Westec Cruising 2010

Went to Westec Tuesday. It was held in the South Hall just like the

2009 Westec. There may have been a few more booths than last year but nothing like in it's heyday years where it filled two large halls plus half the downstairs of another hall.

I don't have any statistics to back this up, but it's my "impression" that there was a much larger turnout of attendees this year compared to last year. I arrived their early, but by the time I'd covered half the exhibits (about an hour), you couldn't walk 10 feet in a straight line without having to wait for someone to move, make a detour, or have to back up to let someone pass, whereas last year you could just breeze through the aisles. Also it "seemed" like there were a lot of older people (shop owners perhaps?), and quite a few younger guys (out of work machinists?), the mid-range age group didn't seem to be as well represented. But then again, I could have been imagining things.

Perhaps I missed something, but there didn't appear to be any displays of new cutting edge Earthshaking technology. Haas was there with some machines but booths from a number of other large machine tool builders seemed conspicuously absent.

There was a laser Faro arm being demoed that I thought was cool. I only caught part of the demo, but it looked like they were reverse engineering a solid part and it was being reproduced on a monitor. But Faro arms have been around for ages.

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There was a small company that was displaying some jaws for Kurt type vises that they called the "E-Z Sine Angle Jaw Set", which had a movable bar that you could set at virtually any angle you wanted (it had engraved degree marks on the jaw itself). Also, you could remove the angle bar and screw on some other bars at any height that acted like parallels. They don't appear to have a web-site but the jaws came in a little case for about $299.

Another company (Lang Technovation) had a cute little centering vise (both jaws moving toward the center), with serrated jaws called the Makro=95Grip=AE, supposedly for 5 axis work.

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Kurt was showing a couple of small chucks that bolt to tombstones (or any fixture plate for that matter). One, a two jaw chuck, the other a three jaw chuck. They had a combination course pitch/fine pitch scroll where you could move the jaws fast then it would switch to the fine pitch for greater holding power. The salesman said they were new

- that must be the case since I can't find them on Kurt's workholding site.

All in all I'd say it was a pretty good show (given it's size).

-- BottleBob

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Reply to
bottlbob
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Any spoor of jb? Greasy spot on the floor?

Reply to
Cliff

Eerily quiet in the hall, only people making noise were HAAS, there didnt seem to be as much excitement as in years past. I liked the vise, could see it in use on a 4th axis as a "sideways" vise, eg: clamping in "Y" direction, Iv'e had many an occaision to use one like that!! I did see some empty pizza boxes around the cad-cam area, wasnt sure if it was JB's doing, or someone just having fun with an old story. lol

"D"

Reply to
"D"

It's been over a month since he has gnawed through the restraints and drooled on a keyboard. Tell us about the vise! Is it a Haas, or someone else? I've always wanted a vise to hold parts "sideways" . Ferinstance, a long thing part with slits in it, a vise to clamp down on it from the top, and run a slitting saw through the part. Something like that?

Reply to
Cross-Slide

its the vise Bottle referred to in his post

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Reply to
"D"

--Kinda glad I gave it a miss this yr; first time in decades. Last yr was so lame two of us walked the whole shebang in less than 2 hrs..

Reply to
steamer

steamer wrote in news:4babc627$0$1664$ snipped-for-privacy@news.sonic.net:

Odd. I went to Eastec last year, and spent 4 hours going though it. Pretty much the same level of activity & vendors as the previous year. I would have expected Westec to be even larger. I can't compare the size of the buidings, but they had at least 3 filled last year, and two of them are pretty large.

Doug White

Reply to
Doug White

walked slowly through the whole thing in 3 hours, stopping to chat with several vendors - much less excitement than 3 or 4 years ago, but more than last year. nobody was downstairs, Henry Hip was there as were a few other vendors of stuff from china that were absent last year, Enco was there with a tiny booth and a 15% discount coupon (and a free tape measure), MSC was there, etc. There seemed to be a lot more waterjet companies than before, and more laser companies. Mitutoyo was there with a big exhibit, SPI had downsized to a small booth, Starrett was absent, Aloris had a double booth - worth the $12 parking, I guess, but not worth paid admission if you forgot to preregister

Reply to
Bill Noble

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