Archive for the ‘Wood machining’ Category

Faster and cleaner panel profile nesting tooling

March 16th 2008

Advanced tools with tungsten alloy head and precision ground steel shank for high speed and cleaner CNC nesting allows furniture makers to optimise sheet material and reduce wastage

PCD tooling specialist Cruing (UK) is to unveil two new advanced tools for high speed and cleaner CNC nesting With extensive experience of producing nesting tools, such as the Pilot range, Cruing has developed Nexus and Aerotech as part of Nesting+, an advanced technology tooling programme. Nexus combines two components to produce a high productivity full speed single operation nesting tool.

It allows furniture manufacturers to increase the optimisation of sheet material and reduce wastage.

Nexus has a highly resistant tungsten alloy head and precision ground steel shank.

The parts are positioned, interconnected and locked together using the patent ‘Q-Lock’ system.

With only a 12mm minimum diameter, cutting resistance is reduced allowing feed speeds of up to 20m/min plus without strain on the electro-spindle.

Because the tungsten alloy head is an excellent heat conductor, operational-related heat is conducted away from the sheet material and brazed PCD tips.
Further reading

Ultrasonics cleans up wood saw blades
Industrial ultrasonic tanks provide fast and effective cleaning for all kinds of wood saw blades, hoggers, profile cutting tools, routers, and drills

Orbit sander removes wood and paint
A 5in random orbit sander offers 9,500 orbits/min at an orbit size of 1/8in and when using heavy grit sanding discs, the tool offers the power to remove wood and paint

Steel belts and press plates to be shown
The latest developments in high strength steel belts and press plates for wood-based panel production, as well as laminate and melamine coatings, at the LIGNA show

Longer tool life is achieved as the use of tungsten alloy allows Nexus to withstand intensive mechanical stress, far more than steel.

This guarantees the same high performance after each service cycle.

The Aerotech nesting tool is designed to assist the CNC machining centre’s dust extraction system by removing MDF dust and residual material from the nested grooves during operation.

The efficiency of Aerotech depends on the feed speed and machine speed rpm parameters.

Total dust removal is generally achieved at 18,000 rev/min at 15m/min feed and 24,000 rev/min at 20m/min feed.

This reduces or eliminates post-operation dust residue, delivering a cleaner and healthier working environment.

Aerotech provides single operation high speed nesting up to 15m/min-plus.

In addition, cutting pressure is reduced, causing less strain on the electro-spindle, saving on energy costs and reducing operational-related heat.

In certain circumstances its use makes it unnecessary to have larger, more expensive extraction systems, including compressed air blowers to move compacted dust from the grooves.

Furniture manufacturers with low efficiency, or elderly, dust extraction plants can optimise their existing extraction with Aerotech.

Nexus and Aerotech techniques can be combined in a single tool if required.

Said Cruing (UK) co-director, Trevor Barnes: ‘Nesting, optimising the number of components that can be produced per sheet of material, is becoming increasingly popular with furniture manufacturers.

It is a demanding application for CNC tooling which places above-average strains on the tools and requires specific design and construction techniques.’ He explained: ‘Standard profiled routers are unable to withstand the additional stress generated while nesting.

Common CNC tools can force the machine to default to a lower feed speed and complete the nesting sequence in two operations; pre-cut and separation and finish.’ Barnes continued: ‘Our new long-lasting Nesting+ system represents a major technical breakthrough that overcomes all these problems and delivers faster and cleaner nesting.’ Also on the Cruing stand will be numerous examples from the Italian-made range of diamond tools for the woodworking and furniture industries.

They include tools for panel sizing machines, panel squaring machines and edge banding machines, CNC machining centres, point-to-point machines and post-forming operations.

They can be used with a variety of materials, are resharpenable for a long working life and give low noise emission.

Cruing technical staff will be on hand throughout the exhibition to answer questions and provide advice on how to obtain a better end product and reduce tooling costs.

* Working with Wood: Hall 20 - Stand Y56.

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Vertical panel saw avoids manual finishing

March 16th 2008

A vertical panel saw - working to an accuracy of 0.1mm - is delivering improved cutting accuracy and reduced processing time and avoids manual sanding and trimming edges after cutting

A Striebig vertical panel saw is delivering improved cutting accuracy and reduced processing time at solid surface fabricator, Solidity The Buckinghamshire company produces bespoke wet room floors and shower trays, as well as kitchen tops and vanity units, using 12mm thick LG Hi-Macs acrylic solid surface material Solidity’s production processes are very exacting.

The solid surface components have to be totally accurate when cut to size so as to produce a seamless, waterproof edge, with a typical shower tray containing up to as many as 30 pieces.

The Striebig Control model 5168 works to an accuracy of 0.1mm.

It can handle panels up to a maximum size of 4300mm x 1680mm and has a depth of cut of 80mm.
Further reading

Vertical panel saw cuts costs by 15%
A radiant heating panel manufacturer is now cutting aluminium composite boards in-house, using a vertical panel saw, as part of a costs reductions exercise

Verical panel saw has digital measurement
Fabricator of plastics and GRP tanks said that a vertical panel saw, equipped with a digital measuring system, is helping it to save tme and labour, while freing up shop space for other uses

It gives a perfectly square cut, with the resultant smooth finish removing the need to manually sand and trim edges after cutting, which was necessary with its former saw.

As it is so easy to set up and operate, semi-skilled operators obtain a first class result every time Another benefit is that the saw’s tungsten carbide blades now last a lot longer because of its constant feed rate.

Solidity used to get through six blades a week which has now been halved, saving GBP 36 a week on resharpening costs.

The Control offers every possible option for automatic sawing operations.

With manual feeding of the saw unit eliminated, the operator’s job is made easier, giving him ample time to prepare the next cutting job.

Ease of operation is provided by a PLC control system, with any operating errors displayed so that they can be immediately corrected.

Numerous automatic procedures can be carried out by the press of a button including locking and releasing the beam saw, setting the horizontal cutting height, plunging and swivelling the motor, locking the support rollers during sawing and fine saw blade adjustment.

It features the TRK dust and chips extraction system that ensures dust levels are kept well below permitted European limits, plus automatic moving backing support.

The saw, specially made to fit into an area of the workshop with a low ceiling, is also used to cut MDF and plywood panels.

It was supplied and installed by the Swiss manufacturer’s exclusive UK distributor, T M Machinery Sales, of Leicester.

http://www.manufacturingtalk.com/news/tmm/tmm108.html

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Woodworking CAD/CAM part modelling enhanced

March 16th 2008

Latest version of a woodworking CAD/CAM system incorporates a new common line cutting module and a new version of a system for designing, costing and manufacturing staircases

Leading off line programming specialist Alphacam will be launching Version 7 of its CAD/CAM system for woodworking applications on Stand T47 at the W6 Woodworking Show to be held at the NEC in Birmingham, UK, October 8-11, 2006. Providing a wealth of new functionality, as well as enhancements to the system’s part modelling, feature recognition and machining styles capabilities, Alphacam V7 also incorporates a new common line cutting module and a new version of the company’s Alphastair system for designing, costing and manufacturing staircases.

With dedicated modules available to ensure the fast and accurate manufacture of doors, windows, cabinets, stairs and panels, Alphacam V7 is the benchmark CAD/CAM system for joinery applications ranging from 2D fascia doors to complex 5-axis stair handrails.

The new version builds on the strengths of earlier releases - and Alphacam’s position as an Autodesk Unique Application Reseller.

It also provides close integration with Alphacim, the company’s powerful business management system for the wood working industry, as well as direct links to Cabinet Vision, the leading design system for kitchen, bedroom and office cabinet furniture.
Further reading

Joinery CAD/CAM system features enhanced
The centrepiece of the Alphacam’s presentation at Ligma 2007 will be Alphacam V7, the most recent release of its advanced CAD/CAM software for joinery applications

Woodworking CAD/CAM geometries enhanced
Latest enhancements made to Alphacam V7 woodworking CAD/CAM software includes enhancements to the system’s geometry creation, feature recognition and machining style capabilities

Cabinet Vision has integrated Alphacam into its SolidCAM machining option, enabling NC code for hundreds of nested parts on hundreds of sheets to be produced automatically for virtually any CNC routing machine.

