Precision engineering in the UK has
taken some big hits in the last 30 years, but despite all the battering it has
received from numerous sources, it remains one of the most important industries
the country has to offer.
The last few decades has seen the decimation
and decline of some areas of engineering in this country, such as the
automotive industry, shipbuilding and large scale manufacturing. Huge,
important companies have disappeared from the map, and previously thriving
areas of the country, such as the Midlands and
the North East, have taken immense knocks as one large employer after another
falls by the wayside. The employment holes that these closures have left have
been very difficult for communities to recover from, but as people find other
sources of income, the engineering skills and knowledge that are lost can never
be recovered.
However, precision engineering in the UK is nothing
if not adaptable, and there are still enough companies working in this
important sector to keep the country as one of the major players in the global
engineering market. Indeed, because of the intense pressure that it has been
under, the industry has become much more competitive and streamlined than it
ever was before. Companies have had to become much more resourceful in order to
survive, and any precision engineering company that remains profitable has to
be very lean and mean in everything it does. All aspects of the business must
be as competitive as possible. Manufacturers must carefully consider how to get
the best out of every available resource, including labour, machinery, and
floor-space. Versatility and adaptability become much more important, and where
in the past one engineer might expect to work on the same machine every day for
many years doing the same job, nowadays he would have to be proficient in a
number of disciplines. Training and re-training throughout the working life has
become the norm, and with the price of land becoming so high, engineering
workshops have to carefully limit the amount of floor-space they use. Prices
have to be trimmed as close to the bone as possible, lead times become shorter
and shorter, and consequently quality has improved greatly. With all of this
constant monitoring of performance data, the whole industry has become much
more focused than in previous decades.
This can only be a good thing for the
customer, because they know that the service that they will be getting is
top-notch. One such company that has gone from strength to strength during
these times is Machined Precision Components Ltd, a precision engineering
company in Watton, Norfolk.
Director Nick Overton states:- “We know from
our customers that quality is most important, but in such a competitive market
place all jobs have to be keenly priced or customers will go elsewhere. We have
to make sure that we work as efficiently as possible, and this means our
productivity has benefited greatly. The best way to cut waste is to make sure
you get it right first time and every time.”
This continued
vibrancy is vitally important to the UK economy, because precision
engineering not only generates a huge amount of income and employment on its
own, but it also has many other sectors of business that feed off of it, and in
some cases rely upon it. These include accountancy, haulage, power supply, tool
suppliers, and office supplies.
UK precision engineering is still a force to be
reckoned with!
Lee Hunton is a qualified engineer with 25 years
experience in the industry. He has worked in Precision Engineering in the UK and Europe. Machined
Precision Components Ltd website can be found at - http://www.mpcltd.net