Connecticut Manufacturing Program Enjoys Statewide Reach

Founded twenty years ago, Asnuntuck Community College’s Advanced Manufacturing Program in Enfield, Connecticut, has become a major source of employees for the state’s many manufacturing companies. With the employer-employee relationship becoming a two-way street for the students, involved manufacturers have been supplying the school with both curriculum basics and shop equipment to ensure a steady flow of skilled people into the workforce.

QUICK FACTS


Product Used:

Educational Suite, Lathe, Mill


Industry:

Education

PROJECT DETAILS


The Advanced Manufacturing program at Asnuntuck Community College in Enfield, Connecticut, has been providing students with the CNC skills required by today’s manufacturing companies for more than two decades. According to veteran educator Frank Gulluni, Director and Founder of the college’s Advanced Manufacturing Technology Center, “Well over 10,000 people have participated in our programs and that includes incumbent workers from companies across the state for training in advanced manufacturing operations.

“In the beginning, most of our students were dislocated workers coming to us for training that would help them find available jobs. Now, more than half are enrolling right out of high school with the aim of finding a good career, while the rest are employed people looking to either advance themselves or meet the increasingly demanding skills required by their employers.”

Asnuntuck Cad Cam Classroom

Today, some 50,000 square feet of space at the college is dedicated to the Advanced Manufacturing Technology Center, housing dozens of CNC machine tools including machining and turning centers with up to 5-axis capabilities, as well as machines for EDM, plasma cutting, water jet cutting, 3D printing, and sheet metal fabrication, along with 60 booths for teaching welding operations. “We also have an electro-mechanical program,” adds Gulluni.

“Students in the CNC machining program can take a few targeted courses required by their current employers,” says Gulluni, “or earn 34 credits toward an associate degree, six of which are in Mastercam-based CNC, along with such subjects as blueprint reading, metrology, quality assurance, math through trigonometry, and upwards of 600 hours of floor time.”

Asnuntuck Advanced Machine lab

From the very onset of the program, as Gulluni was setting up the curriculum, the college brought onboard Bob Bressani to teach CNC operations. While Gulluni had an extensive background in teaching, Bressani’s bio includes management positions in several manufacturing companies. He immediately began establishing a flexible curriculum in CNC operations to meet the needs of the area’s machining companies. Statewide Reach for Local College is a detailed article in Manufacturing News that looks at this relationship.

Instructions on CNC machine at Asnuntuck

“We did a survey of those companies when we first set up our CNC capabilities,” says Bressani. “They told us what types of machines they used, as well as the CNC software they preferred. As a result, we obtained some CNC mills and lathes to start, plus Mastercam software for programming our machines.

“Our facility’s list has certainly grown since the early days. We now have dozens of Bridgeport® CNC machining centers and Hardinge® CNC turning centers on the shop floor; in all, we have more than 90 machine tools available to our students. We have 100 computers networked in our four labs, with 25 seats of Mastercam in each lab. Seven instructors with manufacturing backgrounds are on staff, teaching CNC machining and related subjects to more than 150 current Asnuntuck students.

“Overall, our students progress from not knowing a darn thing, to Cartesian coordinates, to getting a part into Mastercam either by importing it from SOLIDWORKS® or by actually drawing it in Mastercam and producing the toolpath code. I like Mastercam, because it’s easy to learn and use, even for complex 5-axis parts.

“Hundreds of companies in Connecticut are doing subcontract work for some big firms like Pratt & Whitney, and they tell us that they’ll take a drawing generated by a variety of CAD systems and drop it into Mastercam for their machines. I really like the High Speed and Dynamic Milling features because they help our students get through difficult jobs and shorten production time.”

In addition to providing an education for the school’s own students, Asnuntuck Community College also responds to the needs of many of the smaller companies doing subcontracting work for the big firms. They send employees to Asnuntuck Community College to take advantage of the training capabilities of the Advanced Manufacturing program. These companies discuss in detail with Gulluni and his team the skills required for the specific jobs to be performed by their employees. Programs at the school are then tailored to the specific needs and run from as few as 2 to as many as 78 weeks.

“What we do,” says Bressani, “is determine what they’re looking for in the way of manufacturing skills, then put together a package. That becomes the lesson plan. We don’t just take it out of a one-size-fits-all book.”

The school also sends instructors from the Advanced Manufacturing program to many of the larger companies to teach employees right at the plant. In the same manner, discussions are held with the companies’ managers and supervisors, and lesson plans are developed for the on-site instruction sessions.

From one side of Connecticut to the other, the Advanced Manufacturing Program at Asnuntuck Community College is proving its concept and value, every day.

