I work with one machine shop in Kent, WA that has a dozen Citizen L32 swiss machines in a row, turning out parts all night long. It will automatically stop with no notification for minor faults but stops and pages the on-call for major issues.
Not if they're running lights-out, which is increasingly common in machining. A modern machine tool with all of the features mentioned above is designed to run unattended. It isn't uncommon for bar-feed lathes or mills with pallet pools to be actively running for >160hrs per week. If you're careful about your parameters and run the machine well within its capability, you rarely need to hit the big red button. Modern machines are smart enough to hit the big red button themselves when they really need to, and alert a human to the fact that something has interrupted production.
buildsjets|1 year ago
https://youtu.be/HLSerqr6WTs?si=xslBZNXjpDGTlfy5
diggan|1 year ago
Just for curiosities sake, where are those on-call people located? At location, close to factory, home presumably?
jdietrich|1 year ago
https://www.mscdirect.com/betterMRO/metalworking/definitive-...