EMAG LLC  

38800 Grand River Ave
Farmington Hills,  MI  48335-1526

United States
248-477-7440
https://www.emag.com
  • Booth: 5553

The Optimal Manufacturing Solution for Nearly Every Application

The EMAG Group is one of the few suppliers of manufacturing systems that cover the whole process chain, from soft to hard machining. Access to a wide range of technologies (turning, drilling, milling, gear cutting, grinding, laser welding, ECM deburring, PECM machining, induction hardening and automations) allows EMAG to implement complete process chains not only for the manufacture of gearbox, engine and chassis components but also of components for the non-automotive sector.

A company steeped in tradition with global headquarters in Salach, Germany, the EMAG Group capitalizes on the collective knowledge of its technology companies to offer modular and custom innovative manufacturing systems with world-class precision. Our North American plant is located in Farmington Hills, Michigan, providing sales, service, spare parts and training for customers in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

Stop by booth 5553 and put our experience to work for you. You can also learn more on our website: emag.com.


 Press Releases

  • How Suppliers and Contract Manufactures Benefit from Lean Automation Solutions

    There are many reasons for using automation and robotics in the manufacturing industry, ranging from compensating for a lack of manpower and simplifying production processes to reducing unit production costs. The latest generation of solutions makes it easier than ever to exploit the advantages of perfectly synchronized production.

    It is precisely for this reason that the importance of automation is currently increasing in contract manufacturing and specifically among medium-sized supplier companies. But how can you develop custom-fit and cost-effective solutions for your own production tasks? One answer is provided by the machine builders at EMAG. Their automation solutions come from a trusted, single source and are precisely adapted to the customer's needs and conditions. As a result, flexible and automated processes ensure that, on the one hand, costs are reduced while component quality and process reliability are increased at the same time.

    The company Pucktechnik in Solbiate Arno near Milan, Italy, shows how this can be illustrated in concrete terms. The contract manufacturer was founded in 2017 and currently produces casting tools and various components. In total, the company has nearly 30 machines - including eleven EMAG VL Turning machines and a K 160 LA Hobbing machine from EMAG Koepfer.  These EMAG solutions provide high-volume and automated series production. Primarily with the help of these EMAG machines, around 650,000 Wheels and Wheel Hubs for earth moving equipment are currently produced by Pucktechnik each year. What is interesting here is that four independent production lines with a high degree of automation are used. The machines in each line are completely interlinked via TrackMotion, also from EMAG, with various operations running directly one after the other. As a result, the quantities produced in this area have increased massively in just a few years.  Their success is based on a typical EMAG approach: Vertical machining, assuring the highest possible productivity in the smallest (possible) footprint. This is what the VL machines, used here in combination with TrackMotion automation exemplifies. The basic technological principle of the lines is always the same (regardless of the specific machine type):

    ·       The TransLift - a lift-and-turn carriage on the TrackMotion line gantry with programmable electric gripper - picks up the raw-parts from a parts store, transports them to the machine at a speed of up to 150 meters per minute and deposits them on the machine's internal shuttle.

    ·       Thanks to the vertical arrangement of the spindle, it can pick up the part from the pick-up position of the shuttle and guide it into the working area of the machine.

    ·       After machining, the workpiece is discharged from the machine via the shuttle and transported to the next machine or the discharge conveyor using the TrackMotion system. If necessary, the TransLift can also turn the component.

    TrackMotion: Flexibly configurable

    On this basis, a wide range of possibilities opens up with the various EMAG machine types. For example, a VL 3 DUO, which has two completely self-sufficient spindles in separate machining areas for OP 10 and OP 20, can be expanded into a powerful complete system. The TrackMotion automation system not only ensures fast parts transport between the parts storage and work areas, but also turns the components between OP 10 and OP 20. On the other hand, "large solutions" are also possible via TrackMotion - for the production of differential housings, for example. Four machines are used here: In OP 10 and OP 20, both sides of the housing are turned on a vertical VL 4 lathe. For machining the outside in OP 30, EMAG relies on the VT 4, which enables 4-axis machining of the complete outside in one setup. In OP 40, another vertical lathe is used, this time a VL 6.

