Kerry Klein, Vice President Sales and Marketing, Arrow Gear
The biggest issue is that the economic portion of the business is not very
strong right now. [Arrow Gear is] a mix of aerospace and industrial. Aerospace
is doing OK, and industrial is pretty much down across the board. That’s the
toughest part: just trying to keep your head above water right now.
Arrow Gear is going through a little bit of a transition right now. It’s
been a family-owned company since it was born. It still is a familyowned
company, but there’s new management coming in and they’re
making some changes. We just completely redid our front offices – so
we have a new look, a lot of new personnel in the company and we’re
really trying to bring the company forward with modern manufacturing,
modern manufacturing tools and a new way of thinking. So that
is all new stuff for the company.
We actually just purchased two new Mori Seiki NT machines; we
purchased a new Gleason 600 cutting machine; we purchased some
new inspection equipment. We actually have a lot of new equipment.
We also have some new partnerships with European companies
(Pritzwalk and Samputensili) – either they’re selling our product overseas
or we’re selling their product here in North America. So there actually
was a lot going on for us this year.
Bill Miller, Vice President Sales, Kapp Technologies
Basically, the automotive industry and the aerospace industry continued to
boom. The mining and large commercial gearboxes and energy continued declining.
Our product line is the most diverse in the industry and we produce
gear grinding machines for every aspect of the market, so our reaction
is simply to redeploy our resources as needed to apply to these growth
areas. There haven’t been any major shifts this year – it’s just a continuation
of the same trend.
We have two manufacturing facilities, and we utilize both of those now
for the growth areas. We typically build smaller machines in Coburg
and larger machines in Berlin. But those facilities have a dual purpose
and we switch between the two; they’re managed by the same production
manager and planning people. So we have redundant capabilities.
We’re utilizing both of those facilities right now.
The other aspect of this is the continuing shift towards Mexico. We actually have
more deliveries to Mexico than to the United States and Canada combined. During
this period of recession for the large gear makers, we’ve taken this opportunity to
develop a new basis for productivity and machine types, which is in the 1.2 meter
range. We made an installation at True Gear & Spline in Cambridge, Ontario, and
that was a very big success. We’ve also delivered our latest technology to the aerospace
industry – and I hate to be cliché, but that’s about all I can say about that.
Nicholas Bergmann, General Manager, Exsys Tool
What we’re seeing now is we’re trying to convert a lot of people from older
technology that uses worm gears into hypoid gearsets. They’re trying to make
the equipment that it goes into more efficient – I
think that has been a big buzzword in 2015,
because everyone wants to go smaller and faster.
Those are the other two buzzwords.
Some of the major companies we’ve
dealt with are Mercedes and
Bugatti – we’re mostly automotive
right now. We’re trying to branch
out and we have some robotics
customers. I would say that within
those sectors, those are the big
things right now.
Honestly, our market share (in the
gear industry) is very small right now.
We’re trying to gain market shares and really
feel the market out in all of North America. We
also sell live tooling and rotary gearboxes, and
those things have taken off – but strictly speaking
to gears, we haven’t made significant progress
yet. We really only started six years ago, so compared to some [other companies]
who have been making gears for 100 years and have huge accounts and
are well-established in the industry, a newcomer like us is really trying find
our footing and have some of the big questions on what is new and trendy
answered for us.
Hastings Wyman, CEO, Klingelnberg America
In my opinion, the defining trends
of 2015 for the Gear Industry have
been market based. Here I’m speaking
primarily for what we see in
North America. The potential everyone
hoped for in 2014 for the U.S.
auto industry has been fulfilled and
then some, with all-time or near
all-time SAAR levels. This obviously
benefits anyone in the gear industry
with any auto industry exposure. The
industry switch to high multi-speed
transmissions, with eight, nine, and
10 forward ratios, has meant a lot of
big new programs, very high volumes
and very short cycle times. It is typical
now for automotive planet gears
to be finish ground in less than 10
seconds, floor-to-floor. The auto
industry, of course, places the highest
demands on statistical quality, which
means these super-fast cycle times
are also happening at 1.67 Cpk, fully
automated, three shifts, 24/7. And
those gears need to be inspected on
the shop-floor, in minutes, not in a
gear lab, in hours. There was really
impressive stuff happening in U.S.
auto industry in 2015.
The heavy truck and aerospace
industries are also doing quite well
with very strong volumes, which is
also very good for the gear industry.
The new jet engines coming online
in the next few years are very exciting.
Decoupling the hot section
from the cold section with a gearbox
allows both parts of the turbine
to run in more efficient regimes,
for lower fuel consumption. On the
downside in 2015, the big commodity
boom is over. Everyone knows oil
and gas are down, but so is coal, iron
ore, copper, tin, nickel, you name it.
So the big demand everyone saw for
new big gear installations over the
past 5 to 10 years has really taken
a hit. The repair and maintenance
market for these gears will weather
a bit better, and in some cases
may improve, so there are bright
spots – but overall it definitely hurts
the “big and heavy” end of the gear
industry.
At Klingelnberg America, 2015
has been a big year. At the EMO
show, Klingelnberg showed our
Viper 500 parallel-axis gear grinder
and our new C30 bevel gear cutting
machine. At Gear Expo we unveiled
our new G30 bevel
gear grinder and
P40 gear measuring
machine. The Viper
can form grind both
external and internal
gears with the
day-in and day-out
precision the Höfler
brand is renowned
for, and be configured
for generating
grinding, as well.
But high technology
doesn’t add
value unless you can make it work
on the shop-floor, so Klingelnberg
designed the C30 and G30 with a
new common user interface around
an industrial touch screen. We’ve had
a terrific response from our customers
on this development, because it
answers a need they all face every
day: training new employees, especially
Millennials, many of whom
don’t have experience in machining
or gear manufacturing. Our new
machine interface is as intuitive for
them as using their smartphone.
Outside of selling and delivering
new machines, at Klingelnberg
America we place a big focus on supporting
our North American customers
after the sale, through applications
support, service, and parts and
tooling. We’re doing a lot of machine
refurbishment work in Saline (MI),
taking old lappers, cutting machines
and grinders, doing complete
mechanical overhauls, PPAP and putting
them back into production. We
added a lot of headcount in this area
in 2015, and we will continue to in
2016.
For more information:
Gleason Corporation
Phone: (585) 473-1000
www.gleason.com
Delta Gear
Phone: (734) 525-8000
www.delta-gear.com
Star SU LLC
Phone: (847) 649-1450
www.star-su.com
Arrow Gear Co.
Phone: (630) 969-7640
www.arrowgear.com
Kapp Niles
Phone: (303) 447-1130
www.kapp-usa.com
Exsys Tool USA
Phone: (352) 588-4345
www.exsys-tool.com
Klingelnberg America
Phone: (734) 470-6278
www.klingelnberg.com