The combination provides the most advanced NBM (Nested Based Manufacturing) system on the market today.

Furthermore, components with complex designs can be transferred quickly and seamlessly from Cabinet Vision to Alphacam for intricate detailing operations to be carried out, such as the engraving of logos, motifs or graphical designs.

* About Alphacam - Alphacam provides world-class CAD/CAM software for the engineering, woodworking and stone markets from 2D parts through to complex 5-axis applications and offers a significant return on investment.

Alphacam is a principal brand of the Planit group.

* About Planit - Planit is a global supplier of design and manufacturing software for the engineering, woodworking and stone industries.

We provide our customers with products and services that enable them to improve the productivity of their machine tools, shorten design and manufacturing time, optimise material usage and deliver high quality goods and services to their customers.

Planit’s solutions are best-in-class within our respective markets and are integral to the success of thousands of companies of every size around the globe.

http://www.manufacturingtalk.com/news/lic/lic131.html

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Vertical panel saw improves quality

March 16th 2008

An award-winning kitchen equipment company has improved its panel-sizing efficiency by installing a one man-operated vertical panel saw, which has eradicated damage to veneered panels

Award-winning kitchen company Chiselwood has boosted panel sizing efficiency by installing a Striebig Evolution vertical panel saw. It is delivering greater accuracy, a smoother cut, has eradicated damage to veneered panels and made sheet cutting a one-man job. The Saxilby, Lincoln, UK-based company, which operates at the ‘top end’ of the market, has gained a well-deserved reputation for the design, manufacturer and installation of highly crafted bespoke kitchens.

Last year its design director and owner, Martin Holliday, received the prestigious National Kitchen Designer Award from ‘Kitchen and Bathroom Designer’ magazine.

In 1993 the business won the ‘Daily Express’ Small Business of the Year award and it was picked as Lincolnshire Business of the Year in 2001.

The successful business is housed in the restored 19th Century former Fossdyke Brewery buildings alongside the Fossdyke Canal near Lincoln.

Its output spans the entire kitchen design spectrum, from traditional wooden, painted contemporary to cutting-edge designs using materials such as glass, concrete and steel.

The average price of its kitchens is in the region of GBP 30,000.
Further reading

‘Entry level’ vertical saw range automated
A range of ‘entry level’ vertical panel sawing machines now include larger sizes - up to 5350mm x 2220mm - and automated cut cycle versions

Vertical panel saw cuts costs by 15%
A radiant heating panel manufacturer is now cutting aluminium composite boards in-house, using a vertical panel saw, as part of a costs reductions exercise

Verical panel saw has digital measurement
Fabricator of plastics and GRP tanks said that a vertical panel saw, equipped with a digital measuring system, is helping it to save tme and labour, while freing up shop space for other uses

Amongst recent contracts carried out was the design of five kitchens for English Heritage.

They were for holiday flats in historic properties including Dover Castle, Osborne House, the former home of Queen Victoria on the Isle of Weight, and St Mawes Castle, Cornwall.

It also designs bedrooms, studies, bathrooms, dining rooms and libraries, and is receiving an increasing number of corporate commissions for boardrooms, offices and reception areas.

Martin Holliday and his wife Mel, the managing director, run the company with a staff of 11.

They consist of qualified cabinet makers, bench joiners and paint sprayers plus two on-site installers The Striebig Evolution 4224, which has a maximum cut size of 3300 x 2240mm and a maximum depth of cut of 80mm, replaced an elderly dimension saw.

It represents the cutting edge in vertical panel saw technology.

Advanced features that are optional extras in other saws are included as standard.

They include a digital measuring system, accurate to 0.1mm, and an adjustable precision display that can be set to an accuracy of 1.0, 0.5 or 0.1mm, according to the thickness of the panels being sized.

It has a fully automatic roller locking function, an auxiliary stop section with its own tape measure, three additional auxiliary stops for repeat cuts and small work piece support, and automatic moving backing support.

A wide range of accessories is available to increase its productivity still further.

One unique option is four-sided trimming, which enables the bottom trim cut to be carried out automatically without having to lift or turn the panel.

Chiselwood use it mainly to size MDF and MFC panels, as well as 50mm thick solid wooden kitchen tops.

Said Holliday: ‘We needed a modern saw to give us greater accuracy and make us more efficient.

There was no space in the workshop for a table saw so we decided on a vertical model.’ He said: ‘We checked out most makes on the market and all the others seemed flimsy compared to the sturdy Striebig.

It was not the cheapest, but we wanted something that would last for years.

I have bought cheap before but it’s a false economy.

The cost of the saw equalled the cost of employing someone for a year, but it will have paid for itself quite quickly.’ He said the design of the Striebig made it far safer than a table saw, where you have to push the sheets through the blade.

‘With the Striebig the blade, which is totally enclosed, moves through the sheets, so there is no danger to the operator.

‘It has made us much more flexible.

It has given us the accuracy needed in the mass production of components plus the ability to cut special sizes, which before we often had to send out.

It is also labour saving with sheet cutting now a one-man job.’ Added workshop foreman Carl Creasey: ‘We get total accuracy due to the saw’s digital readout.

Everything now fits together first time where before you could be one inch out on a long run of units.

It also gives a smoother cut with less sanding of the edges needed.’ The Evolution was supplied with an optional scribing blade for use with veneered sheets.

Said Creasey: ‘Before when we sized veneered boards we had to put a piece of MDF underneath to stop breakout, but we still had lots of split sheets.

This is no longer an issue, and the all-round time savings are considerable.’ The Evolution was supplied and installed by Striebig’s exclusive UK agents, T M Machinery Sales of Leicester.

http://www.manufacturingtalk.com/news/tmm/tmm109.html

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CNC router sends production ‘through the roof’

March 16th 2008

Use of a 4-axis CNC router dramatically increases gun stock production - it has more than tripled - since replacing a manual pantograph machine with a 4-axis CNC router

Made of high-quality hardwoods, Ironwood Designs’ products are purchased by individual gun owners, gun dealers and firearms manufacturers to replace the inexpensive plastic or softwood stocks of many imported military guns such as the FN-FAL and the AK-47. Ironwood Designs also sells a four-piece wooden set that includes the butt stock, pistol grip and an upper and lower hand guard.

* Production bottleneck - as one of the few companies making replacement gun stocks for these weapons, Ironwood Designs has a thriving business.

According to Matt Shuster, Ironwood Designs president, a bottleneck in the production process needed to be eliminated before further growth could occur.

For the first step in making a gun stock, Ironwood Designs used a Zuckerman copy lathe to automatically carve a wood block into the desired 3D profile.

The machine cut the block from an over-sized plastics pattern of the gun stock.

The pattern and the wood block would spin in tandem while the machine’s cutter carriage and a sander carriage traversed the block, delivering a clean finished piece in 1 to 3 min.
Further reading

Router cuts development from 2 months to 2 days
A CNC routing machine has enabled a guitar producing company to reduce product development time from two months to to two days and has made the company more profitable

CNC routers help carpenters win new business
A generation of CNC routers is helping carpenters generate new sources of revenues by producing wood, plastics and composites products in much less time and at far higher level of accuracy

CNC routers lower sports goods costs
Latest CNC routers are helping sporting goods manufacturers to increase accuracy and reduce costs in the production of intricate wood, plastics and composites materials

This part of the production process, which was handled by an Ironwood Designs employee, needed no improvement.

The next step was the problem.

To make the gun stock, Ironwood Designs uses a Zuckerman copy lathe to automatically carve a wood block into the desired 3D profile.

Next, parts are placed on the Techno 4-axis CNC router, which positions and cuts four butt stocks at a time in 3 min.

After parts were cut on the Zuckerman machine, they needed further cutting to carve out the inlets where the stock fits into the rifle and areas where parts, such as the swivel and the butt plate, are later attached to the stock.