    Robot cells: Increasingly interesting for contract manufacturers

    The requirements of the workpiece and the associated production process are also the focus of the developers of EMAG's robot solutions. Critical questions are, for example, what batch sizes are to be produced in a given period of time and how autonomously is the solution to operate. At the same time, the connection of the machines based on pick-up technology is particularly simple. The robot places the part on a workpiece carrier on the machine shuttle, where the internal automation takes over as described. The components are fed into the robotic cell, for example, by infeed and outfeed conveyors, palletizers, drawers or by bin picking, with each solution having different strengths and basic conditions. The possibilities opened up by this approach are shown, for example, by the combination of two VL 3 DUOs with a robot: First, two components are simultaneously machined from one side in the first machine. Then the robot picks them up, turns them and feeds them to the machine for simultaneous machining of the second side, resulting overall in high output quantities in short periods of time. In addition, the cell can be easily adapted to other processes. The "truck drum brake" example is also interesting: here, four VL 8 machines are linked-up by means of a robot on an additional travel axis - a concept that combines the flexibility of a robot with the reach of a gantry. 

    In summary, the combination of EMAG pick-up technology with various automation solutions from TrackMotion to robots results in extremely powerful and individually adaptable systems. New machines can be integrated into the process at any time. Contract manufacturers and subcontractors in particular benefit from this: They produce parts faster, more error-free and more cost-effectively - from gears to shafts and wheel hubs to differential housings and many other components.

    Images:

    Image file: _DSC0437.jpg

    Pucktechnik in Solbiate Arno near Milan relies on automated manufacturing systems from EMAG.

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    EMAG production lines at Pucktechnik. The TrackMotion automation system not only ensures fast parts transport here, but also turns the components between operations.

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    In the EMAG machine, the pick-up spindle takes over and feeds the component to the machining process.

    Image file: E417.jpg

    The VL 3 DUO is one of the most compact manufacturing systems on the market. Here in combination with parts storage and TrackMotion automation system.

     

    Image file: E420.jpg

    The two work areas of the VL 3 DUO are each equipped with a 12-station turret.

    Image file: D782.jpg

    In the TrackMotion automation system, a so-called TransLift unit travels through the machines on a rail system (hence the name "Track").

    Image file: D842.jpg

    The TransLift not only provides part transport; it can also turn the workpiece and is equipped with a Z-axis that allows a stroke of up to 650 mm.

    Image file: Line_2xVL3DUO.jpg

    Robot cell from EMAG in combination with two VL 3 DUOs: The components are fed, for example, with infeed and outfeed conveyors, palletizers, drawers or by bin picking.

    Image file: VL8_Robot_Automation.jpg

    For the complete machining of truck drum brakes, a robot is used for loading four VL 8 machines.

    Press and publications contact

    Oliver Hagenlocher

    EMAG GmbH & Co.KG

    Austraße 24

    D-73084 Salach

    Fon: +49(0)7162/17-4267

    E-Mail: ohagenlocher@emag.com

    www.emag.com

  • (Apr 17, 2023)

    More Efficiency and Precision for Barrel Rifling 

    Extreme precision and process repeatability – hardly any other industry puts as high demands on these qualities as the manufacturers of sporting firearms. The accuracy of the firearm all boils down to the “minutes of angle” (MOA), and the barrel has a key influence on this value for the “perfect shot.”

    The production of firearm barrels combines process extremes placing high demands on the material properties of the barrel, which must be hard enough to withstand very high forces without suffering permanent deformation, yet soft enough to form complex geometries.  EMAG’s electrochemical machining (ECM) is ideally suited for this challenging application.

    Barrels have different inner diameters, as well as rifling, which causes the projectile to spin and improves its aerodynamic stability. Very detailed geometries are required in hard material machined with high precision and reliability.  EMAG’s ECM special PI Rifling Machine module ensures a fast and efficient barrel rifling production with high precision surfaces and tight tolerances in the firearm barrel, without any mechanical or thermal stress to the barrel.  

    ECM rifling with special machine solution

    While the basic principle of ECM remains the same (positive anode, negative cathode and electrolyte solution), EMAG fine-tunes a technological concept developed specifically for rifling.  A very narrow and elongated cathode tool generates the desired internal geometry of the barrel precisely. The electrolyte flows between the two and metal ions detach from the work piece. 

