Fabrication vs Stamping - What's the best way to make your part?
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- Опубліковано 27 чер 2024
- Have you been wondering which manufacturing method would work best to make your metal part - fabrication or stamping? Dave Holzer from Wisconsin Metal Parts has the answers! In this video, Dave provides an overview of both fabrication and stamping, discussing the pros and cons of each option for producing metal parts. He also reveals which method is best for certain types of parts, and how to decide which one will work best for your metal part. Don't miss this informative video and get the answers you need to make the right choice for your production metal parts.
Need help with your metal stamping or metal fabrication?
Wisconsin Metal Parts today here: www.wisconsinmetalparts.com/c... - Навчання та стиль
Nice presentation, nice tools, and one must assume, nice toolroom.- Retired British tool and die maker.
I have an interview for a manufacturing engineering position coming up and your videos are helping me get ready. Thank you!
@@user-lo1fm4de1d Nice to meet you. I actually ended up getting a job at a manufacturer that makes molds, so I have been learning a lot of about cope, drag, draft, shrink etc.
Greatly explained. Thank you.
Great video.
Excellent!
Love it thank you
Good video
Thank you! We are glad you found it helpful!
Thats fine for a show and tell, but the customer and supplier usually want a simulated production process. That proves that the part can be manufactured efficiently and the part can perform satisfactory via testing.
what is the different fabrication and stamping in English ?
Hi, would your company be able to cut metal yokes or lamination sheets for rotor assembly?
Jermaine, thank you for your interest! Please go to our website and submit your drawing files on our RFQ page for review
Here's a link: www.wisconsinmetalparts.com/request-a-quote
Why fabrication is not used /suited for High volume? Especially laser cutting or cnc punch..Pls answer
Thank you for your response. Laser or CNC punch can definitely be used for higher volumes. However, our focus in this video was finding the most cost-effective way to produce a particular part. In our examples, hard tooling for stamping was the best method for the higher volumes.
Question I had a late 70s mazda truck and bought after market fenders from taiwan for under 100 us and i was told each family does one part. i was told that it costs 25 million in us to make dies to stamp each body fender how did taiwan do it so cheap.
As you got your production cost down, what happened to the price for the customer?
Valkman, thank you for your question. As the part costs went down, the cost savings were passed along to the customer. That was the benefit of them investing in the progressive stamping die.
@@WisconsinMetalPartsAh, I see. So I didn't realize they were involved in investing in the die. Does the customer own the die, too?
@@valkman761 If the customer pays for the tooling then they typically own it