Customer Quote

“Overall, our students progress from not knowing a darn thing, to Cartesian coordinates, to getting a part into Mastercam either by importing it from SOLIDWORKS® or by actually drawing it in Mastercam and producing the toolpath code. I like Mastercam, because it’s easy to learn and use, even for complex 5-axis parts.”

– Bob Bressani, CNC Operations Instructor, Asnuntuck Community College
Reseller Quote

“Students in the CNC machining program can take a few targeted courses required by their current employers or earn 34 credits toward an associate degree, six of which are in Mastercam-based CNC, along with such subjects as blueprint reading, metrology, quality assurance, math through trigonometry, and upwards of 600 hours of floor time.”

—Frank Gulluni, Director, Advanced Manufacturing Technology Center, Asnuntuck Community College

THE CHALLENGE


Provide students with courses that whet their appetites for a career in advanced manufacturing while leading them through a curriculum that gives them the programming and machining skills demanded by prospective employers.

THE SOLUTION


Mastercam

BENEFITS


  • Easy for students to grasp
  • Support provided for teachers as needed
  • Smoothly stepped from simple 2D to advanced 3D programming
  • Applicable to a wide range of CNC machine tools

Are you Shaping the Future of Manufacturing? Share your Mastercam Story Today!

Additional Case Studies

Asnuntuck Machine Demo
Education
Asnuntuck Community College

Learn More
ATC students with Mastercam University certificates
Education
ATC Machining Technologies

Learn More
Bloomsburg High School Macine Shop
Education
Bloomsburg Area High School

Learn More
Bunnell Guitars
Router
Bunnell High School

Learn More
Hammer Blue prints
Education
Butler Tech

Learn More
Kent Teachers
Education
CADET at Kent Theodore Roosevelt High School

Learn More
Education
Calhoun Community College 

Learn More
Cal Poly Mustang Rough Thumbnail
Education
California Polytechnic State University Uses DFM to Improve Engineering Skills

Learn More
Alexa A Leland Elementary
Education
Captain Leland F. Norton Elementary School

Learn More
CVC Students and Professor
Education
Catawba Valley Community College

Learn More
CCSU team photo thumbnail
Education
Central Connecticut State University

Learn More
chippewa Tech Student in mastercam
Education
Chippewa Valley Technical College

Learn More
CreateAskate class with skate boards
Router
CreateAskate®

Learn More
Desert View High School
Education
Desert View High School Advanced Manufacturing Program

Learn More
Hi- Tech Wire EDM
Router
Hi-Tech Machining Company

Learn More
Chest set
Education
Lincoln College of Technology Teaches Students CAD/CAM Programming

Learn More
New Bridge High School student using Mastercam for machining.
Education
New Bridge High School

Learn More
Students from Ogemaw Heights HS Machine Shop Program
Aerospace Defense
Ogemaw Heights High School, NASA

Learn More
Platt Instructors thumbnail
Education
Platt Technical High School

Learn More
Transportation
Purdue University FSAE

Learn More
Randolph Community College Part
Education
Randolph Community College

Learn More
Group Picture of Reed Custer Students
Router
Reed-Custer High School

Learn More
Education
Reed-Custer High School Guitars

Learn More
Engineering student holding plane prototype]
Education
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

Learn More
Rowan Engine Cylinder
Dynamic Motion
Rowan-Cabarrus Community College

Learn More
Teacher Helping Student With Aluminum Part
Educational Suite
San Diego City College

Learn More
South Texas College student
Education
South Texas College Success Story

Learn More
CAMIT Students in Shop
Education
Spartanburg Community College

Learn More
Springfield Tech Community College
Education
Springfield Technical Community College

Learn More
Stark State Machine Shop thumbnail
Education
Stark State College

Learn More
STCC Students and Professors
Mill
STCC Summer Camp

Learn More
Sophomores, juniors, and seniors from the Mechanical Principles class
Education
Stryker High School

Learn More
Canon Capstone
Education
Technology and Manufacturing Association

Learn More
Education
Temescal Canyon High School

Learn More
Texas State Community College Mastercam
Education
Texas State Technical College

Learn More
UCONN FSAE team
Educational Suite
UConn Formula SAE

Learn More
UTI Instructor in CNC Shop
Education
Universal Technical Institute – NASCAR Tech

Learn More
UA students group picture
Education
University of Akron

Learn More
Jimmy Wakeford and Brandon Hensley
Education
Western Piedmont Community College

Learn More
White Bear Instructors
Education
White Bear High School

Learn More