NEWS --> Dualtech Does
Damage Control
Dualtech Does Damage Control
After a
devastating fire,
Dualtech made castings again
within seven weeks and avoided losing customers
accustomed to four-week lead times.
Shannon Wetzel, Managing
Editor
Published JULY 2009, Modern Casting
Reprinted with permission from
Modern
Casting Magazine
On
Feb. 3, 2008, the wild card New York Giants
upset the New England Patriots to win Super Bowl
XLII and the Vince Lombardi Trophy. The
Patriots' aspirations of finishing both the
regular and post season without a loss went up
in flames with an Eli Manning touchdown pass to Plaxico Burress with 35 seconds left in the
game.
The same day,
Jack Laugle, president and owner of machine shop
Innovative Casting Technologies and metalcaster
Dualtech, Franklin, Ind., watched a fire of his
own—his metalcasting facility burning.
Earlier that
morning, Laugle felt a sense of calm as he
pulled up to the building and saw the fire
department attacking the flames. He wasn't
concerned with the loss of the office, where the
fire was contained, and he was confident that
equipment made to withstand high temperatures
would surely survive the structure fire. But
after the flames were doused, a walk-through of
the building revealed a devastating scene Laugle
was unprepared to see.
|
Dualtech
and Innovative Casting Technologies
Inc. Franklin, Indiana |
|
Metals
Cast: |
Aluminum
319 and 356, gray and ductile iron.
Ni-Resist and high silicon molybdenum. |
|
Casting
Size: |
1-250 lbs |
|
Facility
Size: |
Machine
shop—16,000 sq. ft.; Casting
plant—28,000 sq. ft. |
|
Employees: |
35 |
|
Services: |
Computer
aided design, numerical control
programming, pattern and mold making,
final casting machining, coordinate
measuring machine verification,
prototypes, low volume production |
|
Lead Time: |
3-4 weeks. |
|
"I couldn't
believe it," he said. "We lost 95% of our
equipment." While the building remained
standing, the heat of the fire inside had
damaged nearly everything beyond use. Control
panels were misshapen hunks of metal and
plastic. A tall stack of aluminum molding plates
became a 3-ft. pile of scrap. Laugle saw what he
thought was impossible. His foundry had melted.
Immediately,
Laugle was on the phone with his equipment
suppliers to see how quickly he could get the
casting facility back up and running. Palmer
Manufacturing had a coremaker ready for another
customer but with permission was able to divert
it to Dualtech. The company sent the core
machine, along with a sand system, to the
Indianapolis-area facility that week.
Inductotherm was able to deliver a new furnace
within six weeks. With a temporary solution in
the works, Laugle made it home in time to enjoy
the football game that evening.
Seven weeks
later, Dualtech was back to making its short-run
and prototype castings in a charred building. In
less than a year, the company began pouring
castings in a brand-new $3.7 million facility a
stone's throw from the original building.
"During that
time, we didn't lose a single customer or
employee." Laugle said.
Machine Shop
to the Rescue
After working
several years for a pattern shop in Columbus,
Ind.. Laugle started his own company, Innovative
Casting Technologies (ICT), in 1998 as a machine
shop focusing on prototypes. From the beginning,
Laugle's goal was to supply short-run, complete
machined parts quickly and with style.

Dualtech's new casting operation features an
upgraded sand reclamation system, a
continuous no-bake molding line, two
induction furnaces for iron and two furnaces
for aluminum, and a new core machine and
shakeout system. |
"As a prototype
shop, our parts could be the ones ending up on a
conference table," he said. "They have to look
nice."
The typical
turnaround at ICT for a fully machined part is
three to four weeks, although two to three weeks
is possible in certain cases. Laugle attributes
this to a stable workforce that has not changed
much in 11 years. Nearly all of ICT's 35
associates have been working there for more than
five years.
The machine shop
features five Haas vertical machining centers
and eight Mazak horizontal machining centers.
Along with finish machined parts, the shop
produces cope and drag tooling, coreboxes and
models all in-house.
At first, the
business outsourced its castings, but Laugle
found that he was waiting too long for delivery.
In 2002, he built Dualtech in a neighboring
building to supply castings to ICT. The casting
facility pours iron and aluminum, as well as
some exotic metals, such as Ni-Resist and high
silicon molybdenum. For seven years, the machine
shop and casting facility have worked in tandem
in their niche as a prototyper and rescue
metalcaster. A significant portion of Dualtech's
business is dedicated to filling in gaps of
production when an ICT supplier's shipment is
running late or a shipment delivered from
another source is wrong or defective.

