#Machinetool

Yonhap Infomax Newsinfomaxkorea
2025-04-25

DN Solutions pursues 5 trillion won IPO, highlighting lower US tariff impact and strong financials as key advantages in machine tool industry

en.infomaxai.com/news/articleV

Yonhap Infomax Newsinfomaxkorea
2025-03-17

DN Solutions aims for 5 trillion won IPO as company value doubles in a year despite profit decline, raising questions about valuation amid market interest

en.infomaxai.com/news/articleV

Yonhap Infomax Newsinfomaxkorea
2025-03-14

DN Solutions, global machine tool maker, files for KOSPI IPO targeting $4.3 billion market cap, plans to raise up to $1.18 billion for facility investments

en.infomaxai.com/news/articleV

Xiaofang (Sunny) Shenyontonemould
2024-01-23

Milling is one of the CNC machining services we offer. This process involves a rotating cutting tool that removes chips from the material as it comes into contact with the workpiece.
YONTONE offers the most advanced machinery to guarantee good results for precision machining.
This includes 4-axis milling equipment as well as possibilities for live tools.

2023-01-04

Yesterday in the #Archive, I took advantage of it being quiet and catalogued a collection of order books for the #Stockport #MachineTool makers #CravenBrothers. I also repackaged them. #Today I boxed them up and put them in their new location in the store. #Satisfying!
#BehindTheScenesAtTheMuseum #BehindTheScenesInTheArchive #Archives

A table full of order books for machine tools manufactured by Craven Brothers Ltd. The volumes are unpackaged.A table full of order books for machine tools manufactured by Craven Brothers Ltd. The volumes have been wrapped in acid free tissue and tied with unbleached archival tape.22 archive boxes stacked in three columns on a table. The boxes contain order books for machine tools manufactured by Craven Brothers Ltd.22 archive boxes on shelves in an archive store. The boxes contain order books for machine tools manufactured by Craven Brothers Ltd.
2022-05-20

Square Cuts on Aluminum Extrusion, No Mill Required

If you're looking for the perfect excuse to buy that big, beautiful Bridgeport mill, we've got some bad news: it's not going to be making perfectly square end cuts on aluminum extrusion. Sadly, it's much more cost-effective to build this DIY squaring jig, and search for your tool justification elsewhere.

There's no doubting the utility of aluminum extrusion in both prototyping and production builds, nor that the versatile structural members often add a bit of class to projects. But without square cuts, any frames built from them can be seriously out of whack, leading to misery and frustration down the road. [Midwest Cyberpunk]'s mill-less solution uses a cheap Harbor Freight router as a spindle for a carbide endmill, riding on a laser-cut acrylic baseplate fitted with wheels that ride in the V-groove of -- you guessed it -- aluminum extrusions. A fence and clamping system holds the extrusion firmly, and once trammed in, the jig quickly and easily squares extrusions that have been rough cut with a miter saw, angle grinder, or even a hacksaw. Check out the video below for a peek at the build details.

We love the simplicity and utility of this jig, but can see a couple of areas for improvement. Adding some quick-throw toggle clamps would be a nice touch, as would extending the MDF bed and fence a bit for longer cuts. But even as it is, this tool gets the job done, and doesn't break the bank like a mill purchase might. Still, if your heart is set on a mill, who are we to stand in the way?

#toolhacks #aluminum #cnc #endmill #extrusion #jig #machinetool #router #squaring

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2021-10-27

Heavy Metal Lathe Build Doesn’t Spare the Steel

It's common wisdom that the lathe is the essential machine tool, and the only one that can make copies of itself. While we won't argue the primacy of the lathe in the machine shop, this scratch-built, heavy-duty lathe gives the lie to the latter argument -- almost.

We're used to seeing homebrew lathes, of course, and we've featured more than a few of them before. But two things make [Jornt]'s build stand out: how few specialized tools were needed to build it, and the sheer size and bulk of the finished product. Where most homebrew lathes tend to be the bench top variety and feature cast aluminum parts, [Jornt] went with steel for his build, and a lot of it. The base and bed of the machine are welded from scrap steel I-beams, and the ways are made from angle iron that has been ground flat with a clever jig to hold an angle grinder. The angle grinder plays a prominent role in the build, as do simple tools like a hand drill, files, and a welder -- and yes, the unfinished lathe itself, which was used to bore out the bearing blocks for the headstock.

The completed lathe, powered by a treadmill motor in a way that [Jeremy Fielding] would no doubt endorse, comes in at a beefy 450 kg. It honestly looks like something you could buy from a catalog, and has most of the features of commercial machines. One thing we'd love to see on this lathe is the electronic lead screw that [James Clough] developed for his off-the-shelf lathe.

#toolhacks #fabrication #lathe #machinetool #machining #steel #welding

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