A lot of that equipment is horrendously antiquated.
14(!) Brown and Sharpe single spindle automatic lathes. Those machines are at least 50 years old. They're entirely mechanical, take a very long time to setup for a new job (requiring custom cams and tooling, and are finicky to keep making good parts. Not to mention aren't really fast enough to make money anymore.
A bunch of ancient 30 year old Citizen Swiss machines with equally ancient Fanuc control. Same deal: will be slow, difficult to setup/program for new jobs, parts costly and hard to find, machine likely pretty worn out by this point.
The Acme gridley multispindles are also 45+ years old. Same issues as the Brown and Sharpes. Big mechanical monster that you need to baby sit all day. The Acmes can be fast, but they'll hapilly churn out 1,000 scrap parts in an hour if you're not on top of them.
You can't make money in the U.S. with equipment like that these days. Too old, too finicky, and too inflexible. It's just yet another example of a once manufacturing giant failing to adapt and modernize. If they had more modern equipment, they could have quickly and rapidly tooled up for new customers and product.
The facility does seem clean and well taken care of though. I'll give them that. But I agree with Steve, there is a reason why Ideal is abandoning all of that equipment. I remember an SK rep saying outdated equipment is a major thing they are contending with right now.