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‘Smart tech’ combats sub-contractor’s high operating costs

Citizen lathes — over half with proprietary LFV chip-breaking functionality — maximise the production of high-added-value components at C&M Precision

Posted on 26 Sep 2025. Edited by: John Hunter. Read 148 times.
‘Smart tech’ combats sub-contractor’s high operating costsJohn Cable at the control of the Citizen Cincom L32-XIILFV sliding-head lathe with B-axis live tool carrier, which was delivered to C&M Precision’s Maldon factory in June 2025. An identical machine was installed two years previously

With electricity bills, raw material costs and company taxes at record highs, coupled with an absence of anyone in Government to champion the interests of SMEs in the UK, manufacturers like sub-contract turn-milling specialist C&M Precision are leveraging high technology to maintain profitability.

Hence the reason why John Cable, continues to buy Japanese-built lathes from Citizen Machinery UK. Modern versions have proprietary LFV (low frequency vibration) chip-breaking software in the operating system of the controls, enabling a manufacturer’s earnings to be maximised by ensuring the reliable production of superior, high-added-value components, while reducing scrap rates to virtually zero.

The software, which works at both the main and sub spindles, synchronises servo axis infeed with work spindle rotation, oscillating the former to create periods of air-cutting, measured in microseconds, to break stringy swarf normally generated by malleable materials into chips of manageable size. The programmable function is markedly different from and a significant improvement over conventional pecking macros and dwells. Mode 1 is for turning of outer or inner diameters and for grooving; mode 2 is for operations that require high peripheral speed, such as fine machining or deep, small-diameter drilling; while mode 3 is specifically for threading.

Chip-breaking functionality

Mr Cable said: “We were an early adopter of this technology, buying our first L20-VIIILFV Cincom sliding-head lathe in 2017, the first year the function was available on Citizen turn-mill centres in Europe. I would never buy another lathe without LFV. We only source machines from Citizen and nearly half of our 13 lathes on the shopfloor have the chip-breaking functionality, five Cincoms and a fixed-head Miyano.”

CitizenPictured left: Being inspected on C&M’s new OGP Smartscope measuring machine is a 25mm diameter OFHC copper anode. Machined on a Cincom L32-XIILFV, it has 12 longitudinal, equispaced slots with a 14µm width tolerance machined along the bore. The distance from the bottom of opposing slots must be held to within 25µm

Four of the lathes have been purchased within the past two years, representing an investment of nearly £750,000, indicating Mr Cable’s desire to maximise C&M’s use of the technology and to regularly modernise the production facility in Maldon, Essex.

LFV-enabled lathes are invaluable for processing metals of high malleability like OFHC (oxygen-free high conductivity) copper, a grade that is more than 99.99% pure. The chip-breaking function is also used extensively when machining HE9 aluminium, which is known to be sticky and require close attention to chip control and tool sharpness to obtain best results.

Other jobs regularly fulfilled by C&M involve machining of plastics, which are notorious for generating bird’s nests when turned, drilled or thread-cut. One contract involves machining 3,600 metres of acetal bar annually. Another, in a similar material for the production of a long medical device, would be impossible to tackle without LFV, according to Mr Cable.

He continued: “LFV makes mincemeat of all these difficult jobs – it really works, even on nickel alloys, and is useful for both roughing and finishing. Naturally, the brief periods when the tool is lifted clear of the surface of the bar reduces material removal rate, but only slightly. It is more than offset by preventing long swarf from damaging a component or tool, by avoiding having to stop the machine to clear tangled swarf, and by having all good parts in the container at the end of a long period of unattended running, including overnight.”

Offline Alkart Wizard conversational programming

Mr Cable explained that LFV is programmable, G-codes being used to switch it on or off as required during a cycle. If processing materials such as brass or free-cutting alloys of aluminium or steel, it is not used at all. When it is used, it is adjustable. Citizen’s offline Alkart Wizard conversational programming interface, which guides users through the creation of a part program, recommends from its built-in code library a certain number of LFV pulses per revolution of the bar, according to its diameter and the type of material.

C&M staff then use their knowledge and experience to lower the pulse rate, often by as much as 50% to 65%, creating chips of slightly longer but still acceptable length, while at the same time lowering the proportion of air cutting in a cycle to increase productivity. The lower frequency oscillations also result in quieter metal cutting and minimise the stress on the tooling.