After running the parts through the copy lathe, which was located in the company’s shop, Shuster took them to his home workshop, where he used a manual pantograph to make these additional cuts.

The pantograph had four spindles so four parts were cut at once.

According to Shuster, it was a back-breaking process that was both slow and inaccurate.

The machine cut with straight flute bits.

So although some parts could be done with one pass of the bit, others required three or four bit changes.

It took an average of 15 min to complete the carving process for four butt stocks.

Error was the other problem.

Using a pantograph involves manually following a pattern with a stylus.

If Shuster’s hand slipped, four parts were damaged at once.

He estimates that he had a loss of between 10 and 15% due to carving errors.

Also, as the pattern eventually wore out, edges of the cuts were less sharp, giving them what Shuster calls a ‘fuzzy’ look.

Templates would also get kinks and other irregularities, all of which were transferred to the finished product.

* Accuracy and speed - Shuster says a desire for a faster, more accurate carving process led him to look at other options, including CNC machinery.

After visiting a woodworking trade show, Shuster purchased a Techno four-axis machine with a 5ft by 6ft table, big enough to handle even the longest butt stocks.

According to Shuster, the Techno CNC router is capable of carving the cutouts in about one-fifth the time it took to do them by hand.

The machine also automatically repositions a part and cuts all sides in one operation, enabling it to run unattended.

Shuster said he required a machine with 4-axis capability because cuts are needed on all sides.

A four-axis machine has dual spindles, one that holds the part and one that holds the cutter.

The cutting program directs the X, Y and Z motions of the cutter as well as the positioning of the part.

After one side has been cut, the part can be rotated, for example, to allow access to the other side.

‘With a four-axis machine, repositioning happens automatically, so the cutting goes faster and it’s completely unattended,’ Shuster said.

Using the 4-axis machine, it now takes Ironwood Designs only 3 min to cut four butt stocks, compared to 15 min needed with the pantograph.

The CNC router is located in the shop near the Zuckerman copy lathe; one employee runs both machines.

‘We now produce 100 pieces in four hours.

Previously that took us two days,’ Shuster said.

The quality of the cuts is also improved.

‘There is less tearing of the wood because the spindle is spinning at 18,000 rev/min,’ said Shuster.

‘Also, if a cut is off by 0.010in, I can modify the program and easily fix it.’ He continued: ‘Now we can produce factory-quality pieces.

You can not distinguish our stocks from the original military production except that we use a higher grade of wood.’ * New business Opportunities - the combination of higher-quality parts and faster production has led to an increase in business for the company.

After finishing a large, 212 year contract for one gun manufacturer, Shuster has now programmed the CNC machine for a new product, replacement stocks for the Belgian FN-FAL rifle.

Designed in the 1950s, this rifle had been out of production for years.

But surplus versions are being imported and new ones are being manufactured in the United States from old military specifications.

Ironwood Designs now offers replacement parts to manufacturers, who will resell them as accessories.

The parts are also sold to smaller gunsmiths who build FN-FALs for customers, as well as to private owners of the rifle who wish to retrofit it with a nicer wooden stock.

In addition to this new product, for which Shuster anticipates a big demand, Shuster says he plans to use the CNC machine for other projects.

For example, plans call for offering replacement stocks for common guns, such as hunting rifles, which will be easier to install than those currently available.

Most replacement stocks, he explains, come semi-finished, i e, the sides are carved but not sanded, so tool marks are visible.

This requires the gun owner to fit the rifle to the stock, a process than can take hours of filing.

Shuster said he plans to cut these stocks on the CNC machine for a level of accuracy that has been previously unavailable.

‘My kits will be innovative because they give you drop-in fit,’ he said.

‘We no longer advertise and yet our volume keeps increasing,’ said Shuster.

‘With the four-axis CNC machine, we’re now able to produce replacement stocks for anyone who wants one.’

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CNC router boosts gun case production by 400%

March 12th 2008

When Champion Safe used power tools to produce gun case racks, only enough parts for 20 to 30 safes per day were made, but an unmanned CNC router produces parts for 120 safes/day

When Champion Safe used power tools to produce racks for its gun cases, each person could only produce enough parts for 20 to 30 safes/day (cases/day). To increase productivity, the Provo, Utah, USA-based company invested in a CNC router that works unattended to produce parts of any shape based on a computer program.

Now a single person can produce all the parts needed for 120 safes in one day.

This switch to automated routing increased Champion’s productivity by 400%.

Quality has been substantially improved because the CNC router does not make mistakes and cuts to an accuracy of 0.002in compared to typical 1?16in accuracy for manual cutting.

‘We have substantially reduced our manufacturing costs while increasing our quality,’ said Terry Zierenberg, director of engineering for Champion Safe.

* Previous machining methods - the notched racks inside the safe that hold the guns are cut out of 3/4in particleboard.
Further reading

Router cuts development from 2 months to 2 days
A CNC routing machine has enabled a guitar producing company to reduce product development time from two months to to two days and has made the company more profitable

CNC routers help carpenters win new business
A generation of CNC routers is helping carpenters generate new sources of revenues by producing wood, plastics and composites products in much less time and at far higher level of accuracy

CNC routers lower sports goods costs
Latest CNC routers are helping sporting goods manufacturers to increase accuracy and reduce costs in the production of intricate wood, plastics and composites materials

The geometry of the racks is complex because each rack typically holds 20 to 30 guns.

Techno’s LC Series 4896 helped Champion Safe increase its productivity by freeing up the workers that used to hand rout the racks.

In the past, skilled woodworkers cut these racks using hand routers with bearing bits by following templates and with table saws.

The accuracy of the racks depended on the accuracy of the templates, and making good templates required patience and a lot of experience.

Frequently, templates were ruined and new ones had to be made before the job could continue.

A skilled craftsman was needed to accurately follow the lines of the template.

Even though the operator would follow the template carefully, he or she might bump corners or otherwise damage the template so that it got worn out and had to be replaced.

This is why Champion was only able to produce enough components for about 20 to 30 gun safes/day.

Five people would have been needed to handle today’s production volume.

Zierenberg said he had long thought about purchasing a CNC router to perform this operation, but, when he originally checked, the cost put the machine out of reach.

‘When I worked for a competitive safe company, we bought a CNC router for US$65,000,’ he said.

‘Prices have dropped since then but until a couple of years ago, the cheapest machine that I could find that would do this job cost about US$45,000, which was more than we could justify.’ These were machines with servo motors and ball screws that provide high levels of accuracy and also with large tables that make it possible to produce big parts.

‘We did not want to spend that much because we only have one group of wood products so we can only use the machine in a few areas,’ Zierenberg added.

He said he saw a demonstration at a local dealer and: ‘I decided that for that money it was worth the gamble.’ * A mix of performance and economy - Techno’s LC Series CNC router, which is the system Champion Safe finally decided to purchase, features ball screws on all three axes, offering smooth motion, a high level of accuracy and repeatability, and minimal maintenance.

Champion chose the router because the ball screws do not have the play or the requirement for adjustments that racks do nor do they wear as easily as a rack.

The company also notes that the closed-loop servo control system provides constant position feedback, higher power and smooth continuous motion that eliminate the possibility of losing position in the middle of a part.

In addition, the servo motors are suitable for 3D applications because they can change speed on the fly without losing power as steppers do.

Zierenberg generated programs for the gun racks and a number other wood parts, such as center dividers, used in Champion’s different models of safes.

He designed jigs that hold the particleboard blanks in place, into which an operator can a precut blank and then call up the appropriate program.

Zierenberg said this has freed up the operator to work on other projects while the router is at work, thus increasing productivity even more.

It typically takes the router about one minute for each rack that is machined; some racks are more complex and take as long as four minutes.

The increase in productivity that has been achieved with the new machine has significantly reduced Champion’s manufacturing costs, Zierenberg reported.

‘Clearly, the availability of high-quality, low-cost routers has the potential to dramatically improve the profitability of every manufacturer that uses wood in their product,’ he said.

