Nottingham-based Caunton Engineering, one of the UK’s largest single-site steelwork contractors, has completed a major upgrade of its manufacturing technology following the installation of two advanced automated machines.
The family-owned company, located on the site of the former Moorgreen Colliery in Newthorpe, has invested more than £2 million in bringing this latest ‘intelligent’ technology to its on-site Cut Shack components plant. It is the first time that one of the machines, the FG-400 NEO by Japanese manufacturer Mazak, has been installed in a structural steelwork company anywhere in the UK. The purchase of the FG-NEO, an automatic and continuous 3D laser-cutting machine, follows the installation of a PeddiBot-1250 robotic structural steel fabrication machine in a two-pronged move intended to enhance and streamline the company’s production process.
“This investment in the very best of new and emerging industry technology is a significant statement of intent by Caunton Engineering as we strive to improve both the quality and efficiency of our production process,” said the company’s Chairman, Simon Bingham. "We are especially pleased to be working with Mazak to bring the UK’s first FG-400 Neo laser cutting machine to the Cut Shack, designed for ultra-high-speed 3D cutting of long tube, pipe and structural material. This, together with the PeddiBot-1250, will provide us with the very latest in robotic technology available anywhere in the world today.
“The higher levels of both speed and accuracy that laser cutting and associated robotic technology brings to our production process will transform our capabilities in delivering larger and more complex steelwork projects,” he added.
Caunton Engineering’s new Mazak FG-400 NEO features a variety of advanced technologies and is designed for high-speed 3D continuous and automatic laser cutting of long tube, pipe and structural material. It uses an energy-efficient fibre laser for high-speed cutting and can deliver 3D laser head cuts and complex joints and shapes with high accuracy. The machine's specification is focused more on items below a profile of 300mm and up to 20mm thickness, processing a range of sections including universal beams, universal columns, channels, tubes, box, flats and angle sections.
The Mazak will operate alongside the new US-manufactured PeddiBot-1250, a robotic structural steel fabrication machine which combines plasma cutting, oxy-fuel cutting and layout marking all within one machine.
Designed specifically for the structural steel market, the machine is equipped with an intelligent plasma cutting system designed to maximise productivity with faster cutting speeds and is capable of processing up to 80 mm thick material.
Caunton Engineering has an annual turnover of around £100 million, employing 250 people. Recent steelwork projects include retailer TJ Morris’s £118 million distribution warehouse near Warrington, the major Energy Recovery Centre at the Edmonton EcoPark site in Enfield, London and the North Stand of Leicester Tigers’ stadium.