I dig. I fabricate the same way when I can. If I'm cutting an angle with the bandsaw, I try to cut that sane angle all of the required times before switching, or drill one size hole as many times as I can before switching to a different size drill bit.
You got it! What you are talking about is more amortizing your setups, but the concept is identical. Speaking of amortizing setups, that is exactly why I have this big 27 pallet cell. Most jobs and fixtures are setup once, after that its loading raw stock and adding it the machining schedule. The offsets, probing cycles, tool life etc are all stored in the program, which permanently resides in the control.
You jelly, bro?
Negative. While there might be a good fish somewhere in there I wouldn't bother fishing in that labor pool.
Got any use for a mechanical designer who took nothing but CAD/CAM courses to get his bachelor's degree? Solidworks is my shit. I've used CNC and manual machines. Fairly confident I'm not a retard.
Possibly. It would depend mostly on your capacity for learning new shit, and being objective, and being able to take criticism. Its a small shop, we are focused on doing things the best way possible, I have no problem using an employees idea over mine if its better (happens often enough) and the opposite needs to be true as well. I don't have time to play games with peoples ego's, insecurities etc.
Another issue I have had with people in this position is some people get scared when we tackle new or complicated stuff. I thrive on learning things I don't know, this position best suites someone with the same attitude.
If you do good work, try hard, and learn it would work fine. I always pay accordingly;)
Here is the career section of my page:
http://www.passengerdiesel.com/company/careers.phpDave where you buying your carbide? I've find myself shopping ebay for insert packs, but otherwise it's like carbidedepot.com or some of the copies. The local supply houses seem to mark up 20% on average, and they dont stock anyway.
Can you be a little more specific? Are you just buying generic inserts? Or solidcarbide endmills, drills etc?
I've personally found that spending the time to find the best inserts for a job and then buying them from the same supplier works best for me. Saving money on carbide has never worked for me from both a purchasing (time required) and a tool life perspective.
For most inserted cutters (facemills, chamfer cutters, insert drills etc) I use:
Iscar (mostly for stainless steels)
Mitsubishi (mostly for aluminum)
Korloy (only aluminum)
Nine (everything)
For drills and taps I usually go to OSG first, then Emuge, Nachi etc.
For carbide endmills, spot drills, chamfer mills etc I use DeBoer, Garr, Emuge, Seco and Iscar.
The machine shop at the Foundry i work at gets their carbides from MSC and/or ESSCO, if that is helpful?
I think you mean Enco?
I could mill that shit up with a 5" angle grinder.
Pffft do it with a file