‘Our savings extend through the assembly process as well because the more accurate parts that we produce with the new CNC router avoid the need for manual fitting.

Having lower manufacturing costs than our competitors gives us the opportunity to offer greater value to customers and increases our sales volume.

Higher productivity means that we are able to handle this volume without adding workers, which increases profit margins.’

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CNC routers lower sports goods costs

March 12th 2008

Latest CNC routers are helping sporting goods manufacturers to increase accuracy and reduce costs in the production of intricate wood, plastics and composites materials

A new generation of CNC routers is helping sporting goods manufacturers to increase accuracy and reduce costs in the production of intricate wood, plastics and composites materials. In the past, manufacturers typically used duplicators or power tools to build complicated components in volumes too low for expensive automated machines.

The new routers substantially improve production of these components by duplicating the computer-aided design geometry used to define the part geometry to an accuracy of +/-1mm.

often; this makes it possible to improve the performance of the product by increasing its geometrical complexity.

Another aspect of improved performance comes from the ability to make systematic and repeatable modifications to designs to experimentally improve the performance of the product.

Yet, the new machines cost as little as $20,000 and can run without operator attention except for setup, which keeps costs low.

* Custom pool cues - switching to CNC routing has reduced the time needed to cut pool cue points and the female pockets they fit into by two-thirds, according to Bill McDaniel, president of Custom Cues, a high-end cue manufacturer based in Jackson, Tennessee, USA.
Further reading

CNC router halves curved millwork machine time
A PC-driven CNC wood router has produced miles of curved moulding and other custom millwork in 4000h - halving machine times - and has raised product accuracy by a factor of 10

Router cuts development from 2 months to 2 days
A CNC routing machine has enabled a guitar producing company to reduce product development time from two months to to two days and has made the company more profitable

CNC router boosts gun case production by 400%
When Champion Safe used power tools to produce gun case racks, only enough parts for 20 to 30 safes per day were made, but an unmanned CNC router produces parts for 120 safes/day

‘We used to produce inlays and the points themselves working from patterns on a pantograph-type mill,’ McDaniel said.

‘Now we design the points in CAD and then cut out both the prongs and the inlay on the router.

The new method reduces cutting time, is more accurate and allows us to change designs in less time than before.’ McDaniel said: ‘There’s nothing about making pool cues that’s easy, but one of the most challenging tasks is the inlay work.’ The points, typically 7.5in in length, are inlaid around the circumference of the 29in long butt.

In the past, McDaniel’s firm had to make a male pattern for the points themselves and a female pattern for the butt inlay, which took between one and eight hours depending on the complexity of the design.

Once the pattern was completed, McDaniel’s staff finally had the opportunity to check it against what they were trying to make.

Because the process of making the templates provided no opportunity to check for errors, there were sometimes problems with the first one.

‘Using the old method, producing points was a time-consuming task, one where something could easily go wrong and ruin an expensive piece of birds eye maple,’ McDaniel said.

‘Then one day I visited a woodworking facility building furniture and saw a CNC router at work,’ McDaniel said.

‘It was an eye-opening experience.

The company used an easy-to-operate CAD system to create their patterns on the computer.

Then the router followed the CAD designs to produce the points and the pockets.

This saved the time required to build the pattern and also made it possible to produce a much more accurate cut while eliminating the difficult task of following the pattern.

Despite the fact that the parts being produced were nothing like pool cues, I felt certain that I could make this technology work in my business.’ McDaniel purchased a CNC router from Techno-Isel, New Hyde Park, New York, for about US$20,000.

The new machine made it possible for Custom Cues to adopt an entirely new approach to new product development.

Now, the firm’s engineers begin the design process by using the computer aided design (CAD) capabilities of the CNC programming package that is provided with the Techno machine to sketch out their design on the computer in three dimensions.

By manipulating their model on the screen, panning, zooming and rotating, they are usually able to validate all critical dimensional relationships before they even begin to cut wood.

For each inlay pattern produced, the operator rotates the butt to put another section into position.

The time required to produce a cue is about one third of what is needed on a pantograph mill.

In approximately 2000h of operation, Custom Cues has had no problems with the router.

‘Overall this machine has been great for me,’ McDaniel said.

‘It has helped me improve the quality of our cues while saving money.’ * Windsurfing board fins - a more efficient airfoil design combined with computerized manufacturing technology is helping professional windsurfer racers improve their performance.

High performance windsurfing boards, which are generally 7ft 8in to 9ft 4in long, operate normally in a planing condition with only the rear one-fourth to one-third of the board touching the water.

The only device providing counterforce is a small fixed fin at the rear of the board.

The fin operates in much the same manner as an airplane wing.

However, unlike the wing of a conventional airplane, the fin must work in both directions.

In this respect, it is similar to the function of wings used in certain fighter and aerobatic airplanes that are designed to fly equally well upside down.

While racing windsurfing fins have traditionally been designed by trial and error, it occurred to Gerhard Opel, who worked for 14 years as an aeronautical engineer and is also a board sailor, that optimized airfoil designs which have been developed for aircraft could be transferred to sailboard fins with little or no modification.

The problem in implementing this idea was how to produce these airfoil designs to the required high level of accuracy.

Fins for mass produced windsurfing boards are produced from injection molded plastics.

These fins are not used for high-performance boards because the injection molded fins change their shape slightly as they cool.

Fins for high performance boards are traditionally produced by far more expensive manual methods.

An experienced craftsman begins by building a series of templates that describe the contours of the fin.

The craftsman then uses these templates as guides in producing the final form with a hand grinder.

It typically takes about a day to make a high performance fin.

The accuracy of this approach leaves much to be desired so it is necessary to test the fins in the water to determine whether or not they are effective.

A top name competitor will typically accept 2 out of 10 fins produced by these methods.

When Opel originally developed the idea of building fins according to optimized aerodynamic profiles, he assumed that it would be necessary to build them using conventional manual techniques.

It was no secret that much greater accuracy could be achieved with CNC machining but this alternative was not given serious consideration because it was assumed that the machinery and software required to implement this technology would cost at least US$100,000.

Unfortunately, the market for fins for high performance sailboards is not large enough to justify this expenditure.

A Techno CNC router makes it possible to produce fins to precise aerodynamic profiles at a cost that is less than the cost of hand-producing high performance fins.

It takes about 4h to produce each fin.

Many races have been won with fins produced by this method.

Anders Bringdahl is only one of the well-known racers that have used the fins to beat their best previous times.

* America’s Cup yacht rudders - America’s Cup boats are getting faster all the time, and part of that is due to Goetz Marine Technology’s (GMT) use of Techno CNC routers to produce the precisely shaped, perfectly symmetrical composite rudders many of these boats use.

Boat designers try to optimize the rudder design to provide maximum speed and lift so symmetry and accuracy are critical in the production of the rudder.

In the traditional manual production process, the blade’s foam core was manually carved, one half at a time.

Templates representing the blade half were inserted into slots cut in the foam blank.

The foam was then carved with a power plane down to the tops of the templates.

After one side was carved, carbon fiber was placed on that side and allowed to set.

The next day, the piece was flipped over so the other half could be carved.

It too was covered with carbon fiber and once it hardened, the two halves were joined.

The drawback to this method was that because the foam core was cut by hand, accuracy was only possible to about four or five mm.

This approach was also somewhat slow, taking about 16h to produce a part.

Now after GMT receives instructions from a yacht designer, the rudder production process proceeds this way.

First, an engineer re-creates the blade in a software program called KeelCAM that was created specifically for modeling foil-shaped objects.

The smoothed blade produced by KeelCAM becomes the cutting file for the Techno machine.

The data describing the plan form of rudder blade is transferred into machine’s Mac100 controller.

The carving stroke is in the fore and aft direction.

Most rudders can be carved in three 40-inch cutting sessions.

Compared to the 16h required by the manual approach, this is a beneficial time savings but the real benefit of the automated method is that GMT is now delivering blades with 1/2mm accuracy.

The more accurate rudders produced by this method can significantly increase the speed of the yachts.

