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Datum
Filing Systems
York, Pennsylvania
Steve Potter, Vice President of Manufacturing
Products/Markets
Served:
Designs and manufactures filing, storage, and office furniture solutions.
Main focus is on stackable shelving filing systems and high-density
mobile-storage system units.
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Problem:
Because
their vendor part deliveries were sometimes up to eight weeks late,
the company had a big problem delivering finished products on time
and at competitive prices. As demand for their product increased,
Datum Filing struggled to mass-produce the quantities of parts that
they needed. To ensure quality level and delivery times, the company
decided to move their parts production in house.
Solution:
To begin the in-house parts manufacturing process, the company installed
a Pacific OBL 300-6, 300-ton hydraulic press. The versatile press
withstood
the shock of their blanking operations while allowing them to do
several other types of forming operations. The new gib guided hydraulic stamping press
allowed DFS to cut their production cost by 50% per divider, providing
their customers with better quality products and faster delivery.
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Hydraulic Press Application Story
from Pacific Press Technologies |
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File This One Under “Hydraulic Press/Coil
Feeding Versatility”
Office
Furniture OEM Raises Profitability, Controls Quality and Inventory With
In-House Stamping Lines
With vendor part deliveries
sometimes being up to eight weeks late, Datum Filing Systems (York, PA)
had a problem delivering finished products on time and at competitive
prices.
To solve this, they decided to do the work internally. With the right
metalforming equipment, they were able to bring down product costs
and delivery times along with initiating lean manufacturing with gib guided metal forming equipment. In some instances
product costs were cut by 50% compared to what vendors were charging.
Datum Filing Systems
(DFS) has been designing and manufacturing filing, storage, and office
furniture solutions for more than 30 years. Founded on Long Island, NY
by Frank Potter, DFS is still family owned and operated. “We’ve
been around since 1968,“ said VP of Manufacturing Steve Potter.
“The business was started by my father in the basement of his house.
After he retired in 1990, four brothers took it over and moved it to York,
PA from New York in 1992. In 1997 we bought a stamping press and added
25,000 sq. ft. on the building and bought another building across the
street. In 2000 we sold the buildings that we were in and moved into our
current 120,000 sq. ft. facility, one with room to add another 100,000
sq. ft.”
He added, “Our
original product line was a telephone-card filing system. Then it grew
into rotary files that turned like a lazy-susan. We manufacture these
rotary files with diameters from 24” to 24’. They have also
been motorized and computerized. It’s a big product line for the
phone companies. Then we moved into producing office furniture including
desks, work areas, and modular furniture. In 1992 this was our main business.
Now we are specializing in stackable shelving filing systems. This shelving
grows as you need it. We also manufacture high-density mobile-storage
system units mounted on carriages that condense the file space by eliminating
aisles between file banks. Our focus right now is on filing and storage.”
DFS, a processor
of about 12 million pounds of steel per year, has a current sales volume
of $18 million.
Evolution
of product lines, production requirements
As the company moved into
the stackable-shelving market, the products became even more popular,
and the company wasn’t prepared to mass produce the quantities of
parts needed. The company had tooling made and parts were produced by
vendors. “With vendors, you can have the typical challenges such
as maintaining quality levels and ensuring delivery times,” added
Potter. “This is part of the reason why we decided to bring parts
production in-house to get it under control.”
“We were manufacturing
some of the products in-house. But for our filing-system dividers, we
had an outside vendor making them for us. We were going through 40,000
to 50,000 units every couple of weeks and it got a bit costly at this
point, but it served its purpose at the time. Then we started thinking
about bringing the manufacturing process in house, and began looking at
smaller press and coil feed lines. We also tried to save costs as much
as possible by looking at other products we produced and then came to
the conclusion that we needed a larger stamping press.”
The company installed a Pacific
Press Technologies (Mt. Carmel, IL) OBL 300-6 300-ton hydraulic stamping press
in 1997, which they primarily use for blanking. Potter said, “This
is a versatile press with a 3 x 6’ bed size that can withstand the
shock of blanking operations. It also has versatility to do other types
of forming operations. Feeding this is a Coe Press Equipment (Sterling
Height, MI) CPRF-M24 AC servo-driven digital rollfeed, a CPPS-PO-225-24
power straightener that handles a coil up to 24” in width, and a
Coe CPR-PO-8024 pull-off coil reel. The maximum coil weight for this line
is 8000 lbs.”
DFS then added a mechanical
press with a Coe Servomaster Series-1 rollfeed that can handle up to a
12” wide coil, a CPPS-250-12 power straightener and a CPR-PO-6018
pull-off coil reel that can handle a 6000 lb coil to help increase their
capacity for new product lines.
“When we moved to Pennsylvania,
we started out in a 40,000 sq. ft. building,” said Potter. “As
business grew, we found the need to add on. As our file-system dividers
were being made on the outside (100,000 at a time), we were paying about
60 cents per divider. When we brought it inside, we got the manufacturing
costs down to about 22 cents. By bringing them in-house, we actually paid
for the expansion of the building in about 5 years.
