter. Part of his job is to safeguard the company’s secrets, and some of the Haas machines are making specialised lenses for military contracts. Incom’s newest Haas is a DT-1 drill/tap centre that currently is cutting medical and dental faceplates. In the early days of its reorganisation, Incom had very little in-house CNC machining experience, so they recruited Prismatic M achining programmer Dean Westhoff to pilot the company around the hazards of machining glass. Westhoff, in turn, was guided by Product and Process Development Engineer John Escolas – a former student of Bill Weir, during the latter’s previous life as a college lecturer. “At the beginning, we were only machining around 10% of our production on Haas machines,” says Escolas, “at feed rates of around 0.200 inches (5.08mm) a minute. It was a slow and expensive process. We were holding the part using an old traditional wax compound, and the wax would often fail and the part pop off the mount, even at these low feeds. Incom gave Dean and John free reign on CNC machining standards. “The only advice I offered Dean was to turn off the control panel and go by sound and feel,” Escolas relates. Westhoff and Escolas began by changing the composition of the wax to give greater shear strength. Once Dean felt confident the parts were fixed, he tweaked feed rates with the patience of a piano tuner, increasing them gradually until the Haas hit the right note. Incom machines its glass with diamond-coated tooling, which will burn the part if there is insufficient coolant. Conventional machining uses nozzles to deliver the liquid from multiple directions, spraying the contact area. But, when the tool is changed, the direction of the coolant needs to be adjusted. “To achieve the high-volume machining we had in mind meant we couldn’t adjust the coolant manually,” says Westhoff. “It just wasn’t practical.” The answer was to submerge the parts and the tools completely. Each time a component is loaded and the operator presses cycle start, a custom-made, watertight tank mounted on the machine’s table floods until the part disappears. “It took a lot of faith,” says Escolas. “We were fine-tuning cutting operations, but we couldn’t see what was going on with the part. Sometimes, we’d drain the tank, and there would be nothing but shards of glass.” Incom now machines more than 90% of its production, and feed rates are typically 30in/min. “Now that we’ve perfected it,” Escolas continues, “cutting under water produces better surface finishes, the tools last longer, and we can use coarser diamonds.” Once Westhoff and Escolas had worked out how to make the product, it became Quality Engineer Earl Davis’s job to understand the processes. The subject of his initial study was one of Incom’s Haas Mini Mills. “Our priority is always improving and maintaining yield,” Davis says, echoing the wisdom of his colleagues. “We aim to reduce scrap to a minimum by really understanding the machining process. We felt confident that the Haas machines were sufficiently accurate, so we introduced statistical process control techniques to measure what was causing variation.” One feature of the Haas machines that Incom uses more frequently than most others is the Renishaw probing system. The probe allows Incom to export data off the machines that can be used to understand process parameters. Davis chose to use the Renishaw probe data to track the outside diameter of a machined part. This gave him a consistent measurement to track the machine’s capability for tolerance. A sample was taken every 150 minutes across three shifts. “Because each Mini Mill produces 250 to 300 parts per day,” Davis explains, “this gave us a measurement about every 30 parts.” The first series of tests revealed a process capability of .61 Cpk (In process improvement efforts the process capability ratio is the statistical measure of process capability- the ability of a process to produce output within specification limits. Process capability indices measure how much ‘natural variation’ a process experiences relative to its specification limits and allows different processes to be compared with respect to how well an organisation controls them.), equating to 35,000 ppm out-of-spec. “Not very good,” remembers Davis. “So we introduced X-bar charts to the cell – so the operator could see what was happening in real-time – and an out-of-control action plan, which indicates what to do when the process is going out of control.” It turned out that most variation was due to tool wear, and came immediately before and after a tool change. “A few years back, we were achieving yields of around 84% for that part,” says Davis. “Now, we’re closer to 99%, and process capability has improved to 1.06 Cpk, equating to 750 ppm out-ofspec. The other amazing thing is that the Haas machine is only supposed to cut to 0.0002 inch (0.005mm), but we are regularly achieving tolerances of 0.00015 inch (0.0038mm)!” It’s been a long and intensive learning process since Incom first acquired the know-how to compete in the tapered fibre optic sector, but the company’s engineers and managers have applied themselves in a way that even the late statistician Professor W. Edwards Deming would have approved of. “Quality cannot be inspected in,” the late quality-guru once told manufacturers. “It’s already there.” The key, of course, is knowing where to look, and Incom found it under several inches of water. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 69 Prismatic M achining Getting more for your axes Modern CNC machine tools use tool path data generated automatically from a CAM software package. This allows for highly complex parts to be machined without the extensive manual programming used in times gone past. Now, 3D models that have been designed in modelling software, as well as 2 dimensional CAD drawings, can be used to generate the CNC data for use directly at the CNC machine. However, not all CNC machines have the same capabilities. What is Prismatic Machining, and what type of CNC machine do you require for it? By David White rismatic Machining is a method that allows the use of a 2 or 2.5axis machine to perform a variety of 3D machining. While the results can be very effective, the complexity of the software and the associated learning curve is often much less than 4, 5 or 6-axis machining. Although it is ideal for 2 or 2.5-axis machines, the same processes are still very applicable to more capable machines. The main characteristic of Prismatic machining is that the motion of the cutter is restrained to a plane that is orthogonal to the spindle axis. In other words, the machine can move up and down, or laterally, but not usually both at once. Tool path operations can be defined to perform four main types of machining operation. These are axial or drilling routines, pocketing, surfacing and contour profiling. These operations are usually performed in multi-level passes. Some machine controllers allow the work plane to be redefined to any of the three orthogonal planes (XY, XZ, YZ). This will allow for complex paths to be performed in another plane also, but does not cater for simultaneous 3-axis movement. Parallel surfacing A common method of creating a complex surface is parallel surfacing. If your machine controller is capable, a tool path may be defined as a series of parallel passes over the model with a step over defined by the operator. This allows the use of a ball nose cutter to ‘zig-zag’ over the surface in one axis (the Y-axis for example). As the cutter is moved back and forth it is raised and lowered to create the desired surface. At the end of each pass, the machine will ‘step over’ one increment in the other axis and begin 70 This part was machined using several Prismatic machining processes including Z -level profiling, pocketing and drilling. the pass in the opposite direction. This method is often very useful for relatively flat freeform surfaces but may not be compatible with all controllers. Z Level machining/ pocketing Z-Level machining is another prismatic machining routine that specifies a Zincrement. The CNC machine will move to the first ‘Z-Level’ and then remove material in a lateral fashion where required. When the level has been completed, the machine drops to the next level and begins again. It allows for very good flat surfaces, and also provides excellent finishes on edges with steep inclines. Unfortunately, this method is not as useful for good finishes on gradual sloping surface as it tends to result in a stepped finish that has the appearance of a topographical landscape map. Z-Level machining is useful for surfacing, pocketing and also shape contouring. This method is compatible with almost all 2.5-axis machine. The spindle will be spun up to the required RPM and the path will take the drill bit into the material at the precise feed rate required to match the desired chip size. Often, other parameters can be specified such as a ‘pecking’ motion to allow the swarf to evacuate before drilling deeper. Another common drilling feature is a dwell at the bottom of the hole to allow the drill to cleanly finish its task. The drilling method is applicable to most CNC routers and milling machines. Usually a combination of these methods will be used to achieve the desired results. Processes such as coarse ‘Z-Level Roughing’ are often employed first because this method can remove a large volume of material in a short Drilling Another Prismatic machining process that is very useful is drilling. The machine will generally rapid to a point directly above the drill point location. March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology When using Z Level roughing the cutter steps down and across for each pass Prismatic M achining time. This will usually be followed up with a combination of finer ‘Z-Level’ passes around the object and inside any pocketed areas, and finish off the more horizontal surfaces using a ‘Parallel Surfacing’ routine. Any round holes are usually accomplished with either the correct size drill, or alternatively a smaller router or milling bit (depending on the machine) will be used to perform a pocketing routine. Modern CNC routers more than capable Recently there have been great increases in the performance of CNC routers, which has meant that the gap between machining centres and routers has closed considerably. Advanced Robotic Technology (ART) is an Australian manufacturer of high speed CNC router tables and has had great success with industries that were previously thought to be outside the capabilities of this type of machine. “All of our CNC routers are capable of Prismatic Machining as well as full 3 and 4 axis free-form machining depending on the machine options” says Director, David White. He goes on to say, “Our large The new RT Profile Machining Centre from ART supports prismatic machining. format CNC router machines are now capable of heavy duty machining in solid aluminium as well as plastics, composites and timbers. It is so capable that it even supports rigid tapping. In fact, our newest machine the RT model is no longer marketed as a router. Instead we class it as a machining centre.” The new RT series machining centre from ART supports rotary tool changers and high torque liquid and air cooled spindles. It has premium quality 4 jet misting lubrication injectors which is ideal for 3D machining processes, including Prismatic Machining, because the coolant needs to get right to the cutter especially in deep pockets. The Z-axis has often been a limiting factor on CNC routers but the new RT series machines have a huge standard clearance of 350mm under the gantry. The Z axis has a stroke of over 700mm also which can handle many moulds and other 3D machining tasks with ease. The RT is compatible with ART ToolShop, Edge Cam, MasterCam, RhinoCam, Visual Mill, EnRoute, SolidCam and almost all 3D tool path software packages. Advanced Robotic Technology )7 3393 6555 www.advancedrobotic.com sales@advancedrobotic.com The standard in intelligent CAD/CAM solutions tion onss • • • • • • • • • • Production Machining Multi Axis Machining Mill / Turn Machining Reduced Programming Reduced Machining Times Cad to Cam Interoperability Mould and Die Intelligent Features Solids Based Machining Automatic Feature Machining The world’s most powerful sheet metal CAD/CAM software • • • • • • • 2D & 3D Solid So olilid id Design Desi De sign ign Punching Profiling Nesting Bending Cost Estimation Process Management www.stillam.com Tel: (03) 9584 9733 • info@stillam.com.au Working in conjunction with SNC Solutions Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 71 Prismatic M achining Next generation prismatic machining n today’s demanding manufacturing Industry, increasing labour costs and the movement towards Lean Manufacturing and just -in- time component manufacture, companies are struggling to keep production costs down and maximise machine time in order to remain competitive. Prismatic machining