* Exercise machines - a well-known Yoga instructor helped express his artistic talent at a commercial level by turning a new exercise machine concept into a profitable business with the help of a CNC router.

The new concept involves wooden, multipurpose exercise machines that are designed to simulate the movements used in ballet, swimming, gymnastics and yoga.

Horvath’s machines incorporate the kind of sweeping organic curves one expects to find in Art Noveau furniture.

The platforms are carved in the Santa Cruz style of wavy red and blond woodwork and patterned after the swirling shapes of bonsai trees.

They are created to command a ‘melodic movement’ that increases the individual’s effective range of motion.

These sweeping, circular movements involve the whole body at once, building strength without adding bulk.

Horvath’s machines emphasize the articulation of the joints and strengthening of the surrounding ligaments in such a way that it makes the connection between the bones much stronger.

The base and support elements are made of wood while other components are machined aluminum.

In the beginning, Horvath built wooden components with a jig saw using intricate templates to guide his hands and heavily sanded each piece after cutting.

There were two problems with this approach.

It took so long to build each machine that, considering his other time commitments; Horvath was precluded from turning the exercise machines into a serious business.

Second, the lack of precision provided by jigsaw cutting meant that the components of each machine had to be individually fitted.

Each machine took so long to build by this approach that it seemed impossible to build a profitable business from his conception.

Horvath builds each machine himself and this is a key selling feature of the equipment.

Several years ago, however, Horvath switched to a computerized router that has allowed him to cut the time required to build the machines by 80% and turn what was previously merely a labor of love into a going concern.

The router was relatively inexpensive.

Horvath estimates that he paid for its cost last year in one single order for five machines.

Horvath himself is computer illiterate, but he has a friend who converts his sketches into AutoCAD drawings then uses a CNC programming package called Mastercam from CNC Software, Tolland, Connecticut, to produce a file that the router understands.

Once the program is finished, Horvath operates the machine in his workshop.

When he wants to produce a part, he simply loads a piece of wood and pushes a few buttons to start the machine.

He does nearly all the manufacturing work himself although he does use part-time employees from time to time.

The CNC router concept is clearly an idea whose time has come in the sporting goods business.

It makes it possible to improve the performance of many sporting goods products by allowing complex geometries to be produced to a high level of accuracy.

The high level of repeatability and accuracy also allows for systematic changes and experiments to be performed to improve product performance.

At the same time, manufacturing costs are reduced because of the elimination of time-consuming hand work.

Best of all, the new routers are available at a fraction of the cost of traditional CNC machining equipment.

http://www.manufacturingtalk.com/news/toi/toi120.html

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CNC routers help carpenters win new business

March 12th 2008

A generation of CNC routers is helping carpenters generate new sources of revenues by producing wood, plastics and composites products in much less time and at far higher level of accuracy

CNC routers help Carpenters win new business A generation of CNC routers is helping carpenters generate new sources of revenues by producing wood, plastics and composites products in much less time and at far higher level of accuracy. A new generation of CNC routers is helping carpenters generate new sources of revenues by producing wood, plastics and composites products in much less time and at far higher level of accuracy than is possible using traditional power tools.

To make use of the new routers, carpenters produce electronic models of their products using computer aided design software.

Once the model is completed, the Techno CNC router can reproduce the geometry as many times as necessary with little or no supervision to an accuracy of +/-0.01mm.

The ability to accurately reproduce very fine details with minimal labor requirements is making possible for the carpenters that have adopted these methods to substantially increase their business volume.

Beyond that, they have been able to significantly reduce the cost of servicing their existing customers.

The new CNC routers that are the key to these improvements cost less than US$20,000 and can be programmed and operated by carpenters with minimal computer experience.
Further reading

CNC router halves curved millwork machine time
A PC-driven CNC wood router has produced miles of curved moulding and other custom millwork in 4000h - halving machine times - and has raised product accuracy by a factor of 10

Router cuts development from 2 months to 2 days
A CNC routing machine has enabled a guitar producing company to reduce product development time from two months to to two days and has made the company more profitable

CNC router boosts gun case production by 400%
When Champion Safe used power tools to produce gun case racks, only enough parts for 20 to 30 safes per day were made, but an unmanned CNC router produces parts for 120 safes/day

* Revenues increased - as an example of how these improvements can be accomplished, Unique Woodworking and Carving, Elk Grove Village, Illinois, USA, brought in US$130,000 in additional revenues last year that can be attributed directly to the company’s CNC router.

In its first year of operation, the US$16,000 machine paid for itself many times over.

The use of the CNC machine has made the company more competitive on custom jobs by allowing them to charge lower set-up fees than the competition.

It has also allowed the company to sell carved crown molding and chair rail for about 30% less that what competitors charge.

While the price advantages have helped attract new customers, the quality of the millwork ensures repeat business.

The CNC machine helps ensure quality by giving the Unique Woodworking a level of precision that is impossible to match with manual production methods.

Unique Woodworking and Carving offers standard and custom factory-direct millwork.

Its primary market is custom-built homes, and its products are sold to architects and builders primarily.

The standard product line includes bases, cases, crowns, moldings, dentils, blocks, chair rails, and trim.

The company produces a variety of custom woodwork, such as crown molding and chair rail carved with a customer’s unique pattern, doors, display cases, and so on.

Often their custom pieces are used in restorations where the builder is trying to match a style or molding pattern from the original structure.

A recent job for a Chicago hotel restoration, for example, involved making a conference table, large display case, and doors in the hotel’s original mission style.

Unique Woodworking mills products from the more common woods such as oak and poplar but also works in mahogany, bloodwood, satinwood, silky oak, and other exotic woods.

About two years ago, Unique Woodworking realized that with custom orders and 3D patterns being a growing part of its business, it made sense to look into computer technology that could automate the time-consuming aspects of this work and reduce its cost.

Carving a pattern on crown molding or chair rail, for example, offers a distinctive look that many people would like to have.

But carving by hand takes so long that it prices the product out of most people’s reach.

With a CNC (computer numeric controlled) router, they hoped to be able to carve the pattern much faster and thus, less expensively, driving the price down to where more people could afford it.

* CNC router search - the search for a CNC machine began with requests for literature from a variety of manufacturers.

The company got information about several machines in the US$35,000 to US$60,000 range but felt these were too expensive for their current volume of work.

Then they heard about the Techno CNC wood router which costs less than US$16,000 and is designed for production routing and drilling on a wide variety of materials including wood, plastic, MDF, solid surfacing materials, and nonferrous metals.

The price included the CNC programming system, which has the ability to generate complex contours with little programming effort.

The system features true 3D geometry construction plus IGES, DXF, and CADL converters so that geometry can be uploaded from nearly any CAD system, including Unique Woodworking’s TurboCAD program.

The combination of capabilities included in the Techno CNC system and the price seemed perfect for the Unique Woodworking’s needs, so the company purchased it in 1996.

Since installing the Techno machine, Unique Woodworking has been able to attract more custom work because the company is able to charge set-up fees that are about half those charged by other woodworking shops.

Custom jobs involve a set-up charge because the shop must create new knives for the milling machine, which cuts the linear profile of the piece.

The knives are ground out of high-speed steel by following a template made of plastic.

Unique Woodworking now saves several hours of set-up time by producing the templates on its Techno system.

The pattern for the knives is modeled in TurboCAD, and then exported to the CNC programming system.

There the user specifies the cutting tool, the cutter size, tolerance, feeds, and speeds and the software generates the toolpath for the router.

The Techno machine cuts plastic templates faster than anyone can cut them by hand.

The accuracy provided by the Techno CNC machine has come in handy on other tasks besides cutting knife templates.

The mission-style display case for the Chicago hotel was 12ft wide and 8ft tall and had mullions that ran all the way across to hold double-thick glass.

Unique Woodworking used the CNC machine to cut the mortises for the mullions to make sure there would be no assembly problems.

The conference table for the hotel, also done in mission style, had rails and styles in the design.

Twelve styles had to be centered between two leg members.

That demanded accurate placement of them about 5/8-inch apart.

