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January 2020
January2020
a trend publication  Volume 17 Number 1
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26
The Next Generation
Schools, OEMs and manufacturers band together to grow the workforce of the future
New Collar
Laser Technology
Automation breakthroughs give fabricators control over high-speed laser cutting operations and reduces cut losses
Close up of high-speed laser cutting
Man standing by machine
STAMPING / PRESSES
Manufacturer cuts stroke time in half, performs in-die operations and tackles higher tonnage stampings with servo-forming technology
Fabrication shop food area
Woman and man standing by fabrication machine
Machine measuring
Jet engine
Strong saw machine
Milwaukee grinding tool
features
WATERJET TECHNOLOGY
Engineer takes the reins of the family business and aims to push fab shop to the next level
end user report:
Aerospace
Outlook remains bright as demand continues upward
Sawing / Cutting
Strong saws are built to handle exacting specifications
Abrasives
When smooth finishes count, the right grain achieves aesthetic appeal
features
Fabrication shop food area
WATERJET TECHNOLOGY
Engineer takes the reins of the family business and aims to push fab shop to the next level
Jet engine
end user report:
Aerospace
Outlook remains bright as demand continues upward
Strong saw machine
Sawing / Cutting
Strong saws are built to handle exacting specifications
Milwaukee grinding tool
Abrasives
When smooth finishes count, the right grain achieves aesthetic appeal
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Fabricator Michael Deeter modified a classic 1976 Hondamatic 750 into a Western steampunk bike
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Printed tooling gives fabricators quick turnaround without sacrificing function, quality and mechanical properties
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System helps manufacturers simplify complex operations, cumbersome supply chains and the challenges of a multigenerational workforce
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Lynn Stanley headshot
From the
Senior Editor
By Lynn Stanley
Science & Art
S

everal years ago I realized a lifelong dream—to own a horse. I took on a rescue that was little more than skin and bones when I first saw him. Large doses of TLC got him back on his feet and we were soon taking to the trails. In 2018 he was diagnosed with an endocrine disorder that affects the pituitary gland.

Diagnosis, drugs, diet and frequent hoof trims has become our ritual in the long journey to manage his illness. Regular blood tests to monitor a particular hormone produced by the pituitary gland and insulin, hay testing and balancing, a low sugar/low starch diet, medication and an array of supplements are now all part of a day’s work at the barn.

Careful rehabilitation has him looking and feeling like his old self again and we are living the dream and able to ride. When a recent blood test showed elevated hormone levels, I expressed concern. But our specialist reminded me of the following: “Managing these horses is part science, part art and you need to pay attention to the whole picture, not just the snapshots in time that the blood work highlights.”

The Laser Expert
By Simon L. Engel, President, HDE Technologies Inc.
Set up to standard
Calibrating the process when laser drilling small holes
I

n the December 2019 edition of FFJournal, this column covered the surface effect and basic characteristics of percussion laser drilled, small-diameter holes. Two metal removal technologies were discussed: photo ablative drilling (PAD) and thermal laser drilling (TLD). The distinction between the two methods is the significant difference in power density of the focused laser beam as it is focused on the material.

In everyday practice, we need to calibrate the performance of the laser drilling system before we perform actual drilling. The following steps are applicable to both PAD and TLD:

Equipment qualification record (EQR). In published technical standards, calibration of the laser beam characteristics is a requirement. The spatial and temporal characteristics are measured and recorded to make sure the laser and the beam delivery optics are within the limits specified by the manufacturer and meet the settings developed for the specific drilling process.

Fabricator’s POV
BY LAUREN DUENSING, CONTRIBUTING EDITOR
Jim and Marian Lauer
Jim and Marian Lauer, co-owners of Weaver Precision Fabricating & Finishing.
Jim and Marian Lauer, co-owners of Weaver Precision Fabricating & Finishing.
Eyes on the prize
Job shop credits its success to making decisions with the future in mind
Jim and Marian Lauer own Weaver Precision Fabricating & Finishing in Akron, Ohio, and they are partners both in business and in life. Marian handles the HR, ISO and OSHA aspects of the business, and Jim concentrates on sales and company growth. They purchased Weaver in 1998, and have since seen automation penetrate the industry, good employees become more scarce, and learned to adjust to changing customer requirements.
Measurement Inspection
BY NICK MERRELL, TECHNICAL OPERATIONS MANAGER, VERISURF SOFTWARE INC.
Standards upheld
For measurement and inspection software,
compatibility equals productivity
A

utomated measurement and inspection have become pervasive across manufacturing segments. Driven by Industry 4.0, concepts like maintaining digital continuity throughout the manufacturing process (and beyond) and cyber-physical interoperability, customers want more data and better traceability. As a result, tolerances for fabricated parts are tightening and 100-percent inspection requirements are not uncommon.

