Looking for new ways to give your shop’s production output a kick in the pants? Automation may be a force multiplier. It might also free up your most experienced and ambitious machinists’ time for mentorship, learning new systems and leveling-up machine programming skills. And it could help lower insurance premiums.
The use case for automating many functions in a job shop is very different from a large automotive plant or other high-volume manufacturing facility. But automation can return positive and productive outcomes that help simplify repeatable and time-absorbing tasks for shops of every size.
What are the correct applications of robots and cobots? What technologies can move quality checks closer to the process? Where should shop owners and manufacturing operation managers focus?
We explore some of the ways manufacturers are having success with automation today—and what you need to know when planning for change.
Automation in Manufacturing Gives Time Back to Workers and Helps Shops Stay Competitive
The talent crunch in manufacturing is real. Today’s manufacturing capacity demand is larger than the labor supply—and it’s expected to increase. A 2018 Deloitte and Manufacturing Institute study finds that the skills gap may leave an estimated 2.4 million positions unfilled through 2028 with a potential economic impact of $2.5 trillion.
“It’s not getting any better,” explains John Hicks, owner of Kilgore Manufacturing, about the skills delta his company has seen in an article.
Job shops may find it difficult to compete with larger machine shops for more experienced and expensive talent. But automation, in theory, can reduce the impact of a skills shortage by reducing the most rote, manual tasks—and increase the machine-to-person ratio wherever possible.
A robot can often tend multiple machines. In some cases, a single operator can tend multiple robots—and each robot could be handling multiple machines at a time.
“That frees up operators to perform secondary operations, like deburring parts, assembling or spending more time on quality checks,” explains Steve Alexander, vice president of operations at Acieta, an automation integrator, in the SME article “Automating Job Shops? You Bet!”
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