still plays an integral part in the majority of companies involved in the engineering and manufacture of components. Every machine shop will relate to this and probably agree that, although a necessary practice is not as lucrative as the more advanced, specialised type of manufactured parts that everyone is trying to get their hands on in today’s economic climate unless long production runs are an option. Alternatively, if we could get these simpler jobs onto and off the machine faster we would then start seeing the dividends. Technological advances in CNC machine tools allow easier programming of these prismatic parts on the control and have become a much faster process compared to 10 years ago. Prismatic machining may refer to only 2.5 axis milling capability on either a machining centre or lathe but components may possess complexity that can be a head scratching exercise for programmers at times in terms of approach and machining methods. This manual part programming approach inside the software will still prove to be yet a time consuming and costly effort. We have always had this ability in our CAD/CAM software for prismatic part programming for some time now, manually creating the necessary toolpaths to be applied to specific geometry. Machining cycles have been developed in the various software systems offering the best machining processes for advanced material removal, high speed finishing cycles as well as improved hole machining. All are pre requisites for prismatic machining. How do we improve on what we already have? Edgecam Strategy Manager builds on our knowledge gained from this type of programming and takes it to the next level: fully automated programming. How does it work? Using Edgecam Solid Machinist, the solid model is seamlessly imported into Edgecam. Edgecam Solid Machinist uses built-in feature recognition to find machinable features and extract information relating to these features. This is used by Edgecam Strategy Manager to automatically apply the most appropriate machining technique to each feature, based on a flow chart. Tools are then automatically selected 72 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology from the Edgecam ToolStore, together with predetermined material and cutting data. At the core of Edgecam Strategy Manager is an easy to use f low chart that represents the logic of the machining strategies, a diagram of operational sequences taken from preferred methods and the machining capability to produce a part. In essence Strategy manager captures your machining rules for different scenarios. For example- you wouldn’t machine toolsteel the same way you would machine aluminium- different speeds, feeds and cutting conditions would apply. We may take a different approach to machining material on a 30hp machine as opposed to a 15hp machine tool. All of these factors can be taken into account. In addition to simply capturing how a component is machined or recording the rules that are used to machine it, Edgecam Strategy Manager also captures the logic behind the decision. Our experience over time, machining different components and parts would determine how we want our strategy built and later applied to components. We decide which Edgecam cycles need to be applied in the machining of specific features under different conditions, Strategy Prismatic M achining Manager captures this logic and we apply it in our Flow Chart layout, we can apply these processes add decisions, run-time questions and a vast array of functions that we can build into the strategy. .The strategy can become an intricate one, as it is enhanced, adding more and more processes, scenarios and adaptations ultimately resulting in a fine tuned strategy that can be applied to almost any component you throw its way, automatically applying toolpaths at the click of a button. Model 795XFL-1 Resolution: .00005” (0.001mm) Accuracies: Inch: ±.0001” Metric: ±.002mm The new Starrett range of electronic tools provides an IP67 level of protection against coolant, water, chips, dirt, dust, and other contaminants in hostile shop environments and has an extra-large LCD for excellent readability. A hole is not just a hole. In the industry of manifold manufacturing, hole machining will fall into the category of Prismatic machining but can become very complex. For example, to drill a hole, a series of rules is laid down such as when centre drilling, spotting or peck cycles are required. Feature attributes such as hole diameter may be used to determine if a tapping or thread milling cycle should be used. With the need for applying form tools to hole features, decisions need to be made for best tool selection, which features need to be drilled and which need to be milled. Appropriate T-Slot cutters need to be selected for.O-ring grooves in holes, stepped holes and tight tolerances will determine different logic and machining methods to be applied. Sizes Available: Model Range 798-6/150 150mm 798-8/200 200mm 798-12/300 300mm .0005”/.01mm resolution Linear accuracy meets DIN862 In/mm conversion Zero at any position Auto shutoff after 30 minutes of non-use Stillam - 03 9584 9733 www.stillam.com Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 73 Safety Building a safety culture In a society where human life is seen as paramount, safety at work is rightly a topic of considerable discussion both within organisations and in the media more generally. Whilst some of us at times feel that the concept has been “overworked” resulting in lip-service and impractical red-tape, it only takes a local tragedy, such as the 2008 Varanus Island gas explosion or the fatalities associated with the Australian Government Insulation Scheme, to remind us of the old adage “it’s always best to be safe than sorry”. By Dr Danica Hooper, State Manager and Organisational Psychologist, People Solutions Australasia e know that the causes of workplace accidents are usually very complex, involving an interaction between aspects such as the physical environment and equipment available; an organisation’s policies, procedures, and protocols; their management practices; the training received by employees; team and interpersonal relationships; and of course the behaviours and choices made by individuals themselves. In this respect, safety is considered to be “systemic” and affected by multiple elements working together; no one factor alone is usually to blame for any critical event. Despite the fact that the causes of accidents are complex and multifaceted, the research does suggest that human factors are involved in 80–90% of work accidents (Hale & Glendon, 1987). Specifically, the behaviours of individuals have either a direct or indirect impact on the chain of events leading to an accident. Therefore, organisations are beginning to realise that improving the safety culture of an organisation not only involves re-designing systems and procedures, but it also involves changing the attitudes and behaviours of individuals currently employed, as well as selecting individuals into the organisation who will actively promote and improve safety - the latter being recognised as one of the most proactive approaches to reducing safety related risks at work. So what individual attributes should we be looking for in selection? In the 74 The aftermath of tragedies such as the Varanus Island gas explosion should remind us of the old adage “it’s always best to be safe than sorry." past, approaches to selecting for safety have often focused on an individual’s tendency towards rule compliance. Undoubtedly being aware of and compliant with safety-related rules and protocols is an important first step to working safely, however, safe working habits involve more than simply knowing and following the safety-related rules and procedures in an organisation. Prescriptive process controls (e.g. procedures, rules, and regulations) will always lack the variety necessary to guarantee safe behaviour, even if employees are meticulously compliant. There will always be situations in which no rules are available, or in March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology which variations in the local circumstances contradict the applicability of the available rules. Therefore, in a safety sensitive environment an ideal employee is one who can combine rule compliance with a tendency to engage in learning behaviours such as asking questions, seeking feedback, and reflecting on errors and unexpected outcomes. Furthermore, they are likely to be assertive enough to enforce rules and stick to them when appropriate, as well as have the confidence to guide and direct others as needed. In summary the body of research on safety points to six individual at- Safety tributes of employees that are important to promoting a positive safety culture: 1.Showing safety diligence and conscientiousness (which involves aspects such as adhering to rules and procedures, even when under pressure, and being prepared to confront others in a constructive manner) 2.Being able to cope with pressures (which impacts upon managing stress, fatigue, and distraction at work, all of which affect working safely) 3.Taking proactive responsibility for safety (such as taking responsibility for one’s own and others’ safety, including offering proactive suggestions for process improvements) 4.Having confidence in your work (such as knowing your boundaries and being prepared to ask others for assistance when these are reached) 5.Being prepared to communicate safety information (proactively informing and educating individuals and groups as appropriate on safety related matters). How do organisations traditionally select for safety? Organisations have a history of attempting to predict the future safety related behaviours of job candidates. Quite commonly, organisations will include a single interview question asking a safety relevant question of their candidates. These questions range from fairly basic and ineffective (e.g., why do you think you are a safe employee?) to those which are more useful (e.g., tell me about a time when you witnessed an unsafe act on the job. Talk me through exactly what you did and why, explaining what the outcomes were). The more useful questions in terms of their ability to predict future safety behaviour are behaviourallybased and ask candidates to describe their own past behaviour for a specific incident. Unfortunately, interviewers rarely have the time to ask the number of behavioural questions needed to get a comprehensive measure of the range of individual attributes that affect safety (such as the six key attributes listed earlier), and therefore the interview should typically be seen as only one of several methods used to collect safety relevant information from candidates. Some organisations will also choose to conduct an activity such as a role play, asking candidates to pretend they are in a specific safety critical scenario and to respond accordingly. Again, there are some good insights to be gained here, however, organisations should be careful not to use role plays as their sole assessment of safety behaviour, as they too do not always assess a wide breadth of behaviours, and they can be prone to eliciting nerves and ‘performance’ anxiety, due to the unnatural feel of them. Another option for organisations is to administer a safety questionnaire (otherwise known as a psychometric assessment), aimed at identifying candidates’ attitudes and behavioural tendencies when it comes to safety. Psychometric assessments often offer a highly reliable and practical way to measure individual safety attributes. Given the questionnaire format, candidates can be assessed on a variety of attributes in a relatively quick and efficient manner, and as all candidates are given the same questions and are scored in a standardised manner, the end result is typically reliable and free from bias. However, the issue with many of the existing safety questionnaires on the market, is that some of them have been fairly narrow in focus (e.g., looking only at a few key elements such as the tendency for rule following, ‘thrill’ seeking behaviour, or job-specific safety knowledge). As such, the propensity for a candidate to behave in other ways which promote a safety culture is largely overlooked. In addition to the lack of breadth, some safety questionnaires have been criticised for their perceived lack of relevance in the candidates’ eyes. Depending on the exact assessment chosen, candidates can report being confused or frustrated as to why they are being asked to complete “strange” or “personal” questions. This process sometimes leaves a bad taste in their mouths and a tendency to blame the questionnaire alone, should they be unsuccessful in the broader process. So how do we select for safety attributes in a quick, comprehensive, and reliable manner? A new assessment on the market today, called the Individual Safety Attributes Test (ISAT), fills the gap left by more traditional safety