The Takamaz XW-200 is a 10-inch twin-spindle, twin-turret precision CNC lathe known for the rigidity and repeatability that have made it a staple in high-volume disc and flange production. This listing is a complete two-machine automation cell built from a 2016 XW-200 with an integrated raw-stock stocker (Machine 1) and a 2019 XW-200 (Machine 2), linked by Ethernet so parts flow continuously from one lathe to the next. Each machine carries two opposed spindles with 10-inch (254 mm) 3-jaw chucks on A2-8 spindle noses, a 120 mm spindle bore, 2,800 RPM spindles driven by 18.5/15 kW (about 25 HP) motors, and two 8-station turrets - a cell total of four spindles, four chucks, and four 8-station turrets working as many as four parts at once. A center turn-over gripper in each machine flips the part between Chuck 1 and Chuck 2 so opposite faces finish in one cycle, the core advantage of a twin-spindle lathe. Work envelope is a 320 mm (12.6 in) max swing and 220 mm (8.66 in) turning length, with X 170 / Z 220 mm turret travel and about 2 in (52 mm) bar capacity. Both lathes run FANUC 0i-TF controls with Takamaz operator panels, built-in spindle cooling, and 1,000 PSI through-spindle coolant. Automation includes two Takamaz SiGTH200 3-axis servo gantry loaders, the front-end stocker, an air-operated transfer conveyor, and a powered rolling unloader handling disc/flange parts up to roughly 200 mm dia x 120 mm and 8 kg.
Compared with prior-generation Takamaz twin-spindle lathes, the XW-200 delivers up to 1.8 times the cutting capacity, pairing a large 120 mm spindle bore with high-torque low-speed power built for heavy cuts on large-diameter flange work that earlier twin-spindle models struggled to hold. Built-in spindle cooling minimizes thermal growth for tighter dimensional stability over long runs, and the current-generation FANUC 0i-TF control is a clear step up from the older FANUC 0i-TC class on earlier machines, with faster processing, more program memory, and easier shop-floor operation. Set against running two separate single-spindle lathes such as Takamaz's XT-series, this paired XW-200 cell machines both ends of a part and moves it machine-to-machine automatically, turning multiple manual handlings into one continuous flow. The result is a meaningfully better, higher-output turning platform - not simply a newer one - at a used-equipment price.