Computer Integrated Manufacturing Notes
Computer Integrated Manufacturing Notes
Future AM FMCs
Product Characteristics:
o Material
o Tolerances
o Shape
o size
Production Volume
Production Volume
production variety
production rate
The batch production size of the industry is enormous because it covers a wide range of
batch sizes – batches of 20,100,500, 10000
It is more versatile
3 types of production:
o Stock replenishment
o You have a level of stock that you maintain, when stock is low an economic
batch quanitity is built to replenish the stock
o Production to order
o Parts not in stock, have to be ordered once order is received
o Assemble to order
o Parts are already in stock, you just assemble when order is received
Types of layouts / systems:
o Fixed position layout
o Product stays fixed and the processes are brought to it – ex: ship
o Product flow layout
o Layout is in order of the operations required on the part, and the part flows
through the process from its first to last process
o Very similar product, or derivatives
o Process layout
o Layout where areas are fixed for different processes and the part is taken to
the area depending on the process required on it. i.e milling station, turning
station, etc.
o Cellular layout(GT/lean)
o Mixes product flow with process layout
o Flexible manufacturing
PRODUCT-FLOW LAYOUT
FOR A PRODUCT FLOW LINE, UTILIZATION HAS TO BE VERY HIGH – AROUND 0.99%
For parallel work flow, if each machine utilization is 90% - overall will be 90% because other
machines can do the work
Agile systems: came about due to the demand for greater variants of products – this
appeared with the technology of machining centres being more and more flexible
-there is a requirement for line balancing, i.e each operation and its variants would need to
have similar process times else it will hold up the production flow
-it can be reconfigured based on demand/requirements – i.e send different operations to
different machines
-benefit is that it offers greater variety with different variations of the same operation
-benefit is that if one machining centre goes down, the product flow doesn’t stop – other
machines can continue building other types of parts, or even take some workload off the
other machines because you have the ability with the MC to store 10-20 tools, so there
could be sister-tools which can take up work from the machining centre that went down.
PROCESS LAYOUT
Problem:
o All parts went to every machine, so the product flow from each station was very
complex and the result was excessive part movement with no pre-defined
sequence(i.e the order of operations was fixed, but the sequence to each station
depended on the availability of the machine) – spaghetti lines
o No ownership of product – everybody took responsibility for their own operation,
but product itself has no ownership – hence it can be difficult to trace the source of
any issues/defects
o Product 95% in moving and waiting – 5% actually on the machine. Within the 5% -
being cut less than 30% and position, loading was 70%
Comparison to Flexible operator line/cellular manufacture – you can easily trace the source
of problems
GT/Lean cells had a layout that enabled part ownership to be taken, because the
manufactured part stayed within that cell so it was easy to identify where it had been
manufactured.
Benefits:
o Better throughput with less WIP because the cell was laid out in a way where the
part would flow through the cell systematically
FLEXIBLE MANUFACTURING
Benefits of FMS:
High capital equipment utilization – CNC utilization is usually 40-60% - FMS machines
were expected to working at 90-95% utilization [2 machines at 90%=3 machines at
60%]
Reduced capital equipment costs – due to higher utilization, less capital equipment
costs would be required for the same level of production but conversely other
investment like RGVs and pallet rotary plates
Reduced direct labour costs – less people required, just operator to load/unload
Reduced WIP & lead times – higher utilization and efficiency
Responsiveness to changing production requirements – because it focuses on low
batches so additional parts could be easily be added to the schedule. Similarly, keep
the machines running if one broke down because parts could be transported to
alternate machines with similar capabilities since it was fully automated.
Drawbacks:
Large amount of computational power required, which at the time(80s) was not
possible
Automation still required a lot of people to manage and inspect to ensure processes
are operating smoothly
Due to heavy automation, there was less value/emphasis on the experience of the
operator, hence the components needed to be heavily proofed and proved out, and
the fixturing would need to be totally foolproofed to ensure consistency.
Parts that went through the process required parts to be manufactured in a
repetitive manner – not just once or in a large batch, it had to parts being made on a
regular basis.
The raw material needs to be of high quality with consistency in its structural
integrity and high quality in terms of dimensional accuracy due to its
unattended/automated system
Typically parts are of same material
Categories of FMS:
Unattended/Unmanned Machining Stations (UMS)
Flexible Machining Cells
o Prismatic
o Cylindrical
Flexible Machining/Manufacturing Systems
FMS/FMC could be swapped over, or FMS could encompass the full region
The categorisation always depends on the type of parts and variety of parts you make in
comparison to the volume.
UMS - milling
You have a pallet, TYPICALLY horizontal machine with a tombstone/cube fixture
You’ll be able to fixture all the pallets with one pallet in the machine
You can set parts up and with the pallet buffer, it can automatically machine overnight
8hrs machining
4hrs changing
8hrs changing
Problem: when you needed more fixtures than the number of pallets: ideal scenario would
be that you have six pallets and you never change the fixtures.
UMS – turning
On a lathe , a robot would pick up the billets from a workpiece magazine and load it onto
the machine
Different types of billets
The limiting factor is the robot’s billet gripper which would require similar billet sizes
Turning is usually for much larger batches
Prismatic FMC
Characterized by a number of similar machines in a row, with a RGV
Use RGVs
Most common form is horizontal machining centre
Parts would typically be loaded with fixtures
Limiting factors is tool storage – can have 60-80-100 tools in a magazine
With 2 machines – this is most commong modern set-up, not the one with the rotary table
Cylindrical FMC
Uses a robotic transporter which takes part from input conveyer through to lathe1 or lathe
2
Then it would go to a grinding station or inspection station
The parts would then be sent to the output conveyer, and any rejected parts from
inspection sent onto the reject section
Makino FMS
Tool room with automatic tool delivery
Multi-cell FMS
Yamazaki Mazak
Multi-cell FMS
Mazak Video
Model A:
2 machine cell
Load unload station
Temporary storage buffer station
RGV loading parts
2 spaces outside machine – one to come out from machine, one waiting to go in
Model D
RGV
At far end, there is a tool pallet – the pallet sits on a normal part pallet and is picked
up by RGV. It has 9 spaces, 3 – 3 – 3: 3 tools to come out, 3 tools to go in
The same RGV that carries part pallets also carry the pallets with the tool, and
instead of delivering it to the pallet buffer area, they deliver it to the side of the
machine which has the tool storage area for tools to be loaded/unloaded into the
machine.
FMCs are the only place where you will get all info about part times, processing
times, tool life – standalone CNC machines don’t have that.
More flexible than Mazak machines in terms of tools.
Characteristics:
Linear vehicle
Pallet stocker
See pictorial view:
Future AM FMC
Robot that goes up and down on a transporter
X2 PBF SLM to produce part from powder
Vacuum cleaner to get rid of power
Powder removal station: rotates pallet inside machine to get rid of excess powder
in an enclosed area to get rid of 98% of the powder
Equator: measurement station where the the 250x250mm was split into 4 –
125x125mm pallets where the parts were measured
Renishaw RAMTIC:
Unattended work stations where they deliver a carousel containing the tools and
the raw material required for the build
The operator first checks the tools in the tool pallet and ensures they are in the
correct position and ensures the raw material is on fitted on the carousel
The operator fixes the carousel onto the machine and the machine is run,
automatically drawing the raw material and the cutting tools required from the
carousel into the machine.
The machine then automatically sets up and begins the process by probing to set
datums and automatically machines the parts.
Once machining of the components is complete, the tools are taken out of the
machine and fitted back into the tool pallet and sent back into the carousel