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STRIEBIG
SAW DELIVERS HEALTHY BENEFITS TO HOSPITAL FURNITURE
MAKER
Dixon
Timber Products, a major supplier and installer
of made-to-measure storage furniture and reception
counters to the National Health Service, is achieving
improved manufacturing efficiency and cost-savings
with its new Striebig Evolution vertical panel
saw.
Benefits
include an improved quality of cut with sustained
accuracy, a cleaner working environment and sharply
reduced saw resharpening costs.
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| The
Striebig Evolution vertical panel saw and
mobile Al-Ko extraction system installed at
Dixon Timber Products. |
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The
Doncaster business was set up 12 years ago by
managing director John Dixon to serve the medical
furniture market. It's now one of the main players
in the highly competitive sector.
Operating out of a 14,000 ft workshop, it manufactures
and installs a wide range of panel-based products
at hospitals and primary care centres throughout
the UK. It has also supplied hospitals in Ireland,
the Middle East and Africa.
Its
wide product range includes specialist catheter
and endoscope cupboards, reception counters and
nurses' work stations, wardrobes and bedside units,
vanity units and toilet cubicles.
With
around 80 per cent of its output going into the
medical sector, the remainder is specified for
schools, universities, hotels, retail outlets,
factories and offices.
The
company is founded upon a wealth of experience,
answering the needs of hospitals, architects and
contractors alike and offering high quality, high
value-in-use products. Demonstrating this, its
quality management system has been certified to
ISO 9001:2000
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| The
Striebig's operator uses the special angle
cutting unit supplied with the Evolution saw.
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Its Striebig Evolution 6224 replaced an elderly
wall saw. It's the largest in the Evolution series
with a maximum cutting area of 5,300 mm x 2,240
mm and a maximum cutting depth of 80mm.
It
represents the cutting edge in vertical panel
saw technology. Features considered expensive
optional extras in other saws are included as
standard, such as a digital measuring system,
accurate to 0.1 mm, and an adjustable precision
display that can be set to an accuracy of 1.0,
0.5 or 0.1 mm, according to the thickness of the
panels being sized.
Numerous
automatic procedures carried out by the press
of a button include locking and releasing the
beam saw, setting the horizontal cutting height,
plunging and swivelling the motor, locking the
support rollers during sawing and fine saw blade
adjustment.
The saw is used throughout the day to cut MFC,
MDF, laminates and solid surfaces up to 20 mm
thick, and up to 38 mm thick chipboard panels
used for worktops.
It was supplied by Striebig's exclusive UK agent,
T.M. Machinery Sales, with an optional scoring
use that delivers perfectly smooth cuts on MFC
and melamine-faced MDF panels.
T.M. also provided an optional angle cutting unit,
which is easily attached to the left or right
of any vertical cutting point. Adjustable to 1/10th
of a degree, it can be locked into place and is
for use with panels up to 42 mm thick, producing
angle cuts which are totally clean and accurate.
It also supplied an Alko Mobil Jet 140 H mobile
dust extraction unit for use in conjunction with
the Evolution's highly effective built-in TRK
extraction system.
After Dixon Timber Products decided to replace
its oldest saw, John Dixon involved workshop supervisor
Colin Crawshaw and operator Ricky Scott in the
selection process and together they looked at
several possible suppliers.
John Dixon said: "T.M. arranged for us to see
a Striebig in use at a Stockton woodworking company
and it was Colin's and Ricky's favourable reaction
that ultimately influenced the decision to purchase.
After all, they are the people who have to use
it on a daily basis.
"We consider the Evolution an extremely high quality
product with all the features we need, and it
is by far the more robust and solid of all the
saws we looked at. It's not the cheapest on the
market, but we are prepared to pay for quality
to obtain the best and most long-lasting production
equipment there is.
"The people at T.M. were extremely helpful. They
suggested the most appropriate model for our specific
needs and provided an excellent service from quotation
stage through to installation and commissioning."
Colin Crawshaw said: "The Evolution is a great
saw that's very easy to use. We particularly like
the digital readout with its fine adjustment facility
and the ease of loading panels due to the metal
roller system.
"It gives terrific quality in terms of accuracy
and smoothness of cut time after time. Before,
we often had to make multiple cuts until we were
satisfied with the results and were considering
replacing our edge bander with one with a pre-milling
facility. We can now put the cut panels straight
on to the edge bander."
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| The
furniture in this hospital maternity suite
is an example of the fine quality work turned
out by Dixon Timber Products. |
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The angle cutter is also proving a huge plus.
T.M's engineers modified the standard unit to
meet Dixon Timbers' requirements so that it can
cut in two directions. Jigs were previously made
up and put on a CNC machining centre for any angle
cutting needed.
"The saw's extraction is superb," said Mr Crawshaw.
"A combination of the dust and chip collection
points within the saw and the Alko mobile extractor
has resulted in a totally clean working area."
Said Mr Dixon: "The Striebig has allowed us to
make substantial efficiency gains, plus considerable
savings on the cost of blade resharpening. It's
very labour saving because having a guaranteed
quality cut every time means we now don't have
to do any repeat cutting, and there's less material
wastage."
Sales
enquiries to Matt Pearce, T.M. Machinery Sales
T: 0116 271 7155. F: 0116 271 5862
E: sales@tmservices.co.uk
W: www.tmpartnership.co.uk
Editorial enquiries to Stephen Barry Publicity.
Tel: 020 8341 6660. email: stephenbarry@clara.co.uk
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