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CASE STUDY


LASERWELD™ Kentek’s


WELDING HELMET LaserWELD™


Laser


Protective Helmet contains a window that meets D AB9 at 1070nm, OD 9 @ 1060-1090nm, with options of a welding shade of 3 or 5. Laser eyewear with impact resistance must be worn under the laser welding helmet.


LASER ENCLOSURE BARRIERS / CURTAINS


ACRYLIC WINDOWS! Sizes available up to 1219mm × 2438mm!


FROM ANCHORS TO AUTOMATION WITH EAGLE


Tie Down Engineering is a multi- division manufacturer with its headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, and 11 facilities covering 830,000 square feet. The company produces 7,000+ SKUs across industries ranging from mobile home anchoring to rooftop safety systems, and agricultural equipment.


The company processes a broad range of materials: Mild steel makes up 85% of total volume, with thicknesses varying from 0.060" (1.5 mm) sheet up to 1" plate. Aluminium and stainless steel are smaller but essential segments for safety products and custom components. For plate thicker than one inch, Tie Down relies on plasma or oxy-fuel cutting.


Material handling and throughput are critical for a manufacturer operating around the clock. Tie Down’s automation journey started nearly two decades ago with tower-fed CO₂ lasers and has expanded to large- scale material handling systems. But as production demands grew, even this infrastructure began to strain.


kenteklaserstore.com


“We had a bottleneck on half-inch steel plate,” says Sloan MacKarvich, Chief Business Development Officer, “We needed more power and speed."


34 | LASER USER 118 DECEMBER 2025


"I first saw an Eagle machine at FABTECH,” Sloan recalls. “The shuttle table change was unbelievably fast. With linear motors on every axis and high optical power managed reliably, it felt like a leap forward.”


The company invested in a 20 kW Eagle iNspire fibre laser with a CraneMasterStore and eTower 110 automation system. The machine now runs three shifts, nearly 24/7, cutting primarily ½-inch plate but capable of extreme throughput on thinner materials.


“Installation was straightforward,” Sloan says. “We were fully self- sufficient within six weeks, and Eagle’s support was excellent.”


The Eagle fibre laser effectively replaced the output of two machines, doubling cutting speed and throughput. This shift required Tie Down to rethink downstream processes, from unloading to maintenance cycles, but the impact has been transformative.


The system’s productivity has also opened opportunities to compete directly with stamping, a remarkable shift in a field traditionally dominated by tooling-based production. “With today’s laser speeds and accuracy, and with tooling costs rising, it’s often faster and cheaper to laser-cut parts that would have been stamped,” Sloan notes.


Contact: Camillo Brena camillo.brena@eagle-group.eu eagle-group.eu


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