Dualtech
owner Jack Laugle stands on his shop floor
with facility supervisor Brian Claycamp. |
"We are the
interim supplier until someone gets the problem
fixed," Laugle said. "We fill the niche of, 'oh
no, the boat with our shipment is late.'"
To maintain
rescuer status, Dualtech keeps 30% open capacity
at all times, even at its busiest. This allows
the company the flexibility of fitting in an
emergency job. The company also makes extra
castings for each order and stores them in what
Laugle calls the "hero room." If a customer
calls and needs an extra part in a crunch,
Dualtech can ship it immediately.
Rescuer
Becomes the Rescued
After the fire,
Dualtech could not afford a long period of zero
production, with short lead times one of its
main selling points. The company was insured for
loss of income but not loss of customers, and
Laugle was concerned the downtime waiting for
equipment to be delivered and installed would
result in missed deadlines and possible-lost
customers. He contacted a friend who runs
metalcasting facility Ewing Light Metals,
Indianapolis, a half an hour away. The shop ran
one shift during the day and allowed Dualtech to
pour its castings there in the evenings so it
could fulfill its outstanding customer orders.
For seven weeks, half of Dualtech's employees
commuted to Ewing Light Metals, while the other
half stayed behind to facilitate the reopening
of Dualtech.
With the borrowed
equipment, Dualtech continued to fulfill
customer orders, but eventually a permanent
casting line was needed. Before the fire, Laugle
had purchased an empty lot and building he had
planned to use as a warehouse. He decided to
build the new casting facility there, instead.
The fire-damaged building's walls remained
standing, so after some cleaning and
refurbishing, it was transitioned into the
needed warehouse.
In May 2008,
while Dualtech operated its makeshift molding
line, it also began building the new casting
operation. This included an upgraded sand
reclamation system with new high efficiency
transporters and storage silos for both new and
mechanically reclaimed sand, along with a
continuous no-bake molding line, two induction
furnaces for iron, two furnaces for aluminum, a
core machine and shakeout system. Grinding and
finishing operations were moved into the same
building. The new casting facility was ready for
production by December 2008.
Dualtech's new
facility also features a testing lab with a
Brinell tester, spectrometer, micro structure
and tensile tester, as well as a classroom
overlooking the casting operation. The plan is
to hold casting design and metalcasting basics
classes there for current and prospective
customers.
Small Club
The majority of
ICT's sales is to Caterpillar and Cummins, which
together consume 80% of the company's
production. However, the orders come from
different companies within those two businesses
nationwide, which Laugle said makes him feel
like he isn't too reliant on specific customers.
Before 2009, ICT
and Dualtech had grown every year. In 2008, ICT
completed 750 jobs, with an average run per job
of 50 pieces. However, Laugle expects that to
fall for the first time in company history to
500 jobs in 2009.
"We have been
financially strong and knew the recession was
going to hit sooner or later, so we started
saving," Laugle said.
While production
may slow, he said he will not lay off any of his
workers during the downtime. "I don't want to
give up the experience of my staff."
ICT's niche as a
prototype, low volume production shop with an
in-house casting facility has put it in a unique
position of having little competition, according
to Laugle. So it will take more than a fire to
put it out of business.

Extra
castings are produced for each order and stored
in the "hero room." Laugle says you're either "a
hero or a
goat," so when a customer unexpectedly needs
another casting, Dualtech can ship it that day
and be the hero. |