White Paper · YCM TV-188 B × Aerospace
YCM TV-188 B for Aerospace
Large-envelope CNC vertical mill for oversized workpieces, complex pocketing, and multi-face machining. This paper covers what the machine does, the aerospace parts we produce with it, the alloys we run, the tolerances and finishes aerospace buyers expect, and the documentation package.
Executive summary
Machine: YCM TV-188 B (shop nickname: Loco Motive). large-envelope CNC vertical machining center at B&R Productions, running from our New Waverly, Texas shop under an ISO 9001:2015 quality system.
Application: Large-envelope CNC vertical mill for oversized workpieces, complex pocketing, and multi-face machining for Aerospace customers — Aerospace primes, tier-1 and tier-2 suppliers, MRO shops, propulsion component manufacturers, structural assembly integrators, actuator OEMs.
Envelope: 32" W × 70" L × 32" H workpiece envelope. Tolerance: ±0.0005" routine on critical features. Traceability: Material by heat and lot on every job.
The machine, in context
Loco Motive is where the oversized work lives — valve bodies, wellhead spool adapters, large manifold blocks, and any part that busts the 20-inch class of mills. YCM's TV-188 platform is a heavier, more rigid class of vertical machining center; the extra column and table mass matters when you're taking heavy roughing cuts in Inconel or hogging out a wellhead block.
Full specifications
| Model | YCM TV-188 B ("Loco Motive") |
| Type | 3-axis CNC vertical machining center — heavy-duty class |
| Workpiece envelope | 32" W × 70" L × 32" H (B&R working spec) |
| Axis travels | 70.9" X × 33.9" Y × 29.5" Z |
| Table size | 78.7" × 33.9" (2,000 × 860 mm) |
| Max workpiece weight | 4,409 lb (2,000 kg) |
| Spindle taper | BT50 |
| Spindle speed | 6,000 RPM standard (10,000 RPM optional) |
| Spindle power | 25 HP standard (30 HP optional), 30-min rating |
| Automatic tool changer | 24 tools standard (40 optional) |
| Rapid traverse | 591 IPM; cutting feed 197 IPM |
| Control | Fanuc MXP-200i |
| Structure | Patented T-base for rigidity + chip disposal |
| Tolerance capability | ±0.0005" routine on critical features |
| Materials | Stainless, carbon steel, tool steel, Inconel, Hastelloy, aluminum, titanium |
Values marked "platform" reflect the machine manufacturer's published spec range for this platform family; B&R's working spec is what we quote on this specific unit.
Who this serves in Aerospace
Typical buyer: Aerospace primes, tier-1 and tier-2 suppliers, MRO shops, propulsion component manufacturers, structural assembly integrators, actuator OEMs.
What's hard about aerospace work: Certification-driven documentation, exotic superalloys, tight tolerances on structural and engine components, ITAR handling for controlled prints, and customer-specific QMS integration.
Typical Aerospace parts we produce on Loco Motive
- Large structural brackets and airframe fittings
- Manifold blocks and valve housings for hydraulic systems
- Actuator housings and pylon components
- Engine mount hardware requiring extended envelope
- Large tooling and fixtures for aerospace assembly
Above list is representative; if your part isn't shown, call and ask — most oilfield / aerospace / defense / industrial turned or milled work fits somewhere in the shop.
Alloys we run for Aerospace
Standard range: Titanium Grade 5 (Ti-6Al-4V) and Grade 23 (Ti-6Al-4V ELI) · Inconel 718 · Inconel 625 · Waspaloy · A286 · 17-4 PH · 15-5 PH · 13-8 Mo PH · Aluminum 7075/6061 · Custom aerospace alloys on request.
Titanium Grade 5 is the workhorse and it's temperature-sensitive: aggressive chip load with flood coolant keeps the heat in the chip, not the workpiece. Light cuts overheat titanium and cook tools; that's why titanium demands a different intuition than steel. Inconel 718 in aerospace-aged condition is harder and less forgiving than the annealed billet stock — most aerospace 718 work assumes aged. 17-4 PH and 15-5 PH are common for structural and actuator components; both are precipitation-hardening stainless with condition-specific machining plans.
How we machine it — our 5-step process
This is the process B&R runs on every job, aerospace or otherwise. The specifics of feeds, speeds, and tooling shift by alloy and machine; the discipline is universal.
- Material verification. Every job starts with material traceability. Heat and lot numbers documented against the mill test report. For customer-supplied material, we verify against the CofC before touching the stock.
