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The decision to buy a portable CMM was made because “the stainless and
carbon steel products we make kept get bigger and bigger,” said Patrick
Comparin, vice president. “In the last few years some power-generation
parts have grown by 20 percent.” Some turbine ring castings now weigh
5,000 to 7,000 pounds and have diameters of 10 feet or more. Some
recent valve body castings weighed 21,000 pounds and stood six and a
half feet high.
As the existing layout facility became too small, it was more
economical to take the measuring systems to the castings rather than
move the castings, Comparin noted. This jump in size proved to be too
much for the inspection and layout facilities at Sivyer.
Sivyer Steel Corp., a large Bettendorf, Iowa, steel foundry, has seen a
steady rise in the size of castings its customers needed. Some new jobs
were so big they could not be handled by Sivyer’s coordinate measuring
machine (CMM). The castings can not even be moved into the layout room.
Meanwhile, management and engineers at the big foundry have worked long
and hard to raise the steel foundry industry’s standards in dimensional
measuring. At the same time, other customers were asking Sivyer to
reverse engineer castings for which no drawings or patterns were
available. These three challenges had a common solution: Sivyer
purchased a portable CMM
The decision to buy a portable CMM was made because “the stainless and
carbon steel products we make kept get bigger and bigger,” said Patrick
Comparin, vice president. “In the last few years some power-generation
parts have grown by 20 percent.” Some turbine ring castings now weigh
5,000 to 7,000 pounds and have diameters of 10 feet or more. Some
recent valve body castings weighed 21,000 pounds and stood six and a
half feet high.
As the existing layout facility became too small, it was more
economical to take the measuring systems to the castings rather than
move the castings, Comparin noted. This jump in size proved to be too
much for the inspection and layout facilities at Sivyer.
"By going to portable measurement, we are trying to raise the bar in
the steel foundry business as far as quality of castings goes..."
Sivyer Steel Corp., a large Bettendorf, Iowa, steel foundry, has seen a
steady rise in the size of castings its customers needed. Some new jobs
were so big they could not be handled by Sivyer’s coordinate measuring
machine (CMM). The castings can not even be moved into the layout room.
Meanwhile, management and engineers at the big foundry have worked long
and hard to raise the steel foundry industry’s standards in dimensional
measuring. At the same time, other customers were asking Sivyer to
reverse engineer castings for which no drawings or patterns were
available. These three challenges had a common solution: Sivyer
purchased a portable CMM
The decision to buy a portable CMM was made because “the stainless and
carbon steel products we make kept get bigger and bigger,” said Patrick
Comparin, vice president. “In the last few years some power-generation
parts have grown by 20 percent.” Some turbine ring castings now weigh
5,000 to 7,000 pounds and have diameters of 10 feet or more. Some
recent valve body castings weighed 21,000 pounds and stood six and a
half feet high.
As the existing layout facility became too small, it was more
economical to take the measuring systems to the castings rather than
move the castings, Comparin noted. This jump in size proved to be too
much for the inspection and layout facilities at Sivyer.
The decision to buy a portable CMM was made because “the stainless and
carbon steel products we make kept get bigger and bigger,” said Patrick
Comparin, vice president. “In the last few years some power-generation
parts have grown by 20 percent.” Some turbine ring castings now weigh
5,000 to 7,000 pounds and have diameters of 10 feet or more. Some
recent valve body castings weighed 21,000 pounds and stood six and a
half feet high.
As the existing layout facility became too small, it was more
economical to take the measuring systems to the castings rather than
move the castings, Comparin noted. This jump in size proved to be too
much for the inspection and layout facilities at Sivyer.
Most of Sivyer Steel’s large work is cast and machined parts for the
construction equipment, mining, defense, transportation, valve and
power generation industries. An ISO 9002-certified foundry, Sivyer has
developed a computer-assisted concept-to-casting process which puts all
design and production data into electronic format. This includes
everything from the customer’s designs to final verification of
as-poured and finishing castings with a CMM and layout machine.
Sivyer bought a ROMER portable CMM, a six-axis articulated measuring arm with
a 12-foot diameter measuring envelope. It is equipped with an operator
controlled touch probe and linked to a desktop computer.
Icon-based systems represent various geometric elements making it
possible to “see” the component without the engineering drawing. The
CAD representation of the component is referenced to the part by
touching and/or sweeping various datums known as coordinate locators.
Dimensional conformance is established in real time.
Benefits of computer-aided dimensional inspection are quickly realized.
