For 40 years, Valley Chrome Plating, Inc. (Clovis, CA), has provided the trucking industry with chrome-plated bumpers, both reconditioned and new. In 1990, when business changed, Valley Chrome discontinued the reconditioning business to concentrate on manufacturing customized chrome-plated truck bumpers. Currently, business is booming. In the metal-finishing industry, applications often provide a fertile ground for procedure enhancements. Several years ago, a product demonstration led to a change that dramatically affected production at Valley Chrome. In polishing chrome bumpers, we had been employing six polishing machines to obtain the desired production quality and quantityuntil engineers found marked improvement in production time could be achieved without sacrificing quality by employing a new type of coated abrasive that could be used with our semi-automatic polishing machine that run with a PLC. The new abrasive employs a particular composition that allows one polishing machine at Valley Chrome to do the work of several. Using a specialized granulate consisting of many abrasive grains bonded together, the grinding points literally regenerate new grinding points continually as the belt wears.
Polishing metals to a high-gloss finish prior to chromium plating is a time-consuming procedure typically involving several stages of abrasive grain reduction. Today, as with any time, one of the keys to maintaining a competitive standing in the marketplace is to run an efficient process that maximizes both quality and output.
The net effect of switching to the new abrasive is riddled with positives. After switching to the new abrasive, Valley Chrome realized a 65 % savings in production cost. Efficiency was gained not only by the elimination of unnecessary processes, but also through a longer-lasting product that required less machine downtime for replacement. This allowed the company to achieve a significant increase in production. A side benefit was additional floor space obtained by removing unnecessary machines from the production process.
Serving the Finishing Industries. Since 1936. |