
At the Redhill factory of contract machinists
ATC, the high quality, accuracy and repeatability of the medical devices it manufactures have been enhanced by the installation of a new automated production cell.
Built by German firm Hermle, the cell comprises of a C 12 U five-axis machining centre with an RS 05-2 robotic billet handling system, and was supplied Gosport-based
Kingsbury, the sole UK sales and service agent.
Guy Lord, owner and managing director of ATC, said: “We are one of the highest quality machine shops in the world, specialising in producing difficult components that others are unable to tackle. Medical work accounts for 95% of our turnover and we also manufacture super-accurate bearing rings.
“Currently, 60% of our business is from companies that have previously tried another sub-contractor, either in the UK, continental Europe or the USA, but have been unable to obtain the quality they require.”
It is against this background that Mr Lord decided to invest in the automated Hermle cell, which is allowing him to differentiate his company even more from the competition. At the end of January 2021, the sub-contractor started manufacturing the products for which the equipment was bought, namely extremely complex spinal implants machined to ultra-tight tolerances from tough cobalt-chrome, whose low thermal conductivity tends to wear tools quickly. Surface finish is also extremely high to meet the cosmetic requirements stipulated by the customer.
This particular medical contract requires the production initially of a family of four different parts, with more to come, in cutting cycle times of approximately 1hr. It takes just 30min to change over between batches to make a different part, despite the complexity of the cell. Actually, the time to produce a first-off part, check it and very occasionally make adjustments has to be added to the set-up time.
The presence of the internal robot, temperature compensation within the C 12 U and integration of Blum tool wear monitoring with automatic sister tool change have allowed unattended production to continue day and night and throughout the weekend right from the start.

It has lowered manufacturing cost-per-part and is delivering high levels of efficiency and consistency of output. A mix of different billets can be loaded into the cell on a Friday night for the machine runs unattended throughout the weekend. Staff return on Monday morning to find a rack full of completed components ready for assembly or dispatch.
In March 2020, Kingsbury helped ATC with the urgent supply of a Hermle five-axis production centre equipped with an external, third-party, machine-tending robot to make ventilator parts for the NHS.
It worked well, but Mr Lord and his team realised that the configuration was overly large for the sub-contractor’s general requirements. It was also apparent that billet loading and unloading of the finished components would work better and faster with a built-in robot.
Mr Lord continued: “Cycle times in the new Hermle cell are broadly similar to those in other machining centres on our shopfloor, some of which are automated with a pallet change system.
“The benefits of robotic billet handling over manual intervention are consistency of component quality and dependability of throughput, added to which the cell runs 24/7 virtually unattended, unlike those that depend on pallet exchange.”
He went on to suggest that Hermle is one of the best global manufacturers of five-axis machining centres, while the addition of the integral robot really makes the installation “sing“, helping to quickly amortise the investment.
The plan now is to take the automation a stage further within the next two years by integrating a coordinate measuring machine (CMM) into the cell so that each part manufactured is transferred to the metrology platform by the robot to have its critical dimensions checked. Offsets will be sent automatically to the machine control to keep components reliably within their tight tolerance limits.
Mr Lord said: “There are fewer and fewer really good machine tool agencies in this country and for us, Kingsbury is one of the best. It is down to the high quality equipment it sells and the very good service the compant provides at all levels. We have been buying from them for over 60 years, initially from the company founder, George Kingsbury.
“Whenever we have a problem, it is quick to respond over the telephone or send in an engineer, even during the lockdowns. As a mark of its ingenuity, Kingsbury proved-out the RS 05-2 robot load system on our shopfloor via a Teams meeting with engineers in the German factory, as it was the first such system installed in the UK.
“It is notable that, near the start of the first lockdown, we spoke to Kingsbury on a Friday and it supplied a Hermle machine on the following Tuesday. A robot was sourced from Germany very quickly to set up a temporary production cell. It was a fantastic service.”
He concluded: “We will buy more machines from the same source when the next project requires one, or existing volumes increase, and you can be sure it will have a built-in robot.”