OEM Origins
Takamaz XY-100 and the Gantry-Integrated Production Lathe | OEM Origins
What is Takamaz?
Takamaz Machinery Co., Ltd. is a Japanese CNC lathe builder founded in 1960 in Hakusan, Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan, specializing in single-spindle and twin-spindle production turning centers with integrated gantry loader automation. The flagship XY-100 single-spindle turning center and the XW-130 twin-spindle production lathe are the most widely installed models in North America, used primarily in automotive tier suppliers, fastener manufacturers, valve and fitting producers, and contract shops running high-volume turned parts. Takamaz machines run FANUC controls as standard and ship with the gantry loader built into the machine rather than bolted on as an aftermarket accessory. The North American subsidiary, Takamaz USA, is based in Schaumburg, Illinois, and supports parts, service, and dealer operations across the U.S. and Canada. For shops evaluating used Takamaz equipment, the brand combines the engineering quality of Japanese machine tool builders with built-in automation that competing brands sell as a separate fifty thousand to one hundred thousand dollar add-on.
Walk through a Midwest tier-two automotive supply shop and you will see a row of CNC lathes running brake components, valve bodies, or hydraulic fittings on a 24-hour cycle. Most have robotic loaders integrated separately, often added after the lathe was installed, by a third vendor. One or two of them do not. They have a gantry that runs across the top of the machine, picking parts from a tray, loading them into the spindle, and stacking finished pieces in an outfeed. The lathe and the loader are one machine. That is a Takamaz XY-100, or its twin-spindle counterpart, the Takamaz XW-130.
You may have never heard the name. The brand has been in the United States since the 1990s, supports a service network out of Schaumburg, Illinois, and quietly powers production turning cells in automotive suppliers across the Midwest and South. It does not run marketing campaigns. It does not chase brand awareness. It builds production lathes with the automation built in from the start, which is why the shops that use Takamaz keep buying them and the shops that have never seen one keep walking past them on used auction lots. For a U.S. shop owner evaluating used production turning equipment, knowing what Takamaz actually is changes which auction listings deserve a closer look.
Where Takamaz Came From
Takamaz Machinery Co., Ltd. was founded in 1960 by the Takamatsu family in Hakusan, Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan. Hakusan sits on the Sea of Japan coast in a region that has been one of Japan's machine tool manufacturing centers for over a century. The company started as a builder of conventional engine lathes. Through the 1970s and 1980s, Takamaz transitioned to CNC turning and identified a market niche the larger Japanese builders were ignoring: production turning machines with integrated material handling, built as one piece of equipment rather than two.
Where Mazak, Okuma, and Mori Seiki were focused on the broad CNC lathe market and selling to every machinist from the toolroom up, Takamaz narrowed its product line and built around a specific question: how do you make a CNC turning center that runs unattended at production rates, without requiring a separate robotics vendor or system integrator to make the automation work? The answer was the gantry-integrated lathe. The lathe and the loader share a single control. The handshake between the machine cycle and the material handling cycle is engineered, not bolted together. The result is a machine that walks onto a production floor, gets wired up, and starts producing parts without a six-month integration project on the back end.
The Engineering Philosophy
Most CNC lathe builders offer automation as a separate purchase. The buyer picks the lathe, then picks the loader, often from a different vendor, and works with a systems integrator to bring them together into a working cell. This modular approach gives shops flexibility to specify exactly the production cell they want. It also extends the integration timeline and adds engineering coordination that can equal a meaningful percentage of the lathe's purchase price.
Takamaz takes a different approach. The XY series single-spindle turning centers ship with the gantry loader as standard equipment. The XW series twin-spindle machines do the same with tighter integration between the two spindles and the loader. The buyer's decision is which machine, not which loader.
That philosophy shows up in three places. The control architecture handles machine and loader as a single program. The part-flow timing is tuned at the factory rather than at the integrator's shop. The maintenance schedule covers both halves as one piece of equipment. For a U.S. production shop running a single high-volume part program, that integration is the entire reason Takamaz is worth knowing.
A used Takamaz with the gantry loader functioning is a production cell. A used Takamaz with the gantry stripped or non-functional is a CNC lathe with a heavier overhead structure than it needs. The Resell CNC inspection team confirms gantry function as part of every Takamaz appraisal we handle, because the difference between the two valuations is meaningful.
The Product Line in Shop Language
XY Series single-spindle turning centers with gantry. The Takamaz XY-100 is the most common Takamaz on the U.S. used market and the model Resell CNC's auction and retail divisions see most often. Single spindle, FANUC control, gantry loader integrated overhead, designed for medium-volume production turning. The XY-150 extends the same architecture to larger chuck capacity. These are the machines a tier-two supplier installs when they pick up a new part program and need a turning cell running in eight weeks instead of nine months.
