Smart-Factory Solutions Will Minimize Non-Value-Added Processes
January 1, 2018Comments
The recently opened Trumpf Smart Factory, in Chicago, IL, displays solutions designed to equip metalformers for Industry 4.0. Noting that as much as 80 percent of operations consist of indirect processes, such as upstream and downstream job handling, the Smart Factory concepts promise to help companies reduce their non-value-added processes.
The star is a production-control system that processes data in real time, simplifying nearly every step in the production process, from initial inquiry to invoicing. Trumpf officials summarize the benefits for metalformers:
1) Fast processing of purchase orders and quotations
Online commerce has set new standards, where customers can order products online in just a few clicks. Within this online store for fab-shop customers, Trumpf’s TruTops Fab app and TruTops Boost software solutions automatically calculate costs and prepare quotations.
2) Reliable, automated operation
Digital production control facilitates automated night-shift operations. The system automatically reports any malfunctions, and the night-shift supervisor can take immediate action without having to be onsite.
3) Fewer mix-ups because each part knows its destination
The metal sheets processed in smart factories “know” what parts the machines will cut and bend. In addition to cutting the blanks, a laser-cutting machine can mark the parts with a QR code containing job information, such as the customer ID. If required, the code also can include data referring to the next step in the fabricating process, and thus be used to specify processing parameters—in a press brake, for example. Then, all the press-brake operator must do is scan the code and the appropriate bending program is automatically selected.
4) The next part arrives without asking
In the Chicago Smart Factory, parts generally travel through the entire production facility. However, standalone stations also are on hand. The parts transport from one station to the next by an autonomous transport system—carts moving freely between stations.