    Wide ranges of very different geometries are possible – polygonal, progressive or standard rifling. Within the machining area, there are eight cathodes inside a compact module. The process is safe throughout, with easy cathode exchange and fast component loading. “Here we drew on 20 years of experience in the development of ECM processes,” explains Manuel Steinhauer, Technical Sales Manager at the EMAG Group. “The ECM solution is suitable for short and long barrels, and almost any inner geometry is possible.”

    ECM is faster and more affordable

    The ECM rifling process has various advantages compared to alternatives. It is faster and less expensive than the hammering process, and compared with button broaching, there subsequent stress relief is not needed. Additionally, the outer geometry of the blank matches the later finished geometry; whereas, for hammering, the blank is oversized at first, and then takes on desired smaller dimensions during extreme forming processes.  “Contrary to hammering, the ECM process generates much less noise and vibration,” adds Steinhauer. “Our process can be used universally, unlike alternatives such as hammering or broaching. The EMAG ECM is easier to process plan and decreases reject rates and is rapidly gaining recognition in the marketplace.”  

    EMAG’s proven ECM solution is also available quickly, thanks to the modular PI machine’s basic design, which is IoT-Industry 4.0-ready and easily customized for an entire product portfolio. “Our technology provides the reliability, repeatability and surface quality that are particularly important in the manufacturing of high-precision firearms,” says Manuel Steinhauer. “With this technology you will produce barrels with better accuracy and MOA.” 

    Contact:

    Jeremy Elder

    EMAG L.L.C.

    Manager – Sales & Key Accounts

    (248) 962-8685

    www.emag.com

    Booth 52208

    A picture containing close    Description automatically generated

    Image Caption:

    ECM rifling: precision inner geometries guaranteed

    ECM RIFLING_EMAG-booth-52208_v2.jpg

    Media Contact:           

    Laurie Applegate
    exlapplegate@emag.com
    (248) 675-5018


 Products

  • EMAG VSC 400 PS - Power Skiving & Turning Machine
    Accommodating up to four different power skiving tools on two spindles, plus up to six turning tools, EMAG’s VSC 400 PS combines power skiving and turning for producing internal and external gear teeth on a single, simple to operate machine....

  • Powerful Combination for Complex Gears

    Accommodating up to four different power skiving tools on two spindles, plus up to six turning tools, EMAG’s VSC 400 PS combines power skiving and turning for producing internal and external gear teeth on a single, simple to operate machine.  This machine comes with a stiff, high-performing B-axis for variable axis crossing angles, hydrostatic guidance along the Z-axis for maximum vibration damping and its closed power flow ensures extremely precise workpieces. Watch our video and visit us at EASTEC in booth # 5553.

  • EMAG KOEPFER K 160 Longbed - for Long Motor Shafts
    This unique horizontal bobbing machine is designed to handle shafts up to 1000 mm long as well as heavy gears and pinions....

  • Unique Gearing Solutions for Long Motor Shafts

    Designed to handle shafts up to 1000 mm long as well as heavy gears and pinions, the EMAG Koepfer K 160 XL Horizontal Hobbing Machine comes with:

    • Direct-driven, high-performance drives
    • Easy-to-program controls
    • Up to 15 programmable axes
    • Versatile automation options 

    Learn more in booth # 5553.

  • EMAG TrackMotion - Lean Automation Solutions
    EMAG automation solutions are adapted to the customer's needs. As a result, flexible and automated processes ensure that costs are reduced while component quality and process reliability are increased....

  • How Suppliers and Contract Manufactures Benefit from Lean Automation Solutions

    There are many reasons for using automation and robotics in the manufacturing industry, ranging from compensating for a lack of manpower and simplifying production processes to reducing unit production costs. The latest generation of solutions makes it easier than ever to exploit the advantages of perfectly synchronized production.

    It is precisely for this reason that the importance of automation is currently increasing in contract manufacturing and specifically among medium-sized supplier companies. But how can you develop custom-fit and cost-effective solutions for your own production tasks? One answer is provided by the machine builders at EMAG. Their automation solutions come from a trusted, single source and are precisely adapted to the customer's needs and conditions. As a result, flexible and automated processes ensure that, on the one hand, costs are reduced while component quality and process reliability are increased at the same time.

    Learn more in EMAG’s booth # 5553.