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Aerospace Industry supplier Wilsons Limited purchase Saws for sawing Aerospace Metals
Story added 06 February 2010.
MORE CASE STUDIES
Leading supplier of metals to the aerospace industry in
the UK, Wilsons Limited, Huntingdon, has invested in three high-speed,
automatic bandsawing machines from KASTO in the past five years.
The latest saw to be installed is a dedicated aluminium-cutting
machine, called KASTOtec AM4. According to Wilsons’ Director and
General Manager, James Digby, it is 10 times faster at cutting
aluminium alloys than two early KASTO bandsaws installed in the 1980s,
which are still in daily use.
Founded in 1947, Wilsons currently stocks over 10,000 tons of plate,
sheet, bar, tube, pipe, fittings and flanges totalling over 3,000 line
items for JIT, Kanban, direct line feed and other forms of supply to
customers. In addition to dealing directly with aerospace primes such as Airbus
and Bombardier, the stockist also services the first, second and third
tier supply chain.
Demand is not only for aluminium, which accounts for a majority of
turnover, but also for other aerospace industry metals including nickel and
titanium alloys, and more recently a range of ferrous materials.
Additional high technology companies that take advantage of the
stockist's service include most of the UK-based Formula 1 teams.
By 2005, Wilsons had increased its supply of aluminium bar to the UK
aerospace industry to the point where its market share had reached
nearly 40 per cent. The same year, it decided to branch out into
stocking aerospace steels. Additional sawing capacity was clearly
needed and after a brief foray into circular sawing, the company opted
to buy a 430 mm capacity KASTOtec AC4 bandsaw.
Mr Digby commented, 'We asked several different sawing machine
suppliers to cut a 203 mm diameter bar of 2014 aluminium. The KASTO
machine proved to be by far the quickest. Thankfully the machine was in
stock, as our requirement was urgent at the time, and the saw was
operating in our warehouse within three days.'
Grant Clay, Operations Manager, added, 'Since that moment we have never
looked back – the reliability of the machine has been second to none.'
'The AC4 has been running flat out, eight and a half hours a day, five
days a week, ever since it was installed. To maximise productivity, we
program maximum band speed and infeed for every material it cuts, yet I
struggle to think of a single breakdown in five years.'
'Even KASTO's engineers are surprised at how hard we are able to work
the machine, which is easily three times faster at cutting all
materials than the older bandsaws in our warehouse.'
With the advent of steel supply at Huntingdon, the rigid, powerful AC4
was naturally deployed onto that work, which curtailed its availability
to cut aluminium. So the decision was taken in 2006 to buy a second,
slightly larger capacity (530 mm bar diameter) KASTOtec bandsaw, an
AC5. This is similarly run at maximum speeds and feeds, predominantly
on steel. Even when cutting case-hardened varieties, high productivity
rates are achieved.
Continued Mr Digby, 'Our main reason for choosing the KASTOs, apart
from their superior speed, was the clean cut that they achieve. On
other machines we looked at, fine swarf was produced which, when mixed
with coolant, resulted in a dirty cutting environment.'
'The cut on the KASTO saws is cleaner, as it uses minimum volume
coolant and the chips are much thicker, more like those produced when
milling.'
Other features of KASTO saws that Wilsons’ engineers appreciate are the
integral control panel instead of a bolt-on type, and the ease of
programming. Additionally, the company had always been impressed with
the KASTO’s after sales service, both over the telephone and when
engineers visit.
The KASTOtec AM4 aluminium machine was installed in Huntingdon at the
end of 2009 in response to increased order levels for aluminium alloys,
the result of a growing aerospace market in the UK, despite the
recession, and Wilsons having increased its market share.
Mr Clay explained, 'This machine is finely tuned to cutting aluminium
and nothing else, and achieves extraordinarily fast cutting rates,
three to four times higher than even the AC4.'
'Downfeed on the AM4 is up to 1.5 metres per minute, which is
progressively slowed automatically by the control the closer the blade
gets to the centre of round material so that the chip load on the teeth
remains constant.'
'When cutting single pieces of flat bar or rafts, the blade goes
straight through at a high, constant speed, finishing in less than an
hour what would take a day to cut on one of our older saws.'
A typical order placed on Wilsons is 10- to 20-off, but may be as high
as 500-off, while ones and twos are regularly processed on most days.
With the machines being so fast and batch sizes often low, speedy
changeover is paramount to avoid loss of production. Mr Digby advises
that, on all of the KASTO machines, a new job can be programmed in a
matter of minutes, even if new data has to be entered at the control.
If the program is already in memory, changeover is faster still.
'Even when a new material type, size and cross section plus cut-piece
length and quantity have to be keyed in, the program is always ready
before another operator can load the material onto the input
conveyor,'he said. 'In fact, it takes longer to complete the paperwork
for a job
than it does to program it.'
The beauty of having automatic bandsaws as reliable as the KASTOs is
that they can run without operator attendance from the end of the day
shift. A ghost shift often extends right through the night. This is
because Mr Clay adopts the policy of backing off feeds and speeds by 30
to 50 per cent to guard against blade breakage. A calculation is made
as to how fast each machine needs to run so that the requisite number
of parts, for example 200-off pieces of 180 mm diameter steel, are in
the basket before the next morning shift starts.
It is interesting that the KASTOtec machines at Wilsons are of robust
specification to allow the option of using carbide blades, yet the
stockholder chooses to use bimetal blades for all its cutting
requirements, except on titanium. The reason is that bimetal is nearly
as fast as carbide when cutting all other materials and results in
lower cost per cut, due to the higher consumable cost of bands with
tungsten carbide teeth.
Maintaining efficient customer service in terms of quality and delivery
is essential in stockholding, especially in the aerospace and F1
sectors. With its substantial investment in sawing machines over the
past five years and the confidence to buy the latest bandsaw in a
difficult business climate, Wilsons believes that it is very well
positioned to take advantage of the upturn when it comes.
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