91ÊÓƵÍøÕ¾ÎÛ

Published

High-Performance Gantry-Style Machining Center Builds In Accuracy

To gain control of the manufacturing process and tighten up production times, this company purchased a novel gantry-type machining center that features an integrated rotary table and a powerful right-angle head.

Share

Leaders-In background

With a long-standing reputation for manufacturing quality screen graphics equipment, M & R Printing Equipment (Glen Ellyn, Illinois) was not content to continue trusting its complex machining requirements to outside machine shops. M & R Printing first welded and then outsourced various textile press parts. But farming out parts took too much time and resulted in quality control problems. To gain control of the manufacturing process and tighten up production times, the company purchased the UMB 6 from Unisign, produced and sold by Monarch Machine Tool (formerly Genesis Worldwide, Cortland, New York). The UMB 6 is a novel gantry-type machining center that features an integrated rotary table and a powerful right-angle head.

Capitalizing on the versatility of the UMB 6, M & R Printing now does all its complex machining work in-house, maintaining the requirements necessary to produce its broad line of screen printing equipment, including carousel textile presses, flatbeds, belt printers, dryers and adhesive application equipment—everything necessary to reproduce colorful graphics on a range of materials from tiny decals to XXL sweatshirts and large banners.

Registration accuracy is the primary concern of M & R’s customers. In a typical silkscreen carousel configuration, pallets are rotated to various stations where the exposed garment surface is contacted by each print head, and a pattern of color is applied. For proper registration, both upper and lower elements of the carousels, which are up to 23 feet (7 meters) in diameter, need to correspond closely with each other. When colors aren’t applied precisely, overlaps and bleeding occur, resulting in fuzzy lines and blended colors. Meticulous registration and high-quality impressions require precision equipment that often entails complex, precise machining requirements. High-production, bi-directional textile presses also need to operate smoothly and at high speeds with minimum downtime. According to Jacek Wojcik, chief manufacturing engineer at M & R, the UMB 6 has responded to all these concerns.

Equipped with a right-angle 50-taper head, automatic rotary table, coolant-through-spindle, and traveling tool storage with tool pre-selection, the UMB 6 is used by M & R for milling, drilling, and tapping surfaces of different carousel press models, rotating pallet arms and machine heads. A custom-designed fixture is utilized that permits operators to quickly change the setup from one style of carousel to another. To produce carousel pallet arms and heads, other custom-designed fixtures are employed for multi-part machining.

Mr. Wojcik says that the most important features of the UMB 6 are the rotary table and the right-angle head. Integrated into the fixed machine bed at one end of the X axis, the CNC rotary table is used to machine the many surfaces of the carousel’s components. The powerful 35-hp, 50-taper right-angle head enables the faces of the carousel, the pallet arms, and the printing heads to be milled, drilled and tapped in one operation. A pick-up station attached to a column of the gantry accommodates both the angular head and the cover ring for the spindle nose. Coupling the angular head to the main spindle is fully automatic for fast tool changes. With the UMB 6, each of these parts is now machined in-plant in a single setup. Productivity gains, according to Mr. Wojcik, have been substantial. “The product is more accurate now,” he states.

With its rigid, stationary machine bed and essentially unlimited X axis (to 472.4 inches), the UMB 6 accommodates long parts such as the carousel arms for the M & R presses. Its open design and large, accessible work zone make loading and unloading an easy task for M & R operators. With a milling capacity of 31 inch3/min. (St 60), spindle torque to 119 foot-pounds, and positioning accuracy of 0.0006 inch per 39.3 inches, the UMB 6 provides M & R Printing with both the power and precision in a production environment. Mr. Wojcik says that the UMB 6 gives M & R the capacity for “fast machining of a volume of complex parts.” Mr. Wojcik is impressed with the machine’s accuracy, universality and versatility. “We’re finding even more uses for this machine. We like the wide range of possibilities created by the many features of the UMB 6,” he says. MMS

Related Content

Basics

How to Determine the Currently Active Work Offset Number

Determining the currently active work offset number is practical when the program zero point is changing between workpieces in a production run.

Read More
Five-Axis

Inside a CNC-Machined Gothic Monastery in Wyoming

An inside look into the Carmelite Monks of Wyoming, who are combining centuries-old Gothic architectural principles with modern CNC machining to build a monastery in the mountains of Wyoming.

Read More

6 Machine Shop Essentials to Stay Competitive

If you want to streamline production and be competitive in the industry, you will need far more than a standard three-axis CNC mill or two-axis CNC lathe and a few measuring tools.

Read More
Sponsored

Lean Approach to Automated Machine Tending Delivers Quicker Paths to Success

Almost any shop can automate at least some of its production, even in low-volume, high-mix applications. The key to getting started is finding the simplest solutions that fit your requirements. It helps to work with an automation partner that understands your needs.

Read More

Read Next

Economics

2025 Top Shops Benchmarking Survey Now Open Through April 30

91ÊÓƵÍøÕ¾ÎÛ's Top Shops Benchmarking Survey is now open, offering metalworking and machining operations actionable feedback across several shopfloor and business metrics. 

Read More
Automation

Setting Up the Building Blocks for a Digital Factory

Woodward Inc. spent over a year developing an API to connect machines to its digital factory. Caron Engineering’s MiConnect has cut most of this process while also granting the shop greater access to machine information.

Read More
Workforce Development

Shop Tour Video: You've Never Seen a Manufacturing Facility Like This

In the latest installment of our “View From My Shop” series, explore Marathon Precision’s multi-process approach to manufacturing, where blacksmiths and hand-forged dies meet state-of-the-art CNC machining. Discover how restoring classic muscle cars and building custom art projects creates a dynamic shop culture — and draws top talent to this unique and innovative metalworking facility. 

Read More