Maschinenfabrik Berthold Hermle AGMaschinenfabrik Berthold Hermle AG

C 42 U RS 2 L | Hofmann | Tool and mould making

From left: Benjamin Schuh (HPV Hermle Vertriebs GmbH) with Markus Gräf (Head of Process Development) and Bastian Girg (Head of Marketing & Communication) from Werkzeugbau Siegfried Hofmann GmbH.

Shaping milling is one of the last and most demanding process steps in the production of injection-moulded tools.

The challenge: The hardened material required extremely steady machines operating within the narrow tolerances even after finish-machining of 50 hours. Hermle is the ideal partner to satisfy this requirement for the tool and machine builder Hofmann. Together they shouldered an exceptional project creating more capacities than expected: A production cell with four milling machines of the C 42 U type including a cleaning and measuring system linked by a robot.

The technological frontrunner in the toolmaking and machine building industry developed from a craft business for moulding tools founded in 1958 by Siegfried Hofmann in a garden house. The major driver in the 1980s was the son of the company's founder: Günter Hofmann joined the corporate management of Werkzeugbau Siegfried Hofmann GmbH in 1982 and in parallel successfully developed the field of standard and special machine building. The company today is managed by Stefan Hofmann as the third generation and offers holistic solutions in injection moulding from the tool up to complete automation of the injection moulding process. In addition Hofmann focuses on digital solutions and virtual commissioning, and digital twins in the development and manufacturing of machines and automation solutions.

The injection moulds and machines today produced by the family-owned business from Lichtenfels in Upper Franconia are just as diverse as the industries in which the service provider has a reputation: Household appliances, automotive, packaging and sports equipment get their perfect appearance and function thanks to the precise moulds. A unique feature of the toolmaker is its intensive research and development work. With partners from the industrial and scientific fields the experts utilise their skills for new technologies and material combinations and implement for example innovative design geometries by 3D printing.

System operator Kevin Stark is in charge of setting up the tools and workpieces and checking the measurement results.

Automation for ultra-precise individual components

When Hofmann intended to expand its manufacturing capacity in 2017, the decision makers again opted for an automation solution from Hermle: A linear system with a robot and four C 42 U. "it fitted exactly in the building," the Head of Development jokes and explains that the 5-axis machining centres have the relatively largest traverse path for the size of the machines and are optimally suited for the parts range. "In addition there are very few systems on the market that are able to machine 3D contours from hardened steel with this precision.“ And this is what matters. On the four C 42 U machines only the hardened mouldings are finish-machined, with the machines finally defining the precision of the finished moulding. "This step takes between one and 50 hours and this is why we need a machine which keeps precision and accuracy constant throughout this long time, regardless of the ambient influences such as temperature or coolants used," Gräf emphasises.

But the system is capable of even more: A cleaning and measuring centre is integrated in the cell in addition to the four machining centres. Here the finished mouldings are fully automatic washed, dried and finally measured and thus checked. The entire system is integrated in Hofmann's MES system and therefore it is possible that the production system can be supplied with data fully automated as well as manually.

Markus Gräf is convinced: "There are very few machines on the market that can machine 3D contours from hardened steel with this precision."

Extensive and time-saving

The robot, the four production cells, the measuring room and the cleaning unit occupy an entire production building at Hofmann. The installation took eight weeks, the run-up phase three weeks. This is fast. "Certainly our experiences gained with the RS 3 system was useful. In addition Hermle's excellent standardisation concept had an impact: The modular design is the key to such a smooth process," Gräf praises. In contrast there were in some cases difficulties with the software. "We had no crashes, it is a stabile program. But: It is made for serial production," Gräf emphasises. "There are no test sequences or start-up parts. "Automation right from the quantity of 1 – this is the premium class."

To overcome the last hurdles, the software experts from Hofmann themselves took care and programmed an automated process for readjusting the tools. "We noticed that there are minimum deviations after long machining times. This is however not caused by the machines but by the tools," the responsible manager for process development explains. Hofmann knows from the experience gained with the Hermle machines available for a long time already that the accuracy of the milling centres is constant for years.

Although Markus Gräf and his team knew what to expect, the result surprised them. The RS-L system freed up more capacity than assumed. In addition the C 42 Us work in some cases twice as fast as the older machines – and with such precision that much less reworking is required for Hofmann and his team. On top, there are the time savings by the automation. "Now it is only the setting up what slows us down," Markus Gräf concludes. 

Hofmann utilises the available space in an optimal way with the system, consisting of four C 42 U, robot system, cleaning unit and measuring room.
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