XW Series twin-spindle production lathes with gantry. The Takamaz XW-130 is the current flagship. Two spindles, a single gantry, and a control that orchestrates the two cuts and the loader as one program. The use case is parts that need both OD and ID turning, or first-op and second-op work, completed in one cycle without operator intervention. The XW-130 replaces what would otherwise be two single-spindle lathes plus a part-transfer system.
X Series compact production turning. Smaller envelope machines like the X-150 cover smaller-diameter, higher-volume work. Common in fastener production, electrical component manufacturing, and small precision parts where the cycle time per piece is measured in seconds and the operator touch ratio has to be near zero.
Across the product line, FANUC is the standard control. For U.S. shops that have standardized on FANUC for the rest of the floor, this is meaningful. The operators do not have to learn a new control architecture. The CAM post-processors work without modification. The G-code from existing programs ports directly.
The U.S. Service and Parts Footprint
Takamaz USA was established in the early 1990s and is headquartered in Schaumburg, Illinois, in the Chicago suburbs. The Schaumburg office handles parts, service, technical support, and dealer relationships for the U.S. and Canadian markets. Field service technicians cover the major manufacturing corridors in the Midwest, South, and West, with response time and parts availability that compare favorably against other Japanese builders with U.S. subsidiaries.
For a used buyer, the practical question is whether parts and service are available for the specific vintage of the machine being considered. Takamaz maintains support for machines built across multiple decades, and the FANUC controls that ship standard on Takamaz lathes are supported through FANUC's own North American service network independently of Takamaz USA. That dual support path is one of the reasons used Takamaz machines hold up over time on the secondary market, and a recurring point Resell CNC's appraisal team flags during pre-purchase inspections.
Where Takamaz Fits Among Japanese and Korean Production Lathes
Most U.S. shop owners benchmark Japanese production turning centers against the big four: Mazak, Okuma, Mori Seiki, and Doosan (now DN Solutions). Each of these brands has earned its position with U.S. shops over decades. Takamaz sits in the same engineering quality tier with a different go-to-market approach and a different automation philosophy.
| Brand |
HQ |
Standard Control |
Distinctive Strength |
| Takamaz |
Hakusan, Japan |
FANUC |
Factory-integrated gantry loader, shipped as one machine |
| Mazak |
Oguchi, Japan |
Mazatrol or FANUC |
Mazatrol conversational programming and the broadest U.S. service network |
| Okuma |
Niwa, Japan |
OSP |
Proprietary OSP control and a reputation for machine rigidity under heavy cuts |
| Doosan / DN Solutions |
Changwon, S. Korea |
FANUC |
FANUC-standard production turning with a strong dealer network and accessible price point |
Each of these brands has earned its position in the market. Mazak, Okuma, and Doosan offer modular configurations that let buyers select automation partners and capability levels separately, which works well for shops that want to specify a custom production cell. Takamaz takes a different approach: the gantry loader is part of the machine specification, not a separate purchase. For shops where the production cell timeline is the primary constraint and minimal integration overhead is the priority, that single difference is what makes Takamaz worth knowing.
Why Used Takamaz Is Often Undervalued
Here is the part that matters for the bid sheet. Used Takamaz machines routinely trade below comparable used Mazak Quick Turn, Okuma LB, or Doosan Puma turning centers of similar age and capability. The build quality is not the reason. The control architecture is not the reason. FANUC is FANUC. Japanese cast iron is Japanese cast iron.
The reason is brand recognition in the auction room. Resell CNC's auction division sees this pattern repeatedly: a shop owner bidding on a 2015 Mazak Quick Turn with a bolt-on robot pays for the established brand reputation and the integration work the previous owner completed. The same shop bidding on a 2015 Takamaz XW-130 with a fully integrated gantry pays closer to the underlying machine cost, with the factory-integrated automation included as part of the original machine specification. That gap is the arbitrage. If you can identify a clean Takamaz, the OEM service path through Schaumburg is real, the FANUC support is universal, and the entry price is lower than the brand-name equivalent for an equivalent production capability.
What to Check When Buying a Used Takamaz
The standard used CNC lathe diligence applies, with several Takamaz-specific items added that the Resell CNC inspection team flags on every Takamaz appraisal.
The gantry loader. This is the differentiator and the highest-risk component on a used Takamaz. Run a full load cycle. Watch for hesitation in the X and Z gantry travel, listen for noise in the servo drives, check the gripper condition, verify the part-presence sensors fire correctly. A gantry that has been parked because the previous owner switched to manual loading is often parked for a reason.
FANUC control series. Confirm the exact series (Oi-MD, 31i, 32i, 0iF, etc.) and software version. Older series may not support some current CAM-generated programs without translation. The control on a Takamaz is the same FANUC support path the rest of the shop already knows.
Spindle hours and condition. Pull hours through the control, check for bearing noise, inspect the drawbar. A high-spindle-hour Takamaz that has been on the same production part for years can show concentrated wear in specific zones.