Automated measurement, inspection and reporting allows shops to respond effectively. Measurement technology also provides a double-edged benefit for shops. Using software, those same measurement tools originally designed to inspect parts are providing efficiency and productivity multipliers in the quality lab, on the shop floor and in the field.

Guest Editorial
BY CHAD STORLIE
It’s not a game
The first rule of leadership club: don’t talk about leadership
W

e live in a jaded world when it comes to leadership. We have all heard the person who gives incredible advice on team leadership, recites maxims on how to enable employees, but then, when such leadership is most critical, the same person fails horribly to lead even by the most fundamental measures. Too many have talked a great leadership “game” only to have their own leadership fall woefully short of the most basic expectations.

Being a leader means more than flowery words and motivating speeches with classic quotes from Patton. The best leaders are humble, compassionate, focus on results. They possess the mind of a teacher, the ethics of a child, fearlessness in the face of difficult decisions and a dedication to promote the team’s results over their own career aspirations.

True leaders treat others with respect, achieve goals, innovate, improve, serve customers, teach and develop people to be ready for greater challenges. A true leader focuses on action, open discussion, frontline presence and proof of results. Let us break those ideas down.

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What’s Happening
Fagor Arrasate, Arrasate, Spain
Fagor to open service-oriented plant in Chicago
Fagor Arrasate, Arrasate, Spain, will build a new plant containing a bridge crane-serviced shop and offices outside Chicago. The facility is meant to strengthen the after-sales service, engineering and spare parts inventory while strengthening Fagor’s relationship with customers in a market that exhibits high demand. The new facility will be operational by the end of 2020. Its location will be announced later.
Amada America Inc., Buena Park, California
Amada America opens factory
Amada America Inc., Buena Park, California, opened a 190,000-sq.-ft. manufacturing plant in High Point, North Carolina, in early December. The first products manufactured at the new plant will include automation systems and Amada’s HRB series of press brakes. Amada America will also open a 62,000-sq.-ft. technical center on the same property later this year.
Eye on People
Paul Sorek Headshot
Paul Sorek
Miller Fabrication appoints process leader

Miller Fabrication Solutions, Brookville, Pennsylvania, named Paul Sorek as director of business processes. He succeeds Rich Steel, who was named director of lean manufacturing. Sorek oversees automation, engineering, process development and quality control. He spent the previous 15 years at a lumber company, including the last eight as its president.

The Next Generation
BY LYNN STANLEY, SENIOR EDITOR
New Collar
Schools, OEMs and manufacturers band together to grow the workforce of the future
T

raditionalists, Boomers, Gen-Xers, Millennials and Gen Z—catchy labels coined to describe five generations of Americans working shoulder to shoulder. Pew Research reports that millennials represent the largest labor pool but the number of employees age 55 and over is climbing at a projected annual rate of 24.3 percent. The U.S. Department of Labor estimates that Gen-X and Baby Boom workers will number 13 million by 2024 with millennials making up the majority by 2026.

A skills gap study published in 2018, the fourth such report prepared by Deloitte and the Manufacturing Institute, reveals troubling statistics. It states that the industry may have up to 2.4 million jobs to fill between now and 2028. This deficit puts U.S. $2.5 trillion in economic output at risk over the next decade.

All of Trend Publishing titles
All of Trend Publishing titles
Laser Technology
BY LYNN STANLEY, SENIOR EDITOR
The TruLaser 3030 fiber pierces 1/4-in. steel.
Breaking
barriers
Automation breakthroughs give fabricators control over high-speed laser cutting operations and reduces cut losses

I

feel the need—the need for speed!” Peter “Maverick” Mitchell, played by Tom Cruise, uttered the iconic line in the 1986 film Top Gun. The sentiment behind the famous quote can be heard among fiber laser users.

“Over the last five years, there has been a demand for higher and higher fiber laser speeds,” says Brett Thompson, TruLaser sales engineer for Trumpf Inc. “Manufacturers want to cut faster and cut thick metal reliably.”

