haas rotary table accessories made in china
Rotary table in market mainly includes 4 kinds of mechanism that is worm gear, roller cam, DD driver and harmonic structure. The following is the introduction:
1. worm gear: it’s one of the most popular structrue in NC rotary table because of its irreversibility and costs.The worm is generally made of bronze, but the wear resistance is poor. In order to improve the service life, some manufacturers use the alloy steel.
3.DD motor: it’s the most efficient rotary table with the highest precision. It has the highest precision because it has no mechanical structure, which is directly driven by motor , no reducer. It has high technical difficulty and high price. It is generally used for five axis machine tools.
100 mm (3.9") High-Speed Tilting 2-Axis Rotary Table, with indexing up to 1000 deg/sec. Requires a Haas mill with 4th- and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. Requires software version M18.24B or later. Not available for stand-alone operation.
5C Collet Tilting 2-Axis Rotary. Requires Haas mill with 4th-and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. This unit has no collet closing capability as standard. Requires a Haas mill with software version 18.00 or later.
Dual-Spindle 5C Collet Tilting 2-Axis Rotary. Requires Haas mill with 4th-and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. This unit has no collet closing capability as standard. Requires a Haas mill with software version 18.00 or later.
Triple-Spindle 5C Collet Tilting 2-Axis Rotary. Requires Haas mill with 4th-and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. This unit has no collet closing capability as standard. Requires a Haas mill with software version 18.00 or later.
Quad-Spindle 5C Collet Tilting 2-Axis Rotary. Requires Haas mill with 4th-and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. This unit has no collet closing capability as standard. Requires a Haas mill with software version 18.00 or later.
160 mm (6.3") Tilting 2-Axis Rotary Table. Requires Haas mill with 4th-and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. Requires a Haas mill with software version 18.00 or later.
160 mm (6.3") Tilting 2-Axis Trunnion Rotary Table, with scale feedback on the A (tilting) axis. Requires Haas mill with 4th- and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. Scale feedback functional only on Haas mills with software version 18.xx or later. Scale feedback does not function with rotary control box. Requires a Haas mill with software version 18.00 or later.
160 mm (6.3") Dual-Spindle Tilting 2-Axis Trunnion Rotary Table, with scale feedback on the A (tilting) axis. Requires Haas mill with 4th- and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. Scale feedback functional only on Haas mills with software version 18.xx or later. Scale feedback does not function with rotary control box. Requires a Haas mill with software version 18.00 or later.
200 mm (7.9") Compact Tilting 2-Axis Trunnion Rotary Table, with scale feedback on the A (tilting) axis. Mounts along Y axis of VF- 3 and larger machines. Requires Haas mill with 4th- and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. Scale feedback functional only on Haas mills with software version 18.xx or later. Scale feedback does not function with rotary control box.
210 mm (8.3") Tilting 2-Axis Rotary Table. Requires Haas mill with 4th-and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. Requires a Haas mill with software version 18.00 or later.
210 mm (8.27") Tilting 2-Axis Trunnion Rotary Table, with scale feedback on the A (tilting) axis. Requires Haas mill with 4th- and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. Scale feedback functional only on Haas mills with software version 18.xx or later. Scale feedback does not function with rotary control box. Requires a Haas mill with software version 18.00 or later.
310 mm (12.2") Tilting 2-Axis Trunnion Rotary Table, with scale feedback on the A (tilting) axis. Requires Haas mill with 4th-and 5th-axis drives for true 4th- and 5th-axis operation. Scale feedback functional only on Haas mills with software version 18.xx or later. Scale feedback does not function with rotary control box. Requires a Haas mill with software version 18.00 or later.
Gene Haas founded Haas Automation, Inc., in 1983 to manufacture economical and reliable machine tools. The company entered the machine tool industry with the first-ever, fully automatic, programmable collet indexer – a device used to position parts for machining with very high accuracy. The patented Haas 5C collet indexer was a huge success, and over the next four years, the company expanded its product line to include a wide selection of fully programmable rotary tables, rotary indexers, and machine tool accessories.
In 1987, Haas Automation began developing its first vertical machining center (VMC), a machine designed to perform such machining operations as milling, drilling, tapping, and boring. This machine, the VF-1, was introduced at a cost that was competitive with machine tools from offshore manufacturers. Employing the latest equipment and procedures for close-tolerance manufacturing, the first VF-1 prototypes were completed in 1988 and introduced at the International Machine Tool Show (IMTS 88) in Chicago, Illinois.
