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The Case for Custom Fixturing

PracticalMan

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Photos of custom fixtures illustrate the types of applications that call for non-standard workholding.

Article From: 3/19/12 Modern Machine Shop, Peter Zelinski, Senior Editor

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Joseph Szpak, Jr. founded his shop, Szpak Manufacturing, to engineer and build custom fixtures. Through the 1990s, production machining work took off, becoming the mainstay of the shop’s income. This change concerned Mr. Szpak, who knew that the types of parts his shop was producing could easily be shifted to a lower-cost country. Determined not to let his shop be vulnerable to international competition, he returned his shop’s focus to custom fixturing. It was the best decision he could have made.


Today, the shop in Columbia Station, Ohio no longer has to look for work. Thanks to repeat business and word-of-mouth referrals, the shop’s capacity is steadily full. In addition to fixtures for machining centers, the shop also develops custom clamping and articulation devices for deburring and finishing systems. International outsourcing actually drives some of the demand for custom workholding, he says, because the work that remains here tends to be higher-value. That is, the work tends to require the complex or highly automated machining that makes use of the fixture engineering that Szpak Manufacturing provides.


Even the shop’s remaining contract machining activity makes this point. For one component the shop produces at a rate of only hundreds per year, Mr. Szpak invented a fixture (at his own expense) allowing several pieces to be loaded into one setup quickly, and allowing features to be machined at various angles. The multi-angle machining is particularly important, because the part includes features at different angles that locate in relation to one another. Through efficiency-related savings, Mr. Szpak has long since recouped his investment in the fixture, and he doubts the part will ever be offshored. For that to happen, the new supplier would have to make a similar fixturing investment.


This application illustrates one of various reasons why custom fixturing often makes sense, he says, and why customers come to him to have this tooling developed. In reflecting on various advantages that custom fixtures can deliver, he finds at least five types of challenges that call for something beyond vises and other off-the-shelf workholding devices. Those challenges include the following:


1. Related features at different angles

Photo 1 shows the in-house fixture mentioned above. The part has machined features that locate with respect to features at other angles. The fixture, for use with a rotary indexer, clamps the part in a way that preserves access to various machined surfaces within a single cycle. Mr. Szpak extended the efficiency of the fixture by designing it to hold several pieces at once.

2. Many pieces in one cycle

The simple part in Photo 2 does not need custom fixturing, and was originally run without it. The only machining is milling a wrench design on the head of the screw. The problem was that loading this part proved more time-consuming than machining it. Creating a custom fixture to hold several pieces at once solved this problem by cutting the setup time per piece. Now, 10 pieces can be loaded in one fixture during the time while 10 others are being machined in a fixture just like it. The delay between machining cycles consists of just swapping in the fixture as a single unit.

3. Avoiding operations

The process for the part clamped in the fixture in Photo 3 used to involve sawing a separate blank for each individual workpiece. The sawing was unnecessarily time-consuming. The fixture seen here reduces the amount of sawing per piece, because a single long strip is loaded through all four clamping points. Milling passes within the NC cycle quickly separate the strip into four sections, which then remain clamped for further machining.

4. Accuracy

The part in Photo 4 was clamped in a vise, but was prone to sliding enough to break a tight squareness tolerance. The cheapest solution involved keeping the vise, but equipping it with a customized restraint that keeps the part in place.

5. Parts that can’t otherwise be held

Finally, there are parts so fluid in shape that they cannot be held without some kind of custom clamping. In Photo 5, the only machining this part needs is drilling at two angles, but clamping the part to perform this drilling requires a custom fixture for an indexer. Castings and forgings often have similar custom fixturing needs. Another example is shown in Photo 5a.

Error Proofing

Mr. Szpak says one additional advantage of custom fixturing is an aspect of nearly all his fixturing projects: Error avoidance.

A well-designed fixture ought to prevent the part from being loaded incorrectly, he says. The challenge is not to implement this prevention—doing this can be as easy as adding a dowel in the right place. Instead, the challenge of error prevention is anticipating all the possible misloadings. People who design a part, he says—as well as the people like him who design its fixturing—often are blind to the many ways the work can be loaded wrong. Experience has taught Mr. Szpak to open his imagination, searching for the various possible misloadings that a given fixture design needs to prevent.


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<img id="TB_Image" src="http://d2n4wb9orp1vta.cloudfront.net/resources/images/cdn/cms/mms_0412_caseforcustomfixturing_0.jpg" width="500" height="375" alt="Part of Joseph Szpak’s service as a fixture designer is to create a solid model the customer can use in its simulation of the complete machining process. He uses KeyCreator software to import and export models in various data formats.
">

Part of Joseph Szpak’s service as a fixture designer is to create a solid model the customer can use in its simulation of the complete machining process. He uses KeyCreator software to import and export models in various data formats.

<img id="TB_Image" src="http://d2n4wb9orp1vta.cloudfront.net/resources/images/cdn/cms/mms_0412_caseforcustomfixturing_1.jpg" width="500" height="311" alt="PHOTO 1: The part on this fixture (one part is clamped) has machined features precisely relating to one another at different angles.
">

PHOTO 1: The part on this fixture (one part is clamped) has machined features precisely relating to one another at different angles.

