What characterizes housings?
Housings form the functional basis of many drive and production systems and often combine several machining features in a single component. Typical examples include differential housings, stator housings, industrial gearbox housings and other complex structural components. They are characterized by different internal and external contours, precise fitting surfaces, hole patterns and function-critical interfaces for accommodating additional components. Accordingly, the requirements for dimensional accuracy, positional accuracy and machining quality are particularly high.
Typical machining requirements
The machining of housings requires reliable and cost-effective production, even with complex workpiece structures. Depending on the design, this includes various turning, drilling and milling operations as well as the precise machining of fits, face surfaces and functional bores. PITTLER offers flexible machine concepts for these applications, enabling demanding housing geometries to be machined efficiently and with high process reliability in just a few setups. This supports high component quality while creating reliable conditions for reproducible manufacturing processes.