For Scott Tudury, co-owner of Apex CNC (Morgan City, Louisiana), the key to the
future was a broken rocker arm on a Harley-Davidson Knucklehead motorcycle
engine. Built between 1936 and 1947, the overhead valve V-Twin earned its name
because of the valve cover design.
An online search for parts revealed that the sole source was a company named
Flathead Power, located in Sweden.
“This is ridiculous; the part is for an American motorcycle,” Mr. Tudury
said.
Owners of the Knucklehead and earlier Harley Flathead bikes became familiar
with the Swedish company, which was founded by motorcycle enthusiast Anders
Nygren and his father in 1994. As the company grew, problems surfaced in the
form of export taxes, a difficult business climate and a need for more
production equipment. Mr. Tudury’s initial contact with Mr. Nygren quickly grew
into an extended correspondence.
Realizing that its largest market was the U.S., the company reasoned that
moving its manufacturing to Apex CNC seemed like a logical solution.
Subsequently, Apex owners purchased the company, moved its operations to the
U.S. and acquired the CNC programs, tooling, casting patterns and prints for
both Knucklehead and Flathead engine parts.
However, to Mr. Tudury’s shock, there were no prints for more than 50 of the
parts. Programs had been created years ago in G-code without a software
interface, and manufactured parts were checked against masters. To make matters
worse, all of the comments were noted in Swedish. It became apparent to the
company that it would have to reverse engineer the entire line to produce the
parts on modern equipment.
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Company: Apex CNC
Problem: Reverse engineer numerous existing parts
Solution: GibbsCAM from Gibbs and Associates and SolidWorks’
RevWorks digitizing software
Results: Operational and fixturing advantages as well as
50-percent cycle-time improvement on a representative
part |
One option was to outsource the digital scanning of the parts. After
interviewing various sources at a trade show, Mr. Tudury decided that
outsourcing would simply not be a feasible option for his company. Seeking
another solution, he consulted with both SolidWorks (Concord,
Massachusetts) and GibbsCAM (Moorpark,
California) resellers. This research led him to RevWorks. Offered by SolidWorks,
the in-house digitizing system was compatible with software already in place,
meaning it could be linked easily to the company’s modern system.
RevWorks interfaces to a digitizing arm. The software operates inside of
SolidWorks, enabling all of the data from the scanned parts to appear ready for
use in the assembly or part document. Once a solid model is created, then
measurement verification and/or modifications can be performed. The solid model
is then transferred to GibbsCAM using a plug-in.
“We have PCs at every CNC machine to allow operators to do their own
programming or corrections,” Mr. Tudury says. “Once the point of origin is
determined, then we can generate the most effective tool path and either work
around or revise the fixturing.”
Likewise, if changes or improvements to the part are necessary, then
modifications can be incorporated immediately, the company says. By working at
the machine, Apex can “get it right the first time” and produce parts faster
than before. The CAM system extracts the geometry, performs the necessary
calculations and lays down the tool path.
 |
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The flexibility inherent in the CAM system is demonstrated
in this angled cutaway view of a motorcycle cylinder. The cross-section enables
the operator to clearly view the tool path and make modifications, the
manufacturer says. |
Other advantages of using the CAM package, as cited by the company, involve
tooling and estimating. Apex says that, combined with the software, the
expertise of its operators contributes to being able to use conventional tooling
to generate shapes that might otherwise require more expensive custom form
tooling. In addition, the software’s simulation features afford the company the
capability to quickly and accurately simulate cutting to approximate time and
tooling costs. As a result, Apex says it can offer more accurate estimates to
its customers.
One particularly challenging part involving multiple machine applications is
the Flathead cylinder. The casting is initially fixtured in an SL-30 lathe from
Haas Automation, Inc.
(Oxnard, California). The base and the bore are turned. The part is then
transferred to a Haas VF-6 five-axis machining center for subsequent operations.
These include milling the intake and exhaust ports and valve, the guide and seat
areas and the rod clearances. Thread milling is performed on the intake port, as
well as face drilling and tapping and a relatively small amount of profiling.
Tolerances are ±0.001-inch.
“Initially, we perform the milling, drilling and tapping on a four-axis
machine,” Mr. Tudury explains. “By using GibbsCAM, however, we noticed some
advantages on the operational side as well as in fixturing by moving to
five-axis. All told, we have been able to reduce cycle time by 50 percent.”
This reverse engineering methodology has now become the modus operandi for
other parts as well. After installing the integrated system, the company can now
deliver parts in a timelier manner and grow the business for both Flathead Power
and Apex CNC.
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