<img id="TB_Image" src="http://d2n4wb9orp1vta.cloudfront.net/resources/images/cdn/cms/mms_0412_caseforcustomfixturing_2.jpg" width="500" height="250" alt="PHOTO 2: This fixture holds 10 simple parts simultaneously as a single unit.
">

PHOTO 2: This fixture holds 10 simple parts simultaneously as a single unit.

<img id="TB_Image" src="http://d2n4wb9orp1vta.cloudfront.net/resources/images/cdn/cms/mms_0412_caseforcustomfixturing_3.jpg" width="500" height="265" alt="PHOTO 3: This fixture reduces sawing by allowing milling passes to separate the work into pieces which then remain clamped.">

PHOTO 3: This fixture reduces sawing by allowing milling passes to separate the work into pieces which then remain clamped.

<img id="TB_Image" src="http://d2n4wb9orp1vta.cloudfront.net/resources/images/cdn/cms/mms_0412_caseforcustomfixturing_4.jpg" width="500" height="347" alt="PHOTO 4: A restraint keeps the part square within a vise.">

PHOTO 4: A restraint keeps the part square within a vise.

<img id="TB_Image" src="http://d2n4wb9orp1vta.cloudfront.net/resources/images/cdn/cms/mms_0412_caseforcustomfixturing_5.jpg" width="480.5068226120858" height="493" alt="PHOTO 5: This part would be difficult to hold without custom fixturing.">

PHOTO 5: This part would be difficult to hold without custom fixturing.

<img id="TB_Image" src="http://d2n4wb9orp1vta.cloudfront.net/resources/images/cdn/cms/mms_0412_caseforcustomfixturing_5a.jpg" width="500" height="375" alt="PHOTO 5a: Here is another part with non-square sides requiring custom clamping.">

PHOTO 5a: Here is another part with non-square sides requiring custom clamping.


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Article From: 3/19/12 Modern Machine Shop, Peter Zelinski, Senior Editor

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I dunno. We run all custom fixturing; I hope they didn't pay much for this stuff. It looks pretty poorly designed.

That last one is way over complicated.
 
Jon is that you ? wow you really need to get over it I did not know it was your sister she never mentioned it. Over complicated huh OK since you have no idea what you are even looking at let's hear your advice for simplifying that perhaps it will help me to produce better designs in the future. What is the ewlsey code for what does it mean and did you get a secret decoder ring with that , cause if you did I want one too.

I dunno. We run all custom fixturing; I hope they didn't pay much for this stuff. It looks pretty poorly designed.

That last one is way over complicated.
 
Jon is that you ? wow you really need to get over it I did not know it was your sister she never mentioned it. Over complicated huh OK since you have no idea what you are even looking at let's hear your advice for simplifying that perhaps it will help me to produce better designs in the future. What is the ewlsey code for what does it mean and did you get a secret decoder ring with that , cause if you did I want one too.

No idea who Jon is, or his sister :confused:

If you want help with fixture design, send me a private message. I design and build machining fixtures, mostly for castings.

If it works, it works. But, I will give you a 100% guarantee that I could come up with something better than that last picture. There is no reason to have two screws pushing against each other.
 
No idea who Jon is, or his sister :confused:

If you want help with fixture design, send me a private message. I design and build machining fixtures, mostly for castings.

If it works, it works. But, I will give you a 100% guarantee that I could come up with something better than that last picture. There is no reason to have two screws pushing against each other.

I'm not sure I understand why there's 2 screws pushing against each other either??
 
I dunno. We run all custom fixturing; I hope they didn't pay much for this stuff. It looks pretty poorly designed.

That last one is way over complicated.

Yea, what's the deal with not making one of those a hard-stop? My only line of reasoning is that this is way faster/easier to manufacture in the first place?

-From a guy that doesn't design tooling.
 
I've rebuilt MANY GM smallblock engines before. I've noticed two 3/4 inch dowel holes in the oilpan area that seemed to serve no purpose. A friend of mine worked in GM's Tonawanda engine plant and told me these were index holes and all machining on the blocks were done off these holes. If so, their fixturing must be very accurate. He told me about a machine that bores all 8 cylinders at once! I'd love to see it work!
 
Wow guys really?

I have to say people that have comments about a fixture when they have zero idea how or why it is designed the way it is designed clearly do not have enough experience to see why it is designed that way and if I have to explain it trust me you would never be doing any design work for me. It is really very simple and only one person on here came close to the right answer. It is real easy to make comments when you are clueless about the function of the fixture what equipment it goes on and what the objective is, all these are clear signs of inexperienced so called design people. Charlie good catch there the only one smart enough to come up with the answer out of all these "experts". Wow Ewlsey I mean Jon I am surprised you did not come up with the right answer you seem so smart
 
Paranoid Schizophrenia is a real problem in this thread.

4 fucking years later and your butt is still hurt because I picked on your shitty fixture. Unbelievable.
 








 
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