
FEATUREARTICLE
M&M Tool and Mold: Specialization and Short Leadtimes Yield Success
This small tool shop builds complex molds quickly and efficiently, a talent that won them MoldMaking Technology magazine's Leadtime Leader Award.
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For more information contact Mike Richard or Marty Ciriacks of M&M Tool and Mold, Inc. (Green Bay, WI) at (920) 336-6474 or via e-mail at miker@mmtoolandmold.com or martyc@mmtoolandmold.com.
The company also specializes in more unusual molds like four-slide Dynacast and Techmeyer, which Ciriacks says are self-contained, zinc die casting units able to hold very tight tolerances that usually have multiple side action from several directions. In addition to unique offerings, state-of-the-art equipment and smooth shop flow, specialized positions and key employees are the main ingredients in this moldmaker's formula for success.
Company Creation
"Our competition is a few shops in Wisconsin that are our size and that stay current with technology," Richard notes. "We've responded with high-tech machines and our 99 percent on-time delivery rate. There are only a few shops our size with our extent of automation. We are only the second shop in Wisconsin with a Mitsubishi EDM with silicon powder finishing capabilities." These high-tech machines also include a new wire EDM with an auto-threader for lights-out operation, an Okada graphite machine interfaced with a 114-position 3R robot, a CNC sinker EDM interfaced with the robot, another EDM with a 32-position electrode changer for long runs and two Hurco VMCs with a conversational control for very quick steel prep.
Enthusiastic Employees
To maintain smooth workflow, M&M's designers and programmers work closely together - usually programming on jobs in the very infant stages of a design. "We also are cutting steel before the complete design hits the floor," Richard says. "We try to do everything we can here, so we don't lose time sending things out. The only thing we outsource are mold bases. We use an aggressive mold base manufacturer that can ship it complete in three weeks. Two years ago we addressed the issue of keeping everything in-house for leadtime purposes. We would lose two to three days sending components out for various reasons. "We've basically become self-sufficient in regard to all aspects of building a mold," Richard continues. "We have certain guys doing certain things that a lot of bigger shops do - designing, running EDMs, programming, cutting electrodes and cutting steel. We have been fortunate to have some employees who - while serving an apprenticeship - realize that they like a certain area of moldmaking (like wire EDM or programming) and this becomes their specialty. We have lead man toolmakers that run the jobs through the shop and several key employees that go above and beyond the call of duty. They will stop back at night and check machines or change electrodes. I can't say enough about how great they are and how their efforts help workflow. These guys realize that at times extra effort is needed because that's the way things are now - fast."
Smooth Sailing Future plans, states Ciriacks, include adding more key employees. "We recently hired a design apprentice," he notes. "We'd also like to expand our sales nationally, either by adding satellite offices or expanding our sales force. We currently have a customer in California. Five or 10 years ago, nobody talked about it, but times are changing. We also are exploring a specialized mold that's being made in Europe." Richard adds that the company's current building was built with the back wall able to expand - thus opening up the possibility for a larger facility. This may become a necessity for this up-and-coming moldmaker that already has it all - building complex molds with short leadtimes and hitting delivery times with exceptional customer service.
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