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turret press
A turret punch or turret press is a type of punch press used for metal forming by punching.
Punching, and press work in general, is a process well suited to mass production. However the initial tooling costs, of both the machine and the job-specific press tool, are high. This limits punch work from being used for much small-volume and prototype work. A turret punch is one way of addressing this cost. The tooling of a turret punch uses a large number of standard punch tools: holes of varying sizes, straight edges, commonly-used notches or mounting holes. By using a large number of strokes, with several different tools in turn, a turret press may make a wide variety of parts without having to first make a specialised press tool for that task. This saves both time and money, enabling rapid prototyping or for low volume production without tooling delays.
A typical CNC turret punch has a choice of up to 60 tools in a "turret" that can be rotated to bring any tool to the punching position. A simple shape (e.g., a square, circle, or hexagon) is cut directly from the sheet. A complex shape can be cut out by making many square or rounded cuts around the perimeter. As a press tool requires a matching punch and die set, there are two corresponding turrets, above and below the bed, for punch and die. These two turrets must rotate in precise synchronisation and with their alignment carefully maintained. Several punches of identical shape may be used in the turret, each one turned to a different angle, as there is usually no feature to rotate the sheet workpiece relative to the tool.
A punch is less flexible than a laser for cutting compound shapes, but faster for repetitive shapes (for example, the grille of an air-conditioning unit). Some units combine both laser and punch features in one machine.
Most turret punches are CNC-controlled, with automatic positioning of the metal sheet beneath the tool and programmed selection of particular tools. A CAM process first converts the CAD design for the finished item into the number of individual punch operations needed, depending on the tools available in the turret.
The precise load-out of tools may change according to a particular job's needs. The CAD stage is also optimised for turret punching: an operation such as rounding a corner may be much quicker with a single chamfered cut than a fully rounded corner requiring several strokes. Changing an unimportant dimension such as the width of a ventilation slot may match an available tool, requiring a single cut, rather than cutting each side separately. CAD support may also manage the selection of tools to be loaded into the turret before starting work.
As each tool in a turret press is relatively small, the press requires little power compared to a press manufacturing similar parts with a single press stroke. This allows the tool to be lighter and sometimes cheaper, although this is offset by the increased complexity of the turret and sheet positioning. Turret punches can operate faster per stroke than a heavier tool press, although of course many strokes are required. A turret punch can achieve 600 strokes per minute.
The most sophisticated recent machines may also add facilities for forming and bending, as well as punch cutting. Although unlikely to replace a press brake for box making, the ability to form even small lugs may turn a two machine process into a one machine process, reducing materials handling time.
Update: I dropped the price to $300 and started looking to see what reloading supplies I have that can be included: I have added a pound of IMR 4064 smokeless powder, 1,000 more Large Pistol primers, a second pound of Winchester 231 smokeless powder, 500 .45 230 gr RN Berry's bullets, and 250...
I have a used T-7. It is missing the indexing handle and priming system. Works wonderfully. Just don't have a need for a multi-station press. I already have two single stations and a progressive. $250 ftf. Sorry no shipping.
1. Redding T-7 Turret press... tried and true
Asking $330 $295
2. Press stand... only for sale with purchase of a press. Drilled for both the Forster and the Redding.
Asking $55
All and for pickup in the Tacoma area
New in box. Never used. All the reloading powders, primers, dies, bullets that I've accumulated. Also, a bucket of once fired brass. (5.56, 9mm, 308). All new exceptfor brass cases. Contact me for more details. Not looking to separate at this time.
$500. Not looking for any trades. Possible...
I inherited some parts and pieces. Lee 3 hole turret with rust, corrosion and missing parts. And powder dispenser, Lee (cartridge) maybe, missing parts. Please reach out if you’re interested and I can get specific angles on pictures. $10 or trades, 22lr, or primers, bullets. Holsters for 4-5” 22...
I have a Lee classic turret press with a Lee disk powder measure with 4 total disks. It is a 4 hole toolheads. It comes with all large/small primer accessories (primer seater and feeder) as well as 5 total toolheads. It additionally has the tube for catching spent primers. I also have 4 backup...