When you strip back the hype of Industry 4.0 and focus on the balance of output and quality, the results of its potential promise can be realized. We spoke with a veteran of precision manufacturing and sensor-based metrology technology from Renishaw to understand how Industry 4.0 can actually impact process and part making.
Industry 4.0 will be promoted and discussed at great length at the 2018 International Manufacturing Trade Show. If there is one thing to understand about smart manufacturing and Industry 4.0, it’s that many organizations oversimplify how quickly they think they can integrate something meaningful.
Dan Skulan has been working in precision machining and the metrology gauging trade for over 30 years—and knows his way around productivity and quality metrics for manufacturers. As a general manager of industrial metrology for Renishaw, Skulan has a deep understanding of how companies find out if they are prepared to handle the promise of Industry 4.0. Skulan is presenting specifically on Industry 4.0 at the IMTS 2018 conference sessions.
The definition of that buzzword term should focus more on what the specific goals of a manufacturer are than on anything else. The promise of Industry 4.0 depends more on clearly understanding company objectives and using proper techniques and tooling than incorporating any new data management system, according to Skulan.
“You can collect a tremendous amount of data, but data is only valuable if it’s accurate and actionable,” says Skulan. “There are very valid results that Industry 4.0 can bring, but it’s really important that it be implemented in a systematic way starting with accurate and actionable data coming from your processes.”
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So what should manufacturers do? To start, they need to practice due diligence—and make sure it makes sense. Everyone wants to improve. Automation is important, but it can prove very costly if allowed to run without internal process control to ensure quality is maintained at a higher throughput.
“What if the process that reports to be running has actually created a bunch of scrap or no parts at all?” explains Skulan. “Good process-based systems that verify that the workpiece and tooling are correctly set and cutting programs that are running with inherent accuracy are what is needed. In-process measurements should verify that the right cuts on the right part were made. That is how you help separate the good implementations of Industry 4.0 from the weak ones that simply try to incorporate higher degrees of data monitoring without ensuring the underlying process is in control.”
To that end, Skulan emphasizes the very important role of simulation—but only if coupled with sensor-based accuracy that checks the machining process at key stages right into a machine.
“Our objective is not to just verify that production is taking place, but it is to verify that all stages of production are meeting quality standards with minimum lost processing time,” says Skulan. Here, sensors and automation play a crucial role—but only if the data is verifiably accurate. It’s in the right combination of smart-sensor technology working in concert with software that is readily-available for operators to clearly see on a dashboard that improved productivity is realized.
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