Industry context: hot-season shop conditions create hidden reliability risks in Turkey
In warmer seasons, higher ambient temperature plus enclosed workshops, dust, and mist can increase thermal stress on CNC electrical systems. Many intermittent alarms and servo instability cases are not cutting-parameter issues—they are thermal-management mismatches.
What to check: translate “electrical reliability” into configuration items
VMC-855HL lists Electrical cabinet cooling: Heat Exchanger. For hot conditions, this is a fundamental configuration supporting long-run stability. When comparing machines, specify:
Cabinet cooling method (heat exchanger vs cabinet air conditioner)
Environmental factors (dust/mist) that may favor sealed heat-exchange approaches
Maintainability (filter and exchanger cleaning interval)
System linkage: lubrication and spindle oil cooling support thermal stability
Thermal behavior is systemic:
Thin-oil lubrication affects friction and heat accumulation
Spindle oil cooler supports more stable temperature over long cycles
These fundamentals indirectly support controllable positioning behavior in batch work.
Takeaway: include thermal-management clauses in the technical agreement
For Turkey’s hot-season conditions, define cabinet cooling configuration, maintenance routines, and site requirements in the technical agreement, then evaluate downtime risk against takt planning—this is the most practical engineering-style approach.