“The portable CMM paid for itself in less than a year because it greatly
improved the overall dimensional verification process efficiency,” said
Phil Bruno, technical director. Large complex components with numerous
dimensions are checked in a fraction of the time required with
traditional CMM layout inspection and engineering drawings. Measuring
errors and missed features due to technician fatigue are virtually eliminated. Dimensional layout reports are accurate, complete and have
a professional look which impresses customers, the company added.
The arm is a central element in Sivyer’s implementation of concurrent
engineering -- an effort which began in 1993 and is the responsibility
of the Preproduction Planning Group. It is here that solid CAD models
are created from customers’ data with solid modeling CAD software. The
input includes engineering drawings, IGES files, stereolithography
files (STL formats) and solid models from a variety of CAD systems. Two
of Sivyer’s 10 full-time degreed mechanical and metallurgical engineers
work to complete these models. They add casting-specific features such
as feed pads, directional solidification tapers, fillets, radii and
stock to be machined away.
Comparin noted that buying the portable measurer probably avoided the
expenditure of hundreds of thousands of dollars to buy, install and
calibrate a big new conventional CMM. Not to mention the year’s time it
would have taken to build a special new layout and inspection facility
of several thousand square feet. “There would have been no added return
attached to this spending,” Comparin added. “It would just have gone
into the cost basis. And it still would have been awkward to handle the
large pieces we do here.” Even so, he added, Sivyer “almost” bought a
new conventional CMM.
“Until the pieces got so big,” Comparin said, “we could somehow always
manage to forklift them into place on the bed of the CMM.” But the
conventionally designed computer-assisted layout machine can’t handle a
piece if any of its dimensions is longer than 8 feet. The layout /
inspection room is somewhat small, too, measuring about 20 by 25 feet.
“By going to portable measurement, we are trying to raise the bar in
the steel foundry business as far as quality of castings goes,” said
Quality Assurance Supervisor David Wright. “A 10-foot diameter turbine
casting may be cast as much as half an inch out of round. This is the
norm for this industry’s process capability limits. We want to do a
better job for our customers.”
Thus a major job for Wright and the arm is verifying the foundry’s
process capabilities -- its ability to hold tight tolerances. “The
portable CMM has an accuracy of approximately 0.003 inch which
eliminates most of the measuring error in determining process
capability,” Wright said.
“Measuring helps us find things like out-of-roundness and off-center
rough machining,” Wright continued. “This is especially important when
two halves of a part are laid up back to back and machined together. We
also check patterns and molds as required. Once the error gets into the
steel it’s pretty expensive and pretty slow to fix.”
The portable CMM has also given Sivyer new ways to add value to its
work. “For some customers we now do the layout work for their machine
shops,” Wright said. He is using an optional punch probe for the end of
the arm. “This lets us put a dimple in the steel exactly at the right
spot, say for starting a machining cut or drilling or boring a locator
hole for a reference pin. Otherwise,” he explained, “the measurements
for setting up the job at the machine shop have to be made from the
casting’s edge. And who knows exactly where the edge of any casting is.”
Sivyer takes the portable CMM into the field to customers’ job sites
and machine shops to check on problems and faults. Wright said that
even an overseas trip is practical for the 40-pound machine. However,
the arm spends most of its time in Sivyer’s Bettendorf foundry but
Wright occasionally takes it across the Mississippi to the Riverside
Products’ machine shop in Moline, Ill.
Reverse Engineering
One of the reasons Sivyer originally bought the arm in 1996 was for
reverse engineering. A construction equipment company asked us if we
could generate drawings for some digger teeth where no drawings were
available. With the arm, we were able to digitize one of the teeth and
capture point cloud data. We ran that through DMIS and IGES and
generated the geometry for new patterns with Pro/E. "It worked very
very well and smoothly,” Wright said. “Everybody involved was very
impressed.”
“Reverse engineering with the portable CMM is especially good for
complex contours and surfaces that are out in the sky somewhere,”
Wright added. “These are surfaces you can’t really put a dimension on
very well. The arm sends the data back to the CAD system as an
overlay.” Comparisons are easily done, visually, right on screen, he
noted.
As
a result of raising the quality standards and having extended
measurement capability, “We are getting more business,” Wright said.
“Those 14,000 pound valve bodies were from two new customers. Checking
the first one took a day and a half. The next two were done in just a
few hours apiece. With our old methods checking each casting might have
taken a week or more.” For Sivyer Steel, new measurement techniques are
unlocking new business opportunities and helping it meet its customers’
rising expectations.
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