Electronics Industry Search

Polling Question

Green design is a priority for me in 2009.

  • Yes
  • No



View previous polls
Advertisement
Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Article tools sponsored by

Gibson Guitar’s Newest CNC Machine Strikes A Productive Chord

Gibson has taken its CNC use a step further with a three-axis automatic bandsaw that helps keep its guitar factory humming

Joseph Ogando, Senior Editor -- Design News, July 13, 2007

CNC machines and guitar making go together as well as “Country and Western” or “Rock and Roll.”  In fact, CNC does such a good job at improving the productivity and quality of repetitive wood routing tasks that all of the major guitar makers have adopted it over the past 20 years. Gibson, though, recently took CNC use a step further when it installed a new automatic bandsaw that helps keeps its Nashville factory humming along.

In the past, CNC machines were employed primarily for routing, according to Gene Nix, a Gibson wood products specialist who helped develop the new bandsaw. “We'd been using CNC routers since the late 80's,” he says. “But a CNC bandsaw is a first for the guitar business.”

Gibson installed the new saw, which was built by Warsaw Machinery, primarily for reasons of productivity. In the past, the company's electric guitar necks were manually run through the bandsaw prior to their final shaping. Nix says a good saw operator would get from 200 to 250 necks per day.

The three-axis bandsaw, which works on up to three necks at once, can do “several times that amount,” Nix says. The same logic applies to electric guitar bodies. The saw can handle a stack of three to five body blanks, depending on the guitar model.

As an added benefit, the new saw helped Gibson to adopt a new type of neck blank that is less prone to hidden defects than the lumber used in manual sawing operations.

Nix describes the incorporation of the new saw into Gibson's guitar building operation as seamless. “The biggest challenge was finding a saw that was the right size for guitar building. We looked high and low and there just weren't any,” he says.

So Gibson teamed up with Warsaw Machinery, which has made CNC bandsaws for the furniture industry for about 25 years. These big saws, which usually work on 4 x 8-ft panels with thicknesses up to 14 inches, do have something in common with Gibson's new saw. Both types have a servo-driven x-y table that passes the wood through the saw blade. The third axis is a servo-driven rotation of the blade, whose motion need to be carefully coordinated with movements of the x-y table to allow tighter curved cuts. “It's important to keep blade tangent to cutting path at all times so that there's no binding,” explains Kathy Wettschurack, Warsaw Machinery’s vice president and design engineer.

Similarities with the big panel saws aside, Gibson's bandsaw does break new ground in a couple of ways. The obvious one is its small scale. It has a more modest maximum material size of 60 inches long x 20 inches wide, though it can still handle stock to 14 inches thick. “Scaling down was a challenge,” says Wettschurack. Yet the smaller work pieces used in guitar making did allow Wettschurack to come up with an extremely compact saw design in which the wood passes “inboard” of the blade – meaning between the blade and the machine’s structural column. The larger saws have an “outboard” arrangement.

Less obvious is the fact that Warsaw took an entirely new design approach with the Gibson saw. “In the past, we built everything from scratch,” Wettschurack says, citing linear bearings, actuators, motors and motion control cards as some of the items she would specify on a case-by-case basis. With the Gibson saw, she took a more off-the-shelf approach, picking a pre-packaged motion control system from Parker Hannifin. “We started with their linear actuators because they were compact and fit our profile,” she says. “Then we realized we could get them with the servo motor already attached. Things just dominoed from there.” Wettschurack ended up with a collection of Parker components that include Daedal 412XR and HD185 actuators for linear motion, BE servo motors, Aries servo drives and Bayside gearboxes. Much of it ships to Warsaw pre-assembled, Wettschurack reports.

Wettschurack also went with Parker's PC-based motion control system. She points out that it's G-code capable, which was a must for Gibson given its experience with CNC routers. Control components included Parker's ACR motion card and software as well as HPX PowerStations for the HMI.

Warsaw also used some of Parker's aluminum extrusions to create parts of the machine base, something the company had previously done from welded steel. Wettschurack says that the company will keep the heavy steel bases for its biggest CNC machines, which have higher structural loads than the Gibson machine. But she predicts that the company will use pre-packaged motion solutions on subsequent machines, both large and small. “It was so nice to save the space and assembly time,” she says.

For more on the design of the bandsaw, check out this Design News.

Find a supplier on oemsuppliersearch.com
Products/Services Companies
Advertisement

Sponsored Content

Technology Marketplace

Gallery »

Gibson Guitar’s Newest CNC Machine Strikes A Productive Chord

Gibson has taken its CNC use a step further with a three-axis automatic bandsaw that helps keep its guitar factory humming

Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Article tools sponsored by
Find a supplier on oemsuppliersearch.com

Advertisement

DN's Resource Center Get Free Information, Made Easy

Advertisement

Design News Partner Zones

AnarkCAD/CAE Model Clean-Up: Reduce Iterative Cycles
This webinar featured research and survey results related to problems associated with preparing CAD geometry for CAE applications.  We discussed how Recipe-Based Automation can help create "just-in-time" CAE-ready geometry each time a cad model is updated. Watch the Presentation


Light Matters: A High-Performance, "No-Compromise" Solid State Lamp?
First, let's define "no-compromise". In an ideal configuration, this lamp would use a high-brightness LED (HBLED) that is built into a small, integrated package, and is able to produce a large quantity of focused light, operate with a high level of reliability and generate no audible noise. Is this difficult? Yes, but it is possible.
Read More


Design Engineers' Portal for Sensing and Machine Safety
Whatever industry you're in, or whatever product you manufacture, the right sensors to automate your plant, and to improve your overall efficiency, quality and safety are a must. You'll find Banner Engineering to be an amazing resource of products, training and people with expertise.

Design News Partner Zone Directory »

Please visit these other Reed Business sites