Auto Industry Drives Machining Tech
A look at major manufacturing advancements now commonplace in machine shops.
Entering an automotive machining facility can feel like entering an alternate universe for those who have never experienced it. Automotive manufacturing utilizes common machining processes like milling, turning and broaching, but the demands on machines and people are vastly different.
Automotive manufacturing has stringent quality requirements, requires very fast cycle times, operates on razor thin margins and has no allowance for delays. Creating manufacturing processes that conform to these demands can be challenging, but that’s what drives advances in manufacturing. Many of the advancements that have become commonplace in every machine shop can be attributed to the automotive industry. This article looks at the industry’s influence on several major machining advancements over the years.
Interchangeable Parts
Consider the concept of interchangeable parts, often attributed to people like Honoré Blanc, Eli Whitney and Henry Maudslay. It was Henry Ford and the automotive industry that perfected the engineering standards and manufacturing techniques that made interchangeable parts common.
A Moving Assembly Line
The moving assembly line is ubiquitous in modern factories. Everything from airplanes to dishwashers rely on moving assembly lines today. The moving line was another Ford invention that revolutionized manufacturing. Before Ford’s introduction, assemblies sat in one place while men and materials moved from place to place in the factory. Stationary assembly is almost unheard of in modern manufacturing — even bespoke items like a Rolls Royce are moved from station to station for assembly operations.
Lightweight Materials
Although the aerospace industry initiated the development of lightweight materials like aluminum, magnesium and carbon fiber, the automotive industry drove the proliferation of these along with the advanced processes needed to manufacture them in a cost-effective manner.
Quality Control
Automotive manufacturers also devised and perfected formal quality systems. Auto makers gave them different names in an effort to differentiate their companies in the market, but the systems shared common foundations in statistical process control. Quality professionals from the automotive sector have carried the systems to other industries making them common across manufacturing — making terms like capability, repeatability and process qualification common in manufacturing.
Reducing Costs
Given that cost reductions are a way of life in automotive manufacturing, automation is constantly advancing in the automotive world. Back in 1961, General Motors was the first to use robotics in a production setting. Robots are found in all types of manufacturing today, and are even being sold as options with machine tools like turning centers. GM was ahead of other manufacturers by decades.
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