CitizenPictured right: The Miyano ANX-42SYY, which has Y-axis motion on both tool turrets, is the latest Citizen fixed-head lathe to be installed at C&M

The most recent Citizen Cincom to be delivered to the Maldon factory, in June 2025, was a Cincom L32-XIILFV sliding-head lathe of nominal 32mm bar capacity, with B-axis live tool carrier and long parts collection unit. An almost identical machine was installed two years previously. As an indication of the precision attainable on this machining platform, a 25mm diameter OFHC copper anode produced on it has 12 longitudinal, equispaced slots machined in the bore to a width tolerance of 14µm. The distance from the bottom of opposing slots must be held to a limit tolerance of 14.415/14.440mm.

Notable also is that the B-axis option on these machines is essential for milling an angled flat on a titanium ball joint, a feature that is impossible to realise on other Citizen lathes at C&M and would have necessitated a second operation to be carried out. Mr Cable tends to buy the most capable variant of all Citizen lathes to make sure there is maximum capability on the shopfloor, so these lathes are equipped with a kit that allows feeding of oversize bar stock up to 38mm.

Production of smaller parts revolutionised

A little over a year before its arrival, a 12mm capacity Cincom L12-XLFV with a long parts unit and a Y2 axis on the counter-spindle for additional back working opportunities was bought, joining an earlier, similar machine installed in 2019. These lathes have revolutionised the production of smaller parts. An example is the machining of connector contacts from beryllium-copper bar. Each is 7.4mm long, less than 1mm in diameter which is turned to ±12.7µm, and has two 0.2mm wide slots spaced 180deg apart plus a 0.51mm diameter, 2.3mm long hole drilled axially into one end.

The other recently installed Citizen lathe is a fixed-head, twin-turret, twin-spindle Miyano ANX-42SYY, which in December 2024 joined two larger capacity, double Y-axis Miyanos, both BNE-65MYY models. Again, the number denotes the nominal bar capacity in millimetres. The ANX model, a 10-axis CNC lathe, was the first of Citizen's fixed-head lathes to have LFV. Notable features are its ability to perform three-axis simultaneous cycles, double Y-axis cutting, and superimposed machining with three tools in cut at the same time due to X-axis movement of the sub spindle.

CitizenPictured left: A typical component produced on one of the smaller capacity Citizen Cincom lathes at C&M

Leon Rawlinson, who joined C&M a couple of years ago as production manager, brought with him extensive experience of turning. He introduced the sub-contractor to single-point broaching of hex and Torx features, instead of wobble broaching them. The former, faster method exploits the high power and Y-axis capability of the Miyanos, producing a better surface finish while eliminating the considerable stresses imparted to the lathe structure by wobble broaching. The change in manufacturing process has helped the sub-contractor to win new business for the fixed-head turning centres.

All this modern technology, which includes an ability to remove the guide bush on current Cincom models so that less expensive bar can be used and stock wastage reduced when machining relatively short parts, helps to mitigate the increasingly high cost of running a sub-contract business these days. There are additional opportunities to increase turnover and profitability, for example by producing prismatic parts that require no rotational machining at all on the 13 turn-mill centres. Mr Cable says this is frequently done in the Maldon factory, as a bar-fed turn-mill lathe will always produce such components at a lower cost than is possible on a machining centre, so new business may be won this way.

However, despite all the technological progress, there is an ongoing issue of a lack of Government support for manufacturing at C&M Precision. Mr Cable is a vocal campaigner on representation for the sector in Westminster and met with Sir John Whittingdale MP at the sub-contractor’s factory on 11 July 2025. The MP was presented with tangible examples of challenges at C&M, like escalating energy costs, and four days later the MP for the Maldon constituency raised the issue of industrial electricity prices in the House of Commons.

C&M Precision had thus successfully elevated the issue to Parliamentary attention. However, the initiative is not merely about electricity prices nor one company's struggles. It is a powerful demonstration of how targeted dialogue with policymakers can spark a wider conversation and encourage Governmental bodies to review and address systemic issues impacting the UK’s vital SME manufacturing base. Mr Cable is eagerly awaiting further feedback.