brrian11
Mechanical
- Oct 26, 2016
- 2
We're an engineer-to-order manufacturer. We have a small sheet metal shop & cut all of our parts with a waterjet. We're buying a fiber laser, and we'll need to change the way we process jobs and materials to take advantage of the laser's efficiency and capabilities.
With the waterjet, we cut by job. We'd nest parts by material, and a project could have several different materials and thicknesses. Most jobs are small enough to be cut on remnants of materials. We spend lots of time loading and unloading material.
With the laser, I believe we'll want to consolidate parts by material so we can nest on full sheets and maximize efficiency. So, a sheet may contain parts for several jobs.
With the waterjet, the engineers (five of us) nested our own jobs. With the laser, since we're consolidating jobs we won't be able to (or want to) do that. I think we need a dedicated 'nesting' guy. The engineers will save the individual part files in DXF format, and he'd sort through and nest everything as he saw fit.
I'd imagine this is a pretty standard way of doing this. Instead of coming up with a system from scratch, I'd like to know if any of you could tell me how you handle this. How do you provide/organize the files... by material, or by job, or some other way? I appreciate any input, and I may have some follow-up questions. Thank you,
Brian
With the waterjet, we cut by job. We'd nest parts by material, and a project could have several different materials and thicknesses. Most jobs are small enough to be cut on remnants of materials. We spend lots of time loading and unloading material.
With the laser, I believe we'll want to consolidate parts by material so we can nest on full sheets and maximize efficiency. So, a sheet may contain parts for several jobs.
With the waterjet, the engineers (five of us) nested our own jobs. With the laser, since we're consolidating jobs we won't be able to (or want to) do that. I think we need a dedicated 'nesting' guy. The engineers will save the individual part files in DXF format, and he'd sort through and nest everything as he saw fit.
I'd imagine this is a pretty standard way of doing this. Instead of coming up with a system from scratch, I'd like to know if any of you could tell me how you handle this. How do you provide/organize the files... by material, or by job, or some other way? I appreciate any input, and I may have some follow-up questions. Thank you,
Brian