Applications  

Case Study 1: Ideal Boilers
Case Study 2: Triumph Business Systems
Case Study 3: Glyn Bingham Associates



Case study: IDEAL BOILERS

Atkin provides the Ideal solution

Nearly a century old, Hull-based Ideal Boilers (part of the Caradon Group) has remained a force to be reckoned with in today’s competitive market place. However, as with all successful companies, there have been significant changes made in order to ensure it maintained its position. The introduction of a new range of boilers, the M series W6436, meant that the traditional manufacturing press shop could no longer meet the output conditions for this new product. The team at Ideal decided to invest in a state-of-the-art roll-form production line, and its long-established relationship with Atkin Automation was once again called into action as the combined teams undertook the four year product design and development project.

Tony Blakey of Ideal Boilers explained: “We knew what we wanted from the new production line, but were working with sketchy ideas and abstract concepts. Apart from Atkin, none of the other companies who we contacted about specifications and cost were willing to be flexible enough to work with what we had. We decided to include Atkin in the design team and so they worked with us all the way on every element of this unique new boiler casing production line to produce the turn-key package we were looking for.”

Thetford-based Atkin Automation provides engineering and industrial automation solutions to a wide variety of industries. It is also the UK’s leading designer and manufacturer of press feed and coil processing equipment. Ideal Boilers use other Atkin Automation equipment in its Hull factory, and so it was the obvious choice.

Specification sign-off to installation of the new production line took just eight months, with Atkin manufacturing all the machinery, which makes up this integrated boiler casing production line, and the line has worked perfectly ever since. It is the first such line at Ideal Boiler to be tagged directly onto the main assembly line, which makes the complete assembly of the boiler faster and easier.

The line’s function is to produce chassis and side panels to exacting specifications for use in the production of the high-quality models which have earned Ideal its enviable reputation. Steel blanks of up to 1.8 metres move through the integrated line which, in turn, punches holes, makes envelope folds and presses in indentations before the finished boiler casing emerges at the other end. The one-man production line requires minimal human input, with the chassis being fitted with a barcode label to aid quality control and end-user maintenance.

At present, the line produces variants from two chassis types, although it has the capacity to produce almost infinite differing designs. It is also flexible enough to be quickly programmed to handle model change-overs to handle small batches or one-off orders with minimal change-over time of only fifteen minutes.

When witnessing the ease of operation offered by the boiler casing line, it is hard to imagine that this work was formerly done by hand. In fact, the tools needed to produce the chassis and side panels traditionally cost over £100,000 – plus the high labour costs needed to operate the five presses, which would have been needed to make all the parts. The type of chassis that Ideal is producing for the new range could never have been made by hand. At 1.8 metres in length, the blanks could not be easily handled on a traditional machine shop.

Production Team Leader, Tony Blakey, commented: “The Atkin team supported us through every step of the design process and has delivered the perfect design solution. Even now that the line is in place I know that, if there is a problem, the same men who we worked with on the design are on the other end of the telephone and are ready to help. Some of the companies who gave us quotes at the beginning of the process were going through third parties to be able to supply all the pieces of equipment needed to make up this integrated production line. The personal approach, teamed with technical know how and experience, gave Atkin Automation the cutting edge.”

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Case study: TRIUMPH BUSINESS SYSTEMS

Ball bearing system is a ‘triumph’ for Atkin Automation

Steel storage systems and filing cabinet manufacturer Triumph Business Systems(TBS) has been producing high-quality filing products at its Merthyr Tydfil site for over fifty years, and turned to Atkin Automation when it was felt that its slide production line needed to be made more efficient.

TBS has been manufacturing slides for filing cabinets since the 1960s, but these were the traditional wheeled slides, and the company wanted to offer its highly competitive market the improved quality and performance provided by ball bearing slides. Although ball bearing slides were already used in heavier applications, the TBS team had been unable to find a company which could produce these in high volume at a low enough cost. In 1987, a development partnership with a supplier led to the launch of Triumph’s own unique ball bearing slides. The manufacture of these slides, marketed as ‘Superglider’ was based on extremely simple, and now ageing, automation for assembly and labour intensive manual operations for punching forming and finishing.

Atkin Automation has been supplying equipment to TBS since 1978, and so the relationship between the companies was already well established when the decision was made to automate the slide production line. TBS had been looking for a manufacturer to produce a purpose designed system for its needs since 1979, and had been in serious discussion with several overseas companies. TBS Operations Director, Andrew Jackson, explains: “ For many the sheer complexity of the job frightened them away, whilst the costings which we were given by other overseas companies were uneconomic in terms of payback and did not represent a viable investment. However, it appeared that no British company was flexible enough and technically capable to produce what we needed. For a while it seemed that we were not going to be able to find a solution.”

Luckily, Atkin Personnel were in Merthyr Tydfil discussing another machine when they heard of the problem. Andrew Jackson said: “We saw Atkin as a company which supplied high quality coil processing equipment, it simply didn’t come to mind as designing manufacturing solutions.” The extensive automation experience of the Norfolk based company enabled a project team to design the automated slide production line from Triumph’s specifications, working closely with TBS’s production team in the final stages to ensure that the line met with the most stringent of safety measures, whilst performing within the unique requirements of this application.

