Product category:
CNC lathes
News Release from: Colchester-Harrison | Subject: CNC lathes and vertical machining centre
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk Editorial
Team on 28 March 2007
UK subcontractor to expand CNC machine
tool park
Having to increase its manufacturing capacity, a subcontractor has invested GBP 250,000 in CNC lathes and a vertical machining centre to meet growing oil/gas/subsea components demand.
Having to increase its manufacturing and size machining capacity, a subcontractor has invested GBP 250,000 in CNC lathes and a vertical machining centre to meet growing oil/gas/subsea components demand Investing more than GBP 250,000 in a package of Colchester-Harrison CNC machine tools from 600 Centre of Shepshed, subcontract precision machinist Ultimate Precision of Jarrow, Tyne and Wear sees the purchase of five machines as important in increasing its capacity to cope with 60 to 70% increases in production demands from oil and gas and subsea sectors
This article was originally published on Manufacturingtalk on 11 May 2007 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
CNC lathes range includes mill/turn centres
For most machining applications, a UK company offers CNC lathes ranging from 3-axis machines to mill/turn centres with Y-axis, 'combination' manual/CNC lathes and vertical machining centres.
Improved lathe at even more attractive price
The Tornado 220 two-axis CNC lathe range is faster, heavier by almost 20 per cent and more rigid, to provide a consistent turning operation from part to part
The order, involving progressive installation of a Colchester-Harrison Combi 6000, MultiTurn 4000 and 2000 flat-bed CNC lathes, a Tornado T8, two-axis lathe and a Storm VMC 1300 vertical machining centre, is part of the company's planned increase from small to medium size part machining into high specification parts up to 1m cube and up to 1m diameter by 4m long.
The company, under managing director Ken Davidson, employs 30 people and has grown from its formation in 1997 supplying aerospace, automotive, medical and general engineering sectors.
It has recently added 55% to its turnover from contracts gained from subsea and offshore industry customers.
Further reading
Solid base on which to turn one-offs
Colchester has combined the stability of a solid base and an advanced control and software package into the Combi K-Series CNC lathe for one-off components or batch production.
Toolroom made thorough evaluation of 3-axis lathes
An extensive search of three-axis lathes led to three UK suppliers of CNC mill/turn centres facing in-depth evaluation of machine, control, software and running economics before a choice was made.
Turning cells play central role in SME initiative
Two two-axis 'lights-out' turning cells have very quickly taken a central role in a GBP 500,000 automated machining initiative designed to present cost-effective manufacturing techniques to SMEs.
Said sales and marketing manager Andy Hey: "We still produce batch work for existing customers and continuous production for the automotive sector, which tends to have very tight margins, but the new areas are really very challenging in materials, tolerances and machining knowledge so we need production equipment that is reliable, accurate and very flexible." The company investigated the machines available and while managing the growth of the business, value for money against equipment performance and flexibility were key markers on the comparison spread sheets.
"Here," said Hey, "The performance of the Combi and its specification fitted our requirements exactly against machines costing 45% more.
We also have the factory in Heckmondwike, West Yorkshire providing a close lifeline for support because our philosophy is not to let customers down on delivery." In addition to general materials, Ultimate Precision also produces parts from exotic materials and bespoke alloys, such as Duplex and Super Duplex, stainless steels and ceramics.
Tolerances run into a few microns on certain dimensions and high orders of surface finish are commonplace.
Here programming was a key element in judging the flexibility ranking of the machines and by standardising on Fanuc control, which is a key part of the 600 Group machine's specifications, means the setters on the shopfloor are quick to adapt to the new installations.
In addition to the machines from 600 Centre, the company has installed Fanuc's FAPT off-line programming and made good use of the on-machine interfaces and macros developed by Colchester-Harrison.
Altogether, the CNC plant list at Ultimate Precision has 21 machines and three co-ordinate measuring machines.
• Colchester-Harrison: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Manufacturingtalk email newsletter
• Manufacturingtalk Home Page