questionnaires, offering organisations a comprehensive, timely and reliable way to assess relevant safety attributes of individual candidates. When combined with a good quality interview and subsequent reference checking, the ISAT allows for a thorough yet practical approach for safety selection. The ISAT achieves the above by asking candidates to respond to a number of work-based, safety critical scenarios, with their responses being compared to those of safety subject matter experts. The scenarios do not require job-specific knowledge; rather they require the candidate to draw on practical knowledge, or what might be termed by some as “common sense”. The result is a more “face-valid” assessment, whereby candidates can clearly appreciate the job relevance of the scenarios they are being asked to respond to. As the ISAT, does not require specific job knowledge, it is suitable for a wide range of roles and industries, including entry level positions. Typically candidates would be asked to complete the 30 minute assessment online prior to an interview or assessment centre, or in an assessment centre itself. As a result of the assessment a written report is produced, highlighting the extent to which the candidate shows Safety Diligence and Conscientiousness, Copes with Pressure, shows Responsibility for Safety, has Confidence in their Work, and Communicates Safety Information Proactively; and reference check questions are provided for key areas requiring follow-up (either via the referees or via the interview itself). The result is a more comprehensive approach to assessing safety in selection, which not only helps safety sensitive organisation to proactively manage safety risks, but also provides a message to candidates at the point of selection that safety is of the utmost importance to your organisation. For further information please contact Melinda Boxall-Forsythe, Senior Client Advisor, People Solutions Australasia Pty Ltd, 07 3123 2355 mforsythe@people-solutions.com.au Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 75 Safety Galvanising weld fumes contained orking closely with an industrial filtration specialist, OneSteel Reinforcing has taken preventative action at its Sydney plant to ensure containment of welding fumes on a process line. The Revesby site services industrial markets on the eastern seaboard of Australia, producing galvanised wire mesh for commercial, residential and civil construction as well as the mining and agriculture industries and manufacturing sector. A recent upgrade of its welding automation system prompted OneSteel to consult Donaldson Australasia to design and build a fume collection system based on its patented Downf lo DFO 3-18 technology; with OneSteel management specifying a collection capacity that well exceeds its current maximum fume output. Project Management from OneSteel Reinforcing, says the company has a tenet to ensure any pollution control solutions should easily accommodate high rates of growth. Welding galvanised wire produces weld fumes. According to what processes are required, these can produce more fumes than other welding processes and it is vital to contain these. Mesh is used to reinforce roofs in mines where the environment is often aggressive, hence the need for galvanising. All mines specify unique requirements based on their local geology. One Steel Reinforcing has ACRS certified world-class manufacturing facilities and innovative-engineered reinforcing solutions to reduce labour needs and streamline construction. Donaldson modelled the site’s collection solution in a 3D digital environment before attempting anything physical so that management could test all the structures. This allowed the use of actual structure data to check for the load values at the anchorage points and create underground service pits for the machine. It detailed ducting to specifically suit that pit. Donaldson design engineers had to configure around the machine, especially the hood, and ultimately constructed the system in a way so that it reduced risks caused by sparks. Induction welding creates both fumes and sparks. Donaldson’s Downlfo Oval Series (DFO) of patented dust collectors utilises oval shaped cartridges to allow large amounts of air flow through the collector without increasing the footprint size or damaging filters. The DFO Series requires a smaller collector to minimise initial purchase price, reduce filter replacement costs and use less manufacturing floor space across most industries. Compared with standard industry performance, DFO collectors provide about 25% more capacity than other same sized dust collectors on the market. A patented ExtraLife Filter Cleaning System averages up to 30% increase in pulse cleaning efficiency for excellent cleaning ability. To further lower operating cost, unique oval shaped Ultra-Web cartridge filters provide a long filter life and high filtration efficiency. Donaldson (02) 4350 2034 76 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Safety BULKEX , Safety Show Sydney and Sydney Materials Handling to run side by side in October on display at BULKEX will be matched with a conference agenda that showcases technical papers on the latest innovations in bulk handling and research.” The one-day conference will be supported by a second day of intensive interactive workshops, says Bostridge. “The conference agenda will be 110229_CamplexJunior:Layout 21/1/11 populated by an industry wide1 call for papers. A key element of the selection process is that no paper will be able to have had prior circulation in the industry, so delegates will be guaranteed to be getting access to new and previously unreleased information.” www.bulkex.com.au 3:39 PM Page 1 www.sydmaterialshandling.com.au roductivity and safety will come together when BULKEX, Sydney Materials Handling and The Safety Show Sydney run concurrently at the Sydney Showground for the first time this year. BULKEX exhibitors will see thousands more visitors through the show in 2011 thanks to the additional drawing power of Sydney Materials Handling and The Safety Show Sydney. The two annual shows have routinely seen around 10,000 visitors from industry through their doors in defiance of the global financial crisis. The three events will occupy four acres of the Sydney Olympic Park site from 25 -27 Oct drawing an anticipated 10,000 visitors. BULKEX's organisers say the combined events will have much to offer its traditional patrons: bulk handling engineers and technicians from mining, agricultural, pharmaceuticals, forestry, chemicals, fertilizers, and transport and storage facilities. Among the exhibitors already confirmed for BULKEX 2011 are ESS, 4B Braime, Brice Baker, Dwyer, Fluke, Kinder & Co, Ross Brown Sales, Recycling Systems Australia, Vibrations Systems & Solutions, Eriez Magnetics, Fluke Australia, Pressure Systems, and RUD Chains. The focus will include materials handling and transportation, dust collection, weighing systems and scales, feeders, and packaging and bagging. “The 2011 BULKEX Conference will bring together Australia’s foremost practitioners of bulk materials and powder handling,” says BULKEX general manager Tim Bostridge. “The valuable products and services that are Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 77 Safety POW’R-RISER does the heavy lifting etting up heavy lift equipment for truck, tractor, railway stock and machinery servicing can be time-consuming and hazardous if not undertaken properly. Frustrating problems can arise in both workshop situations, where space is at a premium, and in remote situations where normal plant services and lifting surfaces are not available. A solution to such problems is offered by Enerpac in the form of its easily maneuverable, self-contained, POW’RRISER Lifting Jack which can be used in even the tightest locations and over rough terrain. The heavy-duty lifting system combines a high capacity (54-181 ton) cylinder and an electric or air-powered hydraulic pump unit integrated into a mobile cart. “It is ideal for companies where time and safety are paramount, such as mining and energy, oil and gas, heavy infrastructure construction and heavy transport,” says Enerpac Mining manager Pat Molloy. “POW’R-RISER® has the speed, power and versatility for a wide variety of on-site site applications, including servicing tires, tracks and other maintenance functions on heavy equipment, lifting and positioning of large constructed elements and many other applications that require heavy lifting equipment in remote locations. Key features include: Can be rolled into position for easy placement. l No exposed hoses or fittings to damage. l Narrow width for hard-to-reach areas. l Wide selection of capacities, strokes and jack heights for a variety of applications. l Electric motor fully enclosed to withstand elements. l 54, 90, 136 and 181 ton capacities with pneumatic or electric pumps for the toughest jobs l SUP-R-STACK™ Extension System allows lifting at all heights without blocking. l For safe mechanical cribbing of a lifted load, accessory Locking U-Rings can be placed around an extended piston and come in four lengths for each POW’RRISER capacity. They are available individually or in sets. Locking U-Rings are accommodated by storage racks integral to the POW’R-RISER POW’R-RISER provides safe, efficient, mobile lifting and load-holding for the toughest applications and is backed by Enerpac’s extensive product support. This support includes national and worldwide networks of local distributors and authorised service centers as well as regional customer and technical service centers. Enerpac equipment in Australia - 02 9743 8988 info@enerpac.com.au. Abrasion rating Blade cutting rating Tear rating Puncture rating Hand protection standards - 78 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology rotective Gloves’ is not currently compulsory for glove manufacturers, safety managers view compliance with standards as a key issue.” “Australia and parts of Asia have a policy of adopting established international standards for its own use and has implemented a number of identical standards to those used throughout Europe. Ansell’s gloves have been tested and approved to all meet many of the stringent European and USA standards.” “For example, standard EN 420 (AS/NZS 2161.2:1998) – Occupational Protective Gloves, General Requirements defines general requirements to all protective gloves (except electrician and medical gloves) for glove construction, innocuousness, cleaning, comfort and efficiency, marking and information. Keeping cool By Te r r y Mc D o n a l d ummer is upon us, and employees will be tempted to begin shedding clothing in order to stay cool. It’s your responsibility to see that they don’t take it too far. As welcome as warm summer days are—especially after such a long, cold winter—the heat will rise to uncomfortable levels, tempting those working in hot, harsh environments such as manufacturing plants to seek ways of staying cool. They will begin wearing less clothing, and what they do wear is generally looser than what you’ll find during the colder months. I’m sure you’ve already detected the problem attached to both of those scenarios: less clothing means decreased protection against cuts, abrasions, and spills; and loose clothing can get caught in moving machinery, pulling limbs and whole bodies into the works. Obviously, you don’t want either of these things to happen, so now would be a good time to consider how you’d like to address the issue. Some companies provide their employees with uniforms such as coveralls. While this is a definite added expense, there are a number of benefits that make it worthwhile. First of all, by choosing the right design you can make sure your workers have pockets where they need them, and padding where it helps. This can increase productivity since less time will be spent searching for tools or flashlights, or something to kneel on while working down low or in cramped quarters. Another thing to consider is the impression it will leave on visiting customers, because we all know how important a clean, well-organized shop floor is in projecting a positive, what do they mean? A series of detailed standards follow: AS/ NZS 2161.3:1998 (EN 388) Protective Gloves Against Mechanical Risk; AS/NZS 2161.10:1998 (EN 374) Protection against Chemicals and Micro Organisms and AS/NZS 2161.4:1999 (EN 407) Protective Gloves Against Thermal Risks. Each of these standards is represented by a symbol and number stamped on gloves – the higher the number, the higher level of protection. To achieve each standard requires testing to determine the rating of protection level and is a useful guide to those responsible for ensuring worker safety,” he said. Ansel Ltd - 1800 337 041 protection@ap.ansell.com - www.ansell.com.au Safety professional image. A less expensive approach involves developing a dress code, which is what the vast majority of manufacturing operations