With an estimated payback period of some twelve months on an investment of approximately £500,000, it is clear that this project has been a huge success. The previous method often resulted in production bottlenecks, meaning that the assembly team had to work overtime in order to meet production targets. The new system has reduced the labour requirement from 40/50 workers over a twenty-four hour period to only six (two per shift), with over 3,200 slides being produced in each 8 hour production cycle, and scrap has been reduced from a high of 6-10% to virtually nil. This is because the Atkin machine alerts the operator if there has been a mistake - for example, a ball bearing missing from the slide, so that the slide can be stripped down and put back through the line. The machine is also linked via modem to the Atkin Automation technical support office in case of any serious problems.

Another benefit is that the new system can produce four variants of the main slide design, simply by the operator calling up different computer programmes, with no tool changes being required. Some unexpected benefits have also been obtained, a greater consistency and a cleaner end product, free from the usual smears of grease used extensively in the previous production process, is further reducing overall manufacturing and assembly costs.

Andrew Jackson is very pleased with the Atkin system. “We knew that our production method could be improved upon, but hadn’t fully appreciated the total impact an automated line would make until Atkin Automation installed the new system. Apart from the punching and forming operations, the machine is assembling 53 separate components for each slide. The concept of all these operations happening at the same time, and at such speed, in such a compact machine is quite amazing. The benefits of the investment are unquestionable. This truly is a spectacular machine.”

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Case study: GLYN BINGHAM ASSOCIATES

Atkin seals success for Glyn Bingham Associates at Klinger

With its head office in Switzerland and manufacturing plants around the world, Klinger is a highly respected gasket and seal manufacturer, and its factory in Bradford, West Yorkshire supplies the global petro-chemical sectors with a range of specialist, spiral wound gaskets which are designed to withstand pressures ranging from 150 to 2,500 lbs per square inch.

Yet this highly efficient factory functions without the production and works engineering departments traditionally associated with an operation that utilises heavy presses and associated ancillary equipment to process metal strip into precision engineered components; this is a cost effective success story which has been brought about by engineering consultancy Glyn Bingham Associates and a number of carefully chosen equipment and machinery suppliers, including Atkin Automation.

Glyn Bingham Associates is a specialised engineering consultancy which provides project management and interim management services to a growing number of manufacturers to help with issues which can include relocation, process evaluation, equipment selection and, importantly, the management of change which is often associated which such issues.

Glyn Bingham, the consultancy’s senior partner, was introduced to Klinger in 1999 through a mutual friend, since when the organisation has played an increasing important role in helping this dynamic organisation achieve a number of demanding goals.

One of the first projects undertaken by the consultancy for Klinger involved the introduction of a Atkin decoiler/recoiler which had already been selected by the previously appointed main contractor. The project was highly successful, resulting in a 75% increase in material utilisation whilst increasing the output of blanks to 50 off per minute, and a successful working relationship was established between Atkin Automation and Glyn Bingham Associates.

Three projects later Glyn Bingham Associates led the introduction of a process which has provided huge cost savings for Klinger. The company is a large user of pre-formed metal wire which needs chamfered edges, and its buying team had identified that the cost of chamfering as a subcontract process was placing a 100% premium on the material purchase cost, when compared to the slit price. If the chamfering process could be undertaken in house surely there were substantial savings to be made?

Norfolk based Atkin Automation has been manufacturing press and coil feed equipment for over 60 years, and over the last ten years it has become one of the leading suppliers of purpose designed, automated production systems for companies in a wide range of industry sectors which process metal strip into finished components. Glyn Bingham Associates approached Atkin with the concept of an automated system to undertake Klinger’s need for the precision chamfering of high volumes of metal wire and, together with the Klinger production management team, a design emerged.

The contract for the system, which consists of a 500 kg capacity coilholder with threading drive and a pneumatic safety snubber arm; a simple ‘pull through’ straightener; an edge machine section with intermediate roll drives; multiple tool stations, tip lubrication and recovery system and hydraulic introduction/retraction of tooling onto the strip edge; 500 kg motorised recoiler with heavy duty drive and pneumatic safety snubber arm and a line control system with an operator panel mounted in front of the machine section was placed at the end of 2001 and by May 2002 Klinger’s in- house chamfering line was fully operational.

“Atkin Automation was able to quickly understand what we were trying to achieve for Klinger, and we worked together to specify and design a system for what is a very specific task,” said Glyn Bingham.

He continued: “The system has proven reliable and has been capable of everything that we have asked of it, and a pay back period of less than 12 months on a six figure capital investment project has justified the belief that there were considerable cost savings to be made by making chamfering an automated in-house process.

“ Klinger is a dynamic organisation and there are a number of projects in the pipeline which will involve changing production processes. I am sure we shall work together with Atkin Automation in the future on a number of aspects of metal strip handling and processing.”