Toolholders help shop’s reputation
Rego-Fix's powRgrip allows Symmetrix Composite Tooling to confidently run parts overnight or longer.
John Barnitt, president of Symmetrix Composite Tooling Inc., said the reputation of his machine shop depends on the high precision and quality of the large-format tooling that the company produces for the composites industry. The Bristol, Rhode Island, shop focuses on perfection to prevent recurring errors, mistakes in geometry or flaws in tooling surfaces that transfer to molds and in turn to the final production parts for customers.
To achieve the best results, the shop combines advanced manufacturing technology with old-school craftsmanship. With five-axis machining, Symmetrix Composite Tooling shortens job lead times by weeks in most instances for customers in industries that include marine, architecture, aerospace, transportation and wind energy. Unfortunately, the density of the tooling paste that the shop works with proved to be a root cause of toolholding problems there.
The shop cuts thick sections of this material, running at 9,000 rpm spindle speeds and feeding at 1,200 m/min. (3,937 sfm), which generates a lot of stress on cutting tools and toolholders. As a result, Symmetrix Composite Tooling experienced cutting tool slippage, runout and vibration, which shortened tool life and affected surface finish quality.

When machining, solid-carbide endmills and ballnose cutters gradually would pull out of holders, often by an imperceptible amount but enough to affect toolpaths, part tolerances and surface finishes.”During overnight cuts and even during the day, the tool would actually come loose, causing a different length from hundredths of a millimeter all the way to I’ve seen a full millimeter of slippage,” said Lead CNC Machinist Noah Maraziti. “It causes a big issue if we have a tool that’s wobbling back and forth as it’s trying to cut a path.”In addition, toolholder runout caused vibration, which not only shortened tool life but — like the pullout — degraded part surface finishes, especially during final cut passes.For Symmetrix Composite Tooling, cut times for one part can run as long as five days, and the shop relies heavily on its ability to machine parts unattended overnight. Unfortunately, the shop didn’t trust its toolholders for extended periods of lights-out machining and needed to resolve the problem. That’s when the business reached out to Whitestown, Indiana-based Rego-Fix Tool Corp. and acquired its powRgrip, or PG, collet-holding system.The product from the toolholder manufacturer not only eliminated the issues of pullout, total indicator runout and vibration but allowed Symmetrix Composite Tooling to run at faster cutting speeds, which shortened part cycle times and extended tool life. With the PG, the shop confidently can run parts overnight or longer, with minimal if any intervention.”We are comfortable with leaving the machine running by itself unattended for multiple days at a time — three, four days at a time,” Maraziti said.The shop formerly used a typical nut and collet holder that he said could be inaccurate at times, mainly because of improper nut torque.”With PG,” Maraziti said, “we eliminate the need for torque wrenches and get an accurate clamp every time.”He sets up all the tooling and tracks tool wear and life so engineers can use the toolpath of a part to accurately predict when a tool needs to be changed.Noah Maraziti (left), lead CNC machinist at Symmetrix Composite Tooling, removes a tool and holder assembly from the powRgrip unit. Image courtesy of Rego-Fix Tool
“Previously, cutters lasted about one week, maybe two,” Maraziti said. “But with the PG, we’re getting up to four weeks per cutter. Getting the most cutting life is huge for us. It allows us to maintain more accurate cuts without changing tool diameters and tool lengths every other day because a tool is worn out. The Rego-Fix helps in a way with that just simply because it has a better grip on the tool. The tool isn’t getting as much wear, so it’s dulling in a lot less time.”
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