Manufacturing operations improvement with loop management

Author(s):  
G.R. Chacon ◽  
F. Ballejo ◽  
S. James ◽  
C. Manuel ◽  
C. Love ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 123 ◽  
pp. 103297
Author(s):  
Jonnro Erasmus ◽  
Irene Vanderfeesten ◽  
Konstantinos Traganos ◽  
Paul Grefen

Author(s):  
Claude Gosselin ◽  
Jack Masseth ◽  
Wei Liang

In the manufacturing of spiral-bevel and hypoid gears, circular cutter dimensions are usually based on the desired performance of a gear set. In large manufacturing operations, where several hundred gear geometries may have been cut over the years, the necessary cutter inventory may become quite large since the cutter diameters will differ from one geometry to another, which results in used storage space and associated costs in purchasing and maintaining the cutter parts. Interchangeability of cutters is therefore of significant interest to reduce cost while maintaining approved tooth geometries. An algorithm is presented which allows the use of a different cutter, either in diameter and/or pressure angle, to obtain the same tooth flank surface topography. A test case is presented to illustrate the usefulness of the method: the OB cutter diameter of an hypoid pinion is changed from 8.9500" to 9.1000". CMM results and the comparison of the bearing patterns before and after change show excellent correlation, and indicate that the new pinion can be used in place of the original pinion without performance or quality problems. Significant cost reductions may be obtained with the application of the method.


2015 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhamad Zaki Yusup ◽  
Wan Hasrulnizzam Wan Mahmood ◽  
Mohd Rizal Salleh ◽  
Mohd Razali Muhamad ◽  
Adi Saptari

 The implementation of Lean practices via various techniques and approaches have provided the room of improvement for manufacturers to increase the manufacturing operations performance. Nevertheless, the lack of understanding in synthesizing each of the strategies can cause the implementation benefits of this practice are unable to be retained. This is possibly due to the weaknesses in identifying the exact domain and the right indicators in strengthening the Lean implementation processes. From the review, planning, development, evaluation and execution are the four primary domains that highly influenced the manufacturer performance in synthesizing the Lean practice. In fact, each of the domains has its own performance indicator in streamlining the strategy outlined in strengthening this practice in manufacturing operations. The ability to fortify all these domains is seen to be able to increase the performance of Lean implementation and ensure the adaptation process becomes smoother and easier for a longer period of time. This will be useful to the manufacturer and academician, primarily in formulating the best approach in establishing the sustainable manufacturing practice via Lean approach.  


2003 ◽  
Vol 34 (5-8) ◽  
pp. 515-519 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Bidadi ◽  
S. Sobhanian ◽  
M. Mazidi ◽  
Sh. Hasanli ◽  
S. Khorram

Author(s):  
Edgar Chacón ◽  
Luis Alberto Cruz Salazar ◽  
Juan Cardillo ◽  
Yenny Alexandra Paredes Astudillo

AbstractIndustry 4.0 (I4.0) brings together new disruptive technologies, increasing future factories’ productivity. Indeed, the control of production processes is fast becoming a key driver for manufacturing operations. Manufacturing control systems have recently been developed for distributed or semi-heterarchical architectures, e.g., holonic systems improving global efficiency and manufacturing operations’ reactiveness. So far, previous studies and applications have not dealt with continuous production processes, such as applications for Water Supply System (WSS), oil refining, or electric power plants. The complexity of continuous production is that a single fault can degrade extensively and even cause service disruption. Therefore, this paper proposes the Holonic Production Unit (HPU) architecture as a solution to control continuous production processes. An HPU is created as a holon unit depicting resources in a continuous process. This unit can detect events within the environment, evaluate several courses of action, and change the parameters aligned to a mission. The proposed approach was tested using a simulated model of WSS. The experiments described in this paper were conducted using a traditional WSS, where the communication and decision-making features allow the application of HPU. The results suggest that constructing a holarchy with different holons can fulfill I4.0 requirements for continuous production processes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (4/5/6) ◽  
pp. 370
Author(s):  
Joel Pelkonen ◽  
Àngels Armengol ◽  
Manuel Díaz Madroñero ◽  
Josefa Mula

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