Placing them this accurately would have been difficult to do by hand.

By using CAD to lay out the placement of the styles and the CNC machine to cut the mortises for the styles, accuracy was ensured.

* More work taken on - Designer Woodworking, a custom wood working business located in Manhattan, Kansas, now takes on jobs it wouldn’t have wanted in the past.

Tricky one-of-a-kind restoration projects and intricate architectural milling work that used to take too much time to be profitable have become a source of growth and profit.

By completing difficult jobs like these in hours rather than days, the company makes a profit on them yet keeps its fees in the range the customers can afford.

In business for 10 years, Designer Woodworking specializes in restoration, of both antiques and also modern furniture that has been damaged during moving or by excessive use.

In addition to restoration work, which makes up about 75% of its business, Designer Woodworking also does woodwork for local architectural projects.

Examples include stair rails, custom redwood screen doors to match decks, unique moldings, and so on.

For both types of projects, the company formerly lost some jobs and didn’t bid on others in situations where too much time was involved to make their work cost-effective.

Typically, the problem was curved pieces.

Prior to acquiring the computerized router, things like curved moldings in restorations and stair rails with sweeping curves were very time-consuming.

Designer Woodworking personnel worked from templates and in some cases, just getting the template right took many tries.

Following the templates, they cut the pieces by hand, but since hand cutting was imprecise it was usually followed by a great deal of sanding.

A recent project involving a custom walnut door offers a good comparison of the computerized router versus Designer Woodworking’s previous hand practices.

The door was a narrow solid door designed to be placed between a shower and a hot tub room.

The designer wanted the door to contain an ellipse-shaped inset starting at about two feet from the floor and going up to about six inches from the top of the door.

The door itself was 1.5in thick; the inset panel was 3/4in thick.

Without a computerized method of cutting out the ellipse shape, Designer Woodworking would have attached a pattern to the door to guide the cutter.

With the cutter’s ball bearing riding against the pattern, the operator would have cut out the shape.

The greatest difficulty was making the pattern perfectly.

Typically, a number of tries would have been needed to get it right.

In all, just making the pattern would have taken at least one day.

With the Techno router, creating the shape of the ellipse in the computer, then instructing the system to program the instructions for cutting took between 15 and 20 min.

Another 15 min were needed to set up the door on the table, so that within an hour Designer Woodworking was accurately cutting the ellipse.

Because the computerized router eliminated at least seven hours on this project, Designer Woodworking’s price of US$800 was acceptable to the customer.

Working by hand, the company would have charged between US$1200 and US$1300 and probably would not have got the job.

The efficiency made possible by the router has allowed Designer Woodworking to take on all kinds of jobs that previously weren’t profitable.

For example, the company is often asked to repair wall units that local soldiers bring back from Germany.

These units have crown moldings that often get broken in transport.

The sweeping curves in the moldings made this a difficult job in the past, but they are now easy to reproduce.

Similarly, Designer Woodworking sees a lot of broken rockers on rocking chairs.

These, too, had been difficult items to make profitably by hand due to their long curves.

But it takes only a few minutes to program rockers on the computer.

The actual cutting takes only minutes, as well, so that Designer Woodworking can handle a few dozen rocking chair repairs each week.

Although the efficiency made possible by the router has been key to winning new business, Designer Woodworking also finds that the greater accuracy they can now deliver also helps win work.

In the past, the company didn’t bid on projects like a 30-slot mail insert for a roll-top desk because dividing the area into 30 slots of identical size would have been nearly impossible by hand.

Using CAD/CAM for this project, the operator simply created a line of the desired width, 1.5 inches, duplicated it 30 times, and then used the resulting geometry as the basis for the toolpath.

This took about 15 minutes.

Grooves for the dividers in both the top and bottom halves of the insert met perfectly and each slot was exactly 1.5in wide.

Cutting took between 30 to 45 min compared to 3h by hand, but results would not have been nearly as accurate.

The entire job took about eight hours, which included finishing and installation in the desk.

This was about half the time this project would require if done manually.

* Curved mouldings - Culin/Collela, Mamaroneck, New York, USA, produced miles of curved moldings and other custom millwork using a Techno CNC wood router in 4000h, approximately half the time it would have taken using traditional methods.

The router also improved the accuracy of the work by a factor of ten, helping Culin/Collela deliver curved moldings, cabinets, and bookshelves that drew praise from the architect on the project.

Creating large curved wood pieces by hand would have meant making a trammel and physically swinging an arc to figure out the radii of curves.

Instead, Culin/Collela created shop drawings in its CAD system, then transferred the CAD data to the router’s cam system to create toolpaths for the router.

The Techno router then generated the highly accurate fiberboard templates, knife grinding templates, and cauls needed for the project.

A caul is a template used for bending that clamps wood into a curved shape.

Culin/Collela occupies a 12,000ft2 building in Mamaroneck, New York.

The company was formed when its president and vice-president, who each had a custom furniture business, met, married and later merged the two businesses.

The company employs 23 people and has recently been doing work at the Conyers Farm development outside Greenwich, Connecticut.

This is an exclusive enclave of multi-million dollar homes on lots of at least 10 acres.

One of Culin/Collela’s recent jobs was the woodwork for a 25,000ft2 house with a curved front wall.

Culin/Collela produced the entire interior molding package, which included miles of curved cornice molding, baseboard, and chair rail, as well as wainscot paneling for the curved front wall.

Every piece of the molding in the house had a custom profile designed by the architect.

In all, the house had at least 150 different molding profiles.

Culin/Collela also created the entire kitchen package for the house.

This consisted of natural cherry cabinets with curved doors, as well as the wainscot paneling in the breakfast room.

Other work for this house included a curved bookcase for the library, a chestnut wainscot wall and chestnut tongue-and-groove ceiling in the family room, and a spiral staircase with wainscot paneling that went up three stories to the children’s living area.

Creating curved woodwork using traditional methods presents several challenges.

Typically a template is cut from a piece of fiberboard, either by hand or with a router, and then parts are trimmed flush to the template.

The template must accurately depict the radius of the curve.

Drawing the radius requires the use of a trammel or beam compass, and building one of these is a big undertaking for larger wood pieces.

If a particular piece of wood needs to have a 50ft radius, for example, someone has to take a 50ft length of wood and put a point at one end and pencil at other end, then physically swing the arc to get the proper curve.

Curved kitchen cabinets present additional challenges.

Not only must the doors be curved, but the box of the cabinet, face frame, styles, and rails must also be curved, and they all require different radii to fit together perfectly.

For example, assuming the curve of the cabinet is concave, interior parts such as the box must have one radius while parts farther out such as the door must have a larger radius.

The kitchen cabinet doors for the Conyers Farm house had a 45ft radius.

With this large radius it wasn’t obvious that the doors were actually curved.

If they had not been curved, the installed cabinets would have had a faceted appearance.

To draw the different radii for these cabinets by hand would have required using the 45ft compass and then adjusting the resulting radius for each cabinet part.

Culin/Collela executives realized that CAD/CAM technology could alleviate some of this work, but when they looked at computer-controlled woodworking machines, they saw prices in the neighborhood of US$60,000.

That was impossible to justify at the company’s current workload.

Then the company heard about the Techno CNC wood router, which costs less than US$16,000 and is designed for production routing and drilling on a wide variety of materials including wood, plastic, MDF, solid surfacing materials and nonferrous metals.

By using this router, Culin/Collela has greatly simplified the process of producing complex curved millwork.

The router works in conjunction with the company’s AutoCAD design software (Autodesk, San Rafael, California).

They export AutoCAD files, which contain accurate curve radii for all parts, to CAD/CAM, generate CNC programs, and produce templates and finished parts on the router.

Production time has been reduced by an average of 50% on the items produced by the router.

And, quality has been substantially improved because the computer-generated programs provide far more accuracy than the company was ever able to achieve with manual methods.

The process Culin/Collela followed started with the creation of shop drawings in the AutoCAD system and submitting them for the architect’s approval.

Once that was done, a full-time employee worked with the production manager to determine what templates and cauls were required for what operation.

