October 25, 2016 | Volume 12 Issue 40 |
Manufacturing Center
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Modern Applications News
Metalworking Ideas For
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Tooling and Production
Strategies for large
metalworking plants
The aim is one model that contains all information to carry it through design, smart manufacturing, and inspection.
Looking to cut your overall manufacturing time by 25, 50, or even 70 percent? NIST is working on it.
Researchers at the U.S. Commerce Department's National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) celebrated Manufacturing Day Oct. 7 by launching the Smart Manufacturing Systems (SMS) Test Bed. The test bed is an innovative model factory that aims to help facilitate the advanced manufacturing technology known as the "digital thread" and help manufacturers cut costs, shorten production time, reduce errors, and provide higher quality goods.
"The SMS Test Bed joins the many resources NIST offers to help U.S. manufacturers drive innovation and compete in a global market," said Under Secretary of Commerce for Standards and Technology and NIST Director Willie E. May. "Digital manufacturing represents an exciting advance that is expected to yield significant operational and bottom-line benefits for manufacturers of all sizes."
Until recently, manufacturers have predominantly used two-dimensional (2D) drawings -- what we know as blueprints -- in either printed form, computer-aided design (CAD) plans, or a combination of both to guide a product through its life cycle. Because these methods require humans to interpret, translate, re-enter, and transmit data at each step in the process, there can be significant expenditures of time and money, as well as multiple opportunities for errors to occur. In spite of the disadvantages, however, 90 percent of small manufacturers still rely on traditional 2D methods to make their products.
The digital thread relies on standardized, three-dimensional (3D) models for electronically exchanging and processing product and manufacturing information all the way from design through inspection of the final part. Researchers estimate that moving manufacturing from 2D paper-based systems to 3D digital manufacturing could cut production time by as much as 75 percent.
VIDEO: NIST Smart Manufacturing Systems (SMS) Test Bed description.
NIST's SMS Test Bed is designed to make the digital thread and the resources needed to make it work accessible to all who want to explore its capabilities and contribute to its advancement. It also serves as a platform for measuring the effectiveness of standards for collecting and distributing production data that support the digital thread.
The test bed consists of three major components:
"The goal of the SMS Test Bed is to create a shared resource that enables smart manufacturing research and development," said NIST mechanical engineer Thomas Hedberg, co-coordinator of the project. "We are actively seeking collaborators who are willing to link their manufacturing data sets, fabrication processes, and product data exchange systems with our test bed so that we can help them make their way toward digital manufacturing, and at the same time, let others who participate in the project gain from their knowledge and experience."
According to NIST mechanical engineer and project co-coordinator Moneer Helu, future plans for the test bed include offering manufacturers the opportunity to compare the fabrication of test products (with preset designs and datasets) using their standard procedure and with an optimized "digital thread" plan. "We also hope to assist with the creation and launch of test beds like ours across the country so that, eventually, a national network is established," he said.
To establish the SMS Test Bed, NIST is working with the Association for Manufacturing Technology (AMT), an organization that represents and promotes U.S.-based manufacturing technology; DP Technology Corp., a developer and supplier of computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) software; Mazak Corp., a maker of advanced machine tools and automation systems; Mitutoyo America Corp., a maker of measurement equipment and software; the MTConnect Institute, a standards development organization; and System Insights, a provider of predictive analytics software for manufacturing.
VIDEO: Benefits of the digital thread explained.
Researchers from academic institutions and public-private consortia have already begun using data available from the SMS Test Bed, including: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Virginia Tech, the Commonwealth Center for Advanced Manufacturing (CCAM) in Virginia, and the Digital Manufacturing & Design Innovation Institute (DMDII) in Illinois. DMDII is a member of the Manufacturing USA network, which NIST supports through the Advanced Manufacturing National Program Office.
For more information on the SMS Test Bed, visit the SMS Test Bed webpage or send a message to smstestbed@nist.gov.
Source: NIST
Published: October 2016