Chuck and jaw condition. Production turning machines often run the same chuck and jaw setup for the entire life of the part program. Inspect for jaw wear, chuck body condition, and any modifications the previous owner made to accommodate the specific part geometry.
Way condition. Box ways need lube circulation history. Linear-guide machines need clean rails and tight pretension. Verify which configuration the specific machine has before formulating a maintenance plan.
Takamaz USA support window. Confirm with Schaumburg that the machine's vintage is still within the active service support window. Parts pricing and field service availability shift past the cutoff date.
Who Actually Runs Takamaz Machines in the U.S.
Automotive tier-one and tier-two suppliers producing brake components, valve bodies, fuel system parts, and transmission components. Fastener manufacturers running high-volume bolt, screw, and stud production. Hydraulic and pneumatic fitting producers turning brass, steel, and stainless on continuous cycles. Electrical component manufacturers producing connector bodies and small precision parts at volumes where cycle time per piece is measured in seconds. Contract shops in the Midwest and South that took on a high-volume turning program and needed a complete cell rather than a piece of iron.
The common thread is production volume. Takamaz is not a toolroom brand. It is not a job shop brand running 20-piece prototype lots. It is a brand for shops running the same part program every shift, every day, for years, and treating spindle utilization as the metric that determines whether the business is profitable.
Resell CNC Take
Takamaz is the brand most U.S. shop owners have walked past on the auction floor because the badge is unfamiliar. The shops that know the brand keep buying them because the gantry-integrated architecture costs less to acquire and less to integrate than building a comparable production cell from separately sourced components. Across the Takamaz transactions Resell CNC has handled, the math has held up consistently.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Takamaz XY-100?
The Takamaz XY-100 is a single-spindle CNC production turning center built by Takamaz Machinery Co., Ltd. of Hakusan, Japan, with a gantry loader integrated as standard equipment rather than as an aftermarket accessory. The XY-100 runs FANUC control architecture, supports continuous unattended production cycles, and is used primarily in automotive tier suppliers, fastener manufacturers, valve and fitting producers, and high-volume contract shops. The integrated gantry handles part loading, part transfer, and finished-part stacking from a single program shared with the machine cycle.
What is the difference between the Takamaz XY-100 and XW-130?
The XY-100 is a single-spindle production turning center with an integrated gantry loader. The XW-130 is a twin-spindle production lathe with two spindles and a single gantry that orchestrates part flow between the two cuts. The XW-130 is used for parts that require both first-op and second-op work, or both OD and ID turning, completed in one cycle without operator intervention. The XY-100 is the more accessible price point; the XW-130 is the choice when the cycle time math favors twin-spindle work.
Where is Takamaz headquartered in the U.S.?
Takamaz USA is headquartered in Schaumburg, Illinois, in the Chicago suburbs, and has operated in the U.S. market since the early 1990s. The Schaumburg office supports parts, service, technical support, and dealer relationships across the U.S. and Canada. Field service coverage runs through the major manufacturing corridors in the Midwest, South, and West. FANUC control support is available independently through FANUC's own North American service network.
Why are Takamaz machines often overlooked in the U.S. used market?
Brand recognition. Mazak, Okuma, and Mori Seiki have built strong U.S. brand presence over decades, while Takamaz has focused its U.S. growth on direct relationships with production buyers rather than broad market awareness. The build quality, FANUC control, and integrated gantry automation are equivalent to comparable production lathes from better-known Japanese builders. For shops that recognize the brand, the gap between price and capability is the arbitrage.
What should I check when buying a used Takamaz lathe?
Run a full gantry load cycle and confirm the loader is functioning before anything else, as a non-functional gantry strips the machine's primary value. Verify the FANUC control series and software version. Pull spindle hours and listen for bearing noise. Inspect chuck and jaw condition. Confirm way condition based on whether the machine has box ways or linear guides. Verify with Takamaz USA in Schaumburg that the machine vintage is still within the active service support window for parts and field service.
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The XY-100 and the full Takamaz lineup at Resell CNC.
Browse the current Resell CNC inventory of used Takamaz CNC production turning centers, twin-spindle gantry lathes, and FANUC-controlled automation cells.
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About the Author
Bill Murphy is the Marketing and Content Lead at Resell CNC, where he covers used CNC equipment, auction strategy, and the buying side of the secondary machine tool market. He works directly with the appraisal, auction, and retail teams to translate machine-level detail into content for shop owners, plant managers, and acquisition buyers.
About Resell CNC
Founded in 2008 and headquartered in Maitland, Florida, Resell CNC carries 200+ years of combined industry experience, four AMEA/CEA Certified Equipment Appraisers on staff, MDNA membership since 2009, and is the only used CNC dealer in North America with Official Mazak Trade-In Center status. The company operates across retail, auction, appraisal, and finance divisions from warehouses in Winter Springs and Longwood, Florida.