The Pacific OBL Press gave
Potter hydraulic flexibility for variable stamping speeds and a wider
opening for die setup. “It’s more versatile for getting in
and out of the opening for tooling changes, and we do some forming on
it too, not just blanking. With a hydraulic press you have the flexibility
of slowing down and putting dwell pressure on the parts where you really
need it, ...completely controlling the stroke. It was the right machine
for us.” The OBL has a rapid advance of 460” per minute, fast
press of 175” per minute at 120 tons, and a normal press speed of
50 IPM with a fast return of 280 IPM.
“To increase our throughput
with the press, we try to keep our strokes as short as possible. Typically
they are 2” strokes, because there are ejector pins in the die to
pop the part out. Anything less than 2” would interfere with the
ejector pins.”
DFS also produces stackable
shelving in which they produce large parts called skins or wrappers. Tooling
is designed so that one die can do a family of parts, and there’s
one set of tools to do different widths. “We have 24”, 30”,
36”, 42”, and 48” widths, and one set of tooling that
does all of them. Some of these parts get up to a blank length of about
88”. Speed is not as important as having the proper length. We’ll
set the different part lengths by programming the feeder’s CNC control
and use the same tooling. On this line, we use the servo roll-feeder with
a 24” width. It has a maximum speed of 436” per minute.”
On one line, they had to dig
a looping pit to allow the coil to advance rapidly for a part that is
88” long. On this line, the smallest part is a divider that’s
about 16” in width and about 5” in length. It is a semi-progressive
die (two hits) that would punch notches or other features and then feed
5”. Then it’s ejected onto a conveyor. They run these at about
22 pieces per minute.
Produced
on the same press line, their largest part is 21” X 88” in
length blanked directly from the coil without trimming, and runs at 12-pieces
per minute. “Feed length precision is critical and the Coe servo
feed does an excellent job keeping it within tolerances,” said Potter.
“You plug into the program what you need, and it maintains a +/-
0.005" tolerance. Any change in length of this 88” part shows
up in the spacing of small holes that we have punched in the blank during
this operation. Because these units are assembled by customers, hole location
and spacing are critical. If it’s not correct when they are assembled,
edges and flanges will not line up properly. Then the product won’t
be aesthetically pleasing.”
On large parts, once the blank
is made, there are secondary operations such as roll forming or press-brake
procedures. “It’s critical to start with a flat part, and
the Coe straightener does a great job of taking the coil set out for us,”
remarked Potter. “In another application, some of these parts go
through an automated piece of equipment where they are destacked and sent
through a roll former into a computerized wing bender which forms up the
U-shape for the wrapper (the outside piece of a file cabinet), which then
goes to three spot welding and three other operations. So flatness is
critical here. If the blank has some coil set, it’s going to have
problems going through the automated machinery. It’s more than removing
the coil set over the large surface to be aesthetically pleasing. It’s
also dimensionally-critical for secondary operations.”
Datum was introduced to the
Pacific and Coe product lines through Mid-Atlantic Machinery, their area
sales representative. “We checked out each company and found them
to be well-established quality manufacturers. We then decided to go with
them. They’ve been very good for us. I’ve had no complaints
with either of them whatsoever,” remarked Potter.
“I didn’t investigate
many other lines. On the press I did look at some other manufacturers
that built mechanical ones. But even the cost of these machines far exceeded
the Pacific Press price. It was part of a cost reason why we went with
a hydraulic press, and it was a large solid press for us. It gave us the
flexibility to stamp larger materials. We don’t use anywhere near
its maximum tonnage, but it’s better to have more than less.”
In-House
vs. Contracted Work…and the Effect on Profits, Product Availability
“Processing versatility
is very important. A week’s production on the Pacific OBL typically
processes a range of about 50 different parts and it allows us to control
our inventory levels, too. Our lot sizes were around 40,000 to 50,000
pieces at a time. Now they are about 10,000. The larger parts like our
skins and wrappers we used to run 10,000. Now we run about 1000. Due to
the design of the tooling, changeovers are down to two or three per day
in a nine hour shift. This keeps press time up. We run three shifts, but
only one on the stamping equipment. The other shifts do the secondary
operations on the parts.”
When using outside vendors,
DFS was typically at a four-week production schedule. “When vendors
didn’t deliver parts on time, it hurt us,” said Potter. “We
realize that as a manufacturer also, we have to deliver on time. We spent
a lot of time on inspection and waiting for delivery, causing us to work
more overtime and work at non-efficient levels. Through this, our profitability
was being limited with wasted work and not having the product on hand
to ship to our customers (often a result of lost orders). We had many
parts made on the outside, but now they are all made in-house.
“Today we are close
to meeting all our delivery schedules. On one specific product, we are
now doing it at half the cost. Bringing work in-house and controlling
our own scheduling and quality destiny has enabled us to work for eight
or nine years without a price increase.” Even after the company
went with in-house stamping equipment, they continued to run larger part
volumes to eliminate some press setups. But through lean manufacturing
techniques they became a lot more efficient on their die changes. They
went from three to four hours to about 30 minutes, and the staff is working
to reduce this.
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