Machine shops grappling with a widening labor shortage, higher inflation and the need to invest in constantly improving technology are increasingly taking advantage of long-term maintenance agreements and other services offered by their equipment suppliers.
It’s a trend that benefits both parties. Offering parts replacement, repair and assistance with digital equipment enables manufacturers to lock in revenue streams that can last long past the initial sale—and potentially boost profit margins, according to consultant McKinsey & Company.
Their customers, meanwhile, are able to maximize the performance of expensive machinery and tools while assigning smaller workforces to the most important jobs and outsourcing tasks they might previously have handled in-house.
Avoiding Calibration Conundrums
Metrology equipment provider Mitutoyo America Corp., for instance, makes a variety of quality assurance services available to its customers, says Education Manager Jeff Meyerholz. At the top of the list is onsite calibration and certification of coordinate measuring machines.
Field service technicians, who also perform general maintenance, “typically use a check master or other type of master gage” for calibration, Meyerholz says. “Contrary to what you might see in a magazine or hear from others, there’s rarely a need for a laser inspection system like those used on a CNC lathe or machining center. Today’s CMMs have temperature compensation and volumetric mapping capabilities, so a skilled technician can very accurately calibrate one by placing a check master in different orientations.”
Those gages draw attention to another common service that Meyerholz and his team perform—calibrating a shop’s gage blocks and rings, which they can then use as reference artifacts for internal calibration of hand tools like micrometers, bore gages and calipers.
While there’s no shortage of calibration labs willing and able to perform the service, the National Institute of Standards and Technology among them, Meyerholz warns that shops should do their homework when selecting one.
“It’s important to use an accredited lab, since this means a third party has come in and verified that the lab is following best practices and can actually do what they say they do,” he explains.
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