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Beam Drill Lines Primer – PythonX or Peddinghaus

Beam, Drill, Lines, Peddinghaus, Primer, PythonX

Machine tools for fabricating structural steel have advanced over the past 100 years, from basic handheld motorized drills and saws to cutting edge, fully-automated “heat cutting” machines. Steel fabricators today stand at a technological “fork in the road” of sorts – whether to continue using traditional cutting-tool-based methods or embrace the new heat-cutting-based methods. The choice is one that must be considered from many perspectives, based on both where the fabricator has been and where they want to go. There are many companies supplying fabrication machinery to structural steel shops, but of these, the most recognized name is Peddinghaus. Their philosophy has been one of specialization – dividing up the myriad different functions that are commonly done into distinct groups and then building equipment focused on the resulting groups. Following this way of thinking, Peddinghaus has come up with a collection of machines that fabricates beams, plate, angle, hollow structural sections according to the requisite operations of cutting, drilling holes and making variable shapes of different sizes. This philosophy results in features such as high cutting spindle speed, workpiece indexing, specialized clamping, and others that make any individual machine especially efficient at the tasks it was designed to accomplish. However, the possible downside for this specialization is that an individual workpiece may have to visit multiple machines in order to have all its operations competed. That calls for extra time and material conveyance around the shop. Only recently has a fundamentally different method to this equipment specialization philosophy emerged. The core of this approach is using thermal cutting via robot or similar automated means to accomplish multiple fabrication functions. In this case, the “flame” is the familiar plasma arc – ordinarily used to cut steel plate – rather than an oxy fuel torch or laser cutting. In this case the plasma cutter has been placed in the grip of sophisticated industrial robot, which decides what and how to cut based on a cutting sequence made by proprietary software. The new system, known by the brand name PythonX, is the first of these structural fabrication machines. Early in its introduction (2005) the common complaint about the PythonX plasma cutting approach was certain operations – like making bolt holes – were somehow not done as well by flame cutting as by metal-against-metal drilling. That concern has since been shown to be unfounded, since plasma cut bolt holes satisfy all pertinent requirements for both roundness and dimensional precision. The PythonX philosophy stands the Peddinghaus approach on its head, by using one plasma cutting system to perform the work of four traditional machines plus a manual torch setup. The net effect is less capital investment and less floorspace to host the equivalent fabrication capability of those five machines. Some consider reductions in material handling are the strongest benefit of the PythonX philosophy. Since all operations can be performed on a single machine, there is vastly reduced need to transfer WIP from one machine to another, as is so commonly done in the multiple specialized machines approach to structural fabrication. Fabricators facing the prospect of acquiring new production machinery now find themselves at this “crossroads” that begs the decision whether to follow the path of multiple, specialized machines to sequentially perform the different functions needed, or the path of a single versatile machine that completes all the needed operations. In several cases, there is likely to be a place for each fabrication philosophy approach. Cases that call for a large number of bolt holes drilled into steel beams don’t require much more than a beam drill line and bandsaw. On the other hand, jobs that involve more complicated steel workpieces – copes, notches, flange flush cuts, piecemarks – will be quickly and completely processed on a single robotic plasma cutting machine. Each structural steel fabrication company will take the path that matches their business needs. The question is, if you can only choose one fabrication system, what would it be?

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Plasma CNC Drill Line Runs Rings Around Standard Equipment

Around, Drill, Equipment, Line, Plasma, Rings, Runs, Standard

The economy of structural steel fabrication is very dependent on the path the workpiece travels as it goes from raw steel inventory to eventual loading on a truck headed for the job site. Every time the workpiece is “touched” adds delay and cost to the final finished beam, channel or angle.

A beam with ten or so bolt holes and cut to length has really very few “touches” . But many fabricated sections are considerably more complicated than that.

For example, complete fabrication recently performed on an 96″ W16×31 structural beam involved three dozen unique operations:

* Front Trim Miter Cut 1/4″
* 2 Copes on the front of the beam
* 3 Bolt Holes on that same end of the beam
* 6 bolt hole angled cluster on web
* 4 layout marks on web
* 2 bolt holes on top flange
* 2 bolt holes on bottom flange
* 3 slots on web at rear of beam
* Piece Mark – 2 Lines – 9 characters total
* Flange notch cut flush with web (each end of the beam)
* Cope on rear of beam
* Notch cut on flange

An analysis of fabricating this section by three different “paths” was very revealing in terms of the time requirements that result.

To begin, the “high touch” path is a traditional manual approach. The beam has to be measured and marked, then cut on the bandsaw. After that, there is plenty of “manual” drilling (admittedly using a heavy duty drill press) and significant thermal (torch) cutting to make the copes and flange cuts, in addition to stamping by hand to make the nine letter piece marks. The total time involved to perform these processes was estimated to be 120 minutes – 2 hours. But because of the transport involved and the time in queue at subsequent stations, the clock time would cover at least two shifts – normally two days at most shops.

Second, a more updated and automated approach was used to fabricate the section. This involved cutting the piece to length on the bandsaw, then shuttling it to a beam drill line to make the thirteen bolt holes and three slots. The newer CNC drill lines can probe the steel section to determine location and dimensions, then put the holes according to instructions determined by specialized software. The remaining features have to be measured and marked on the beam before cutting. Then cutting is done by hand coping torch, plate burning machine, and stamping in the piecemark letters. The total time for this approach is 82 minutes. Again, when including the time needed to shuttle the workpiece between stations and time waiting at those stations, the actual clock time totals to take most of a shift.

Then the piece was fabricated on a new and one-of-kind approach. All features were produced on a single machine – a robotic plasma cutting system. Using this approach, there is no use for any measuring or marking. The sensor tip probes the workpiece for position and geometery, then follows its own calculated cutting instructions it calculates from standard software files of the workpiece downloaded into the operator control from programs like TEKLA, SD/2,StruCAD and others.

PythonX starts cutting on the section and doesn’t stop until it’s done . . . 10 minutes and 13 seconds later. All thirty seven features are fabricated in this time and the beam is completed. There is no time lost in moving the piece or waiting , therefore the time from beginning to completion isn’t a day, or a shift . . . it’s the time needed for a standard coffee break.

Details on this advanced method of structural fabrication can be found at these links exploring the new plasma cutting CNC drill line:
PythonX is the next evolution of the CNC Drill Line
Redefining the Economics of the Beam Drill Line

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