Short-notice flexibility: Drilling Performance
Increase flexibility and repeatability when machining high-volume auto parts. A hydraulic stationary clamping system.
END USER: Seeger Präzisionsdrehteile GmbH, +49 7553-8258282, www.seeger-salem.de.
CHALLENGE: Increase flexibility and repeatability when machining high-volume auto parts.
SOLUTION: A hydraulic stationary clamping system.
SOLUTION PROVIDERS: Hainbuch America Corp., (800) 281-5734, www.hainbuchamerica.com; Hainbuch GmbH, +49 7144-907-0, www.hainbuch.com.
For 15 years, Wilhelm Seeger led a double life. In addition to working as production supervisor at a large manufacturer, he ran his own contract manufacturing operation. Seeger’s business, Seeger Präzisionsdrehteile GmbH, Salem-Neufrach, Germany, progressively grew and, in 2005, he became entirely his own boss. It was easier to make this decision because Seeger’s two sons, Moritz and Manfred, would soon join his company after training and university studies and help grow the family business together.
Fast forward to the present, where his two sons share management responsibilities, including handling new orders and negotiating customer contracts. The company employs nearly 100 people, operates three shifts and delivered nearly 49 million turned parts in 2012. “Although my father is no longer the owner, he is the undisputed boss,” Moritz Seeger joked.
Seventy percent of the company’s customers are suppliers to the automotive industry, 25 percent are in the machine tool industry and the remaining 5 percent are from other industries. To produce the parts, such as gears and other round parts for transmissions, their shop has 65 sliding-headstock automatic lathes from Star, 25 fixed-headstock automatic lathes from Miyano and three Haas machining centers. All the machines are equipped with FANUC controls so parts can be transferred from one machine to another, if needed. “There is no mishmash,” Moritz Seeger said. “All employees are thoroughly familiar with all the machines. That is the flexibility we need here.”

Courtesy of Hainbuch
Thirty 32mm-capacity Hydrok 32 hydraulic stationary chucks fit on the machine table of a Haas machining center at Seeger Präzisionsdrehteile.
Four years ago, the company received an order for a component for the timing gear in gas and diesel engines and envisioned delivering 300,000 parts per year. To accommodate production of this part family, Seeger needed a new workpiece clamping system. It considered a separate clamping fixture manufactured for the part family or a flexible system in which part diameters can vary.
Although some in the company advocated for a dedicated clamping fixture that would have multiple part positions and sequential part loading, the fixture would become “worthless” from one day to the next when a workpiece diameter changed by as little as 1mm, according to the company. To change over between part models, the entire tombstone would need to be removed from the machine and replaced. In addition, because a tombstone can weigh 200 to 300 kg (441 to 661 lbs.), the company would need to purchase a crane to remove and replace the tooling.
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