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Machining Versatility
Date: January 2009
Source: Cutting Tool Engineering
Diamond Machine Werks was in a fix. For years, the Arlington Heights, Ill., builder of machines for high-speed assembly applications had relied on its more than 35 machining centers to han-dle any project that came its way.
But in 2007, the pressures of a grow-ing workload revealed a weak link. By the fall of that year, the company had a 3-month backlog of rotary cams (varying in size from 3" to 5" in diameter) and in-dexing screws (24" long and 3½" in di-ameter) that needed machining.
According to Dave Kowalski, DMW’s lead CNC man, the problem centered on a 25-year-old Johnford machining center. "We had a machine with an old rotary table that was worn out," he said. "It wasn’t accurate or fast or powerful enough to push like we needed."
DMW decided to jettison the Johnford machining center and look into updating its Yasda machine. Kowalski telephoned Steve Riel, vice president of McKenna Service Co., Mundelein, Ill., which specializes in CNC machinery repairs.
"DMW’s Yasda horizontal machining center had an indexing-style rotary axis, which means it rotated in 5° increments," said Riel. "What DMW originally wanted was to put a fullblown rotary table on that machine along with an indexing table, which would havebeen expensive.
"So we ended up disabling that indexing table and replacing it with a Lyndex-Nikken CNC501 rotary table that we could either stand up vertically to do cams or lay down to take the place of the indexing table."
The CNC501 features an ion-nitrided worm wheel and carbide worm screws to reduce friction and wear. The worm wheel is made from hardened steel, heat-treated to 36 HRC inside with a final 0.10mm-deep ion-nitriding treatment to achieve a hardness of 930 HV.
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