With a shop full of CNC grinding machines, machining centers and Vollmer
saw-sharpening machines, Riverside Tool in Elkhart, Indiana constantly strives
to efficiently manufacture high-quality cutting tools.
Founded in 1989, Riverside produces carbide and polycrystalline diamond (PCD)
tools to shape wood, plastics and composites, including surface material and
exotic species of wood. The company brazes the PCD tips onto cutterheads, router
bits and saw blades. Riverside also services a range of cutting tools and
produces insert tooling in the form of cutterheads, router bits and tools for
custom applications. It sells these products to distributors and end-users
nationwide.
To shape PCD tools, the company employs a Vollmer QWD 750H, an automatic wire
EDM capable of machining tool edges in five axes simultaneously. Shortly after
Riverside selected this machine, the staff on the shop floor suggested that the
company acquire a smarTcheck tool measuring and inspection machine from Zoller Inc. By
inspecting and measuring tools on the Zoller machine rather than the Vollmer,
the company can free up costly machining time for CNC tool shaping rather than
tool checking and setups. The objective was to maximize the productivity of the
Vollmer.
According to the company, cost savings from reduced machine time on the
Vollmer were immediately apparent. Following the installation of the new
machine, the total production time was reduced by more than 50 percent because
the need to create CAD drawings was eliminated. In addition, profile information
could be directly transferred to the Vollmer machine.
The smarTcheck features the Saturn 1 vision system, which uses a 90-degree
incident light camera with a swiveling optic carrier to measure in radial and
axial directions. It checks parameters such as rake angle, helical pitch, land
width and other characteristics. Cutting edges are displayed in transmitted
light, permitting measurement of the tool contour parameters. The system also
includes software to measure tool characteristics such as radius, contour
cutting angle, clearance angle, chamfer width, concentricity and so on. Capable
of close-up tool inspection, the camera helps the company discern chips or
damage and measure precisely how much material to remove to restore the tool
edge.
“This system allows us to fully inspect the tools we make—PCD tools and
insert tools,” says Ron Migedt, Riverside’s owner. “This is important because
the cutting edge imparts a surface to the material, and those edges need to be
smooth.”
“In our industry, all tools are designed with hook and some with shear,” he
continues. “So, what you see on the tool edge is not what you may see on the
wood. Years ago, the only way to be certain of what you were going to get on the
wood was to run a wood sample. Even though many shops today have a shaper setup
to test-cut parts, this method is not a safe or accurate way for us to inspect
our tools. Simply put, our employees are not woodworkers, so they are not
prepared to set up the various tools.”
On the other hand, the new system affords the company the capability to
effectively test-cut every tool via the camera system and duplicate what the
user would see on the wood. Riverside can then determine the accuracy of the
tool by extracting the resulting DXF file and comparing it to the company’s
drawing file.
“Prior to shipping the tools to our customers, we preset all of the tools,
adding or adjusting shims if necessary,” Mr. Migedt. “If we do that and there is
minimal machine runout at the end-user, then the tools run perfectly every
time.”
|
Company: Riverside Tool
Problem: Inspection on the machine tool would cost
production time
Solution: SmarTcheck inspection machine from Zoller Inc.
Results: More machine time; data for simulating performance
of product |
The inspection machine’s lasso function enables Riverside to measure
thousands of points on a tool within seconds and compare actual or nominal
dimensions using the DXF interface without writing programs. Data can either be
printed in a test log or saved for reference and quality assurance.
The Zoller machine has also provided Riverside with a high degree of
assurance that its tools are up to par before it ships them. Because the company
is able to inspect the tools for damage, it can produce a correct tool, save
material and reduce total production time by as much as 50 percent.
“We are positive that the tools are within tolerance and runout,” Mr. Migedt
explains. “That even includes our insert spiral moulder heads and other
surfacing heads. We can be certain that each insert in a head is operating in
the correct cutting plane, and that it is in balance. Otherwise, the end-user
would see lines in the material, which is unacceptable.”
“We can inspect the entire cutting plane as the tool rotates in the machine’s
precision spindle,” he continues. “Being able to check for misalignments and so
on means that we can guarantee that our tools will operate line-free in a
qualified machine.”
Riverside also uses the measuring and inspection machine to document the
condition of incoming tools. The company may snap a picture and share
recommendations with the customer. If the tool needs to be reset, then the
operator can pinpoint precisely how much of the tip needs to be moved or
replaced in brazing. After brazing, tools go back to the smarTcheck for setup on
the toolholder so that operators can enter all measurements and parameters for
the Vollmer machine. The tool and the holder are chucked in the Vollmer. The
tool edges are machined, and the tool is returned to the Zoller for
confirmation. The company also uses the Zoller to generate a list of the new
tool measurements so the end-user can input them into a CNC router or other
cutting machine.
“The data we can collect and store helps the customer understand what we do
to the tools as well as what they need to know to adjust their machines
correctly,” Mr. Migedt concludes. “It behooves the customer to know what type of
technology you are using to make and inspect their tools. That goes for the
insert side or our business, too, as the complexities that people are asking for
have increased.”
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