
Dillon Manufacturing Showcases High-Precision Soft Jaws at Eastec 2025!
Dillon Manufacturing, a leading provider of chuck jaws, collets, and custom workholding solutions, is set to…
In early 2020, small Minnesota-based shop M5 expanded its micromachining capabilities by purchasing a five-axis Kern Micro Vario machine tool to grow its micromachining capabilities. Soon after, it bought another.
These purchases pushed M5’s accuracy and tolerance limits and led to M5 becoming a critical vendor for many essential medical equipment businesses. Now, the four-person shop creates everything from micro-fluidics molds for vaccines to brain surgery tool components to micro-molds of pacemaker prototype pieces. “Two of the best investment decisions we’ve ever made,” declares owner Jon Baklund.
The pacemaker parts required eight 0.005″ holes, and sterility requirements meant the parts could not be touched by human hands. Baklund stressed the importance of mechanical automation and machine accuracy in meeting these requirements.
“Not only does it result in cost savings,” Baklund says. “It also gives us the ability to do many more critical processes and achieve finer surface finishes, which brings profitability.”
Meeting this accuracy was especially difficult as thermal expansion can cause machining issues at these micro-levels — but the Kern machine tool bypassed these concerns due to a configuration that pumps cold water throughout the structure to make it more temperature-stable than its outside environment. “This often results in a huge cost savings for manufacturers, who no longer need to acquire giant AC units and more to stabilize their rooms,” Kern president Toni Mangold says.
M5 lead tool maker and designer Alex Madsen notes other process improvements: “I’m regularly using end mills of 0.003″ diameter on hardened steels with these machines, often resulting in surface finishes like mirrors. Also, the fifth axis helps with tool life. Being able to machine five sides of a part at one time eliminates having to fixture second clamping.”
Despite having no prior experience with five-axis machining or the Micro Vario’s Heidenhain 640 TNC control, Madsen was completing jobs within a week and a half from when M5 receiving its first Micro Vario.
“The first thing I noticed about the Heidenhain control was that it uses a more verbal language for tool changes and things like that,” Madsen says. “Even if I am manually typing in some G code, the programming screen provides a description as to what it is and what I should look for. The tool table is nice, and the probing cycles are also easy to follow.”
The controls also feature a remote desktop manager, enabling M5’s employees to work remotely and set up jobs at night. Between this capability and Madsen’s tendency to work on five or six different types of parts every day on two machines running simultaneously, the shop requires accurate simulation work. With features such as optional Dynamic Collision Monitoring, which helps prevent spindle crashes, Madsen says the control delivers: “I basically do a full render of my part on the control, and there have been times where it shows a half-a-thousandth step off that was in the G code. So, on these really tiny parts where I need super-fine surface finishes, I can prove it out on the control and trust what I see.”
Be first to see all the updates from MTDCNC
Our newsletters frequency varies dependant on content
All the latest deals from the industry feature on our newsletters