do. Points to consider include the work being done, since long pants should be required in areas where someone may be exposed to hot metalworking fluids or caustic liquids, but there may be other areas where shorts or lighter clothing might be acceptable, or even preferable. The same thing goes for long sleeves, but in the areas where they are required you should also ask that cuffs always be buttoned to avoid the horrible situation described previously. Those of you who have had a machine “grab you” when your clothing gets caught in moving parts still probably shudder at the memory. To be honest, though, the real issue involves creating an environment in which it’s comfortable for people to do hard, sweaty, demanding work. We all know how sweltering it can be in some manufacturing facilities, where heat is often generated in addition to the sun beaming down on the metal roof, and if you can make the temperature bearable—if not idyllic—you’ll find that people will be less likely to begin shedding their clothing. So make use of the wind where you can, channeling it through open doors and windows, and also deploy fans in ways that will encourage that type of airflow, much like the attic fans you’ll see in some people’s homes. Creating that kind of large-scale airflow will be much more productive than simply aiming a smaller unit directly into someone’s face. Large industrial air-conditioning modules are also available for extremely high-heat areas, such as near forges or welding operations. In addition to keeping your workers cool on the outside, you need to make sure they’re hydrated on the inside as well. While good old-fashioned water is always the best liquid to fill up on, there are many drinks that have been formulated especially for hot industrial environments. Unlike water, these hydration products can contain ingredients that your body needs and is losing due to sweating, such as salt, electrolytes, and even nutritional supplements. They are available in premixed liquid form, or in packaged powders that you can mix and make available around the facility in your own coolers. So think of the small things you can do to help your employees keep their cool inside and out, and you’ll stand a better chance of avoiding the terrible types of injuries we’ve discussed here. Terry McDonald is US-based and Manager of Repair Parts, Inc. rpi@repair–parts–inc.com www.repair–parts–inc.com Reprinted courtesy of Gear Solutions magazine [www.gearsolutions.com] Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 79 Lean M anufacturing Linking the Lean enterprise By Jim Huntzinger There are a number of “Lean” movements going on that are having a significant impact on organisations involved in and learning from these movements. This is true particularly in the Lean niche areas of accounting, product & process development, logistics, human resources, sales and marketing, and Training Within Industry (TWI). But these movements – actually business functions – do not function in isolation. They all must function together as integrated facets of a business enterprise. Just like systems of the human body – circulatory, respiratory, nervous, and so forth – they are interconnected physically and functionally; otherwise, life of the human body would cease. The business organisation is no different. Implementing these systems cannot be done successfully in isolation. s the diagram illustrates, these niche functions are all interlinked. While expertise in each area must be developed, what also must be developed is the understanding of the cross dependency each has on the other functions of the business. For high level success there is no alternative. But, unfortunately, few companies have successfully accomplished this. This situation is, in part, the reason for the rise of these movements – to give organisations and individuals within these organisations the opportunity to learn and understand both the function of each of these unique parts, and their integrative relationship with the rest of the business enterprise. This interdependency of each of these characteristics within the business enterprise is the reason these organisations have joined together to promote these topics and their associated events. In order for each function to thrive at the most effective level, the other characteristics must thrive as well. That translates into developing key people in each discipline with the skills and knowledge to lead, guide, and grow others in their organisations; and this includes leadership which understands these principles and practices so that strategy, direction and mentoring leads the organization in a productive and functional manner which serves the organisation’s customers. For example, Lean accounting covers how an organisation accurately reflects cost information in order for the decision-makers to make significantly better informed decisions. Since, other than operations, logistics and product development have the largest impact on a company’s financial health, Lean accounting plays a direct role in supporting both logistics and product development. Logistics are tied to product development since procuring and shipping supplied components and finished products are essential to day-to-day success. While sales and marketing connects product development to the market, customer demands and preferences, it also links daily demand and consumption to operations in order to fulfill this demand; all the while logistics handles the flow of information and materials through the maze of customers, distributors, retailers, manu- 80 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology facturers and suppliers. And overall, TWI is foundational to developing skills of continuous improvement and good standard work in any function of a business. Basically, it becomes very apparent after a bit of thought and analysis that none of these functions can, in any reasonable semblance, operate free and clear of each other. Unfortunately, that is what many firms try to do, combined with managing them financially as independent functions. How is a firm to develop itself into a Lean enterprise under such conditions? Simply put, one step at a time. The process typically begins in manufacturing. The reason for this is that application of Lean in manufacturing is much more tangible. It is easier for people to see, touch, and understand physically the changes taking place. And in most cases this is fine. Manufacturing is where the value the customer ultimately sees is added. Manufacturing also has the most history and case studies to review and reflect upon for examples of what to do. But the real key is developing people. Lean M anufacturing and developing people Another of the key underpinnings of the Lean enterprise is the development and implementation of one-piece flow, or just simply stated, flow. One-piece flow is producing one part at a time – a batch of one – aligned with customer demand. This includes both the flow of materials and information; for the purpose of this article we will focus on the flow of materials – or production in operations. There are two main aspects of implementing flow in the Lean enterprise. First is establishing flow where it currently does not exist; moving from batch manufacturing to flow manufacturing. Many problems must be solved in order to achieve this, such as machine design, machine uptime, and changeover time to name a few. The second is re-establishing flow when and where it breaks down. Since operating under flow manufacturing drastically reduces inventory levels, operations cannot afford downtime because there is little or no inventory to buffer downtime. Tools used to solve problems associated with a breakdown in flow are: standard work, TWI, pull systems, TPM, and many others. But how does a firm drive and sustain flow? This key loops straight back to developing people. An analogy I often use to explain these two key elements of the Lean enterprise is they are two sides of the same coin – flow and people. Therefore, any organisation which truly desires to become a Lean enterprise will have to implement flow principles, and the only way to achieve this is by developing their people; that means all people in the organisation. The link to connect the two sides of the coin – flow and people – is solving problems on a daily basis. This is the essence of kaizen, developing people to quickly solve problems when and where they occur, and creating countermeasures before issues become substantial problems. In order for people to develop, they must Learn by Doing – that is, they must learn in a hands-on fashion with a mentor/teacher by their side guiding them through the process. Allowing them to fail and exerting positive pressure to understand the reason behind the failure (root cause), then reapplying an adjusted effort based on what they learned in the failure, is crucial. This is where Plan, Do, Check, Act (PDCA) or kaizen comes into play. This is absolutely key to developing people in your organisation, and utterly critical to transforming your business into a Lean enterprise. By its nature PDCA is an acknowledgment of failure, but a victory in learning. If PDCA was a victory each time, you would never have to go back through the cycle again. But that is exactly what PDCA intends for you to do. This is the process of learning: fail, learn, fail, learn, and so on. And this will equate to a victory. The failure I am referencing does not mean things go bad necessarily, it means that a final solution or a perfect solution is not reached. This is why Toyota frequently refers to these “trys” as countermeasures. Counter the problem and measure the results, then try again and again. This is exactly what TWI manifests both mechanically and philosophically – a pattern for a behavior. Once this behavior is learned and made into a habit, deep learning takes place and the learning cycle can become addictive; this is a habit. How does TWI achieve this? It goes back to the old analogy frequently used by Toyota folks using stair steps. Job Methods is the vertical part of the step – the change, the improvement, the experiment, the ‘try’. Job Instruction is the horizontal part of the step or the stabilisation of the experiment upon some level of success (or learning). Job Relations gives an environment where both the leader and the subordinate feel comfort and are confident to work together through this change-stabilization process. This is a learning process running in parallel with the mechanical PDCA process of the stair steps. In this manner there is a symbiotic relationship between the organisation and its people. The company gets an improvement – better performance. People get to contribute in a meaningful way and grow in knowledge and experience. Then each gets to further leverage the mutual benefit over and over again, thus making both better through many tiny creative-destruction cycles. Creative-destruction means that new businesses, services, or products enter and create the new markets, while destroying existing ones – with the overall result being beneficial. TWI is a micro version of creative-destruction. Kaizen is no different, but on a smaller scale. It links people directly to understanding the processes in which they work and, in turn, helps them to understand better the interdependencies of the functions in their organisation. This ultimately makes the overall organization function more effectively as a whole. But this takes patience. It takes leadership. It takes a long-term view of the business while working on resolving problems in the short-term. It takes intimacy with your customers and markets. It is not an easy task, but it can be very fulfilling for everyone in the organisation when it is embraced. Jim Huntzinger is Founder and President of Lean Frontiers. jim@leanfront.com - www.leanfrontiers.com For the upcoming Summit in New Zealand please visit: www.leanfrontiers.com/nz About the Author Jim Huntzinger has over twenty years’ experience developing Lean enterprises through system design and development, implementation, and guiding organisations both strategically and tactically through the transformation process. He began his career as a manufacturing engineer with Aisin Seiki (a Toyota Group company and manufacturer of automotive components) when they transplanted to North America to support Toyota. Over his 20 year career, he has held positions in engineering, operations, and management working to implement and evolve Lean into operational and business practices. He has also worked as a consultant with organisations ranging from small privately-held to huge global corporations. