As an end-to-end precision engineering, design and manufacturing business, Rugby-based Raysun Innovative Design Ltd is a company that provides a range of services from initial concept design, through prototyping and project management, to manufacture and testing.
One division of the business consists of a toolroom with its own design and manufacturing facility that specialises in jigs, fixtures and tooling for the aerospace industry, and the other is a ‘fast make’ service that rapidly produces development parts in small quantities for gas turbines. Like any company working in this challenging field, high-quality EDM machines are a necessity.
Raysun Innovative Design recently invested in its second Mitsubishi EDM machine supplied by the
Engineering Technology Group (ETG), a MV1200S which now sits alongside a previously purchased larger MV2400S which features a simultaneous sixth-axis rotary indexing unit.
Charles Ray, director at Raysun Innovative Design, said: “We purchased our second Mitsubishi machine because we have had such a good experience with the MV2400S. It was a bit of a gamble buying a ‘top-end’ machine-tool for a small business like ours - but the investment soon paid off.
“We found that we were using the new wire EDM machine for all kinds of applications that at first didn’t appear obvious — it rapidly became a machine that was being used all of the time.
“The MV2400S soon became the go-to machine in the ‘fast make’ department of our business, as we realised there were a lot of applications that we could use the machine for — especially concerning gas turbine parts.”
“With some of the prestigious contracts we had secured, it seemed like the obvious and right thing to do, to purchase a machine that was dedicated to the ‘fast make’ side of the business.”
Commenting upon the relationship with HK Technologies, and subsequently ETG following its acquisition in 2019, Mr Ray continued: “The relationship started for me many years ago. I came across the machines during previous employment at a company called Winbro Group Technologies that required die-sink EDM equipment.
“Following a lengthy procurement process, the company selected the Mitsubishi EDM machine from HK Technologies. I watched that machine run very reliably for several years, so when it came to considering wire EDM, Mitsubishi was right at the top of the list of names to consider.”
“In addition to EDM, we have been involved in 3-D printing for our workholding, clamping and fixturing. We have had various 3-D printing systems as the technology has developed, and recently we bought a system from ETG that utilises either Kevlar or carbon fibre.
“For example, we have made fixtures where we can put a turbine route blade form into the printed fixture and use the fixture for laser marking.
“We have printed another fixture where we have applied a small chuck detail to the underside of the fixture that also has a turbine blade root form. This fixture is used as a soft fixture for CMM inspection.”
Quality guaranteed“The quality of the Mitsubishi machines really is the core of our business. We rely on them perhaps more heavily than we should, but if we are measuring a part on the CMM and we get a questionable result - we look at the CMM first rather than the EDM machine. This demonstrates our reliance and faith placed in this particular platform.”
When asked how the solutions have helped the company achieve NADCAP and other certification platforms, Mr Ray said: “Working with aerospace and producing parts that fly, there has been an increase in demand from our customers for us to work at the NADCAP level.
“The two Mitsubishi machines have made it much easier for us to work at that level than perhaps other equipment we have. The new D-Cube control system is very well set up, there is a maintenance schedule that can be contained, and we can add to it.
“The machine is also self-diagnosing, self-controlling and the diagnostics on board are at such a level, that the work we have to do as a user is limited to achieve a NADCAP level of work.”
“As an engineering group, we have had very limited previous knowledge of EDM. The toolmakers we employ, principally have a background in milling, turning and grinding. I wouldn’t say that EDM has been something of a black art, but it is something where there has been very little previous experience.
“So, when we are talking about complex manufacturing processes, which EDM is, there are a couple ways of dealing with things. Either send the guys on comprehensive training courses to understand the technology or, as what has happened in our case is that we have relied heavily upon the built-in technology of the CNC units on the Mitsubishi MV1200S and MV2400S machines.
“The CNC control unit allows us to fill in a very limited number of fields, such as type of material, type of profile and number of cuts, the machine selects the technology that will work for us.”
Regarding the new CNC configuration on the Mitsubishi MV1200S machine, Mr Ray said: “I am not a programmer myself, but my colleagues tell me the control is considerably upgraded from the previous version on the MV2400S that was installed some years back.
“From a quality viewpoint, it is much more accessible for maintenance routines and we can add our own maintenance requirements into the control. The guys tell me it is quite a similar platform, so they didn’t have to ‘go back to school’ to learn how to use it, but there are also a lot of new features and new facilities available. Furthermore, the visual display gives more feedback.”
He continued: “The first Mitsubishi machine has almost worked non-stop for nearly five years. The machine has six-axis capability, and this has helped because we had parts that needed to be held in several different configurations.
“The rotary axis means we can hold the part once, but then rotate it to several different positions. So, we are not using it as an active axis, but more as a positional axis. This has made us more flexible with the new work that is coming our way, and we can produce our parts with fewer set-ups and much faster cycle times at a lower cost.”
Mr Ray concluded: “If we were in the market for another wire EDM machine, which we may well be in the future, there is little doubt that Mitsubishi and ETG would have to be top of our list to contact.”