American Locomotive
Well-known member
The place I worked at absolutely beat on their machines. Cycle time was everything. The stuff the programmers and job engineers did was amazing. We were constantly replacing the live tool drivetrains on our C200 and C100s. We made parts that the Index in-house engineers said wouldn't be possible on our particular machines.We had a couple of Index lathes with hobbing attachments at Eaton. It was cool that one of those machines replaced 3 others but my god what a nightmare. I spent more time working on those than just about anything. I think the hobbing process was just so aggressive it shook the machine to death.
Eaton was one of those places that really pushed the limits of what a machine could do. The sales people sold unbelievable capability and our process engineers had to wring it out. We had twin spindle Mazaks that we used to destroy. Mazak Japan couldn't figure it out, they set an engineer from Japan and he took one look at the amount of holes and grooves we were doing with live tooling and he understood. So all future Mazak owners can thank Eaton for the "beta testing" we did. LOL
I think the MS machines took even more abuse though. I remember one job they were cutting tool steel for a Milwaukee step-drill, and the kept stalling the main spindles. That machine had 32HP liquid cooled spindle motors!
Index never sent anyone to look at our machines, even though we were one of the bigger customers of their machines in the U.S. They just swore up and down it was us doing something wrong, even though their techs would secretly tell us tons of other customers had the same problem.
For that company, the best machines = the fastest they could find. Cycle time, cycle time, cycle time. Didn't matter how much it cost or how much it broke, as long as it was fast.I have been asked by Ops Managers what are the best machines.
That's one of the reason why loved the Index MS machines so much. They could make a complete part in one shot that normally took 2, 3 or even 4 different secondary machines to make.
Oh that's right! We had a little Nomura swiss machine. Most of the floor guys really liked it. It was fairly reliable and churned out part after part without much fuss. Management hated it because it was slow.Nomura - Just a rock solid lathe
