Schelling FK6 330 Manual infeed cut-to-size saw; MODEL: FK6 330 / 330: Machine No: 223.073: Date of Manufacture: 2015: Max Saw Blade Projection: 135mm: Saw Blade Diameter: 460mm: Main Saw Motor Power: 27kW: Number of Clamps: 10 clamps: Speed of Saw Carriage forward: 0.1 to 80m/min: Speed of Saw Carriage back: 80m/min: Air Flotation Tables: 1. Each Schelling saw has a simple control system as a standard feature, that does permit the cutting to size of boards to be programmed, but doesn't optimise the cutting patterns. To save material, time and money, you need a more complex program – the Schelling HPO software. Depending on the cost of material, machine and labour. Fast and powerful beams manufactured by Schelling, design for cutting the wood materials in the manual series and industrial production. Properties (selection) saw blade projection max. 125mm; speed saw carriage: up to 160m/min; cutting length: 3.330 mm, 4.330 mm, 5.800 mm; MCS-control. The CM4 Series horizontal panel saw is a compact and powerful machine with a 4” cut depth. With its ease-of-use and hassle-free automation, you can load, position, cut, and unload faster than ever before. Reset origin tool.
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Schelling Saw Manual Parts
U he hive vst free. Fully automatic production from the raw panel to the finished cabinet: At the end of the previous year, the company Reiss Büromöbel GmbH headquartered in Bad Liebenwerda, Brandenburg, commissioned a new furniture component production. The factory is located in the Lausitz district of Bad Liebenwerda, with a new panel processing installation from IMA Schelling at the heart of the factory to enable individualized production in batch size 1 assisted by ultramodern robotic sorting technology.
Reiss Büromöbel looks back on a long-standing, uninterrupted tradition in office furniture production. Today, the company whose founder invented the 'Reiss-Brett“ (drawing board) fabricates office furniture for industrial corporations, health insurance agencies, schools and for the public authorities. In view of the digitalization of manufacturing and Industry 4.0, Reiss will invest about 30 million euros in the expansion of the two production sites. The goal is to concentrate the metal component production in the main factory in Bad Liebenwerda and to develop a specialised wood processing factory at the nearby new production site. The new building, which occupies an area of 12,500 square metres, comprises the fully automatic panel storage system, the production hall for individualized batch-size-1 production as well as the dispatch hall, office rooms, cafeteria and a showroom.
The investment has become necessary since the old double-side edgebander did not represent the state-of-the-art any longer: excessive setup times, too much manual work including handling and transport, insufficient flexibility. The new fabrication plant uses ultra-modern technologies and intelligent machines. No operator intervention is required until the assembly stage is reached. “The new panel processing installation allows us to operate in a much more flexible way and to respond faster to orders from customers. Moreover it enables us to offer office furniture that leaves almost nothing to be desired in terms of product variability, functionalities and decorative surfaces – while at the same time reducing delivery times,” says Henning Stratmann, project manager of Reiss's new wood processing plant.
Schelling Saw Manual
The new batch-size-1 production line, consisting of an area storage system, a panel saw, a storage system for facultative parts and a circular edge processing cell as well as the required handling and conveyor systems, has been designed and constructed by the IMA Schelling Group. The concept developed by the specialist for high-end workcell solutions in the woodworking industry has raised the benchmark for edge processing on both quality and capacity and for modern robotic sorting technology. “The robots are not only extremely efficient. They are also visually attractive,” says Henning Stratmann who will be filled with pride when guiding customers through “his” production in the future.