Getting the right grip on workholding; Using
specially-designed fixturing for high-volume production runs, an
automotive supplier more than doubled its output.
It is somehow appropriate that what became a successful supplier to
the automotive industry began in a garage. Keith Armour, founder, owner,
and president of Southland CNC, Cornelia, GA, began the company with a
single machine 19 years ago and has grown it to a 21-machine company
employing 30 people.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The company is an automotive industry supplier of machined aluminum
sand-cast components. It machines parts that include both high- and
low-level production runs. The company uses dedicated hydraulic clamping
fixtures on Okuma Howa vertical machining centers for its high-volume
work because the fixtures speed production time, making the fixturing
cost-effective. The dedicated hydraulic fixtures also have consistent
and repeatable clamping pressure which improves machining accuracy.
Typical tolerances are held to 20--[micro] true position, with
critical dimensions to [+ or -]. Armour said he credits the tolerances
to the hydraulic fixturing supplied by Advanced Machine &
Engineering, Rockford, IL. Because low-volume production runs do not
justify dedicated fixturing, Southland uses manual fixturing because of
its adaptability and lower cost of acquisition.
Southland has four horizontal machining centers and three vertical
machining centers that each use hydraulic tombstone fixturing, all
designed and built by AME. The fixtures are dedicated to high-volume
production of single parts or single families of parts.
The company chose AME to provide its first hydraulic tombstone
because the fixturing solution was competitively priced and designed to
fit Southland's production needs. Delivery, which was important to
production scheduling, was significantly better than any other supplier,
Armour said.
A Replacement Brings Results
The first AME fixture replaced the customer-supplied fixturing
Southland was using, which the shop determined was not providing the
efficiency needed to meet cost and schedule goals for the production
run.
The advantages of the AME-designed fixture included reduced load
and unload time, reduced cycle time, reduced scrap rates, and error-free
loading. The initial application of the fixture reduced cycle time by
more than 50 percent, which let the shop meet its production goals
without additional machines.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
On a bearing plate for a supercharger assembly, production has gone
from 50 units to 110 units per day with the same tolerances and a 1.67
Cpk, critical to the Six Sigma conformity for its automotive customers.
The fixture, which provides automatic clamp and release, is
designed with locating dowels for error-free handling. Each component to
be machined is touched only twice: once as it is loaded into the
fixture, and once as it is unloaded. Because it is a windowed fixture,
the component is machined on all four sides without additional handling.
On the vertical machining centers, a second loading pallet is used to
mount workpieces while another fixture is running in the machine. This
enhances Southland's throughput.
"The AME-produced fixturing has been very reliable,"
Armour said. "One fixture has been in operation 20 hours a day,
five days a week for more than seven years without a single
problem."
Because of this reliability, and AME's cooperation and
innovation, Southland added a second fixture for the vertical machining
centers, plus a fixture dedicated to horizontal machines.
"The fixture configurations we designed include cast
tombstones as well as welded tombstones," Alvin Goellner, AME
fixturing group manager, said. "Depending on the intended use for
the fixtures, they had external surface mounted hydraulics as well as
internally cored hydraulics."
A "Supercharged" Choice
One particular part--a bearing plate for a supercharger--is
aluminum sand-cast and measures 8"x4"x1-1/2". A
two-operation part per side, the workpieces are loaded in less than 20
minutes on a second fixture, using the secondary pallet on the VMC. The
shop supplies these parts to Jaguar,, BMW, and Mercedes.
"The fixture was designed for this part, though it's
flexible enough to let us use it for other jobs," Armour said.
"AME had a very short turnaround time, plus its knowledge of
workholding, and components selection were all first-rate. There's
been zero downtime due to fixturing, although we tweak the rest pads for
enhanced accuracy. That's normal with the machining centers we
use."
Armour said the design and development work was done via CAD
drawings and the completion of the entire project was done on schedule
and at the quoted price.
"When we began to go from 50 parts per day to 110 or better,
with absolutely no loss of accuracy and finish quality, we knew
we'd made a wise choice," he said. Advanced Machine &
Engineering
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