look at our name, i was against saws since day one. and this machine has opened my eyes to the capabilities. in 4 months of owning it, we have moved 30% of our manufacturing from cnc to saw
we ran exclusively on nested routers for years and i was reluctant to give beam saws a try as i thought they were old tech. but using a combination of both cnc and saw for manufacturing has been a game changer for our production
@@diamondcnc interesting ... so you still use cnc? are they point to point cnc or do you use a combo of nesting for complex odd shapes parts (ie cabinets)and beam saw for longer straights rectangle parts? I would be very interested to hear how a beam saw reduced your lead-times. On our world, using nesting machines ... compared to rip and cross cut (ie beam or panel saw) give us the ability to create flow. Assembly can receive parts for a kitchen - (ie base cabinets) sooner, and start assembly earlier where as a beam saw make assembly wait until everything is cut. This "waiting" extends the lead time. Would be interested to her your take on this
@@TheJoineryCoach we run small batches. one order at a time. so anything less than 3 sheets goes on the saw, veneer core material goes to the saw, and if we have a lot of mdf doors to make, we push our cabinetry to the saw to open up production on the nested machine. of course all angled and complex parts will have to be made on the cnc, but we rarely have to wait on parts from cutting area for assembly. we cut kitchens at least 7 days before they ship. check out some other videos, youll see our layout and our production flow
Thank you for showing the interface on that saw❤
Beautiful Saw!!!! I especially like the LED Guidance system on the Beam and the moving graphics on the display. Super easy to operate.
look at our name, i was against saws since day one. and this machine has opened my eyes to the capabilities.
in 4 months of owning it, we have moved 30% of our manufacturing from cnc to saw
Hey .. great video. Have you guys looked at changing over to nesting cnc machines for production?
we ran exclusively on nested routers for years and i was reluctant to give beam saws a try as i thought they were old tech. but using a combination of both cnc and saw for manufacturing has been a game changer for our production
@@diamondcnc interesting ... so you still use cnc? are they point to point cnc or do you use a combo of nesting for complex odd shapes parts (ie cabinets)and beam saw for longer straights rectangle parts? I would be very interested to hear how a beam saw reduced your lead-times. On our world, using nesting machines ... compared to rip and cross cut (ie beam or panel saw) give us the ability to create flow. Assembly can receive parts for a kitchen - (ie base cabinets) sooner, and start assembly earlier where as a beam saw make assembly wait until everything is cut. This "waiting" extends the lead time. Would be interested to her your take on this
@@TheJoineryCoach we run small batches. one order at a time. so anything less than 3 sheets goes on the saw, veneer core material goes to the saw, and if we have a lot of mdf doors to make, we push our cabinetry to the saw to open up production on the nested machine. of course all angled and complex parts will have to be made on the cnc, but we rarely have to wait on parts from cutting area for assembly. we cut kitchens at least 7 days before they ship. check out some other videos, youll see our layout and our production flow
Hello sir i need a job 2 year experience sawteq B-200 machine
If you don’t mind, could you tell us how much this beam saw costed?
150k CAD
@@diamondcnc Thank you sir
Bruh, you need a stabilizer for your camera! lol