Should you target fabrication?: People & Companies
Being in the machining business, you've probably considered diversifying your business or expanding your capabilities with "value-added services." Our shop has certainly diversified.
Being in the machining business, you’ve probably considered diversifying your business or expanding your capabilities with “value-added services.” Our shop has certainly diversified.
But what does diversification really mean? Does it mean serving customers from various industries so your shop isn’t overly dependent on any one particular industry? Or does it mean diversifying your processes and capabilities to offer a wider array of services to the marketplace, including activities other than conventional metalcutting? Diversification could mean both scenarios, but this column addresses the latter.
Many machine shops have diversified by acquiring fabricating equipment, such as laser, waterjet and flame cutting machines and perhaps welding equipment.
Their logic goes something like this: “If we add fabrication capability, then we can process our own blanks for machining, and we can even sell these fabrication services.”
This seems reasonable and many machine shops have been successful at incorporating such equipment into their operations. On the other hand, some shops may find this venture too risky and choose instead to focus on what they do best—machining tight-tolerance parts and nothing else. There are viable arguments for going either way, but when evaluating whether a shop should expand into the fabrication world careful planning is in order.
In some ways, the current market lends itself to the acquisition of fabrication equipment because dealers are aggressive with pricing and payment options. Adding this type of equipment can provide a shop with the ability to eliminate outsourcing of blanks and other parts, gaining more control over the production process and decreasing lead times.
Fabrication equipment has improved and some of it may be able to perform precision functions and reduce more costly operations on machining centers. For instance, sometimes fabricating blanks with hole patterns can be done precisely enough to avoid milling the holes. Usually, performing these functions with a flame, waterjet or laser cutting machine is significantly faster and more cost-effective than machining the entire piece on a mill. This should free up production time for more complex machining activities, which command higher prices.
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