CH 14 Single-Station Manufacturing Cells
CH 14 Single-Station Manufacturing Cells
CH 14 Single-Station Manufacturing Cells
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Automation, Production Systems, and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing, Third Edition, by Mikell P. Groover. 1
Classification of
Single-Station Manufacturing Cells
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Single-Station Manufacturing Cells
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Analysis of Single-Station Systems
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Single-Station Manned Cell
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Single-Station Automated Cell
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Parts Storage Subsystem and
Automatic Parts Transfer
np = parts storage capacity of the storage subsystem (pieces)
Tcj= cycle time for part j that is held in the parts substorage
system (min)
UT = unattended time of operation
np
UT Tcj
j 1
This equation assumes that one work unit is processed each cycle.
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Parts Storage Subsystem and
Automatic Parts Transfer
If all the parts are identical and require the same machine cycle,
UT = npTc
In reality, unattended time will be less than UT because the
worker needs time to unload finished parts and load raw
work parts into the storage subsystem
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Parts Storage Capacity
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Storage Capacity of One Part
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Storage Capacities Greater Than One
Machining centers:
Various designs of parts storage unit interfaced to
automatic pallet changer (or other automated transfer
mechanism)
Turning centers:
Industrial robot interface with parts carousel
Plastic molding or extrusion:
Hopper contains sufficient molding compound for
unattended operation
Sheet metal stamping:
Starting material is sheet metal coil
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Storage Capacities Greater Than One
Machining center and automatic pallet changer with pallet holders arranged
radially; parts storage capacity = 5
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Storage Capacities Greater Than One
Machining center and in-line shuttle cart system with pallet holders along its
length; parts storage capacity = 16
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Storage Capacities Greater Than One
Machining center with pallets held on indexing table; parts storage capacity =
6
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Storage Capacities Greater Than One
Machining center and parts storage carousel with parts loaded onto pallets;
parts storage capacity = 12
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Applications of Single Station
Manned Cells
CNC machining center with worker to load/unload
CNC turning center with worker to load/unload
Cluster of two CNC turning centers (TC) with time sharing of
one worker to load/unload
Plastic injection molding on semi-automatic cycle with worker
to unload molding, sprue, and runner
One worker at electronics subassembly workstation inserting
components into PCB
Stamping press with worker loading blanks and unloading
stampings each cycle
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Applications of Single Station
Automated Cells
CNC MC with APC and parts storage subsystem
CNC TC with robot and parts storage carousel
Cluster of ten CNC TCs, each with robot and parts storage
carousel, and time sharing of one worker to load/unload the
carousels
Plastic injection molding on automatic cycle with robot arm to
unload molding, sprue, and runner
Electronics assembly station with automated insertion machine
inserting components into PCBs
Stamping press stamps parts from long coil
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CNC Machining Center
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CNC Horizontal Machining Center
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CNC Turning Center
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CNC Turning Center
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Automated Stamping Press
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CNC Mill-Turn Center
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Part with Mill-Turn Features
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Sequence of Operations of a
Mill-Turn Center for Example Part
(1) Turn smaller diameter, (2) mill flat with part in programmed angular
positions, four positions for square cross section; (3) drill hole with part in
programmed angular position, and (4) cutoff of the machined piece
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Analysis of Single-Station Systems
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Number of Workstations
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Number of Workstations
WL QTc
WL=workload scheduled for a given period (hr or work/hr)
Q= quantity to be produced during the period (pc/hr)
Tc= cycle time required per piece (hr/pc)
WL Q jTcj
j
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Number of Workstations
WL
n
AT
n= number of workstations
AT= available time on one station in the period (hr/period)
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Factors Complicating the Computation of
Number of Workstations
1. Setup time in batch production
2. Availability
3. Utilization
4. Defect rate
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Availability and Utilization
AT H sh AU
AT= available time
Hsh= shift hours during the period (hr)
A= availability
U= utilization
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Defect Rate
Q Qo 1 q
Q= quantity of good units made in the process
Qo= original or starting quantity
q= fraction defect rate
QTc
WL
1 q
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Machine Clusters
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Machine Clusters
Let Tc Tm Ts
The time required for the operator to service one machine is
Ts Tr
where Tr is repositioning time.
The time to service n machines is
n Ts Tr
For a perfectly balanced system, assuming one work unit is
produced by each machine during a cycle:
n Ts Tr Tm Ts
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Machine Clusters
Tm Ts
n
Ts Tr
n may not be integer.
Tm Ts Tm Ts
Let n1 and n2
Ts Tr Ts Tr
n1 : the operator has idle time Tc Tm Ts
n2 : the machines have idle time Tc n2 Ts Tr
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Machine Clusters