Thomas Built Buses Improves Efficiency With New Laser Cutters

Jan 19, 2012 2:03 PM

Thomas Built  Buses’ fabrication process has changed dramatically with the purchase of two  Mitsubishi 4000-watt laser cutters and a 20-foot-tall stacker. 

Since being  added almost a year ago, the new machines have allowed the company to eliminate  five other machines, reorganize work flow and reduce the average time it takes  to fabricate parts by about 25 percent.

The new equipment is one of the  most recent components of the company’s implementation of lean management,  which began in Thomas Built’s Saf-T-Liner C2 bus plant. Assembly lines for Type  A and D buses in Plant One were updated and redesigned for more efficient  production in 2007 and 2008.

At Thomas Built, lean management  is a philosophy of improving quality while driving waste out of the  organization at every level, and empowering all employees as waste eliminators  and problem solvers to achieve optimum efficiency.

For many years, Thomas Built  Buses has fabricated parts for all of its new buses as well as some replacement  parts for buses in the field. With the new laser cutters, the company was able  to bring production of more than 100 additional parts in-house. And, with  lasers that operate nearly 24 hours a day, seven days a week, every week more  parts are being manufactured in-house, reducing costs and speeding up delivery  of parts to the bus manufacturing line.     

“Thomas Built Buses is  vertically integrated,” said Jeff Allen, Thomas Built Buses vice president of  operations. “The majority of parts on our buses are fabricated from steel that  we buy as coils of raw material direct from the mill.” With approximately  11,000 active parts in inventory, Thomas Built purchases about 60 million lbs.  of steel a year.     

“These new lasers provide greater  precision, so we get the optimal number of parts from a sheet, reducing waste,  and we can produce higher quality parts. Because we make most parts in-house,  we can get parts to our customers faster, and maintain better quality control,”  said Allen.     

  Allen  reports that nearly a year after installation, the lasers are on track to pay  for themselves in just two years, and they are contributing significantly to  Thomas Built’s Zero-Waste-to-Landfill commitment.

  “The  best way to be Zero-Waste-to-Landfill is to avoid creating waste in the first  place,” he said. The addition of the lasers has reduced fabrication waste and  saved on material costs and recycling fees.

Related content: Thomas redesigns EF front-engine bus


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