How do you identify and measure the true value of a tool? We talk to metalworking expert Gary Plante about what’s involved in evaluating tooling costs against outputs.
From a business perspective, metalworking tools may be only as good as their ability to help produce quality parts and end products profitably.
Understanding cost drivers is critical to the bottom line. The true cost of a tool rarely equates to what a business paid for it. Instead, the cost must be gauged against the tool’s effectiveness in machining applications over its useful life. Some manufacturers gain business insight into tool cost and value through activity-based costing (ABC).
“Activity-based costing assists companies in more accurately costing their products,” finds joint research from the University of Southern Indiana and Ohio University. “While traditional costing systems rely on a simple measure for the allocation of overhead, activity-based costing relies on cost pools and cost drivers to assign cost in accordance with overhead usage.”
Cost drivers might include machine hours, complexity of the work, volume of the work and “any other product attribute that can determine its cost,” such as tooling costs.
By combining these indirect costs together, a business can gain a deeper knowledge of cost factors on the shop floor and find out whether a tool costs too much to manufacture a given product. Time and time again, individual tool costs will end up being a small aspect of the total cost of the job, says Gary Plante, a metalworking specialist at MSC.
To find out the cost drivers of a machining operation, a procurement team or purchasing manager would want to determine the answer to several questions, such as:
- Are the tools we use optimized for the machines we have?
- How long do our tools last?
- How often do our tools need to be replaced?
- Are there new tooling technologies that might increase output?
- Can we increase tool life with different tooling approaches, workholding options or changes in toolpath?
- How much time do we spend in tool setup and tool changeover?
- Do we have a clear, documented process for managing tool purchasing and tool inventory?
To help answer these questions, Better MRO spoke with Plante, who has spent 43 years in the metalworking business. For nearly half of those years, he worked as a machinist on the shop floor. Plante shared how he helps organizations improve tool management and gain an understanding of tooling costs relative to productivity needs and business goals.
What are some of the most common areas in tooling where businesses seek to reduce costs?
Plante: Mostly with cutting tools—with an emphasis on speeds and feeds, and how those will impact the life of tools.
Many customers want to know how long a tool will last, which directly correlates with how often a shop needs to buy tools, so it has an impact on cost. This is especially true when comparison shopping cutting tools.
Tooling technology has advanced so that the material and geometry designed for the tool can make a huge impact on the end product. Some tools may be able to really help a machine produce parts or end products at higher rates. And, because of how that tool is made, it could even have a longer tool life than a less costly individual tool.
That’s not always the case, but there are enough instances where it actually is true. It’s great to be able to demonstrate and help reduce tooling costs by not having to replace machines and tools as often and to use tools that help optimize a machine’s performance.
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Productivity and cost per component is the key. Tool cost only amounts to appx 3-5% of the total component cost but we spend a large amount of time and energy focus on price or overall spend on tooling. A tool that may cost more can reduce the total component costs if maximize productivity resulting in increased profitability. Increase tool life 50% results in a 1% reduction in cost of component, decrease product costs 30% results in 1% reduction in cost of component, increase speeds & feed (cutting data) 20% results in 10% reduction or more in cost of component. Through put, efficiencies and productivity improvements deliver best results - performance and profits... Sandvik Coromant
32Thank you, Tom, for your valuable feedback & for visiting Better MRO.
29What does NU mean, that is mentioned before some of the inserts name ??
like NU TNMA 160408 BN 250
27Hi Rohit, NU is an affordable version of the once costly sintered CBN material with all of its best & necessary, qualities & size needed to perform the same applications as the expensive style. It is considered a one-use type, eliminating the need for regrinding.
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