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 81 Lean M anufacturing Lean – how and why SME’s should do Lean When contemplating improving your business there is a common tendency to unconsciously go on the defensive and think “Lean may be alright for company XYZ in Industry ABC but it won’t work like that in our industry or company. We are different and have different challenges.” It is true that your business is different and has its own peculiar challenges. Lean however can work for any process or business that is looking to add value. By Glenn Seaby like the definition of Lean that is “Striving to deliver value to your customer through the perfect process”. So if you’re trying to deliver value to your customers, don’t yet have the perfect process (no one does) and you want to change, Lean will work for you. So how do you do it? I maintain that you need three things 1.Desire 2.A questioning and challenging approach 3.Skills Desire The hydraulic shop before the Lean process. Unless you really want to change and can see the need, you won’t. Your Lean efforts will be like all the other things you should do - a good idea just not right now, I’m busy. Change is hard and unless you really desire a better future state, motivation will fall off. If you really desire change you will find the time and the resources to achieve the goal. A questioning and challenging approach The hydraulic shop after the Lean process has started. 82 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology So you’ve got the desire, how do you strive to achieve the perfect process? Lean experts are increasingly emphasising the importance of a questioning and challenging approach (1). You need to challenge your processes and ask l What is not as it should be? l Where you are letting your customers down or wasting your effort? l What you should do about it? Lean M anufacturing You need to clearly understand what is wrong with your process and then apply the right solution. As we’ve said, your industry and company are different, so you’ll need your own solution. Tools that others have developed like 5S, Problem Solving, Quick Changeovers etc. may form part of the solution but you need to apply them in the right mix and sequence for your own set of problems. A good way of working out the right mix and sequence for your business is to use the Lean tool of value stream mapping. Skills You need to get the skills required. Most of the techniques seem obvious or are intellectually simple once you know them. Unfortunately, many of these same tools and techniques are counter intuitive. You can however learn from those who have gone before. There is a wide range of books, web sites and blogs that you can get information from. The nationally recognised course in Competitive Manufacturing is also a good way to access materials, expert coaching and obtain the skills you need. As a further incentive this training is heavily subsidised in Australia. So can it be done? Many examples of SMEs working successfully to apply Lean exist, all different to you but some similar. A recent example my company has been involved with is a group of SMEs in Rockhampton Queensland. The group met regularly with us to learn and discuss Lean processes and learn from each other. Each business was different but the generic principles of Lean applied to each of them. They all followed the same questioning and challenging process and variously reported l Reduced lead times on jobs and quotes l Improved profitability l Reduced error rates l Improved safety and environmental performance Paul Thompson of The Hydraulic Shop, and part of the group, commented that - “Through the process I’ve learnt a lot and redesigned our key processes. As a result our internal communication, processes, systems and customer service have all improved. We also have quicker turn around and more capacity.” Sounds good, and all through 1. Desiring to change 2.Questioning and challenging the way things are done 3. Getting the skills required to make the change. (1) Jeffrey Liker and Mike Rother, “Why Lean Programs Fail”, Lean Enterprise Institute, www.lean.org www.efficiencyworks.com.au twitter: efficiencyworks About the Author Glenn Seaby works as a Lean coach and consultant and is a Director of Efficiency Works. He has been involved in manufacturing and process improvement for more than 20 years. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 83 Lean M anufacturing Lean accounting's quest for acceptance. . . Despite growing interest, proponents say there's still a long way to go before Lean accounting becomes a mainstream practice. By Josh Cable When Orest "Orry" Fiume was vice president of finance and administration for The Wiremold Company, US.-based manufacturer of cable and wiring products, he recalls management meetings in which executives had difficulty stifling yawns while analysing the company's standard cost accountingbased financial results. "After about 30 seconds, you could see everybody else's eyes glaze over," Fiume recalls. "Because when you look at those statements, they're just unintelligible to anybody that doesn't have a degree in accounting." iume, who led Wiremold's conversion to Lean accounting in the early 1990s and went on to co-author "Real Numbers: Management Accounting in a Lean Organization," notes that once the company switched to a simpler financial statement that reflected the improvements being made by its Lean efforts -- the "plain-English P&L," as it's called in the book -- the tone of those meetings changed dramatically. "Once we went to the plain-English P&L, we could have a good management discussion about what was happening, because everyone could understand what they were looking at," Fiume says. Fiume retired in 2002, but he still extols the virtues of Lean accounting in various workshops presented by the Lean Enterprise Institute, where he is a member of the board of directors. In his presentations, Fiume shows how a standard cost-based P&L statement penalises a fictitious manufacturer for reducing inventory, because the labour and overhead costs associated with the production of that inventory have been deferred to the balance sheet until the year the inventory is sold. "When we reduce our inventory, or improve our inventory turns -- which is a good thing -- we have to take some of that labour and overhead from prior years that was capitalised on the balance sheet and we have to take it off the balance sheet," Fiume explains. "And the only place it can go is through the P&L." Unfortunately, those deferred labour-and-overhead costs are buried on a standard cost-based P&L (usually showing up as an unfavourable overhead variance) -- which often prompts corporate brass to question the value of Lean initiatives taking place in the company. The plain-English P&L, 84 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology on the other hand, separates current operating information from the change-in-inventory information, presenting the latter on a separate line. "Whereas standard cost accounting hides what is really happening [with shop-floor Lean initiatives], Lean accounting shines a light on it," Fiume says. An uphill climb Even with the growing popularity of Lean manufacturing, Fiume laments that it's been a bit of an uphill climb to convince manufacturers to implement the plain-English P&L approach. An informal survey of his workshop attendees several years ago revealed that while more than 80% of respondents had begun applying Lean concepts (such as waste removal) to their accounting operations, fewer than 20% said they had switched from standard cost accounting to simpler Lean-reflective accounting statements. Jean Cunningham, a Lean consultant and co-author of the aforementioned "Real Numbers," asserts that there is plenty of interest among manufacturers in "changing their metrics to fit with their operational changes as well as interest in applying Lean within their accounting operations." However, when it comes to manufacturers actually taking the plunge and switching to Lean accounting-based financial statements, "there's certainly a lot more interest than action." Gary Hourselt, Executive Vice President and CFO for US-based TBM Consulting, is a firm believer that Lean accounting "gives a much better picture of the company and its [Lean] improvements" compared with traditional cost accounting methods. Ironically, though, the clarity of the financial information in the Lean accounting-based Lean M anufacturing P&L is a big reason why adoption of Lean accounting has been slow, he notes. "Traditional accounting systems reward overproduction, and overproduction is a very common way for manufacturers to make their results look better," Hourselt says. Hourselt points out that public companies have been particularly resistant to adopting Lean accounting, in part because "the world of public [companies] thinks quarterly earning first." "Public companies have a lot of investors rely on their accounting, and [Lean accounting] is a pretty drastic change for them," Hourselt says. "It also exposes poor business practices -- we use the term 'it opens the kimono' -- and I've seen some very good people in public companies work very hard to shade the results so that the earnings per share look as good as they can and the stock price stays as high as it can." Change is hard With the help of Lean consultant Brian Maskell, Watlow business units have been identifying their value streams and posting simplified operational and financial data for each value stream on a weekly basis. The implementation of the value stream management system, as Watlow calls it, has helped the company gain "a better understanding of our cost structure" and make better business decisions, Grinde explains. "And even though right now the economy is down, here at Hannibal we're growing the business because we understand our costs better," Grinde says. "One reason is because accountants have been trained for the last hundred years to do material-labour-overhead standard costing and doing P&Ls one way, and we've been telling businesses, ‘These are your costs,' and now all of a sudden we're telling them something different," Grinde says. "Now we're saying, ‘No, we were all wrong.' That's a big hurdle." Fiume asserts that the major hurdle standing in the way of widespread adoption is the education system. "We're still teaching standard cost accounting in schools," Fiume says. "Some schools have started teaching Lean accounting as an adjunct to the traditional standard cost, but it's a very small minority. Until the academic world starts telling the accounting profession that Lean accounting is a legitimate way of looking at your financial information, people are going to be reluctant to adopt it." Clemson University accounting Professor Frances Kennedy, who delves into Lean when she teaches classes on cost accounting, is well-aware that she is in the minority when it comes to her inclusion of Lean accounting in her courses. She points out that even some of her colleagues at prestigious business schools don't always understand Lean. "I've actually had someone tell me that they don't think what I do is really accounting," Kennedy says. "I get a huge kick out of that comment." Her students, on the other hand, "really do get Lean." "They get it because they don't have a paradigm already established, and because it just makes sense," Kennedy says. "And then I get students asking me, ‘Why did you teach me all that other stuff?'" Kennedy's advice to manufacturers that want to see Lean incorporated into accounting classes is to exert that same type of pull on business schools. She notes that this can be accomplished in a number of ways, from sponsoring a faculty or student scholarship for the Lean Accounting Summit to simply picking up the phone and calling the dean or the department chair. Not all doom and gloom While Lean accounting is a long way from garnering mainstream acceptance in the manufacturing community, proponents of this accounting approach assert that it's not all doom and gloom. "We find that once the financial leadership understands the thinking behind Lean accounting, the actual transformation can be very quick on a location-by-location basis," she explains. "Small or medium businesses can probably get this done in less than a few months. And in larger companies, on a division-by-division basis, it doesn't take a long time to make this change, once you understand what it's about." She continues, "Our challenge is to educate people on what statements would entail, what they would look like and how you would read them. Once people understand that, they can see that this is actually quite a simple change, and most of the information that you need to make this change is readily available in your accounting system." www.jeancunninghamconsulting.com Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 85 STRATEGIES Forum What is your view on Innovation? – the innovation trajectory There are many approaches taken to inspire insightful thinking into what may be the next big thing for your industry. Many struggle with the search for new horizons, but in fact the search can be made a lot easier if you plot what is best termed the “innovation trajectory”. Roger La Salle explains. good