Stamping/Presses
BY LYNN STANLEY, SENIOR EDITOR
AutoStop
Manufacturer cuts stroke time in half, performs in-die operations and tackles higher tonnage stampings with servo-forming technology

D

ubbed the vehicle-friendly state, Alabama is expected to become the nation’s No. 2 automaker by 2022. In 2018 Mercedes-Benz produced its 3 millionth vehicle while Honda and Hyundai closed 2018 with production numbers of more than 320,000 vehicles each. Toyota and Mazda jointly plan to build a $1.6 billion vehicle production plant in Huntsville. The facility is expected to open in 2021. Toyota Boshoku America is building a $50 million factory in Athens, Alabama.

The Economic Development Partnership of Alabama credited investments in infrastructure, workforce development, training, and a network of suppliers with helping Alabama mature into a “true automotive state.”

Waterjet Technology
BY GRETCHEN SALOIS, SENIOR EDITOR
New
Chapter
Engineer takes the reins of the family business and aims to push fab shop to the next level
M

etal asteroids? Most are made from rock or ice but in recent months, NASA approved the next fabrication and testing phase of its spacecraft and subassemblies for its mission to explore Asteroid Psyche, an asteroid scientists believe to be metal. It originates from a planet possibly as large as Mars. It is voyages such as these that innovate technology that then flows down into everyday manufacturing operations.

At Space Metal Fabricators Inc., engineers use the latest technology to work with customers to take concepts and fabricate them into actual products that outfit the manufacturing, automation solutions, control systems, nuclear fuel and food service industries.

End user report
Aerospace
BY GRETCHEN SALOIS, SENIOR EDITOR
Boom
without
the bust
Outlook remains bright as demand continues upward
T

he aerospace sector is a not a fast-paced up and down industry. The longer economic cycles within the industry are buoyed by extended product life cycles and high barriers to entry. The current industry upswing may slow but it will continue to climb, a departure from what might typically result in a 30 percent or more bust cycle.

“We’re near the 15-year marker of what typically is a seven-year boom cycle—and I don’t see a bust cycle following it any time soon,” says Richard Aboulafia, vice president, analysis, Teal Group Corp., Fairfax, Virginia.

Sawing/Cutting
Up to the challenge
Strong saws are built to handle exacting specifications
I

In 1956, Milon Viel and Ross Clarke opened up a fabrication business. Viel had spent time in the Air Force and then worked for Douglas Aircraft, and Clark was a retired co-pilot and mechanic for Hearst Airlines in San Simeon. Initially, the company designed and built aluminum window frames but soon began to cut a wide variety of materials exactly to customer specifications, focusing on the growing aerospace industry and manufacturers that did not have in-house sawing capabilities.

Today, Metal Cutting Service is a partner and supplier for manufacturers in aerospace and defense, semiconductor makers, aluminum and steel distribution. The company has been based in City of Industry, California, a suburb of Los Angeles, since 1975. Current owner David Viel joined his father in 1977, working part-time while in college and transitioning to a full-time position in 1981. He became company president in 1993.

Abrasives
BY GRETCHEN SALOIS, SENIOR EDITOR
Able Iron Works switched to Continental Abrasives’ Ulticut Shieldtech grain wheels after comparing results on steel I-beams, railings and plate.
Clean by comparison
When smooth finishes count, the right grain achieves aesthetic appeal
F

or some homeowners, a staircase is a work of art as well as a practical necessity. Achieving the desired effect and design is as important as the safety parameters. “Our customers want what they want, and they’ll scrap an entire staircase if it doesn’t fit their vision,” says Michael Estrada, owner at Estrada Engineering in Whittier, California. His finished staircases have graced the pages of Architectural Digest, “so finish definitely matters for us.”

Nick Wohler, owner of Inland Tool Solutions Inc. in Orange, California, takes into consideration each customer’s needs when making suggestions and often keeps customers like Estrada informed of the latest products available in the marketplace. At Wohler’s recommendation, Estrada began using Continental Abrasives’ zirconia standard density flap discs and has continued to do so over the last year. “I normally don’t care for thinner flappers, but Continental’s thinner flappers work for us—we almost use them as grinding discs,” Estrada says.

Custom Fabricator
Know a great CUSTOM FABRICATOR? Tell us. Email Mark Koenig at mkoenig@ffjournal.net.
Beyond Reflection is a 16-meter-tall stainless steel sculpture by Lawrence Argent
Beyond reflection
Beyond Reflection is a 16-meter-tall stainless steel sculpture by Lawrence Argent, placed into a sunken plaza at Uniwalk, a mixed-use development in Shenzhen, China.
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