Mitsubishi EDM

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Mitsubishi MV models eliminated the need to manually grind the outside of the part. Source: MC Machinery Systems

Quality Tool & Die (QTD) has found its groove, in no small part, because of its strategic use of Mitsubishi wire and sinker EDMs and an OPS Ingersoll five-axis milling machine with an automated cell.

The Meadville, PA, company was founded in 1976 and purchased by Managing Partner Brad McDowell and Vice President Chad Kearns in 2005. However, it was a rocky start, when a business that owed them $70,000 in receivables went bankrupt.

“We really had to tie our shoes tight there for a while,” says Kearns. “We struggled through it and it turned out to be a great thing. It was primarily an automotive spare parts supplier. Over the years, we turned it into a builder of complete custom molds.”

When McDowell and Kearns first bought the company, most of the equipment was manual and outdated. In 2013, they bought their first Mitsubishi sinker EDM and “saw the deep benefits right out of the gate” because of the machine’s ability to run unmanned, Kearns says.

QTD purchases its equipment from WSM Technology, an EDM/milling dealer in the MC Machinery Systems dealer network. A subsidiary of the Mitsubishi Corp., MC Machinery Systems is the North American supplier and service provider of Mitsubishi wire and sinker EDMs, OPS Ingersoll sinker EDMs and milling equipment from Roku-Roku and OPS Ingersoll.

Things turned around so much that QTD moved into a larger facility in 2014, which they recently expanded to 30,000 square feet.

QTD has evolved from a job shop to a complete tool-building company. It now has 17 employees in the tool shop and another 13 in the plastic injection molds division, which was added in 2014. McDowell says business has been growing 10 to 15 percent a year.

“We’ve eliminated an entire operation. Everything comes off the wire done and ready to go.”

EDM Transformation

QTD now has four Mitsubishi sinkers, which produce the same or more work than the 13 machines they replaced. Sinker EDM Operator Daryl Bosco says the Mitsubishi SV12P, QTD’s newest sinker that has adaptive artificial intelligence, is incredibly easy to use.

“You don’t have to do anything but push a couple of buttons, and it goes to midpoints and center points. Everything you want is right there on the pendant,” he says. “It makes life simpler. This thing is touch off, write the program, hit the start button and the machine does it for you.”

McDowell says that MC Machinery’s applications support has been a huge asset to QTD. “My operators even have cell phone numbers for people to call. Their knowledge helps us get up and going if we run into a tight spot, like if we haven’t EDMed a type of material before and we’re struggling – what are the settings, overburn, etc.”

QTD replaced wire EDMs made by another manufacturer with two Mitsubishi wire EDMs in 2021. The Mitsubishi MV models eliminated the need to manually grind the outside of the part–the old EDMs left skim stock because they didn’t hold location well enough. “We’ve eliminated an entire operation,” says Wire EDM Operator Adam Hall. “Everything comes off the wire done and ready to go.”

Milling & Automation

After adding its third Mitsubishi sinker, QTD realized they needed a way to

The Mitsubishi SV12P sinker EDM has adaptive artificial intelligence, making it easy to use. Source: MC Machinery Systems

supply enough electrodes to keep the shop running lights out. That led to the replacement of a three-axis machine with an OPS Ingersoll Eagle V5 five-axis milling machine with an automated cell in 2018.

The addition of the V5 mill proved to be a game-changer. Not only did it eliminate bottlenecks caused by not having enough electrodes to keep the four CNC sinkers running lights out, but the milling machine also produced more precise electrodes, resulting in reduced electrode consumption. This saves time and money spent on graphite.

“We used to struggle with tool deflection on deep cuts,” Kearns says. “Now we’re able to tip that up in a five-axis and actually hit on the bottom of the flute. And we’re not getting that tool push anymore. Electrodes are so, so much more accurate.”

QTD replaced a three-axis machine with an OPS Ingersoll Eagle V5 five-axis milling machine with an automated cell in 2018. Source: MC Machinery Systems

The five-axis machine’s 42,000 RPM spindle allows QTD to cut intricate details into electrodes that they couldn’t do before. The ability to tip and turn and cut deeper rib features with a shorter tool produces a better electrode. Even better, what used to require three or four electrodes on the sinkers now takes only one or two.

“Before, we had to break up into three or four electrodes to burn all the necessary surfaces that we wanted,” McDowell says. “Now, maybe we do it in one or two electrodes. So not only does the V5 make electrodes faster, but we have to make half as many.”

In fact, the V5 is so productive that McDowell says it’s feeding the four sinkers while not even close to capacity. He thinks it could supply electrodes to another three to four sinkers without a problem.

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