starting point is to first agree that there is always a new horizon, or something better. Indeed the very definition of Innovation: “Change that Adds Value” is founded on this very notion. To argue with this would have you take the view that whatever you use or are doing today will be the same in 100 years - not likely I suggest! One of the secrets of innovation in any sector is to trace the evolution or development of that industry over time and look at how the offering has changed. What is your innovation trajectory? Discover this trajectory and the gradient of the trajectory and then ask, ‘what’s next’? There is always a next. Innovation trajectory is similar to a mathematical extrapolation. By extending a known graph or curve we can very likely anticipate its new position and find new insights into the business. Do this in a systematic way with your present offering, plot the trajectory and see if you can discover the “enablers” and “drivers” and be first with the next innovation, thus leaving others in your wake. In Roman times mail was delivered by a runner or on horseback, an innovation on this was perhaps smoke signals, or the semaphore. Speed of reliable information delivery has always been of great value. Indeed it was the promise of speedy mail delivery that essentially underpinned the fledgling airline business and spawned the birth of the aviation industry. Had it not been for mail contracts the development of the airline industry would have been severely handicapped. Find the enablers and drivers On observing this innovation trajectory with speed of delivery as a driver, and technology as an enabler, some clever 86 entrepreneurs moved to fill the gap of the relatively slow mail services and implemented the overnight courier services. Such was the birth of such companies as DHL, FedEx, UPS etc. Speed of delivery via jet aircraft has now plateaued as the speed of transport jets approaches that of the speed of sound. There are now only two presently available solutions to increase this much valued speed: l faster aircraft and/or faster ground transport lfaster collection and processing time. The volume and content is now expanding at a seemingly unstoppable rate. The trajectory of businesses in the communications sector is clearly headed toward volume data coupled with added security using technology as the enablers, and ever lower price, with competition as the driver. These are classic examples of innovation of services, determine the trajectory, extend the graph and anticipate what’s next, then innovate to fill the void. Whilst speed may have plateaued, price has not. Such innovation based on a plot of the trajectory, a determination of the enablers and drivers should be carried out in a structured way that can produce sometimes quite remarkable insights. The secret is to learn from the past and try and extrapolate to the future as shown. Competition and technology have been the drivers of lower prices for deliveries, and it would seem this trajectory will ever be on a downward slope. Based on this price trajectory and the plateauing of speed, one must question the long terms benefits of being in this business unless some breakthrough innovation is undertaken. Reuters is another example of a business that “innovated” the delivery of information, simply by offering increased speed. The telegraph was the first move into electronic signalling and a great innovation. Since then we have seen an explosive growth in speed of data delivery with that now approaching the speed of light. The driver is people’s need to know, the enabler is technology. Speed may have just about plateaued, but data volume has not. March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Spent the time, plot a trajectory, find the opportunities Roger La Salle, is the creator of the “Matrix Thinking”™ technique and is widely sought after as an international speaker on Innovation, Opportunity and business development. He is the author of three books, Director and former CEO of the Innovation Centre of Victoria (INNOVIC) as well as a number of companies both in Australian and overseas. He has been responsible for a number of successful technology start-ups and in 2004 was a regular panellist on the ABC New Inventors TV program. In 2005 he was appointed to the “Chair of Innovation” at “The Queens University” in Belfast. Matrix Thinking is now used in more than 26 countries. www. matrixthinking.com OHS Forum OHS harmonisation – the clock has started ticking No matter who you are, it will be almost impossible to escape responsibility for workplace safety when the national model Work Health and Safety Act is adopted by Australian states at the end of this year. Norton Rose law firm partner Barry Sherriff, who as a member of the review panel was one of the architects of the laws, will tell Safety In Action trade show visitors in seminars from 5-7 April that the new laws will close the loopholes in accountability. Marian Macdonald reports. herriff notes that the NSW government’s proposals to adopt the right of unions to prosecute and to reverse the onus of proof are not central to the operation of the laws. “Even if the Keneally government is returned at the next election, these are ‘after the event’ items – going only to who can prosecute and who must prove what,” Sherriff says. “The changes that will make a real difference to compliance will apply to NSW workplaces as well.” Significant changes in all jurisdictions will include: • Moving from employment as basis for duties, obligations and rights. • New positive duty of care for officers, with due diligence defined. • Broadened consultation obligations – vertical and horizontal. • Broadened union right of entry. • Greater protection against discrimination and coercion. • Emphasis on graduated enforcement but higher penalties. • Easier modification of notices. • Changes to powers of questioning and reduced rights of individuals. A significant change in some States will be that health and safety representatives will have powers to issue Provisional Improvement Notices PINs and direct a work stoppage (not currently available in NSW, Queensland, Western Australia and Tasmania). OHS no longer the domain of employers One of the biggest changes under the new laws will be a shift in emphasis from the employer-employee relationship. “Rather than focusing on the duties of employers, the model Work Health and Safety Act refers to the Person Conducting a Business or Undertaking (PCBU), which is a very broad term and everyone contributing to work will have a duty of care,” says Sherriff. “Practical relationships, not legal, will determine who owes a duty to whom.” The definition of worker under the legislation is expanded significantly. Contractors, employees of contractors, sub-contractors, labour hire workers, apprentices, volunteers as well as employees are all caught by the definition. Clearer but positive obligations for senior officers Senior officers of companies and other organisations will have a more positive, proactive duty of care, beginning with an understanding of hazards and risks. “Officers will need appropriate processes for receiving and considering information regarding incidents, hazards and risks and responding in a timely way to that information. It also means verifying the implementation of those processes through regular audits and verifying legal compliance.” Consultation is critical The new Act obliges the PCBU to consult so far as reasonably practicable with all workers in the business of the PCBU not just direct employees. Also added will be a duty of every PCBU to consult, co-operate and co-ordinate activities with every other duty holder. Issue resolution processes and default procedures must also be in place to ensure engagement of workers and their representatives with PCBUs. Why it’s urgent “Model OHS laws are no longer just a possibility,” says Sherriff, “They are close to being passed, and contracts are being entered into now that will operate after the commencement of the new laws on 1 January next. Though experience shows that effective implementation of new laws like these takes 18 months to two years, the clock started ticking months ago and you have only a few months still available to prepare.” Draft regulations are out for public comment Safe Work Australia has released draft model regulations, for public comment until 4 April 2011. “The regulations will bring about a lot of changes in the detailed obligations in each State. How to prepare Norton Rose recommends preparing for the new WHS Act in 10 steps: 1. Undertake a legal risk analysis. 2. Undertake a gap analysis. 3. Review, revise and supplement policies and procedures (remember current consultation obligations). 4. Implement – including training and ongoing review. 5. Review contracts – many will operate under the new laws. 6. Design and implement interface coordination processes and plans. 7. Develop effective representation and consultation processes. 8. Develop robust issue resolution processes. 9. Ensure effective processes for union right of entry. 10. Review and revise all aspects of corporate governance in WHS to ensure effective management and ‘due diligence’ compliance. Barry Sherriff will deliver free seminars addressing the model WHS Act daily at Safety In Action from 5-7 April at the Melbourne Exhibition Centre. Visit www.safetyinaction.net.au, email safetyvisitor@aec.net.au or phone Australian Exhibitions & Conferences on 03 9654 7773. Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 87 LAW Forum Additive Manufacturing and intellectual property The Australian patent system is underutilised, often because Australian manufacturers consider their inventions unworthy. Surprisingly, a patent may well cover the use of Additive Manufacturing if this use was not previously publicly known, as explained by Ben Mott. dditive Manufacturing (AM) is the name given to an exciting range of non-conventional manufacturing techniques that can be applied to produce profitable products. Conventionally, product components have been formed by removing material (eg machining) or forming material (eg casting). AM involves building product components by material addition, often layer by layer. In the past AM has been applied to produce prototypes and short production runs. As AM technology advances, increasingly larger production runs are economical. AM offers many advantages: tooling is not required, product design can be changed at a whim and is not constrained by coring considerations or other conventional limitations; complexity is free. Exploiting these new design freedoms can lead to dramatically reduced part counts and superior products, eg a heavy plate can be economically replaced by a stronger and lighter integrally formed covered lattice. AM is an example of good product design that can lead to profit margin. Like all good product design, this margin is unlikely to last if your competitors release similar products. Intellectual property Intellectual property is the name given to the ownership of a ‘creation of the mind’, eg the application of AM to a particular product is a creation of the mind that you might seek to own. Generally speaking, in the manufacturing context, you must take action to retain ownership of your intellectual property. Aside from a few rare exceptions, it is not an infringement of copyright to copy a product once it is in production. Patents, design registration and trade mark registration are available to protect intellectual property relating to manufactured products, eg you could seek patent 88 An integrally formed hydraulic valve housing manufactured using a Selective Laser Melting process (a form of AM). or design protection to stop others copying your AM product. Design registration protects the appearance of a product. An Australian design registration lasts for up to 10 years and can be used to stop others making and selling a product which looks “substantially similar in overall impression” to the registered design. To qualify for protection, the design must not be “substantially similar in overall impression” to anything that was publicly known before an initial application for design registration was filed. Design registration can be of particular value where the appearance of the product is important, the appearance is required to achieve a functional result, and/or there is a significant risk of direct copying. Applying for design registration is straightforward. The patent system can be used to protect technical details of a new product or process. An Australian standard patent lasts for up to 20 years. An Australian innovation patent lasts for up to eight years. The Australian patent system is underutilised. Australian manufacturers are often held back by a false belief that their products and processes are ‘not clever enough’ to qualify for patent protection. To qualify for a standard patent the invention must have an ‘inventive