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Engineering Tool Supply
NS Dev - 13/1/05 at 09:50 AM

I have seen a few comments (and thought the same myself) about getting hold of engineering tools wihout peeing around all over the place.

A very good supplier (we use them at work for out tool supply contract, a very big contract at a stel rolling mill!) is Cromwell Tools, http://www.cromwell.co.uk

these will post stuff, you can collect from nearest branch, are really clued up and do a HUGE catalogue (you know, limitless amounts of stuff right down to a vast array of carbide lathe tooling etc etc) and the catalogue has prices in it (hooray, a first for a major tool supplier there!) and they are generally very good. Not the cheapest, but they don't stock crap, just quality engineering stuff.

[Edited on 13/1/05 by NS Dev]


Hellfire - 13/1/05 at 04:51 PM

quote:
Originally posted by NS Dev
I have seen a few comments (and thought the same myself) about getting hold of engineering tools wihout peeing around all over the place.

A very good supplier (we use them at work for out tool supply contract, a very big contract at a stel rolling mill!) is Cromwell Tools, http://www.cromwell.co.uk

these will post stuff, you can collect from nearest branch, are really clued up and do a HUGE catalogue (you know, limitless amounts of stuff right down to a vast array of carbide lathe tooling etc etc) and the catalogue has prices in it (hooray, a first for a major tool supplier there!) and they are generally very good. Not the cheapest, but they don't stock crap, just quality engineering stuff.

[Edited on 13/1/05 by NS Dev]


What steel rolling mill would that be then?


NS Dev - 13/1/05 at 05:12 PM

Not a Yorkshire one I'm afraid, although we do get the vast majority of or raw billet from Stocksbridge and Rotherham/Thrybergh.

I work for Timken in Desford, formerly TI Tubes or Desford Tubes, now known as "Timken Alloy Steel Europe Ltd".

We are a seamless tube plant (the only full scale one left in the UK) and run a hot piercing mill and 11 cold reducing machines, producing seamless mechanical tubing. (about 1500 tonnes a week, so rather small in the steel rolling world!)


greggors84 - 16/1/05 at 06:15 PM

I was reccommended these by a mate who used to work for an engineering firm. Got a few things from them and they are always very helpful even if i am only buying one drill bit!