Sixty Years of Machines, Part XXX: Linear Saws Go with the Flow Joe Kannapell Downstream and upstream, the linear saw continues to improve the flow of truss manufacturing. Increasingly, cutting and assembly are treated as interdependent processes and have begun to be tied together. Jim Urmson started this, others have followed, and a “cut truss-by-truss”... Read More May 2022 Issue #14274 Page 10
A Retrofit or a New Truss Line – How to Decide Cullen Ellis and Chad Wickham Decisions, decisions – how do you decide between a retrofit for your plant or upgrading to a new truss line? It’s all about the options. Let’s Start with the Retrofit Retrofitting an existing table is not for the faint hearted, so it’s important to know you have... Read More May 2022 Issue #14274 Page 19
Sixty Years of Machines, Part XXIX: Linear Saws: Out of the Box Joe Kannapell A second sales pro reacted to Jim Urmson’s Florida saw blitz, the redoubtable (now deceased) Jere Broedling. Few knew Florida CMs better than Jere, first as Gang Nail’s sales manager, then as Bemax salesman, and finally as a MiTek rep. Like Randy Yost, he relentlessly prodded his... Read More April 2022 Issue #14273 Page 10
Spida’s Personal Approach to Service and Installation Chad Wickham Starting in the maintenance field in the mid-1980s was an eye opener for me, to say the least I was very green. The manager of the truss plant could see I had mechanical aptitude and was driven to learn – but he also saw that I had no practical experience about troubleshooting machinery.... Read More April 2022 Issue #14273 Page 19
Sixty Years of Machines, Part XXVIII: Perfecting the Concept Joe Kannapell After an impressive debut and ten sales on the BCMC Show floor, the fate of the Alpine Linear Saw (ALS) was still up in the air. Few knew that the ALS was the product of a 105-day crash effort (see “One Hundred Five Days in 2002,” by Dave McAdoo in the December 2021 issue), and that... Read More March 2022 Issue #14272 Page 10
Automation is Easy with the Right Support Wendy Boyd From the initial discussion with you about the needs of your factory through to installation, it’s a surprisingly straightforward experience – but it will succeed or fail based on the quality of service and know-how available to you. From purchase through installation to on-going... Read More March 2022 Issue #14272 Page 19
Increasing Efficiency Gains From Plant Optimization Edmond Lim, P.Eng. My January article, Optimize Your Saw with a Lumber PickLine, focused on “Feeding the Beast!” and replacing inefficient, expensive, and labor-intensive “forklift lumber picking” with our improved material handling system. Then, my February article, Threading the Needle... Read More March 2022 Issue #14272 Page 54
Sixty Years of Machines, Part XXVII: Optimization Redefined Joe Kannapell A new truss plant owner faced a daunting challenge: local home builders wouldn’t use trusses and apartment builders were driving tough bargains. The owner’s partner, Charlie Barns, 250 miles north in Dallas, couldn’t have understood since he was cranking out hundreds of trusses... Read More February 2022 Issue #14271 Page 10
Capturing Efficiencies with a Spida Wall Panel Line Cullen Ellis As all prefabricated wall panel manufacturers know, you are always trying to predict the amount of wall panels required for your business daily, what their true cost is, and when they will be delivered to your customer – and you want to do this efficiently and on time. With a Spida wall... Read More February 2022 Issue #14271 Page 19
Threading the Needle with a High Rise Lumber PickLine Edmond Lim, P.Eng. February means different things to different people – Valentine’s Day, the Super Bowl, Family Day (in Canada) – but to me, February is also the anniversary of my most complicated and challenging installation. What’s more, the installation was completed in the middle of... Read More February 2022 Issue #14271 Page 54