step’. This is a surprisingly low standard: many rather mundane items are validly patented. March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology An inventive step is not required to qualify for an innovation patent. Instead the invention must have an ‘innovative step’. This is an even lower standard. It requires a variation from what has gone before that makes a ‘substantial contribution to the working of the invention’. In a recent court decision, adding a taper to the end of a post to make it easier to drive in to the ground was held to qualify. As the law currently stands, an Australian innovation patent may well validly cover the use of AM to make a particular product if this use was not previously publicly known. Such a patent could be used to prevent others using AM in Australia to make the product, and/or to stop others importing product made elsewhere using AM. Physical changes in the product, eg for reduced part count, would improve the likelihood of obtaining valid protection. By way of example patent coverage in relation to the illustrated valve housing might be defined in terms of: “A method of manufacturing a valve housing including the steps of: (1) providing an electronic representation (e.g. CAD data) of a valve housing; and (2) repetitively (2a) depositing a layer of powdered material, and (2b) selectively fusing the deposited material in accordance with the electronic representation to form the valve housing.” If pursuing patent or design protection is of interest it is important to keep the invention or design secret until an initial application for protection is filed. This article was written by Ben Mott, Freehills Patent & Trade Mark Attorneys, benjamin.mott@freehills.com. Ben would like to thank Formero (http://www.formero. com.au) for their kind assistance with the preparation of this article. LEAN MANUFACTURING Forum Lean manufacturing – fat training How does training and lean manufacturing go hand in hand? Ron Pollak explains I’ve got a confession to make. I’ve received a whole lot of help with this article. It’s probably an excellent example of Lean Authoring. It started this way: I thought that if I was going to write an article about how training and Lean manufacturing go hand in hand, I had better bone up on Lean manufacturing. So, where do you go today? the web! Now, before you read further, please note that my major efforts are outlined at the foot of this article. Now, read on… Some time ago I joined a discussion group, through the highly recommended Australian Institute of Training & Development (I am biased as I am a NSW Councillor of this august organisation). So, I threw out the question. “I have been asked to write an article on “Training & Lean manufacturing”. My first thought was to title the article “Lean Manufacturing - Fat Training”. Pro or con give me your thoughts. Well, the answer came back from a colleague in Egypt, Moustafa Wahba, who basically provided the bulk of the article. Moustafa’s is a Competency Assurance & Technical and Vocational Education and Training Consultant. Moustafa wrote: “My own thoughts on the approach to implement a Lean Management System to achieve excellence in Companies, Enterprises, Education and Training Institutions are summarised as follows: The word “Lean” means little or no flesh /fat/waste or thin. Lean management adopts the zero-waste principal and addresses the waste inherent in bureaucratic communication and reporting systems. Many of the successful Lean companies have relatively ‘flat organisational pyramids’ to begin with; others find ways to use cross-functional management to ensure that critical information is not buried or twisted before it can be used. To implement a Lean Management System, practical methodology based on continuous improvement methods, crossfunctional management and employee’s involvement should be adopted. The Ron’s own comments entire system should be supported by documents and forms that guide the staff in applying the concepts. In order to adopt a Lean Management System, the senior management needs to follow up the following simple guidelines and tools: l Link the key vocational areas to zerowaste. l Develop a company-wide vision, analyse strategically training capabilities needed in the future and create a five year training development plan for development of these capabilities. l Transfer the development plan into an annual improvement policy. l Guide, monitor and evaluate activities to ensure progress towards the annual policy target, using a cross-functional system of reporting and analysis. A Lean Management System is designed to lead management systematically through the above activities to form a world-class Company, Enterprise, Education and Training Institution. “In conclusion, the Lean Management System is a complete programme that aligns and integrates long-term strategically development planning and day-today improvement targets to make the company demand focused, flexible and ready for tomorrow’s challenges.” Mustafa talks about ‘flat organisational pyramids’. Hopefully, by the time you are reading this article, Egypt’s period of difficulty is behind it and the only pyramids that are flat are those in organisations. Perhaps this article should have focused on one of the wastes that Lean manufacturing endeavours to avoid. That being ‘latent skill’. This is where organisations employ their staff for specific skills, whereas these same employees have other skills too. With training it’s possible to take advantage of these latent skills as well. The problem that I see with training today, is that there’s far too much attention on cutting ‘discretionary expenditure’ – and training is top of the list. Sure, you have got to do technical, product and safety training. But the real gains are made when the people themselves grow. Otherwise, you are not taking advantage of their ‘latent skills’. Here are some recent examples I have collected where growth has occurred, when there were indirect benefits from unexpected latent skills. I have heard stories about how a group who went through a strenuous Certificate IV in Business Sales program were noticed to be more confident and greater contributors in areas outside of the sales arena. On another occasion, employees who were treated to a Personal Development program – the fattest and least businessgoal-targeted course available, returned from their course with a ‘different attitude’ to a whole range of situations. At the same time, however, I consider that there are distinct benefits when training can be linked to a management goal or initiative. As such, I am a great believer in training needing a theme greater than the event itself. Yet, a number of businesses I have visited lately are taking a special pride in running a Lean manufacturing initiative, with appropriately titled training. Yet, stopping waste is not the only goal for management. Perhaps, being Lean is too strong a theme for training. Ron Pollak Training Pty Limited Ph: 02 8354 7777 www.ronpollak.com.au Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 89 n ibitio 11 Exh dar 20 en l a C INDUSTRY CALENDAR INTERNATIONAL It is recommended to contact exhibitor before attending event Green manufacturing expo USA (different dates/venues): 16-17 March 2011 Orlando 7-9 June 2011 New York 21-23 June 2011 Toronto 20-22 Sept 2011 Rosemont Presents the full spectrum of sustainable manufacturing solutions. Email: greenmfginfo@cancom.com www.canontradeshows.com/expo/gmx11 Blech 15-17 March 2011 Russia, St Petersburg Sheet metal, tube, cutting/forming, flexible sheetmetal working, joining/welding, automation and Robotics, tools/dies, measuring, CAD/CAM, recycling, OHS, R&D. Email: info@blechrussia.com www.blechrussia.com/english AeroCon USA (3 different dates and venues) 14-15 March 2011 (Texas) 16-17 March 2011 (Florida) Introducing new conference and exhibition for the aerospace and defence industries. Email: aeroconinfo@cancom.com www.canontradeshows.com/expo/aerocon Automate USA, Chicago 21-24 March 2011 Full spectrum of automation technologies and solutions. www.automate2011.com/ MTA 23-26 March 2011 Singapore Precision engineering event.. Email: jes@sesallworld.com www.mta-asia.com Hannover Messe 4-8 April 2011 Germany, Hannover Showcase for industrial technology. Includes Forums on: Industrial Automation, Energy Efficiency, Mobile Robots & Autonomous Systems, The Future of Automation, Economic Conference (Arab Countries), Product Protection, Robotation Academy. Fax: +49 511 89 32626 www.hannovermesse.de BLECH India 14-17 April 2011 India, Mumbai Includes sheetmetal forming machines and fabrication solutions., Joining/ Welding/Fastening, Surface treatment, Automation,Tools/Dies, CAD/CAM, OHS Email: blech.india@interads.in www.blechindia.com/english Fabtech 11-13 May 2011 Mexico, Mexico city Includes: coil processing; plate and structural fabricating; punching; robotics; shears; tube and pipe equipment; laser and plasma cutting; press brakes; roll forming; saws and cut-off machines; tooling. www.fabtechmexico.com IMTOS 26-29 May 2011 India, New Delhi www.imtos.com/imtos/imtos_2011.html IMTOS 26-29 May 2011 India, New Delhi Includes machine tools, heavy machinery, CNC machines, sheet metal working, Email: info@imtos.com www.engimach.com/imtos/imtos_2011.html Blechexpo and Schweisstec 6-9 June 2011 Germany, Stuttgart Sheet metal processing. Supplemented with Schweisstec with its focus on joining technologies, www.blechexpo-messe.de/en/ 12th China Exhibition on sheetmetal,, machinery, forging, stamping and setting equipment 23-25 June 2011 China, (Guangzhou) Includes: Sheetmetal forging, punching, plate shearing machines , pressing machines, hydraulic machines, oil press, cylinder, oil cylinder, precision pressing machines, etc. forging press machines & accessories. www.julang.com.cn CIMT 11-16 April 2011 China, Beijing Email: cmtba@cmtba.org.cn www.cimtshow.com/enshow.shtml Eastpo 28 June -1 July 2011 China, Shanghai Includes machine tools, turning/drilling/ boring/milling/grinding/deburring machines, machining centres, flexible manufacturing, gear cutting machines, ,sheet metal cutting machines, electrochemical machining, micro machining. Email: eastpo.net@gmail.com http://en.eastpo.net The Lean Business and Accounting Summit 12-13 April, 2011 – NZ, Auckland “The Lean Business Model.” This is the team that in 2005 launched the U.S. Lean Accounting Summit that has now given thousands a serious competitive advantage. www.leanfrontiers.com/nz/ MTA Vietnam 2011 5-8 July 2011, Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh City Highly targeted for the machine tool, precision engineering and metalworking technology industries. Email: atodd@oesallworld.com www.allworldexhibitions.com/industry. 90 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology PDMA 17-20 August 2011 Philippines, Manila Die & mould machinery and equipment exhibition. The bi-annual events incorporates Autocor 2011 (automation, controls, robotics, accessories & services exhibition), Machine Tools 2011, Metfin 2011 (metal finishing, equipment, tools, accessories & services exhibition), Metrology outsourcing and engineering 2011, Philplas 2011 (plastics, machinery, equipment tools, accessories, raw materials exhibition), Philweld 2011 and Sheetmetal 2011 . LOCAL 14th Annual Global Iron Ore & Steel Conference & Exhibition 21-24 March 2011 Perth Sheraton Australia’s premier event for the region’s iron ore and steel industry. www.globalironore.com.au Auspack 22-25 March 2011 Melbourne Packaging, processing and plastics materials and associated technology. AUSPACK has evolved, and from 2011 it will be known as AUSPACK PLUS, reflecting expansion. Ph: 02 9556 7993 Email: rkeen@etf.com.au www.auspackplus.com.au 2nd Annual Victorian Coal & Energy Conference 30-31 March 2011 Traralgon (Vic) Latest projects and the most pressing issues for the Victorian Coal & Energy sector www.informa.com.au/VICcoalandenergy Safety in Action/Materials Handling 5-7 April 2011 Melbourne Exhibition Centre Collocated with Melbourne Materials Handling Trade Show and CleanScene: With new model harmonisation laws only months away, a free National Harmonisation Seminars will also be offered. Also held concurrently is the Safety In Action Conference with over 70 Australian and international speakers covering the latest issues in occupational health and safety. Email: safety@aec.net.au www.safetyinaction.net.au 4th Surat Basin Coal & Energy Conference 11-12 May 2011 Brisbane Focus on the Surat Basin – as huge potential opportunities lie within this large body of shallow untapped thermal coal, which is deemed to be greenhouse friendly. www.informa.com.au/suratbasin I nternational P lastics E xhibi T ions Email: mai_mgt@compass.com.ph http://pdmaec.brinkster.net/ EMO 19-24 September 2011 Germany, Hannover Trade fair for metalworking technology. Includes cutting and forming machine tools, manufacturing systems, precision tools, automated