Sandvik Coromant

Sandvik Coromant is a Swedish company that supplies cutting tools and services to the metal cutting industry.

Sandvik Coromant
Private company
ISIN556234-6865
IndustryMetalworking
Founded1942 
FounderWilhelm Hanglund
HeadquartersSandviken, Sweden
Key people
Nadine Crauwels, CEO
ProductsMetal cutting tools for turning, milling, drilling, boring, tool holding systems, digital machining.
Number of employees
7900 (2019)
ParentSandvik AB
Websitewww.sandvik.coromant.com/en/gimo

Sandvik Coromant is headquartered in Sandviken, Sweden and is represented in more than 150 countries with some 7900 employees worldwide.[1] It is part of the business area Sandvik Machining Solutions within the global industrial group Sandvik.[2]

Metalworking focus

Sandvik Coromant produces an extensive range of metal cutting tools for a large number of applications.[3]

  • Turning, including general turning, heavy turning, small part machining, parting and grooving, hard part turning and threading
  • Milling, including face milling, shoulder milling, profile milling, turn milling, high feed milling, chamfering, slot milling and thread milling
  • Drilling, including general drilling, step and chamfer drilling, composite drilling and tapping
  • Boring, including rough boring, fine boring and reaming
  • Tool holding, including tools for turning centres and lathe tools, machining centres, multi-task machines and sliding head machines
  • Digital machining, including advanced software and tools that support digital manufacturing, from design and planning to machining and machining analysis

History in brief

Sandvik Coromant museum in Gimo

1942: The company begins as a small production unit for cemented carbide tools in Sandviken, Sweden when Wilhelm Haglund is assigned the job as manager of the unit.[4] However, new innovations and manufacturing methods lead to the establishment of a more industrialized unit in Gimo, Sweden, in 1951.

1957: Scrapers become the first product with mechanically clamped “indexable inserts” or “throw-away inserts”, as they were called at the time. The birth of the T-Max holder and use of indexable inserts is the start of a big change in the practice and productivity in machining.[5]

1969: Heat-resistant Gamma Coating, or GC, is introduced as a grade, revolutionizing turning, milling and drilling with previously unmatched metal cutting performance.[6]

1972: The Multi-Service marketing campaign sees the light of day, and the yellow coat becomes an important symbol. Tool-pool, machine-adapted tool recommendations and mini-catalogues are made available.[7]

1990: Coromant Capto, a single holding system for both rotating and stationary spindles, is introduced. This ground-breaking invention provided a new and efficient means of combining and organizing tooling, while reducing tool-changing time in machinery. Today Coromant Capto (Latin for “I am gripping”) is an established system and an ISO standard around the world.[8]

1997: Sandvik Coromant offers to repurchase used cemented carbide inserts for recycling, underlining the company's commitment to environmental responsibility.[9]

2008: Sandvik Coromant acquires Norwegian anti-vibration tool developer Teeness. The unique Silent Tools damping adaptors allow for increased cutting parameters and a more secure, vibration-free process.[10]

2013: Sandvik Coromant researchers discover that it is possible to control coating crystals at an atomic level to create uniform, tightly-packed, thermal-protected coating for new levels of hardness: Inveio coating technology is introduced.[11]

2016: CoroPlus makes its first appearance, enabling connected solutions for increased security and efficiency in the design, planning, monitoring of machining performance and the optimization of machining processes.[12]

2017: PrimeTurning is introduced, a new methodology enabling turning in all directions.[13]

2019: The production unit in Gimo, Sweden, is officially announced as a "lighthouse" by World Economic Forum as an role model in industry 4.0.[14]

Standards and certifications

Sandvik Coromant has received certification for international standards such as the ISO 26623 standard for tool holding systems, the ISO 13399 standard for simplifying the exchange of data for cutting tools between different systems such as CAD, CAM, CAE and PDM/EDM, as well as the ISO inserts, around which an industry-leading recycling program[15] was created.