At that time, industry scholars and members of the trade press were skeptical that an American-made machining center could be sold for less than $50,000. Haas not only delivered on the price, but delivered the product, as well, something other manufacturers often were unable to do. Today, the Haas VF-1 still sells for less than $50,000, and in most instances, a customer’s machine can be delivered within just a few weeks of the initial order.
To ensure accuracy, Haas manufactures all critical components in-house using dedicated state-of-the-art CNC machine tools. The company’s 1.1-million-square-foot facility makes extensive use the latest lean manufacturing methods and just-in-time production practices to streamline production capabilities and reduce costs. This, combined with highly trained teams for electronics and mechanical assembly, allows Haas to control quality, cost, reliability, and availability. The resulting savings and increased quality are passed on to the customer in the form of lower prices and better products.
Of the nearly 300 chip-making machine tools in the Haas machine shop, more than two-thirds are Haas machines – proof positive that the company believes in its own products. To increase production capacity and capability, new manufacturing equipment is added constantly, allowing Haas to produce more parts more efficiently, and further reduce the cost of Haas products to the end user.
Today, Haas manufactures four major product lines: vertical machining centers (VMCs), horizontal machining centers (HMCs), CNC lathes, and rotary tables, as well as a number of large five-axis and specialty machines. All Haas products are manufactured at the company’s expansive facility in Oxnard, California – the largest, most modern machine tool manufacturing operation in the United States.
Gene Haas founded Haas Automation, Inc., in 1983 to manufacture economical and reliable machine tools. The company entered the machine tool industry with the first-ever, fully automatic, programmable collet indexer – a device used to position parts for machining with very high accuracy. The patented Haas 5C collet indexer was a huge success, and over the next four years, the company expanded its product line to include a wide selection of fully programmable rotary tables, rotary indexers, and machine tool accessories.
In 1987, Haas Automation began developing its first vertical machining center (VMC), a machine designed to perform such machining operations as milling, drilling, tapping, and boring. This machine, the VF-1, was introduced at a cost that was competitive with machine tools from offshore manufacturers. Employing the latest equipment and procedures for close-tolerance manufacturing, the first VF-1 prototypes were completed in 1988 and introduced at the International Machine Tool Show (IMTS 88) in Chicago, Illinois.
At that time, industry scholars and members of the trade press were skeptical that an American-made machining center could be sold for less than $50,000. Haas not only delivered on the price, but delivered the product, as well, something other manufacturers often were unable to do. Today, the Haas VF-1 still sells for less than $50,000, and in most instances, a customer’s machine can be delivered within just a few weeks of the initial order.
To ensure accuracy, Haas manufactures all critical components in-house using dedicated state-of-the-art CNC machine tools. The company’s 1.1-million-square-foot facility makes extensive use the latest lean manufacturing methods and just-in-time production practices to streamline production capabilities and reduce costs. This, combined with highly trained teams for electronics and mechanical assembly, allows Haas to control quality, cost, reliability, and availability. The resulting savings and increased quality are passed on to the customer in the form of lower prices and better products.
Of the nearly 300 chip-making machine tools in the Haas machine shop, more than two-thirds are Haas machines – proof positive that the company believes in its own products. To increase production capacity and capability, new manufacturing equipment is added constantly, allowing Haas to produce more parts more efficiently, and further reduce the cost of Haas products to the end user.
Today, Haas manufactures four major product lines: vertical machining centers (VMCs), horizontal machining centers (HMCs), CNC lathes, and rotary tables, as well as a number of large five-axis and specialty machines. All Haas products are manufactured at the company’s expansive facility in Oxnard, California – the largest, most modern machine tool manufacturing operation in the United States.
Haas Automation is the largest machine tool builder in the United States, and one of the largest builders of CNC (computer numerically controlled) machines in the world. Haas products are manufactured in the company’s 1.1-million-plus-square-foot facility in Southern California, and distributed through a network of more than 170 Haas Factory Outlets, in more the 60 countries. Every HFO has complete showroom facilities, factory-trained service personnel, extensive spare-parts inventories and fully stocked service vehicles to provide the industry’s best service and support.
Gene Haas founded Haas Automation in 1983, to manufacture the industry’s first fully programmable collet indexer. The Haas 5C indexer was a huge success, and during the next four years, the company expanded its product line to include a wide selection of programmable rotary tables, indexers, and machine tool accessories. In 1987, Haas developed its first vertical machining center – the VF-1. Priced less than $50,000 – a then unheard of price for an American-made machining center – the VF-1 debuted at IMTS ’88 in Chicago.
