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Manufacturing

Plymouth manufacturer set for growth after £100k power press investment

Source Engineering buys top-of-the-line kit from Luton's Bruderer º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and now eyes 20% turnover hike

Pablo Gutierrez, technical director at Plymouth's Source Engineering, with the firm's new £100k Bruderer machine

A Plymouth manufacturer has invested £100,000 into a high-speed press line to boost capacity ahead of a raft of new opportunities.

Source Engineering, a specialist in precision pressed parts and machined components, employs 32 people across its two divisions in Plympton.

The firm has tapped into the expertise of industry leading high-speed press maker Bruderer º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to purchase a machine that can do the work of four conventional HME (Hordern, Mason & Edwards) power presses.

The BSTA 200M 20-tonne stamping press was identified as the ideal solution and is now up and running at Source Engineering’s Langage Business Park facility, achieving 300 strokes per minute which represents a 200% increase in production output across a range of products destined for the automotive, electrical wholesale and oil and gas markets.

The BSTA 200M 20-tonne stamping press purchased for £100,000 by Plymouth's Source Engineering

Engineers at the firm have freed up an additional 500sq ft of production space to use for the introduction of new projects and to help them cope with an increase in demand for its range of automation solutions.

Andy Dunkerley, chairman at Source Engineering, said: “Buying a Bruderer is like buying the Swiss watch of machine - you get unrivalled precision, speed and repeatable quality, all wrapped up in a relatively small footprint.

“We already had one in another part of the factory and were fully aware of its capabilities, so when it came to looking at how we optimised the factory floor space by replacing four machines with one high-speed line we called in its technical experts to review the options.”

He added: “They really understood what we were looking to achieve in space utilisation without giving up the versatility and the volumes, which basically meant we needed one machine to do the work of four.”