Trade fair highlight 18. May 2026
Laser Welding in Sync with the Stamping Line
In connector and contact manufacturing, high-speed presses run at more than 800 strokes per minute. Integrating laser processes into this environment leaves no room for approximation. The laser must run in sync with the machine cycle, and the joint must hold.
AUXXOS Laser Technology from Amtzell has been developing exactly that since 2012. The core technology is One Shot Welding: a single laser pulse generates a complete weld contour through a beam-shaping optic, with line lengths up to 15 mm on stainless steel, in around 4 milliseconds. At 600 parts per minute, the laser process takes up approximately four percent of the available cycle time. What remains is headroom for transport, quality control, and further processing. Leading manufacturers of stamping and bending machines already rely on this technology in series production.
What sets AUXXOS apart from component suppliers: customers do not buy a laser off the shelf. They buy a process, developed in the in-house laboratory on their specific parts and validated through to the handover of reproducible parameters. Laser processes cannot simply be transferred from one part to another. Material batch, surface condition, and geometry all play a role. Laboratory development is not an add-on service. It is the starting point of every collaboration.
As part of the ASKEA Group in Amtzell and recognized with multiple awards, including the Baden-Württemberg State Prize for Young Companies, AUXXOS stands for laser integration at an industrial level.
At Stanztec 2026 in Pforzheim, André Le Guin and application engineers from the AUXXOS team will be on site. No dedicated booth, but time for conversations about real challenges. Anyone with questions about laser integration in stamping lines, or with a specific application to discuss, is welcome to approach the team directly.
AUXXOS Laser Technology from Amtzell has been developing exactly that since 2012. The core technology is One Shot Welding: a single laser pulse generates a complete weld contour through a beam-shaping optic, with line lengths up to 15 mm on stainless steel, in around 4 milliseconds. At 600 parts per minute, the laser process takes up approximately four percent of the available cycle time. What remains is headroom for transport, quality control, and further processing. Leading manufacturers of stamping and bending machines already rely on this technology in series production.
What sets AUXXOS apart from component suppliers: customers do not buy a laser off the shelf. They buy a process, developed in the in-house laboratory on their specific parts and validated through to the handover of reproducible parameters. Laser processes cannot simply be transferred from one part to another. Material batch, surface condition, and geometry all play a role. Laboratory development is not an add-on service. It is the starting point of every collaboration.
As part of the ASKEA Group in Amtzell and recognized with multiple awards, including the Baden-Württemberg State Prize for Young Companies, AUXXOS stands for laser integration at an industrial level.
At Stanztec 2026 in Pforzheim, André Le Guin and application engineers from the AUXXOS team will be on site. No dedicated booth, but time for conversations about real challenges. Anyone with questions about laser integration in stamping lines, or with a specific application to discuss, is welcome to approach the team directly.