Today, Haas Automation manufactures an extensive line of CNC vertical machining centers, CNC horizontal machining centers, CNC lathes, rotary products, and fully integrated automation systems. The company also builds a variety of specialty machines, including 5-axis machining centers, mold making machining centers, toolroom machines, and gantry routers. Haas has regional headquarters in Belgium and China, and currently exports more than half of its products overseas.
IP rated rotary tables provide more possibilities for humidity and dusty environment in actual working conditions, like CNC drilling work, CNC grinding work, laser marking and laser cutting work, etc.
High precision and excellent IP rated performance makes the high precision and accuracy work possible, such as diamond cutting rotary task, phone production and inspection rotary task, etc.
Haas Automation is the largest machine tool manufacturer in North America, building a full line of CNC vertical and horizontal machining centers, CNC lathes, rotary tables and 5c indexers. Haas machine tools and rotary products are built to deliver higher accuracy, repeatability and durability than any other machine tools on the market.
From its beginnings in 1983, Haas Automation has always produced top-quality products at affordable prices. Haas produces all critical components in-house, using dedicated state-of-the-art cnc machine tools. the company"s 1 million-square-foot facility makes extensive use of automated lights-out flexible manufacturing systems (FMS) and robotic loaders to streamline production capabilities and reduce costs. This, combined with highly trained electronics and mechanical assembly teams, allows Haas to control quality, cost, reliability and availability. Haas delivers more standard features, high-tech innovations and rock-solid engineering than perhaps any other CNC manufacturer in the world and at better prices.
“We were trying to get larger batches. Our operation was growing, we had a lot more of a customer base and we wanted to keep the quality that comes with the quantity,” says Dan Nutter, an engineer at Lie-Neilson Toolworks of Warren, Maine. To achieve this goal, the shop replaced its older machines with machines from Haasthat had rotary tables, which reduced the number of clampings needed to machine some pieces. It also invested in a CNC lathe with a bar feeder.
The substitute the shop chose was the VF-2 VMC from Haas Automation Inc. (Oxnard, California). It purchased two with TR210 rotary tables in October 2015. “We liked the machines, so we bought two more in January,” Mr. Lie-Neilson says, eventually replacing the rest of its VMCs with six more in March. The company also replaced its old lathe with a Haas ST-10 turning center and bar feeder. In addition, it ordered a Haas TM-1 toolroom VMC, which it plans to use to produce smaller parts.
According to Mr. Nutter, the machines have reduced both cycle time and handling time by 75 percent on certain pieces, like a part called a “frog” that is found on many of its tools. This bronze-cast part comes from the foundry with a gate, and a lot of casting remains on the sides, he says. This makes finding effective workholding and then machining the part challenging. On the old equipment, pieces were machined one at a time, requiring four or five clampings, additional handwork and sanding. Now, the parts are held with Mitee-Bite clamps on a pallet system and machined four at a time on the VF-2 VMCs with TR210 rotary tables. Multiple clampings and secondary operations have been eliminated. The increased production has put the shop months ahead in shipping, Mr. Nutter says.
The ST-20 lathe and bar feeder enabled the shop to also increase production on another woodworking tool: its corner chisels. According to Mr. Nutter, the company turns between 500 and 1,000 chisels per week on the new lathe, compared to the 400 to 500 per week turned on the company’s two old lathes. The tools are finished on a VF-2 with a rotary table. “We have a little cell going with two VF-2s, and the one ST-20. It has allowed one operator to do a much better job,” Mr. Nutter says, and the increased productivity of this cell has enabled Lie-Neilson to keep its production in house.
The controllers on all the new machines have also been instrumental in increasing the company’s productivity, Mr. Nutter says, because they are easy to learn and use. With the help of a Haas simulator, the shop has transferred many of its programs from its old controllers to the new Haas ones “with no speed bumps,” he says.
The service that Haas and its factory outlet, Trident Machine Tools, have provided also has played a role in the company’s success with the new machines, including enabling Lie-Nielson to get its six VMCs up and running in one weekend.
The two men are looking forward to using the Haas systems to reduce cycle time and handling on more of the parts they produce. “The future is unlimited as to what we’ll be able to do with these machines and their support team,” Mr. Nutter says.