That employee then took the appropriate drawings from the CAD system and transferred them to CAD/CAM to generate all the toolpaths required to create those templates and cauls.

The CAD/CAM work took about 200h for this house.

They used the router to make two types of templates: fiberboard templates for use with the shaper and knife grinding templates.

Knife grinding templates are used to create the knives that go into the molder head and cut the profile of the molding.

Molding knives are only as good as the template, so the CNC router was important in this project to get a high degree of precision.

After templates were created they were taken to the molder or the shaper to cut the actual part.

The molder was a Weinig Profimat four-headed molder with automatic head positioning.

The shaper was an SAC 10HP tilting arbor shaper capable of profiling edges of curved pieces and trimming on a curve.

The cauls used in this project held strips of solid cherry molding in a curved shape while the glue that held them together dried.

The router was used to cut all the ribs and parts for cauls so they had the exact radius needed.

CNC enabled them to produce knife grinding templates in one-third the time needed by hand, or about 20 min/knife template versus 1h by hand.

In all, producing the curved millwork for this house took approximately 4000h, which Culin/Collela estimates would have been closer to 8000h without the Techno CNC machine.

In addition to the time it saved, the accuracy of the router won Culin-Collela high praise from the architect for the quality of their work.

The CNC router concept is clearly an idea whose time has come in the carpentry business.

It makes it possible to improve the quality of many products by allowing complex geometries to be produced to a high level of accuracy.

At the same time, costs are reduced because of the elimination of time-consuming hand work.

Best of all, the Techno routers are available at a fraction of the cost of traditional CNC machining equipment.

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Router cuts development from 2 months to 2 days

March 12th 2008

A CNC routing machine has enabled a guitar producing company to reduce product development time from two months to to two days and has made the company more profitable

‘Switching from power tools to a CNC router helped us reduce the time required to develop new guitars from two months to two days,’ reported Rick Dodge, president of the Dodge Guitar Company in Tallahassee, Florida, USA. Reducing product development time has made the company more profitable and made it possible to introduce products for smaller market niches that would have been too expensive to address in the past.

It used to take two weeks to build the prototype for a new guitar with most of the time being occupied in building templates.

Problems with the initial design were always discovered, which required a long iterative process that involved making up to a dozen prototypes to resolve.

A new CNC router dramatically streamlines this process by allowing Dodge to develop electronic prototypes in which it can check the fit of critical components.

As soon as Dodge have completed a design on a personal computer, the machine produces the guitar without the need to make templates, saving huge amounts of time.

Dodge Guitars has developed a patented modular system that allows the player to replace all of the electronic components of the guitar in seconds, providing unlimited sound possibilities.
Further reading

CNC router halves curved millwork machine time
A PC-driven CNC wood router has produced miles of curved moulding and other custom millwork in 4000h - halving machine times - and has raised product accuracy by a factor of 10

CNC routers help carpenters win new business
A generation of CNC routers is helping carpenters generate new sources of revenues by producing wood, plastics and composites products in much less time and at far higher level of accuracy

CNC routers lower sports goods costs
Latest CNC routers are helping sporting goods manufacturers to increase accuracy and reduce costs in the production of intricate wood, plastics and composites materials

They can switch from a three single coil Stratocaster configuration to a twin single coil Telecaster setup to a dual humbucker Les Paul configuration, all in the same guitar, in a matter of seconds.

Each interchangeable module contains the complete electronics for the guitar, including pickups, switches, knobs and jacks.

Active electronics or any specialty pickup combination, including MIDI wiring, can be incorporated into a module.

The sustain is comparable to any other well-crafted electric guitar.

* Challenge of a modular system - building a modular guitar represents a considerable challenge from a design standpoint.

The module, a hollow box that inserts through the back of the guitar, must be perfectly aligned with the guitar strings in order to provide the proper sound.

Insuring that this level of accuracy is achieved with every module is a challenging task.

In the past, when the company used power tools to build its guitars, it was very difficult to establish the proper relationships between the different components.

Building a prototype first required that about a dozen separate templates be created to produce the front and back of the guitar body, the neck, and other parts.

Producing all these templates and building the prototype took about two weeks with a power router with a bearing bit.

Once the prototype was completed, Dodge finally had the opportunity to check it against what we were trying to make.

Because the process of making the templates provided no opportunity to check for errors, there were always a considerable number of problems with the first one.

For each problem the company had to create a new template and often a problem affected more than one template.

It was necessary to build an average of 10 prototypes before it achieved the demanding levels of dimensional performance required to achieve management approval to begin production.

The amount of time involved in developing new products meant that Dodge could only address relatively large market niches where they were certain that sales volume would be high enough to pay back the development costs.

* Search for an alternative - in an effort to develop products faster and at a lower cost, Dodge Guitar management investigated various computerized numerical control (CNC) cutting tools.

The goal was to create and validate the design on the computer in order to eliminate or at least streamline the lengthy prototyping process.

At first, the company considered a traditional CNC machine.

These machines, made by companies such as Bridgeport, start at US$50,000, not including the CNC programming software.

To get a model with a large-enough working area, Dodge Guitar would have had to buy one of the larger machines costing at least twice that.

Another alternative would have been a low-cost router that uses racks, acme screws and stepper motors but it would have been limited to low speeds and shallow cuts and probably would have suffered from vibration that would hurt part finish.

Then they heard about a new type of gantry router that has a large cutting area and most of the features of much more expensive machines such as ball screws, servo motors and a heavy frame yet was still available at a low price.

The supplier of the Techno Series III, Techno-Isel, New Hyde Park, New York, has been around for longer than any of the other low-cost router manufacturers and managers heard they had a good reputation for service and support.

Dodge Guitars ended up purchasing the machine from their local dealer, CWS Associates, Newport Richey, Florida.

The price was less than US$26,000 including CNC programming software.

Its working area of 40in by 48in with a Z-axis height of 6in is large enough to set up multiple guitars at once.

The new machine made it possible for Dodge to adopt an entirely new approach to new product development.

Now, the firm’s engineers begin the design process by using the computer aided design (CAD) capabilities of Mastercam to sketch out their design on the computer in three dimensions.

By manipulating their model on the screen, panning, zooming and rotating, they are usually able to validate all critical dimensional relationships before they even begin to cut wood.

In their most recent project, a new bass guitar, for example, they digitized an existing guitar body, then made about 50 changes to their original design on the computer prior to building the prototype.

The best feature of the new approach is that a typical dimensional change can be made in two minutes on the computer as compared to half a day to build an accurate template.

To provide a final validation step, they put a marker in the machine spindle and used it to trace the outline of the program on posterboard.

* Cutting prototype in an hour or two - with the design fully validated, we were ready to produce the prototype.

Note that there was no need to make templates first, so it only took an hour or two to cut out the pieces for a prototype.

The Techno machine’s 0.0002in resolution and repeatability and 0.003in absolute accuracy are considerably better than what Dodge’s craftspersons were able to achieve with power tools.

The Techno machine’s accuracy is the result of several features inherent to the table, such as the use of ball screws and servo motors.

For example, anti-backlash ball nuts permit ‘play-free’ motion that makes it possible to produce accurate curves and inlays and a terrific finish.

The Techno router uses ballscrews that ensure longer life and greater rigidity during the life of the system because of the reduced wear as compared to ACME screws and nuts or rack and pinion systems.

Cut quality and longevity were important considerations.

Dodge also found that all the big expensive routers used the same ballscrews and servo motor design found on the Techno machines; but none of the expensive routers offered stepper motor drives.

Prototypes produced by the new machine generally have few if any problems that need to be ironed out because of the advance validation process performed on the computer.

Any changes that do need to be made can be done far more quickly than in the past.

The engineer simply enters the change in the three dimensional Mastercam model, then cuts a new part.

In the new bass guitar described earlier, only a few minor changes were required to the initial prototype.

This made it possible to complete the entire design process in only two days.

* Product variants - one of the greatest benefits of the new approach comes after the initial design is complete.