Research and development

The white villa, a part of Sandvik Coromant in Gimo

Sandvik Coromant invests extensively in R&D with more than 500 people working at fully equipped research and development centres around the globe. In total, some 60 research and testing facilities work in close cooperation with machine tool manufacturers, machining tool agents and customers across a wide range of industries to drive cutting tool development forward.[16]

Training and education

Training

More than 20 Sandvik Coromant centers worldwide offer customers, distributors, employees and students theory-based training courses, seminars and live demonstrations. Among its e-learning courses Sandvik Coromant offers Metalcutting Technology Training; some 35000 users are registered for the programme.[17]

Education

Willhelm Haglunds Gymnasium that is 90% owned by Sandvik Coromant

Part of the organization's mission is the continued advancement of industry knowledge and education, Sandvik Coromant is thus involved with several educational facilities and organizations across the globe.

  • Sandvik AB founded the technical upper secondary school Gӧranssonska Skolan in Sandviken, Sweden in 2002[18] to provide students with the technical competences needed to bridge the skills gap the manufacturing industry is facing.
  • Wilhelm Haglund's Gymnasium is a joint project between Sandvik AB and Östhammar Municipality, founded in 2007.[19] It is a technical upper secondary school in Gimo, Sweden, which provides students with three years of technical education in preparation for workforce entry.
  • In 2008, the Sandvik Coromant Centre for Machinist Technology opened at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology. This facility increased the school's capacity for training machinist apprentices.
  • Sandvik Coromant is also engaged in various R&D projects at the Chalmers University of Technology Materials and Manufacturing Technology and Applied Mechanics.[20]

Partnerships

Sandvik Coromant is a member of the Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (AMRC) in the UK, working with the centre's partners: Boeing, Rolls-Royce and the University of Sheffield.[21] The AMRC shares research and support in areas of assembly, composite materials, structural testing and advanced machining for the aerospace industry.

Sandvik Coromant has also partnered with the Commonwealth Center for Advanced Manufacturing as one of its originating industry members,[22] as well as the Connecticut Center for Advanced Technology in the United States[23] and the Manufacturing Technology Centre in the UK.[24]

gollark: Then, whenever you even think of milk, write a JS program or something to begin associating negative feelings with it.
gollark: If you have milk, sell it on eBay or something to get rid of it.
gollark: Of course, the longer-term plan is to infiltrate Intel HQ and make processors execute MIR instead of unsafe machine code.
gollark: Rust's async things, for instance, *may* implode if you run a blocking task in a normal async thing instead of using the dedicated threadpool for it.
gollark: In the case where it's a language runtime doing it it is quite possibly just doing cooperative multitasking internally, yes.

References

  1. "Company facts". Sandvik Coromant.
  2. "Sandvik's business areas". Sandvik Group.
  3. "Metal cutting tools". Sandvik Coromant.
  4. "Our moments". Sandvik Coromant.
  5. "Our innovations". Sandvik Coromant.
  6. "About Sandvik Coromant". Sandvik Coromant.
  7. "Timeline". Sandvik Coromant.
  8. "Our innovations". Sandvik Coromant.
  9. "Timeline". Sandvik Coromant.
  10. "About Sandvik Coromant". Sandvik Coromant.
  11. "Our innovations". Sandvik Coromant.
  12. "About Sandvik Coromant". Sandvik Coromant.
  13. "Our innovations". Sandvik Coromant.
  14. "From Steel to Smartphones, Meet the Forum's New Factories of the Future". World Economic Forum.
  15. Raz, Schlosser, Gal, Michel (9 January 2012). "Case in Point: How a business can make recycling profitable, as well as noble". The Washington Post. Retrieved 7 August 2013.
  16. "Research and development". Sandvik Coromant.
  17. "Company facts". Sandvik Coromant.
  18. "About us". Göranssonska skolan.
  19. "Wilhelm Haglunds Gymnasium". Wilhelm Haglunds Gymnasium.
  20. "Industrial partners". Chalmers University of Technology.
  21. "Tier 1 Members". Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre.
  22. "Industry members". Commonwealth Center for Advanced Manufacturing.
  23. "Sandvik Coromant Partners with Connecticut Center for Advanced Technology". Mold Making Technology.
  24. "Our Members". Manufacturing Technology Centre.
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