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STEEL TOOLS BUILT USING SALAMI TACTICS
15 November 2002 - Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der angewandten Forschung e.V.
| Gazing through a car showroom window, have you ever asked yourself how they manage to make such a variety of different models? One thing's for sure: The days of "any color as long as it's black" and one model for all have gone forever. The new buzzword not only in the car industry is mass customization, still mass production, but incorporating a maximum of personalized features. |
Quite apart from the logistics, this trend also challenges manufacturers by requiring them to rapidly build new presses and forming tools and integrate them in production lines. Rapid technologies are ideal for toolmaking. What sets them apart from traditional methods like casting and milling is that the chain of steps from the first CAD drafts to the final part should be almost entirely an electronical one. One of the youngest members of this "rapid" family bears the name MELATO, or Metal Laminated Tooling. Dr. Anja Techel, project manager at the Fraunhofer Institute for Material and Beam Technology IWS in Dresden, describes the first step in this process: "Like a salami slicing machine, the computer first divides a model of the tool into thin layers. Using a software program developed by our industrial partner, it then virtually aranges the individual slices in an optimum layout, and a laser cuts them out from a real sheet of metal." The next step is where "laminated" comes in: The pieces are stacked one on top of the other and, held together by a vise, either glued or soldered or welded together. A dual-action machine then gives the steel tool, measuring up to 70 x 150 centimeters, the final finish: Metal is applied to critical areas by means of laser deposition welding to about 0.3 millimeters precision, then the part is milled to its final shape. MELATO and many other rapid technologies will be presented by the Fraunhofer Rapid Prototyping Network, which comprises the IWS and eleven other Fraunhofer Institutes, at the Euro-uRapid2002. This international users' conference is to be held in Frankfurt-am-Main on December 2 and 3. Visitors from the car industry, its suppliers, aerospace, medical engineering and all other branches of industry confronted with rapid product innovation will be able to learn about the latest developments in over 50 conference papers. A hands-on presentation of rapid technologies can then be experienced at the EuroMold trade show, at the same venue from December 4 to 7. And if you want a souvenir to take home: An injection-molding machine using rapid "metal printed" molds will create a bust of Joseph von Fraunhofer in plastic, at the joint Fraunhofer stand in Hall 8.
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About: Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der angewandten Forschung e.V.
The Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft undertakes applied research of direct utility to private and public enterprise and of wide benefit to society. Its services are solicited by customers and contractual partners in industry, the service sector and public administration. The Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft maintains over 80 research units at more than 40 different locations throughout Germany. A staff of some 12,700, predominantly qualified scientists and engineers, works with an annual research budget of over one billion euros. Of this sum, more than € 900 million is generated through contract research. Two thirds of the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft’s contract research revenue is derived from contracts with industry and from publicly financed research projects. The remaining one third is contributed by the German federal and Länder governments, as a means of enabling the institutes to pursue more fundamental research in areas that are likely to become relevant to industry and society in five or ten years’ time.The Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft is also active on an international level: Affiliated research centers and representative offices in Europe, the USA and Asia provide contact with the regions of greatest importance to present and future scientific progress and economic development. |
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