Because the design is produced in electronic format and the modeling process is largely automated, it’s easy to modify the design either as an improvement or to create a product variant.

In the past, on the other hand, the amount of time required to make changes was high because templates had to be built from scratch.

For example, Dodge Guitars recently developed a new line of left-handed guitars simply by producing mirror images of the computer models of existing guitars.

Left handed guitars are normally more expensive and there are few choices available.

The new CNC approach will let us offer any guitars we wish in left-handed models.

In approximately 300h of operation, Dodge Guitars has had no problems with the Techno machine.

This is partly due to the strength and rigidity of the table, which is constructed from extruded aluminum profiles that provide easy clamping capability.

The machine also has four ground and hardened steel shafts and eight recirculating bearings in each axis.

This shaft and bearing system produces very smooth play-free motion and an extremely rigid system that produces high-quality cuts.

Dodge concluded: ‘As a relatively new entrant to the guitar market, the CNC router has had a big impact on our ability to compete with the market leaders.

It has helped us develop an extensive product line at a reasonable cost and allows us to produce a product that matches or exceeds all other products in terms of accuracy and repeatability.’

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CNC router halves curved millwork machine time

March 12th 2008

A PC-driven CNC wood router has produced miles of curved moulding and other custom millwork in 4000h - halving machine times - and has raised product accuracy by a factor of 10

Culin/Collela produced miles of curved molding and other custom millwork using a personal computer-driven CNC wood router in 4000 hours, approximately half the time it would have taken using traditional methods, reported its president, Ray Culin. The router also improved the accuracy of the work by a factor of ten, helping Culin/Collela deliver curved molding, cabinets, and bookshelves that drew praise from the architect on the project.

Creating large curved wood pieces by hand would have meant making a trammel and physically swinging an arc to figure out the radii of curves.

Instead, Culin/Collela created shop drawings in its CAD system, then transferred the CAD data to the router’s cam system to create toolpaths for the router.

The router then generated the highly accurate fiberboard templates, knife grinding templates, and cauls needed for the project.

A caul is a template used for bending that clamps wood into a curved shape.

Culin/Collela occupies a 12,000ft2 building in Mamaroneck, New York, USA.
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The company was formed when its president and vice-president, who each had a custom furniture business, met, married and later merged the two businesses.

The company employs 23 people and has recently been doing work at the Conyers Farm development outside Greenwich, Connecticut.

This is an exclusive enclave of multi-million dollar homes on lots of at least 10 acres.

One of Culin/Collela’s recent jobs was the woodwork for a 25,000ft2 house with a curved front wall.

Culin/Collela produced the entire interior molding package, which included miles of curved cornice molding, baseboard, and chair rail, as well as wainscot paneling for the curved front wall.

Every piece of the molding in the house had a custom profile designed by the architect.

In all, the house had at least 150 different molding profiles.

Culin/Collela also created the entire kitchen package for the house.

This consisted of natural cherry cabinets with curved doors, as well as the wainscot paneling in the breakfast room.

Other work for this house included a curved bookcase for the library, a chestnut wainscot wall and chestnut tongue-and-groove ceiling in the family room, and a spiral staircase with wainscot paneling that went up three stories to the children’s living area.

Creating curved woodwork using traditional methods presents several challenges.

Typically a template is cut from a piece of fiberboard, either by hand or with a router, and then parts are trimmed flush to the template.

The template must accurately depict the radius of the curve.

Drawing the radius requires the use of a trammel or beam compass, and building one of these is a big undertaking for larger wood pieces.

If a particular piece of wood needs to have a 50ft radius, for example, someone has to take a 50ft length of wood and put a point at one end and pencil at other end, then physically swing the arc to get the proper curve.

Curved kitchen cabinets present additional challenges.

Not only must the doors be curved, but the box of the cabinet, face frame, styles, and rails must also be curved, and they all require different radii to fit together perfectly.

For example, assuming the curve of the cabinet is concave, interior parts such as the box must have one radius while parts farther out such as the door must have a larger radius.

The kitchen cabinet doors for the Conyers Farm house had a 45ft radius.

With this large radius it wasn’t obvious that the doors were actually curved.

If they had not been curved, the installed cabinets would have had a faceted appearance.

To draw the different radii for these cabinets by hand would have required using the 45ft compass and then adjusting the resulting radius for each cabinet part.

Culin/Collela executives realized that CAD/CAM technology could alleviate some of this work, but when they looked at computer-controlled woodworking machines, they saw prices in the neighborhood of US$60,000.

That was impossible to justify at the company’s current workload.

Then the company heard about the Series III PC-driven CNC wood router (Techno, New Hyde Park, New York) which costs less than US$16,000 and is designed for production routing and drilling on a wide variety of materials including wood, plastic, MDF, solid surfacing materials and nonferrous metals.

Working area for the router is 49in by 41in and Z-axis height options range from 4.0in to 19in.

Table technical specifications include a rapid travel rate of 200in/min, a Z-axis cutting force of 200 lbf.

maximum, 0.0005in resolution and repeatability and 0.003in absolute accuracy.

The system includes the Mastercam CNC programming system (CNC Software , Tolland, Connecticut) which, although originally designed for metalworking, is ideally suited for woodworking because of its ability to generate the most complex contours with little programming effort.

The program features true 3D geometry construction plus IGES, DXF and CADL converters so that geometry can be uploaded from nearly any CAD system.

By using this router, Culin/Collela has greatly simplified the process of producing curved millwork.

The router works in conjunction with the company’s AutoCAD design software (Autodesk, San Rafael, California).

They export AutoCAD files, which contain accurate curve radii for all parts, to Mastercam, generate CNC programs, and produce templates and finished parts on the router.

Production time has been reduced by an average of 50% on the items produced by the router.

And, quality has been substantially improved because the computer-generated programs provide far more accuracy than the company was ever able to achieve with manual methods.

Culin/Collela has restricted the use of the router on the Conyers Farm job to making templates and cauls.

They did not use it for direct part cutting because they had only a three hp motor on the router at the time.

The process they followed started with the creation of shop drawings in the AutoCAD system and submitting them for the architect’s approval.

Once that was done, a full-time employee worked with the production manager to determine what templates and cauls were required for what operation.

That employee then took the appropriate drawings from the CAD system and transferred them to Mastercam to generate all the toolpaths required to create those templates and cauls.

The CAD/CAM work took about 200 hours for this house.

They used the router to make two types of templates: fiberboard templates for use with the shaper and knife grinding templates.

Knife grinding templates are used to create the knives that go into the molder head and cut the profile of the molding.

Molding knives are only as good as the template, so the CNC router was important in this project to get a high degree of precision.

After templates were created they were taken to the molder or the shaper to cut the actual part.

The molder was a Weinig Profimat four-headed molder with automatic head positioning.

The shaper was an SAC 10HP tilting arbor shaper capable of profiling edges of curved pieces and trimming on a curve.

The cauls used in this project held strips of solid cherry molding in a curved shape while the glue that held them together dried.

The router was used to cut all the ribs and parts for cauls so they had the exact radius needed.

CNC enabled them to produce knife grinding templates in one-third the time needed by hand, or about 20 min/knife template versus 1h by hand.

In all, producing the curved millwork for this house took approximately 4000h, which Culin/Collela estimates would have been closer to 8000h without the CNC machine.

In addition to the time it saved, the accuracy of the router won Culin-Collela high praise from the architect for the quality of their work.

For basic routing applications, the machine’s 0.0005in accuracy is more than enough for the job at hand.

However, for jobs requiring greater precision - such as inlays and molding cutter templates - such accuracy and play-free motion are essential to producing exceptional work.

The router’s accuracy comes from its use of anti-backlash ball screws, as opposed to the rack and pinion drive mechanisms used in cheaper systems.

Culin/Collela would not have bid on this contract without the time-saving and cost-saving capability of CNC equipment, nor would they have won it.

Their ultimate goal is to increase their use of technology to the point where they download an architect’s drawings directly into their computer.

This will greatly reduce the effort needed to produce shop drawings, and make the company even more competitive in its bidding.

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