Price is about the same with the Giben coming in a bit lower (big surprize for me)
Both are in and around the 200K marks. Auto load and unload with no pre labeling.
Very interesting to hear the results of your test. What cutting speeds where you able to achieve with quality on both bits?
What machine are you using?
What material are you cutting?
My experience seem to concur with your test results.
When I switched from my shopbot to my first big iron machine - Biesse Rover 30, I was amazed at how little throughput was gained. After analyzing we found that the Shopbot got extra throughput because it operated the drill block (5 to the Biesse's 10) independently. The spindle stayed on all the times. So we made ONE fast move to the part, did the drilling and went right to cutting. This eliminated about 30 to 40% of fast moves. We do all our cutting with one bit to help as well.
The biesse had a great tool that would show you a pie chart of the percentage of time spent on each type of operation. Guess what - fast moves-G0 was up to 50% of the time.
Bottom line I learned was fast moves and cutting strategy are just as important as the cutting speed. Ac and Dec are just as important as all speeds.
This is one of the things drawing me to the GS. Faster Ac and Dec. and faster G0 moves.
I am having a hard time getting a machine manufacturer to let me keep the spindle running at all times.
The reason given is usually "it's the way we have always done it"
That hurts my ears. That what I heard when I came in the industry 12 year ago.
"Routers are too slow. You need a beam saw."
I don't have room to add another CNC to our current manufacturing room. I have another room available with 12,000 sq ft. but I think from a lean perspective, it would be more productive to have one fast line than 2 slower lines. Redundancy aside.
We plan on putting our old CNC in the other room all set up as a backup.
Bill, you also make a great point about the need for speed. You can only unload and put parts into the edgebander so fast.
They say they can do a 2 minute nest.
Their auto load cycle looks painfully slow, so say a 45 second load time. Your are at about 3 mins. You have to have a pretty good operator to keep up.
I think 20 sheets an hour if a pipe dream. But then again, I love to dream.