Diamond Tooling Showcase 2011
Here’s a look at the newest products and innovations for cutting, shaping and finishing dimensional stone and quartz surfaces.
CNC, laser-etching and other advanced production.
Here’s a look at the newest products and innovations for cutting, shaping and finishing dimensional stone and quartz surfaces.
By K. Schipper
Not all that long ago, shop owners looking for used fabrication machinery had two choices: equipment manufacturers and distributors with trade-ins, or friends and colleagues in the process of buying new.
By K. Schipper
In just about anything, there’s good to be had in even the worst of times. Still, if your business is barely hanging on, your first thought isn’t to go out and buy a new – and expensive – piece of equipment.
By K. Schipper
While you can’t cost-save your way to a profit, there’s a good possibility that you can spend money to keep it – with an investment in inventory software.
HICKORY, N.C. – Advanced Industrial Machinery, Inc. (AIM), a designer and manufacturer of CNC and custom machinery for the stone industry, recently opened its new training center here.
By K. Schipper
GREEN ISLE, Minn. – If every job in the fabrication shop was made up of straight cuts and flat edges, the world would be a much simpler place.
By Russ Lee
If you want to know what the Internet can do for a fabrication business, ask Paulo Seidl of GranTops in Frederick, Md.
By K. Schipper
Today’s booming market owes its existence to two things: more-plentiful, less-costly stone, and the technology to speed up fabrication. Stone may not get any cheaper than it is today … but production machines will get quicker.
By K. Schipper
For many stone-fabrication shops, a bridge saw is almost always the first major equipment purchase in a move to grow their business.
However, the old standby is getting some competition these days in the cutting realm: waterjets. The ability to do radius curves – whether for corners or sink cutouts – is making a waterjet an attractive addition to many shops.
Not only is the accuracy impressive, but – depending on the edge – an abrasive waterjet may reduce the amount of time spent on finishing. And, with the right software, it can nest cuts, reducing waste.
Does this mean the bridge saw will eventually go the way of rotary-dial telephones and eight-track players? Probably not, but more shop owners say their next major slab cutter will be doing the job with water rather than diamonds.