Know-as-you-go software: Digitalization & Industry 4.0
In today's market, a machine shop often has millions of dollars invested in machines. Typically, a hefty amount is also committed to payroll. For a shop to be profitable, these two assets must work together efficiently.
In today’s market, a machine shop often has millions of dollars invested in machines. Typically, a hefty amount is also committed to payroll. For a shop to be profitable, these two assets must work together efficiently. But what is the best way to manage and balance machine and manpower efficiency?
One software package designed specifically for the shop floor is Predator MDC (Manufacturing Data Collection) from Shop Floor Automations Inc. MDC offers real-time information instead of relying on written records, manual worksheets and other historical data. Historical data has its uses, but its impact on profitability is limited. There is a higher potential for profit in a know-as-you-go environment.
When using a manual application like Excel, information such as machine activity (setup, cycle time and teardown) and the number of good parts and scrapped ones, is compiled after production. Unfortunately, not all shops stay on top of manual reporting on a daily or weekly basis.
In addition, after-the-fact information provides little room to adjust when production is not on schedule. If a shop must produce 100 parts per day for 5 days, it’s beneficial to know that only 125 parts have been produced in the middle of day two. At that point, there is still time to make adjustments and get the job back on track. This is one of the benefits MDC provides.
One of Shop Floor Automations’ MDC customers is West Coast Quartz/WCQ Silicon, Fremont, Calif. WCQ fabricates precision components, specializing in high-purity quartz, silicon, ceramic, graphite and silicon-carbide parts for the semiconductor industry.
In spring 2008, WCQ was seeking ways to capture data on its CNCs in real time and to better control loading of NC files into those controls. The company did not have a central distributed numerical control (DNC) system to communicate with the 40 machines on its shop floor and was using Excel worksheets for data collection. “There was no way to capture live cycle times for parts,” recalled Mark Byrne, director of manufacturing. “We were only running off what the operator documented in the log.”
Byrne decided to automate the facility and chose Predator software. “DNC and MDC are through the same system,” he said. “The two other firms we looked at had data collection, but did not have the ability of DNC—to download and upload—which is the main reason we considered Predator to begin with. Now, as soon as the spindle is turned on, data is captured. Our scheduling personnel are now able to build a more accurate delivery schedule because utilization numbers are real, plus we have accurate cycle times for parts.”
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