CNC outlook: making tracks in midrange products

Easier CNC programming is creating growth in midrange computer numerical control products, said Siemens Industry. Advanced features, once available for high-end CNC tools used for aerospace, automotive, and medical applications, provide competitive advantage to a wider range of machine tools.

By Mark T. Hoske June 28, 2011

Easier CNC programming is creating growth in midrange computer numerical control products, according to Siemens Industry. Advanced features—once available for high-end CNC tools used for aerospace, automotive, and medical applications—eliminate the need to be a CNC guru to gain competitive advantage when using new Siemens midrange product lines. These were among key points that Siemens Industry’s Rajas Sukthankar discussed with Control Engineering recently. Sukthankar, business segment manager, machine tools, said business is on an upswing with Siemens, with more than 20% growth in sales for the last three quarters. Greater capacity utilization, rebound of automotive industrial, and recent expansions in midrange CNC product lines have helped.

During the downturn, Siemens kept its focus on R&D, allowing great traction as manufacturing has emerged from recession, Sukthankar said. At the IMTEX machine tool show in India in February, and at others since, Siemens demonstrated the Sinumerik 828D Basic-series CNC and 1FK7 second–generation servomotor. (See links below.) These are among products particularly useful in the midrange domain of many job shops, between high-end tools and the standard machine tool marketplace with a lower degree of sophistication.

In the middle of the market, Siemens has broadened its offering, targeting areas traditionally served by competitor Fanuc, Sukthankar said. Catering to the needs of machine tool builders and their customers, Sukthankar noted that Siemens offers flexibility to move beyond G-code programming with intuitive CAD/CAM software right on the machine. It’s not either/or, Sukthankar said, and machine tool customers appreciate having that choice of control programming options.

“In some production environments, being able to program all parts directly on the floor make it very easy for an operator to set up and program a job on the fly, very quickly,” Sukthankar said. “It provides instant productivity through faster tool setup and workpiece setup. The interface is easy. You don’t have to be a CNC expert,” he said. See photos for additional examples.

While predicting the future remains a challenge, Sukthankar foresees additional Siemens development and manufacturing in China for that marketplace, a departure for the traditional made-in-Germany mindset. Local product development with Siemens Chinese colleagues is expected to result in faster tool development in line with local requirements, Sukthankar said.

www.usa.siemens.com/cnc

Sinumerik 828D Basic

1FK7 Servomotor

Also see the Control Engineering Machine Control Channel at

https://www.controleng.com/channels/machine-control.html

and the

Motors and Drives Channel at

https://www.controleng.com/new-products/motors-and-drives.html

-Mark T. Hoske, CFE Media, Control Engineering, www.controleng.com


Author Bio: Mark Hoske has been Control Engineering editor/content manager since 1994 and in a leadership role since 1999, covering all major areas: control systems, networking and information systems, control equipment and energy, and system integration, everything that comprises or facilitates the control loop. He has been writing about technology since 1987, writing professionally since 1982, and has a Bachelor of Science in Journalism degree from UW-Madison.