- First-article layout. Stock is measured and laid out before any cutting starts. Concentricity, roundness, and squareness of the starting material established; if the stock is out of tolerance we call the customer before wasting time on a bad blank.
- Roughing with process control for the alloy. Feeds, speeds, and coolant strategy set for the specific alloy family — sharp coated carbide (or PCD for high-volume Ti Grade 5), positive rake, high-pressure through-tool coolant on 2507 and Inconel to control cutting temperature. Interrupted cuts get extra attention because they cycle heat into the workpiece.
- Finish pass to spec. Finish pass with a fresh insert, controlled DOC, and measured surface-finish targets. Critical features (bore concentricity, seat grooves, sealing surfaces) are held tighter than most job-shop lathes can offer.
- CMM verification + documentation. Every critical dimension CMM-verified. First-article report generated. Certificate of conformance issued with delivery. Customer-specific ITPs and PPAP-style packages produced on demand.
Send a print, drop off a sample, or call (936) 291-7827. Same-day for rig-down / AOG when material is stocked.
Tolerance and finish expectations in Aerospace
±0.0005" routine on critical features. Tighter with proper fixture and setup — some aerospace features run ±0.0002" or GD&T-driven cylindricity and position tolerances. CMM verification standard on first articles; process-driven measurement on runs. Surface finish measured, not estimated.
Documentation and quality workflow
Customer-specific quality plans integrated on demand. First-article layout and CMM verification standard. Material traceability by heat and lot. ITAR-controlled prints handled under NDA with customer-specific document control — prints stay in-shop. Certificates of conformance issued with delivery.
Response time and emergency work
AOG (aircraft-on-ground) work prioritized when material is available. Emergency response supported for existing aerospace customers with blanket arrangements or established relationships. Call direct at (936) 291-7827.
How we compare
Compared to a captive aerospace shop: we're faster for one-offs and small runs, more flexible on setup, and we don't require a long approval process. Compared to a lowest-bidder commodity shop: we understand the alloys, we've handled ITAR before, and we treat first-article inspection as a discipline rather than a formality.
Working with B&R Productions
New customer or existing, the process starts the same way: call (936) 291-7827 or send a print through the quote form. Prints are accepted as PDF, STEP, IGES, DWG, or DXF; if you only have a sample part, we reverse-engineer routinely. NDAs on request. ITAR-controlled prints handled under document control with prints staying in-shop.
Quotes typically come back within 24 hours for standard work, same-day for repeat customers on stocked materials, and near-immediately by phone for emergency and rig-down situations. Lead times are quoted honestly — we don't promise Wednesday and deliver next month.
Frequently asked questions
8 questions covering the YCM TV-188 B platform and Aerospace work. Also indexed as FAQ schema for AI answer engines.
What's the max part size on the YCM TV-188B?
B&R's stated working envelope is 32" W × 70" L × 32" H. The YCM TV-188B platform has a 78.7" × 33.9" table, travels of 70.9" X × 33.9" Y × 29.5" Z, and max workpiece weight of 4,409 lb (2,000 kg).
Does the TV-188B have a high-speed spindle option?
Standard spindle is 6,000 RPM with a 10,000 RPM option on some builds. BT50 tooling, 25 HP standard (30 HP optional, 30-min rating).
What alloys can the TV-188B run at production speeds?
Full oilfield + aerospace alloy range including Inconel and Hastelloy. The T-base structural design and heavy castings keep it stable through the heavy roughing cuts these alloys demand.
Do you serve aerospace primes and tier-1/2 suppliers?
Yes. Aerospace primes, tier-1 and tier-2 suppliers, MRO shops, propulsion component manufacturers, and structural assembly integrators. Customer-specific quality plans and AS9100-lineage QMS expectations supported.
Can you handle ITAR-controlled aerospace/defense work?
Yes. ITAR-controlled prints handled under NDA with customer-specific document control. Prints stay in-shop.
What tolerances do you hold on aerospace parts?
±0.0005" routine on critical features. First-article layout and CMM verification standard. Surface-finish targets measured to spec.
What aerospace alloys do you run?
Titanium Grade 5 (Ti-6Al-4V), Grade 23 ELI, Inconel 718 and 625, Waspaloy, A286, 17-4 PH, 15-5 PH, aluminum 7075/6061. Custom aerospace alloys on request.
Can you respond to AOG (aircraft-on-ground) work?
Yes, when material is available. Emergency response supported for existing aerospace customers. Newer customers should call to discuss what's realistic for their specific alloy and part.
YCM TV-188 B overview · All white papers · Aerospace industry page
