NEW EUROPEAN-STYLE STAGED BENDING TOOLING MULTIPLIES BENDS WHILE SUBTRACTING SETUPS
Wilson Tool International has introduced an innovative way to drastically trim setup time from multi-stage bends on press brakes. The new European-style Staged Bending Tooling allows one press brake operator to easily carry out a complex series of bends in a single machine setup, freeing up more time, employees and press brakes for other jobs
Posted: April 30, 2008
Wilson Tool International has introduced an innovative way to drastically trim setup time from multi-stage bends on press brakes. The new European-style Staged Bending Tooling allows one press brake operator to easily carry out a complex series of bends in a single machine setup, freeing up more time, employees and press brakes for other jobs. Completing multiple bends in one press brake setup by conventional means requires the time and skill to use special risers and shims to achieve a common shut height (the total height of the punch and die when they come together) across all punch and die sets. But Wilson's Staged Bending Tooling has common shut heights built in, eliminating these complicated setups. Thirty-degree, offset, gooseneck and other tools are installed in succession in one press brake without fear of punches and dies colliding.
Many American-style press brake fabricators already use Staged Bending Tooling and have seen the advantages of staged bending approach. The machine operator easily arranges a series of three, four or more sets of punches and dies, depending on the job requirements and the brake's bed size. The operator then takes each blank through the sequence of bends (stages) to completion, handling the part only once to significantly improve throughput. This "one-stop" bending provides a significant savings in time and resources. Complex parts requiring several bends are an ideal target for staged bending because the process creates a striking reduction in part handling. Short runs become more cost-effective with staged tooling because fabricators don't have to depend on large batch sizes to achieve efficiency. www.wilsontool.com