91ÊÓÆµÍøÕ¾ÎÛ

Published

NC Programming The Key To Cycle Time Reduction

This company focuses on up-front CAD/CAM programming to reduce cycle times, rather than machining optimization, with excellent results.

Share

Leaders-In background

Boyle Engineering focuses on up-front CAD/CAM programming to reduce cycle times, rather than machining optimization.

"I used to be very concerned about my machining cycle times, making sure everything was running as fast as possible," says Don Boyle. "Now I'm not that worried about that any more, because when a lot of new jobs are coming in, I can program them so fast in my software that it's taken the pressure off cycle-time reduction at the machine tool."

Mr. Boyle has realized a 50-75 percent reduction in programming time since purchasing AlphaCAM, a PC-based CAD/CAM system from Licom Systems, Inc. in Westborough, Massachusetts.

"Tool path is generated literally within seconds," Mr. Boyle says. "All I do is develop the graphics for the part--or use the system's CAD capabilities to clean up graphics already supplied to me--and the software will produce the cutter paths incredibly fast."

Boyle Engineering is located in Tyngsboro, Massachusetts. The 2000-sq.-ft. job shop specializes in microwave electronic products for the communications, defense and medical industries. On-time delivery is one of its customers' biggest requirements.

The company does close work--tolerances are typically ñ0.001-0.002". Most jobs are in aluminum; Boyle also works nonferrous and brass.

"Production runs are five to 500, with about 30 different orders a month," Mr. Boyle says. "That constant turnover means I have to get CNC programs written and to the machines quickly."

"With some of the other systems, you have to get three or four levels deep just to get to a routine, and there's a lot of information you have to remember. In AlphaCAM, the dialog boxes and the way the software is written are so clever that you can just step right through it, and within a short period of time, you're really producing programs."

Mr. Boyle runs the software on a 486 PC that clocks at 66 MHz and is equipped with 8 MB of RAM and a color monitor. CNC programs are downloaded directly from the PC to the vertical machining centers through an RS-232 port.

"Let's say I have a family of parts, or multiple parts I want to machine out of a single strip of stock," he says. "All I do is program one part, tell the system I want six of these spaced at such and such an interval, and presto, everything is output to the machine."

Cutter compensation is another feature he likes.

"One part requires us to machine 150 small connector holes in a variety of grid patterns," Mr. Boyle says. "The material is 40 percent glass-filled, and we use specially ground carbide tools to machine the 0.041-inch diameter blind holes, as well as 0.021-inch diameter holes that break through the bottom of the blind holes.

"With the cutter comp, I can keep the job moving, continually opening up the holes to the correct diameter and tolerance even as the carbide tooling wears quickly in the abrasive material."

"The system automatically gives me run times on all the parts I program," he says. "Complicated parts are especially difficult to quote; having the machining cycle time up-front means I can make an accurate quote."

Once Mr. Boyle has done all the NC programming, he simply moves the tool path instructions directly to the machine.

"AlphaCAM goes right to NC code, right into the G-codes that you output to the machine," he says. "The other systems all seem to have a `middleman' language--the cutter path goes to one language, then you have to post process that, then it goes into G-code and out to the machine. It's crazy to do that--it makes no sense."

Not when you're rushing to get work out the door.

The bottom line, according to Mr. Boyle?

". . . programming is the big tie-up in job-shop work--once you get that under control, you've got the edge."

He's seeing the result of that competitive advantage.

"AlphaCAM is helping our business grow," he says. "We'll get another vertical soon, and we'll be bringing on some new people." MMS

Related Content

Sponsored

Continuous Improvement and New Functionality Are the Name of the Game

Mastercam 2025 incorporates big advancements and small — all based on customer feedback and the company’s commitment to keeping its signature product best in class.

Read More
CNC Tech Talks

Tips for Designing CNC Programs That Help Operators

The way a G-code program is formatted directly affects the productivity of the CNC people who use them. Design CNC programs that make CNC setup people and operators’ jobs easier.

Read More
Sponsored

ERP Provides Smooth Pathway to Data Security

With the CMMC data security standards looming, machine shops serving the defense industry can turn to ERP to keep business moving.

Read More
CAD/CAM

Can ChatGPT Create Usable G-Code Programs?

Since its debut in late 2022, ChatGPT has been used in many situations, from writing stories to writing code, including G-code. But is it useful to shops? We asked a CAM expert for his thoughts.

Read More

Read Next

Economics

Last Chance! 2025 Top Shops Benchmarking Survey Still Open Through April 30

Don’t miss out! 91ÊÓÆµÍøÕ¾ÎÛ's Top Shops Benchmarking Survey is still open — but not for long. This is your last chance to a receive free, customized benchmarking report that includes actionable feedback across several shopfloor and business metrics. 

Read More
Top Shops

Machine Shop MBA

  Making Chips and 91ÊÓÆµÍøÕ¾ÎÛ are teaming up for a new podcast series called Machine Shop MBA—designed to help manufacturers measure their success against the industry’s best. Through the lens of the Top Shops benchmarking program, the series explores the KPIs that set high-performing shops apart, from machine utilization and first-pass yield to employee engagement and revenue per employee.  

Read More
Automation

AMRs Are Moving Into Manufacturing: Considerations for Implementation

AMRs can provide a flexible, easy-to-use automation platform so long as manufacturers choose a suitable task and prepare their facilities.

Read More