Taneduke Presser //free\\ -

Taneduke Presser //free\\ -

This obsessive precision comes at a cost. A new Taneduke TDP-9000 starts at $187,000—roughly three times the price of a comparable Cincinnati or Aida press. Lead times are six months minimum. And the company famously refuses to sell to anyone who cannot produce a certified maintenance technician on staff.

Operators call it “the finger.” Because that’s what it feels like: a giant, impossibly sensitive finger testing the workpiece before committing. Walk into any plant that runs a Taneduke, and you’ll notice a peculiar ritual. The morning shift doesn’t just power it on. They perform the “dry kiss”—a cycle with no material, listening to the hiss of the pilot valves and watching the digital manometer settle to zero. A seasoned operator can diagnose a failing seal or a sticky guide rod just from the sound of the release phase. taneduke presser

The result? Parts that stay exactly where they were pressed. To see a Taneduke Presser disassembled is to understand a philosophy. Where other presses use off-the-shelf hydraulics, Taneduke builds its own piston accumulators, each lapped to a tolerance of 0.3 microns. The frame is a single-piece cast iron alloy with a proprietary nickel-chrome additive to dampen vibration. There are no gaskets on the high-pressure lines—only metal-on-metal cone seals, a nightmare for technicians but a dream for longevity. This obsessive precision comes at a cost

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