Beckhoff Automation Provides Servo Drive Technology for Precision Machining
In Watch Valley, a region between Basel and Geneva, an ecosystem has developed over several centuries around the watch industry and the smallest precision components for micromechanical devices. Machine builders such as Esco SA in Les Geneveys-sur-Coffrane and Affolter Group SA in Malleray are an important part of this ecosystem. Their CNC machines are used to manufacture the smallest gears, screws, shafts, and other components at maximum precision, practically laying the foundation for the famous precision of Swiss watch movements.
Esco specializes in lathes to produce parts with high accuracy and impeccable quality in medium and large quantities. As well as turning as their main process, the machines offer additional machining functions. They make it possible for complex parts to be produced on compact machines.
Stationary material and rotating tools
Unlike conventional automatic lathes, Esco machines are characterized by an individual operating principle: stationary material, rotating tools. This allows the machines to process ring or bar material in a fully automated process without interruptions. “In addition, the proximity of the tools to the workpiece offers advantages in terms of production rate and surface quality,” says Vincent Fankhauser, sales manager at Esco. The basis for the precision and the short machining times is the spindle, which rotates at up to 12,000 rpm.
Esco has been relying on PC-based control for the automation of its machines since the beginning of 2020, for which it uses TwinCAT 3 from Beckhoff. “The control and drive technology from our previous suppliers were at the end of their life cycle and we needed future-proof CNC technology that could be easily configured for our different series,” says Vincent Fankhauser.