Machinist Publishes Book About 5-Axis CNC Technology
Michael Cope of Hurco explains in his book how the adoption of 5-sided machining processes is the most efficient way for job shops to instantly increase productivity and profitability.
Posted: October 23, 2017
A new book, The Power of FIVE: The Definitive Guide to 5-Axis Machining, has officially been released by author Michael Cope, a machinist who works at Hurco Companies, Inc. (Indianapolis, IN) as a product technical specialist. Cope said he wrote the book because the adoption of 5-sided machining processes is the most efficient way for job shops to instantly increase productivity and profitability. While there are other books about 5-axis CNC technologies, he saw a need to write a book specifically for machinists: “I’ve always seen myself as a machinist first, and I wrote this book with the intention of educating machinists and shop owners on the value of 5-axis machining because I truly believe it is the future of our industry and the most efficient way to produce parts.”
Cope explains how making the transition to 5-sided machining on a 5-axis CNC machine solves many of the problems that so many shops face: finding qualified machinists (the skills gap), excessive setup costs due to inefficiency, and reacting to pressure from customers, both pricing pressure and delivery pressure. “To be blunt, 5-axis saves time and money. Since time is money in our industry, 5-axis makes each part more profitable,” he says. “It offsets the skills gap issue because you can do more with fewer machines – which means you won’t need to find as many skilled employees. The technology makes the process more efficient, which means shops increase productivity because they don’t waste time flipping parts. Making the transition to 5-sided machining on a 5-axis CNC also helps job shops respond effectively to pressure from customers because they can switch from one job to another quickly and efficiently. Basically, you can do more with less if you select the right 5-axis CNC machine.”
The idea for the book was realized as Cope was preparing for a conference where he was asked to speak on behalf of Hurco about 5-axis CNC machines and control technologies. “We identified 5-axis as a critical initiative in 2006 because we realized it would help our customers be more profitable,” noted Maggie Smith, the marketing manager at Hurco. “We focused our attention on building rigid and reliable CNC machines equipped with a most flexible control that supports both NC and conversational programming, and developing software features that are intuitive and easy to learn. Our software engineers made sure the conversational programming of the 5-axis control makes the transition to 5-sided machining easy. So easy, in fact, that no CAM system is required.”