Frazier & Frazier Adapts to Changing Metalcast Market


Texas foundry buys new equipment, including Hunter XL matchplate molding machine, to respond to customer needs with fast pattern changes, shorter runs and on-the-fly flexibility in job scheduling, deliveries

Schaumburg, Illinois (USA)-In the heart of Limestone County sits Coolidge, Texas, halfway between Dallas and Houston. This classic American small town is home to another classic, Frazier & Frazier Industries, a ductile and gray iron foundry, established in 1972 by C.W. Frazier as a traditional cope-and-drag sandcasting operation with two squeezers and run today as a formidable shop by Plant Manager Will Frazier. An ISO 9002 Certified process operation, F&F combines the best of the old ways with the newest casting technologies and equipment in the market. As Will Frazier points out, "This is one of the biggest reasons we've continued to prosper, while so many other foundries have disappeared. We recognize what works and what doesn't, to best suit our current business and market conditions."

Once a heavy production shop, F&F today continues to support their large batch customers, but has reshaped the business model in many ways, according to Frazier. "We have traditionally worked in pieces from a few ounces up to 150 pounds or more. The large runs were more typical in days past, while we saw a new business environment emerging, several years ago, when the market began to decline overall." He continued to explain how many of the company's traditional customers began to reduce their inventories and thus placed shorter run orders with much tighter lead times. In something of a "perfect storm" scenario, this combination of increased job numbers and more urgent shipping requirements literally changed the pace of business at F&F. Frazier notes, "It's not unusual for us to come in on a Sunday to finish a job for a customer who really needs it...and we rarely charge a premium, because we know how tough things are, for most of our accounts."

While the oil & gas market applications are prominent here, as they are with most foundries in the region, F&F currently sells to end product manufacturers for the automotive, agricultural, wind energy, municipal water works and other market segments, a strategy that has helped to maintain a better balance in this shop's workload. With its own sales force plus several manufacturers' rep organizations in the field, Frazier & Frazier boasts customers in a wide variety of markets and as far away as Indiana, a relatively rare achievement in the foundry business, especially when larger, heavier workpieces are involved.

With over 8000 patterns in-house, F&F today experiences as many as 15 pattern changes per day per machine on the floor. This further complicated the job scheduling and work flow. Will Frazier and his team of Bob Pranger, general manager and Harlon Easton, vice president of sales, quickly saw the need for more automation in the machinery lineup.

F&F still does hand-rammed oil and air set cores, but over the years they've acquired automatic coresetting equipment, as well as automated molding machines, including the most recent purchase, a Hunter XL2024 automatic matchplate molding machine, which is used with the already in-place Hunter mold handling turntable system at F&F, as are other molding machines here. Three melting units feed the certified chemically correct iron to the molding stations. Currently, this shop does approximately 70% of its work in ASTM Class 60-100 ductile and 30% in Class 15-50 gray iron.

The XL2024 is a fully automated matchplate molding system, using gravity-fill technology pioneered by Hunter. It produces sand molds up to 20" x 24" with shallow 6-1/2" cope and 5-1/2" drag (165mm/140mm) at 180 cycles per hour, using 400 lbs. (181kg) of sand. Variable squeeze surface pressures to 142 psi (10kg/cm2) can be achieved in production.

This latest Hunter machine continued the tradition of leading-edge sandcasting technology used at Frazier & Frazier. Although several generations of Hunter and other brands of machines have been used here, when a new machine was planned, Will Frazier notes there were some key criteria to be met. "We'd been having critical problems with another machine builder, getting parts and service. We always knew the Hunter folks were excellent in those areas based on past experience, plus they were willing to provide considerable application engineering assistance and set-up help with the new machine. Coupling that with their stability as a company and great reputation in the world foundry market, we looked at all our options and settled on the XL2024." Frazier further cites his long relationship with Hunter's Mike Hughes as a factor. "Mike came down here several times to help us and, since the machine has been up and running, he's stayed in close touch with us, even though we've had no performance issues with the machine."

Will Frazier also points out that, currently, over 20% of the orders at F&F are rush and the quick changeover time of the Hunter machine makes it a highly productive piece of equipment and a definable competitive advantage in the market for his shop.

Frazier & Frazier provides its customers with metal castings as well as CNC machining, heat treating and galvanizing services, when needed. The shop has a fully equipped quality inspection department, highlighted by CMM and other state-of-the-art lab apparatus.

For further information on this story, interested parties may contact:

FRAZIER & FRAZIER INDUSTRIES, INC.

817 South First Street

P.O. Box 279

Coolidge, Texas 76635

USA

Phone: 254-786-2293

Fax: 254-786-2284

Web: www.ffcastings.com

Email: willfrazier@ffcastings.com

Attention: Will Frazier, Plant Manager

Or

HUNTER AUTOMATED MACHINERY CORPORATION

2222 Hammond Drive

Schaumburg, Illinois 60196-1094 USA

Phone: 847-397-5120

Email: sales@hunterauto.com

Web: www.hunterauto.com

Attention: Bill Hunter or Mike Hughes

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