MBengineeing, Germany

Deburring with the EdgeBreaker® 6000. A success story MBengineering GmbH & Co. KG, Germany.
MBEngineering

From tricky problems to special solutions

An engineering office became a consulting firm, and the consulting firm became a production company: In 2000, Manfred Butsch founded MBengineering for this purpose. In the meantime, there are 45 employees in Dürbheim who manufacture air and process engineering systems, special machines as well as products for the medical industry and provide technical services.



„Customers expect us to provide complete edge rounding, not just on the outer contours.“

- Manfred Butsch, Founder and Managing Director MBengineering


The medical industry requires perfect parts

The medical industry however, has some special requirements. For example, the surfaces must also be easy to clean and disinfect. For production, this means: no scratches, no unevenness in which dirt and bacteria can settle, nothing but flawless surfaces.

In the case of the screen baskets, this became a problem. An older belt grinder did not provide sufficient edge rounding for the perforated parts. Manual reworking, in turn, is too time-consuming in the long run.

MBEngineering
Deburring rollers round perforated plate
Perforated plates are fed into deburring machine
Higher quality and relieved employees.
MBenineering team with final product
MBengineering team in front of deburring machine


Machine perfectly deburrs even inner contours of perforated parts

In order to sufficiently process the perforated parts, MBengineering opted for the EdgeBreaker® 6000 from ARKU. The machine deburrs via a grinding belt. The edge rounding is accomplished by rotary brushes. This ensures very uniform edge rounding because it means that the brushes always make contact with the part from all directions. The size of the products makes them an ideal fit for the EdgeBreaker® 6000: "The screen baskets are about 500 millimeters long and 300 to 400 millimeters wide. With a 1 millimeter thickness, this results in a part weight of just under 1 kilogram," explains Martin Zepf, project engineer at MBengineering and member of the management board.