materials flows, computer technology, industrial electronics and accessories. Email: emo@vdw.de www.emo-hannover.de Austech/National Manufacturing Week (including Ausplas) 24-27 May 2011 Melbourne Exhibition Centre In 2011, Austech and National Manufacturing Week (NMW) will line up alongside Ausplas international plastics industry exhibition. Austech is the only show specifically targeted at the metalworking, machine tool and ancillary market being held in Australia in 2011. The conjoined shows will make the already-combined NMW/ Austech Australia’s largest and most comprehensive industry exhibition. Ph: 03 9800 3666. Email: info@amtil.com.au. www.amtil.com.au Plast-Ex 21-23 June 2011 Canada, Toronto www.canontradeshows.com/expo/ plastex11 MassPlastics 2011 15-16 March 2011 USA, Massachusetts www.massplastics.com/ Suedtec 22-24 March 2011 Germany, Stuttgart www.Suedtec.com InterPlas Thailand 23-26 June 2011 Thailand, Bangkok www.interplasthailand.com INDOPLAS 2011 30 March- 2 April, 2011 Indonesia, Jakarta www.indoplas.com Philplas 17-20 August 2011 Manila - Philippines www.pdmaec.brinkster.net/index2.html Plast Expo 6-9 April 2011 Morocco , Casablanca www.plast-expo.com TIPREX 31 August 3 September 2011 Thailand www.tiprex.com/tp2011 VIETNAMPLAS 19-22 April 2011 Vietnamm Ha Noi www.vietnamplas.com/hanoi/ Asian-Pacific Plastics & Rubber Industry Exhibition 6-9 September 2011 China, Shanghai www.applas.com.cn/english/index.asp ANTEC 2011 1-5 May 2011 USA, Massachusetts www.4spe.org/conferences/antec-2011 Interplas 2011 27-29 September 2011 UK, Birmingham www.britishplasticsshow.com Plastteknik Oresund 4-5 May 2011 Denmark, Malmo www.easyfairs.com/events_216/ plastteknik-2011 Sheetmetal Industry Association (SIA) Industry Gala Dinner 3 June 2011, 7pm NSW, Doltone House, Darling Island Wharf, Pyrmont Ticket Sales: events@ sheetmetalaustralia.com.au ; Ph: 0413 968 964 events@sheetmetalaustralia.com.au www.sheetmetalaustralia.com.au IndoMax - AseanPlas 4-7 May 2011 Indonesia, Jakarta www.indomass.com/indonesia-internationalmachinery-show.html Queensland Safety Show/Materials Handing 21-23 June 2011 Brisbane Exhibition Centre Includes workplace health and safety solutions and services including new and innovative ways to improve workplace performance. Co-locating with Qld Manufacturing Show. Email safety@aec.net.au www.qldsafetyshow.com.au Plastic Design & Moulding 17-18 May 2011 UK, London www.pdmevent.com Queensland Gas Conference & Exhibition 16-17 August 2011 Brisbane Convention Centre Examines Qld-specific Coal Seam Gas - LNG issues and how these relate to the broader domestic & international market. Focuses on the unique needs, challenges and opportunities facing Queensland’s coal seam gas industry. E: david.mccarthy@reedexhibitions.com.au www.queenslandgasconference.com.au Brasilplast 9-13 May 2011 Brazil, Sao Paolo www.brasilplast.com.br Fakuma 18-22 October 2011 Germany, Friedrichshafen www.fakuma-messe.de/en/fakuma Pro-Plas Expo South Africa 25-27 October 2011 Cape Town - South Africa www.biztradeshows.com/trade-events/ proplas-africa.html Plastex Ukraine 2011 25-28 October 2011 Ukraine, Kiev www.plastex-ukraine.com Saudi Plas 21-24 November 201 Saudi Arabiam, Riyadh http://events.alriyadh.gov.sa/sites/English/ Events (Type in “Saudi Plas” in “Events” search bar Chinaplas 2011 17-20 May 2011 China, Guang Zhou www.chinaplasonline.com Ausplas 24-27-May 2011 Australia, Melbourne www.ausplas.com CEPLAST 2011 22-24 November 2011 Hungary, Budapest www.targikielce.pl Click on “Calendar of fairs” FIP Solution Plastique 24-27 May 2011 France, Lyon www.f-i-p.com PLASTEX 2011 25-27 November 2011 Egypt, Cairo www.plastex-online.com PLASTEC East 7-9 June 2011 USA, New York www.canontradeshows.com/expo/plaste11 Equiplast 28 November – 2 December 2011 Spain, Barcelona www.equiplast.com Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 91 60 years with men and machines - Part 12 The World’s Fair, but prosperity’s postponed We continue our regular series of instalments from the book “60 years with men and machines” - the autobiography of US machinist and author Fred Herbert Colvin (1867-1965). His first-hand experiences of those bygone days are sure to give us unique and fascinating insights into the era which laid the foundations of the industry. It is the year 1893 - the year of the Chicago World’s Fair. It was also the year of the “1893 Panic” the worst depression in US history before 1929 By Fred Colvin Two events of importance to me occurred in the year 1893. The first and more exciting was the birth of our first child, Charles Herbert. The second was the Columbian Exposition, or World’s Fair, that opened in Chicago on May 1. By the summer of 1893 I had sufficiently recovered from the excitement of my son’s arrival to make the trip to Chicago to see the exposition, accompanied by my father. This extensive display of the arts and sciences covered more than 600 acres , and so did Father and I. Although I was only 26 at the time, I was near the point of physical exhaustion each evening when we returned to our little hotel near the fairgrounds, but the following morning would find me out again trying to keep up with Father as we went from one exhibit to another. Among other things, we saw the Intramural Electric Railway, the Transportation Building, glowing with colors and gold leaf, that had been erected on a steel frame designed by Louis Sullivan; the latest model Corliss steam engines, new types of micrometer calipers and cutting tools, Edison’s new dynamos, alternating-current motors, horn-and-cylinder phonographs, model telephones and switchboards, typewriters, adding machines, printing presses, and even a few primitive automobiles with real pneumatic tires. The World’s Fair led many of its 27 million visitors to believe that the United States was on the threshold of a wonderful new era of prosperity and economic development. But before Grover Cleveland was fairly started in his second administration, the disastrous panic of 1893*, which had begun even while the Fair was opening with the 92 “Machinery Hall” Chicago World’s Fair,1893 failure of the Reading Railway and the collapse of the National Cordage Company, swept over the entire country, and any era of prosperity that was in the offing was postponed for at least four years. The railroads were affected more than any other industry partly because most of them had been built on shaky financial foundations - and by the winter of 1893 about 20,000 miles of railways were in the hands of receivers, with all construction at a complete standstill. I well remember the nation-wide strikes that followed, and “General” Coxey’s hobo army (unemployed men demanding relief) marching on Washington in 1894, and the burning of rolling stock in Chicago by uncontrolled mobs, and Cleveland calling out the Federal troops, and the imprisonment of Eugene V. Debs** for conspiracy and contempt of court. It is no wonder that the Wheelock Engine Company, itself a product of overcapitalization and tied up with high finance, went down like chaff before the wind, leaving me high and dry in the midst of a depression without a job. March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Times, as people said, were bad. By making drastic cutbacks in our family expenditures we managed to keep afloat, aided by the money for an occasional piece for one of the trade magazines and by odd jobs of drafting, consulting, and similar work …. To be continued… Sixty Years With Men and Machines, The Autobiography of Fred H Colvin, Master Machinist, original copyright 1947, McGraw-Hill Publishing, reprinted by Lindsay Publications Inc, 1988, Bradley IL 60915, USA. *A serious economic depression in the US. Initiated by the collapse of railroad overbuilding and shaky railroad financing resulting in bank failures; compounded by a run on the gold supply. Uunemployment was estimated at over 10% for at least five consecutive years . This was the worst depression the US had experienced until the Great Depression of 1929; ** An American union leader, one of the founding members of the International Labor Union and the Industrial Workers of the World RN.8559 One membership. Many benefits. Explore the opportunities today. More than ever in the current economic climate you need to make the most of all the opportunities that are available to you to enhance your business prospects. This could mean: • Savingmoneyonarangeofcommercialservicesthatyourbusinessuses. • Accessingthelatestandmostrelevantinformationaboutourindustryto make informed decisions. • Networkingateveryopportunity. • Marketingyourproducts,servicesand/orcapabilitiesthroughAustechor AMTMagazinewhereAMTIL Members enjoy deep discounts. AMTIL Membership offers many opportunities to enable you to enhance your businessprospectsandbestofallthesavingsyoucanachievealongtheway willmorethanoffsetthecostofAMTIL Membership. AMTIL’s mission statement is to educate and support our members to build amoresuccessfulAustralianmanufacturingindustryandinsupportofthis commitment AMTILhasdevelopedarangeofbenefitstailoredspecificallyto our members needs. Membership starts from as little as $200. For more information or to join AMTIL visit www.amtil.com.au or email plambe@amtil.com.au Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 93 AMTIL MEMBER PROFILE Ronson Gears Ronson Gears Pty Ltd Mr Gavin New 18 Teton Court Highett, VIC, 3190 T: 03 9555 9822 enquiries@ronsongears.com.au www.ronsongears.com.au Since its inception in 1954, Ronson Gears has grown to become a leading Australian gear manufacturer. Ronson’s extensive and high quality gear products are commissioned both nationally and internationally. Renowned for its high precision gears and first-class customer service, Ronson Gears manufactures spur gears, helical gears, internal gears, bevel gears, splines and gear racks for many diverse industries. Supplying aerospace, agriculture, automotive, defence, energy, medical, mining and rail industries, the company also provides a unique CNC gear measuring service to industry. Ronson also offers an extensive range of ‘off the shelf’ items (more than 1800 line items), ensuring fast supply and competitive pricing. An exclusive partnership with KHK Stock Gears brings an extensive range of spiral bevel gears, helical racks, ground racks, worm and wheel sets and spiral bevel gearboxes, amongst many other products, to the Australian and New Zealand markets. Be sure to visit www.ronsongears. com.au or call Ronson Gears to see what they can do for your company. AMTIL NEW MEMBERS CRP Industries 03-9761-5566 2/1 Stephenson Road BAYSWATER NORTH, VIC 3153 info@crpindustries.com.au www.crpindustries.com.au Hillier Engineering Services 07-3423-4414 15 Bradman Street ACACIA RIDGE, QLD 4110 john@hes.net.au www.hes.com.au Tungaloy Australia Pty Ltd 02 9672 6866 Unit 308/33 Lexington Drive BELLA VISTA, NSW 2153 martin@tungaloy.com.au www.tungaloy.co.jp/au ADVERTISERS INDEX Accessories for Manufacturing...........27 Alfex ........................................21,22 Amada .......................................IBC 91 AMT .......................................64, 65 AMTIL Membership.............................93 AMTIL Austech...............................46,47 Applied Machinery..............................39 Asset Plant & Machinery P/L...............63 Blackfast.............................................28 Australian Exhibition & Conferences...17 Camplex P/L.........................................77 ECI Solutions........................................ 41 94 Export Finance and Insurance Corporation (EFIC).............13 Hare & Forbes Machinery House........53 Holmesglen TAFE.................................19 Idronic P/L...........................................83 Iscar Australia.....................................2,3 Kennametal........................................4,5 Kaeser Compressors............................25 Kyocera ...............................................7 LS Starrett ...........................................73 MTI Qualos ......................................... 31 Purgon Engineering.............................67 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology Romheld.............................................59 Sandvik .......................................... OBC SECO Tooling........................................15 SEI Carbide..........................................57 SOS Components.................................43 Stillam .............................................71 Sutton Tools.........................................55 Taegutec...............................................9 XYZ Innovation....................................45 University of Ballarat...........................85 Walter .............................................33 WYSIWYG............................................29 In back cover Australian Manufacturing Technology March 2011 95 Out Back Cover 96 March 2011 Australian Manufacturing Technology